Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1931
Page 1 of 363
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 363 of the 1931 volume:
“
- ., YN: , im l A 1 K . Bw nf XS A . x 1 f l K gn , ' A, s ga al'. s v .., . .Luv . ,,M... - 13 4--wi? R , lf mira? .,,.r:n.,Ef' '1' '..X 11,' i 'l .,.,M. '13 . . .f, '. 1 '. .nh Q' -ol ' . -.bf '+. ,1-sri. -1 ' Q - -: ' - -.,. . , 'A Y , ,A A , , 1 . I n,,.- U Q - . Haw if:-'L-,. .1zl'11'.Lf- mwqzinxwuweyu- 3 M 'fl I M v2,,,,.Q5f1, A YA,,-,- 0441 Ass a'lcf733 Mgvwii EE CLINIC 1931 COPYRIGHT BY W. L. HAIGHT H. C. McCLAlN THE GROSS CLENIC' Thomas Eakins U 844- I 9 fbji ROF-ESSOR SAMUEL D. GROSS, of disfinguished presence, has paused a momenf from an operafion for 'fhe removal of a sequesfrum from fhe fhigh bone fo explain 'fo fhe class fhe defails of fhe procedure. ln fhe foreground, af The leff, are fhe surgical insfrumenfs. Abouf The pafienf are grouped fhe assisfanfs in pre-anfisepfic garb. Dr. Charles S. Briggs, lafer Professor of Surgery of fhe Universify of Nashville, Tennessee, is kneeling af fhe middle in fronf of Dr. Gross. ln 'fhe lower righf-hand corner is Dr. Daniel Apple, who holds open fhe incision wifh a refracfor. Behind Dr. Apple, and using a fenaculum, is Dr. James M. Barfon, Chief of Clinic, and lafer Clinical Professor of Surgery in Jefferson. Nexf fo him is fhe efherizer, Dr. W. Joseph Hearn, lafer fo become fhe Clinical Professor of Surgery in Jefferson, holding fhe anesfhefic 'fowel fo fhe pafienf's face. ln fhe lower leff-hand corner sifs fhe mofher of fhe pafienf, shrink- ing from fhe sighf of fhe surgeon's knife, red wi'l'h 'fhe blood of her son. In fhe background, behind Dr. Barfon, is Dr. Samuel W. Gross, son and successor of Professor Samuel D. Gross, fhe operafor. He sfands in a characferisfic pose, an excellenf por- fraif in spife of fhe low fones of color fo which fhe arfisf was limifed by fhe field of shadow abouf him. ,Equally remarkable is fhe porfraif of Hughey O'Donnell, 'fhe orderly, who had served fhe college for many years, dimly seen in fhe dark doorway. ln fhe leff middleground is fhe clinical clerk, Dr. Franklin Wesf, faking nofes af a desk. ln fhe background are seafed 'fhe sfudenfs. As fhe amphifheafre made a complefe circle, some of fhe crowds xof specfafors saf behind fhe operafing fable which is placed in fhe cenfer of fhe arena. The operafing fable used by Professor Gross may be seen in fhe Pafhology Museum. This painfing faifhfully depicfs a scene familiar fo Jefferson graduafes before fhe days-of anfisepfic surgery more fhan fiffy years ago. If is fhe masferpiece of one of America's mosf famous ar-fisfs, and was firsf exhibifed af fhe Cenfennial 'Exhibifion in Philadelphia in'!876g lafer af fhe exposifions af Chicago, Buffalo, and Sf. Louis, being awarded fhe gold medal ai' fhe lasf-named exhibifion in l904. If occupied fhe place of honor in fhe loan exhibifion of fhe works of Thomas Eakins af 'fhe Mefropolifan Museum of Arf in New York Cify in l9l7. Thomas Eakins sfudied anafomy af fhe Jefferson Medical College in I873 and l874, and while 'Thus engaged, conceived 'fhe idea of painfing fhe surgical clinic as if was conducfed fhen. He sal' upon fhe benches of 'fhe old amphifheafre where fhe Jeffer- son Hospifal annex now sfands and made his arfisfic sfuclies and skefches from fhe poinf of View of fhe medical class. R. V. P. I I I THE CLINIC 1 9 3 1 ' II I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 'I f.GQfImHmE C' -I Q eamfsaiakgm. rv OA Q, .!'ILAnmF x Pubnshed by THE SENIOR CLASS of +he JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE Philadelphia . . . PennsyIvanIa W-1 X www: X X :XX L Nr. X X XXX Qi Q: SE Ss X fSi NX 3 iw NSA SX X X Sm X KX N XX X XX X X . Y x X X N X X X X XXXX XX N X X XY x XX X X X X X X X X X X X XX X X X X X X X X X X X X N X X X X X Q X N XX XX X X X X X X XX X X N X fx A XXX N X Xw SAX X A gXgXX A X X 1 'XSXX :Ni QSXSXQ X XXX AXA XXXXX X XXX Q X X ' XXX X X X X XfS1.XXX X X XXXX X , X XX, X QS X XXXXXSA sXi'gSZXXXS 3 SSS X X YXXXXSQF s :XA P XX XXXSX X PXX-S XXAXX 3 SSSXQXXSSSS X Siif XXXXXQ5f XXX X'5 XXXSSFi 1 X TXX: AMX X AX 1 XXX s XXXXXXXXSX 1 N rggx QXX,-,M 'X 5 XSS 1 SXXXXXSSST XXXSXQXXSS A XX XXsiXXXXX Y X X SX, M AkiXSSXSX XS XSS - X X T:-us , 5 A AND CHRONICLE A PROPHECY. WE TRUST YEA IN FUTURE RS ITS - f5EEI Nj'E T0 V URE IVIFY TREAS- D M EMORIES OF TH HOPES E . PLEASURES' DIFFI CULTIESI AND A MBITIQ OF O N5 UR U ATE DAYS - K Y R THE COLLEGE CLASSES FEATURES ORGANIZATIONS HUMOR R SX N S E J TO NORRIS WISTAR vAux AND GEORGE A. ULRICH We Affecfionafely Dedicafe This Book T by . . xxxx N gzkwg gmrw X ENN-NNN . NX wxw Q . Q. .. .S X . . 5 ' 5 4 3 mf .fl -X., 2 .M .Y 5 X1 1 :w K Q Niffkwrxf X X5 X M ww. .55 Q XJ ANN 4 . N .. Q Q An' 3-XXWX .. Q .QW W r L .-wx S .M I . Xf-Nms Y.. Q... . g W , KN 5-N . QQFN tw ,. 34 ..MWmw. N I k . xx- A W5 Nm. X N WS X . ,sv X A Gm . is XX . Q fwmxs :Q 5,1-SSN, ...imwg .. ' 'mkfq' Q... Q. 1 MF' E :Wx 3 fm K -f ' .sixgwm .. . 5 :A uw., .sk 1 NN- . fs5Si'.4.5., X wzfffswgx K Q 5 A ps X fx N555 X X -.QL X -KYQQQSQ .NS ' -www? . , N.S,,V5,. I E M' Qs Y NSW . 1' WIN , X . 2 ki KWSN : 1 Xwwx' . 55. . RQNS ms' s . sf' X - Q. .Q .. ksvxqi A . ' gvff Q 1,..,. -'XSSMSSQ - xx . wr-.ww gsmQS z Q ww .A X ' .Q-. . Xxwx 3 Esrqws Q. 2 f 5 if q Q Wswxff . . W , NORRIS WISTAR VAUX 3 Xi: K ,... . A A 5,2 - .gg E 31.3 5' .K ' F Q, ..... 5 xssggf A 1 PNfE,x 5 QNYNQEES .Q . A . E i 29 ' 2? -S, 'if' i 0 ' 'Jf sg . 1 I .3425 ifiiyil. i- w -wwe' 5' 4 E, -A ' . fx 1 wx ' sg .X 5 Es- ,X Q ,X .. my., . . - IQ? - . 4.i:'Nfs Y- K Q- was: Norris Wistar Vaux OHRIS YV. VAUX, son of Jacob 1Valn Vaux and Emily Norris Pepper Vaux, was born at Rosemont, Pa., September 1, 1881. His prelim- inary education was acquired at the Delancey School after which he entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1900. The pre-medical and medical courses at this institution consumed a period of five years. Dr. Vaux interned at the Pennsylvania Hospital from 1905 to 1907. After a year of study in Europe, chiefly in obstetrics at the Rotunda Hospital, Ireland, under Ernest Hastings Tweedy, he began general practice at Chestnut Hill and continued in this pursuit from 1908 to 1917. Dr. Vaux was an instructor in obstetrics at Jefferson under Dr. E. P. Davis and at this time gave a course in operative obstetrics. In 1919 he became a member of the staff of the Philadelphia Lying-In Hospital and was obstetrician to the Chestnut Hill Hospital and chief obstetrician to the Bryn Rlawr Hospital from 1921 to 1926. Military activities consist of eleven years of service with the Philadelphia City Troop as honorary surgeon, service with Base Hospital Unit No. 10 and British General Hospital No. 16 from lliay, 1917, until April, 1919. He was dis- charged with the rank of llajor, completing twenty-three months of oversea service. In 1925 Dr. Vaux was appointed Clinical Professor of Obstetrics at Jefferson. He is editor of Edgar's Obstetrics and has published papers on Eclampsia, Post Partum Hemorrhage, Ante-Natal Care and Pyelitis. One hears of Dr. Vaux at Jefferson long before the third year course in obstetrics affords closer acqualintance with him. His friendliness to the students, augmented by his superior teaching ability, insures his popularity among those of us who occupy the benches. Dr. Vaux has exerted tireless effort to teach a system of obstetrics that is practical and sufficient in all aspects. His lectures are not formidable didactic affairs that burden the already over-burdened student. On t.he con- trary, they consist of well organized, practical facts relative to the subject at hand, interspersed with illustrations, as well as an occasional quiz that misses not a man and which has proven efficacious in facilitating the retention and clarification of obstetrical facts. The course given by Dr. Vaux is the obstetrical foundation upon which we future practitioners depend for the technique and treatment of maternity practice. His task is indeed of tre- mendous consequence, but we feel confident that those who ha.ve preceded us will sustain our opinion, that no other man could more effectively and capably have performed his duty than has Dr. Vaux. Dr. Vaux is a student with the students. His pleasing personality and ready humor have endeared him to us. A more pleasurable opportunity could not present itself than this, of apprising Dr. Vaux that his efforts in ou1' direction have not gone unappreciated and that there is imbued in our hearts an everlasting esteem for him. 4 4 C6 7 5 .-2' .. 5 FO 2555 ., 1 f Q E Z e ren 1, ff QQQSNN :w5 1 W Qs- sq- N ENS ski EN ' sv N is SSX sk Ai: QL Sw ' I is '52 ,N T N 'SQQQQNNE A Q.:- sms?- N: ' S x N A I M Fl , .. : ffl Q K Q 1 YQ- A Xfy. 6 ' Q- XRQN' - NS- X E A UL - RICH ' Yffxs. X ws wwsxf , XQSQW www x g v sfsxxw Nggm Q X X: 5 gui! si i Q i I ' E 3 Q .xv ss ,Ng if SX Q Q Q 2 KS: - si? i Kiwis T QQQSMQ wsgixgx E :ss , .x as-'rt us? . R Kg .-1431 fsgf 5 Q-gif -srgq - 'is -' X W . -4 taxes v ft.: X: s....e George A. Ulrich EORGE A. VLRICH was born in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, December 1-L, 1873. His early life was passed on a farm in his native county. He attended public and private schools in Annville, Pa., and at the completion of his school work taught for three years in Annville. H.e was graduated from Lebanon Valley College in 1897 receiving an A.B. degree. In 1899 he received a BS. degree f1'o1n the same institution. He entered Jef- ferson in 1901. Dr. 1'lrich is associated with the Jefferson and Polyclinic Hospitals as well as chief obstetrician to the North VVest General Hospital. At present Dr. Ulrich is associate Professor in the Jefferson Medical College and clinical assistant obstetrician to the Jefferson llaternity. Dr. Ulrich is the author of several papers on obstetrical subjects. He is a member of the County Medical and Philadelphia Obstetrical societies. Dr. Ulrich has been a faculty member of the school since his graduation. His years of service have earned for him an enviable position among his asso- ciates. Recognition of his achievements in his chosen specialty is widespread. His ability as an obstetrician is of the highest rankg his reputation as a teacher and a friend excites the admiration of all connected with the school. These statements are indeed confirmed when we learn that his services for the families of men of the medical profession are in constant demand. Dr. Ulrich in conjunction with Dr. Vaux gives the third year course in obstetrics. Dr. Ulrich never wavers in his firm purpose of imparting to the student a fundamental insight into normal and pathological obstetrics. His opinions are based on the solved problems of long experience and are master- fully elucidated in lecture. Perhaps the one attribute, more than any other, for which Dr. Ulrich has earned the esteem and admiration of all whom he has taught is the beneficial advice he gives to the students relative to the practice of obstetrics in particular and medicine in general. Nlany prac- titioners have been saved biy such advice from mistakes at the bedside and the discomfort of legal procedure. He inspires us with the thought that he who undertakes to handle obstetrical cases has a solemn duty to perform-he must primarily be of true and upright character and everlastingly exert his best efforts in order that the patient may derive the most benefit l',ll01'Qf1'OII'l. VVe Wish Dr. Ulrich to realize that we, the Seniors of Jefferson, are in full realization of what he has done for us. Wfe want him to know that any success we may have in the future 'is in good part the result of his teaching as well as the :inspiration of his personal example. Soon we will be dependent on our own knowledge in obstetrical and general medical practice-unguided then by solicitous teachers ever near at call. Problems of moment will present themselves. VVe may find great comfort then in knowing that our ultimate decisions revert to what we have acquired from the example as well as the didactic and clinical efforts set forth for us by the incomparable efficiency of Dr. Ulrich. Th-irfcen. A' f J 'A , x AAAAM CI V Views -l-HE remarlcable, ar- resiing beauiy of Jrhis arched enlrrance, acceniuafed and enhanced by 'rhe play of ligh'r and shadow by nighr, is represen+a- Jrive of The archiieciure of The College building in Hs enJrire+y. The sleps inside lead Jro a grealr ar'ris'ric maslerpiece, one which is very dear +o Jefferson siudenis, The Gross Clinic. Through porlals of orher Jefferson College buildings, less beauiiful Jrhan Jrhis, have come men who have indelibly in- scribed rheir names in medical hislory. Four years ago we enrerecl wilh hopes and aspi- ralions peculiar To freshmen in general. We are now about we hope, To leave wiih some few of our desires realized. GY-9 ily Ml Q pl :',A X if? ' lil :wh ,yy f l i' fl ' ..--,, ll -1 ja' 'll I l ii f A QUIET corner in our library, one of The grealesl in Jrhe oily, guarded by The busls ol +wo greal men of medicine-William l-larvey and James C. Wilson. Wilh examples of such men abouf us, The myriacls of volumes, warmlh, quiel' and Jrhe cold December snow oulslde Jrhe windows, one coulcl, in such an almosphere. sllr and read lhe lndex Medicus wllh lhe grealesl of enloyrnenl. QJQ GNX9 l N SHARP Conlrasl' To our molfo, The gods sell all for labor is Jrlwls beaulilul lounge,wl1ere luxuriously com- forfable chairs slrelch forllw Inviling, wide arms To Hred sluden+s. H is an ideal rendezvous for an occasional free lwour, wlwere we can quielrly smolce a cigarelle, relax, read or perchance, even sleep. m J X: vw. :X K bs wx xx 1 Ns Ri X , ,vi kai xx-3' 1, 5,2 :E .,-,.,. -+R iN THIS roorn are given mosr of Jrhe leciures of Jrhe senior year. From irs walls, Jrhe porrrails oi pres- enr and bygone professors gaze benignly down upon us. The audiiorium has a feaiure which is of decided advaniage To lale arrivals and lare sleepers-a door opening on an our- side passage which permirs enirance wilh- our passing Jrhe lecrure desk. The room is sulliicienlly long lo allow an occasional nap wirhour being unduly noriced or disrurloed. General Jrachycardia prevails when Dr. Shallow ascends The sreps ar The sides To quiz. Q19 Q19 V -l-l-llS auslere, richly furnished room, wilh ils porlrails, mighl well serve The Presicleni' anol his Caloinel, buf if is in our own College. li is Jrhe Truslees' Room-il' mighl be very aplly Called The Room ol Pale, lor in ii all lhe porlenlrous mallers concerning lhe College and ourselves are pondered upon and ullimalrely selllecl. 6X9 MFE V- .1 fx:- K vi ' Y X ii Ez is M, . I .Q - --ia... ...... V. 'T' . B K bw: Q TA' 3, 5 ll' HAS been said fhaf, There are places we shall always re- member, and on The ofher hand, places we can never forgeff' Neifher of fhese can be said of D. B. l., if falls befween fhe fwo exfremes. Efficiency, sysfem, fairness, and a Jugger- nauf-lilce roufine characferize fhis deparf- menf. l-lere we all have experienced fhe heighfs and depfhs of academic achieve- menf or failure. The doorway and fhoroughfare in fhe foreground mark fhe sife of many hurried smokes as we sfole a few momenfs from class, and had frequenf posf-morfems on examinafions iusf faken. QJQ QXVQ L ' ' ,341 +4 fl '43 ,.,1.Q ,jg l ' , . f , X I , A 1 . f ' J f , I A' 4 If ,f X 1, X I ,f f ,fax LOSELY linked wilh Jrhe early hislory of Jrhis counfry, Jrhis oldesr of American hospilals, founded by Jrhal grear philanrhropisl, Benjamin Franklin, is inseparably associaled wirh achievemenls in American medicine. Through many gen- erarions Jrhis old inslrilrulion has drawn lo ilself The mosl eminenl of The profession. I+ slill rerains Jrhal enviable power. l-laying access ro Jrhis hospilal wirh Hs hisrorical background is an enjoyable fea- Jrure of our sludeni days. Who can lorger Thar brisk walk down Spruce Srreer, Jrremu- lously wondering if he will be chosen for lhe pil on lhal parlicular day: and our lor- mal inlroduclion 'ro obslelrics as juniors in Jrhe new Lying-In l-lospiral? QJQ - NW' i A xx Y' xx ARCUND These por- Tals hover The revered shades oT Pepper, QT Osler and rnyriads oT lesser medical lighTsg ge-neraTions oT Jewcierson sTudenTs Trod The wards in search oT clinical wisdom. The Old Blocl4ley is TasT being re- placed by more nobler buildings. Winds and rains mellow The sTark, new sTone1 eager TeeT wear The Treshness OTT The sTairsg The newer amphiTheaTre is sancTi- Tied by scenes worThy oT CharcoT and The SalpeTriere-The PsychiaTric Clinic oT STreclcer. QTX9 GNX9 ,II J' . . . ,. ,. ,N p ,. . . ,.f X X -Fx N I il. 1 X ,Y z - -.-- if I . -M , Q4 . r x .V Ml I ! , J MX .,,.f' 1 -Z' , , s 1 E s 1 2 5 2 3 . Q ,E A , . x ' .QS 515552 'J X , P 25: 2. ,r . gtg wg 1 Q - .. 1.-'S. ' , fmyik ' N A , N, ., ,,. 'V A . , I a..,..-.Q,N.n- , '-:'-:-an-Sm .f QM,-1 ,f mmf:-.-V . gag.:-:P p- -:-gzff,-..v,-,,,,4g-Q 1-f , az Leia2,..,Mf,5f..,,,f.,.4f: ,,,. ,f-::,,-pq-:,sv-fv1:2z.x u v Administration QN- QNX Awww XX iXX Nz gg XXX SSX ,X rg X X .MX X X X X . XsX . XX SX XX . X X. XS XXX 'A iw 1 .X . SX N iggwv xi Q -SN -XXXXXXX X M. SX X X XXXX ,Q .XX 3. X.. .X X KXXXX X X X X X X X X X X iw .. ANS M '1 ' ..X.g ' XXX K XX X-X. fm X.. my N ,V M k X QQ X, 3 wmNQvN' -QNX. X : X XXQ X: 5 5 - -' XXX-, . MX . 1 XXXA VSA XV. Q.: 1 M XSS XXX Ywxf l NXQ 5 .iswws X? IXs - 'YISQXXX X ' ALBA PI'6Siden+l Grd of TruS+e es XX XXXXM ,SS WSX, X XX S 2 NfrSS Q LNSSSQL bg QSXXX-QX ig? XXQQMVS . Q Q 115 ws .W-X .iv . - I .. Xl ' 2 x ,X:..g -X1.XX?Xi 2 'wfiz Q ' 'A RG H 5 2 N-ri f T N5 SE E :SE N? a vfnx --Q : me Q . - L :rr-.13 M535 1. a Q Axvkiwv . M s ww lEx1S5? Q . NX Q l - - Q X Nm ws- WY xx x S Q Q ,csg X554 'Q ...AQ X. ' Q vi?- QNNSXN QQ x rzrgsw AE all X x x X 'Q SWE E X . x xx. X N Q- Q TS Si X aw .XX R si N A RSX Eva N WM EN xxx X 3 M W , WN, -MN WWW 0 -awww , ua.wwwwwfwfww-':.,...,,,..Awfrwfawffmfm:mzrwffffuff.1-.wW,.,M,,,,.,.M ,MW . A MM., S.Xx5 Samuel M. Curwen Daniel L. l-lebarcl Roberr P. Hooper James M. Willcox Van l-lorn Ely S we B cl F T l 5 ALBA B. JOHNSON ff Presidenlr 2 L R. STURGIS INGERSOLL A E Secrelary ' John C. Marlin Waller l-l. Lippincoll Clarence l-l. Gemsl E Lesslng J. Rosenwald, Jr. . Percival E. Foerclerer 5 3 2 Q X A Q NN E SV? we g N ' FM 5 WEL S M w .-as xv-my K s ,nv-swf N x W. Q 5 xv . , , X SNS 2 Q. X X 3 MQ 3 Q 5 SS x X i W 3 1 -, 2 A X ljwiv A 3 wz 1 Q 3 sw, X iw Swiiiwisgi Q - X1 3 ' X 3 y, X '52 HN S X E N 1 SQ Q i ISM Hxeigkx e X A ,vm-. Q veg Sq -RQ 2 N 5 3A xx r E SS mix X Q N X w QMS N R- s .Ag -xx 4 N - , wx . , 3 3 X :FN N-ms 5 Q 3 I DEA N ROS 5 v . TER So N N S S X .A x XXX K , X N N X ki S xx Q S X fx QXNX X as tk XX XXX X ,Wx XXMN i:XX g l Nt :S si XXX' XXXS XXX N X X XX X NW-XXNXXI, X X XNQW XX X X ,XX X X X X X X X X X X X N X X X X K X X X X X X Q X Y XS X X X XX N Xe X X YW X gwggsmkx X XXXSXFXNX X QXXXXNSF' si XXX-QNX: . X .X . XXX , W 1 X X X X X XXXNN Ss- WXNX XS X T ww Q ' s X WX . 2 W 5 W ,XX XX- HE Senior Class en masse has had the pleasant oppor- tunity of meeting Dr. Patterson but twice. At the first meeting he informed us of the responsibilities, the difli- culties, and the ,duties that were the lot of the medical student. The second meeting occurred during the course of the Senior year at which Dr. Patterson imparted to us some very timely advice with reference to internship. On both occasions his fine dignity, his learning, and finally his gracious efforts in our behalf excited our admiration and earned our everlasting respect and appreciation. Although we see little of Dr. Patterson we find encourage- ment. in knowing that at all times he is endeavoring to guide the destiny of the Jefferson Student. lVe place in him the con- fidence that a sailor places in his captain-confidence in know- ing that we are well directed and that we will receive ready advice in any difficulty that we may meet. VVe know him to be a brilliant physician, an executive of ability and an orator of renown. Dr. Patterson has in large part been responsible for the creation of this greater Jefferson of the present. This, a task indeed of colossal magnitude, will endear his memory to all the past, present and future members of the student body. VVe, the Seniors of Jefferson, in bidding you farewell, Dr. Patterson, want you to know that we are in full realization of the fact that you have been greatly responsible for the success of our undergraduate days. VVe sincerely appreciate what you have done. VVe hope that many ensuing classes may have the benefit of your unfailing efforts and personal example as we have had. X X X NX X XXX NX X XX ek f XXX . .. 2 ' l ? VZ. 'vi 542: W - f 521 My v .mfs .Q X S wk W WILLIAM W. KEEN Emeritus Professor of Surgery since l907 M.A., Brown University. 18595 BLD.. Jellerson Medical College. 1362 ' Irlonorary: LL.D. Brown University. 1891: Nlll'fllXVE'Sl'fUl'I1 lfniversity and loronto University 1.90b' Unixersitg of Edinburgh, 19055 Yale University, 1906: l'nive-rsity of St. Andrews, 1911- Unix ersity of Pennsylvania, 19193 Ph.D.. University of llpsula, 190Tg Sc.D., lefferson Medical College on the Fiftieth Anniversary of his graduation in 191,2g Sc.l'J. Harvard University 1920' Doctor Honoris Causa, University of Paris, 1923. Conductor, Philadelphia School of Anatomy. 1866-1375: T.C'tlll'0l'. Pathological Anatomy at Jefferson Medical College. 1866-1875: Professor of Artistic -Xn-itoniy in Pennsylvinia Academy of the Fine Arts, 1876-19893 Professor of Surgc ry. Womens Medical College 1884-1SS9g Professor of Surgery, .Tellierson Medical College 1859-1901. Assistant Surgeon Fifth Massachusetts Regiment. 18013 Acting' Assist-int Surgcon U. S. LX.. 1862-18643 President of: American Surgical Association, 1S99' American Medical Association, 19005 Philadelphia College of Physicians and Surgeons. 1905g Amerie-in Philosophical Society. 1907-1917. inclusive: Fifth International Congress of Surgery 1920' since 1894 Foreign Correspondent Member Societe de C'l1ll'l1l'g'lC, de Paris. Societe Belge do Chirurgie, Clinical Society of London: Honorary Fellow Roy-il College of Surgeons of England: Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh: Roy 'll College of Surgeons in Irelfind, 19213 Honorary Member of British Neurological Surgeons. 1914 ' Italian Surgical Society ' Palermo Surgical Societyg American College of Surgeons' Associate Fellow of American Academy of Arts and Sciencfes, Sigma Xig awarded the 114-1-1111 T. Bigelow Gold Medal by the Boston Surgical Society, 1922: Gold Medal of the Pe 1J1'lSylV'1lll 1 Society of New York for Distinguished Achievements. 19295 Otlif-er of the Legion of Honor. France, 1923. X . W Q 1, sos x. 1, W Y P 'Q x 1 J K 7 I' V 1 7 Y B . Y vs , ' Vs i . . -. X v K f N 1 1 M An 1 K L 1 5' c A c 'Q 1. v . i 1 , so . ,- . 1, U Q .., A 1 , A , wx 1 . 1 1 1 ll 1 P 1 5 W X 1 0. O 1 3 I 2 1 . X V1 4 X2 -.. , 1 1 S C 4 xx of f- . V , 4 . 1 , e L X s 1 ' 1 7 , , , 1 f v x, 1 , 1 qi C 1 . X 4 0 1 N s as f X X , 'Qs W e We ei? R. lm? gf . if iv fo, og ' Sf P2 11 ', ' - 1 I 11:11-czrht , 1A W -I J gif? ,ef we gf A sf? A x 9 A . ' X , Y- N, .4 xxx.. : -5 xv. ..,. Q 1 JAMES c. w1LsoN Emeritus Professor of Practice of Medicine since I9II B.A.. Princeton, 1867, also M..-X. in course. M.D.. .Tcl'terson Medical College. 1869. Professor ofy Practice of Medicine and of Clinical Medicine in the Jefferson Medical College. 1891- 1!g 11. Physician-in-Chief to the German Hospital since 1898g Attending Physician to the Pennsyl- vania Hospital, 1895-1911, now Emeritusg Attending' Physician to Jefferson Hospital from 1876, now Emeritus, Attending Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital. 1876-1890, Consulting Physician to the Rush Hospital for Consumptives, the Jewish Hospital, the Bryn Mawr Hospital, and the Philadelphia Lying-in-Charity: formerly Visiting Physician to St. Agnes' Hospital and Consulting Physician to the Wfidener Memorial Home for Crippled Childreng Medical Director of Jefferson Medical College Hospital, 1894-1896. President of County Medical Society, 1895-18963 American Academy Medicine, 18985 Asso- ciation American Physicians. 19025 American Cliniatol Association, 19045 American Therapeutic Society, 19095 College of Physicians of Philadelphia, 1913-1915g Philadelphia Pathological Society, 1885-18865 Philadelphia Medical Club, 1914, Physicians Library Association, 1913. Author of The 'Summer and Its Diseases, 18975 A Treatise on the Continued Fevers, 18813 Fever Nursing. 18875 eighth edition, 1915, A Handbook of Medical Diagnosis, 19093 fourth edition, 19155 Editor, American Textbook of Applied Therapeutics. . Captain, Medical Section, Officers Reserve Corps of United States Commission, dated May 9, 1917. Resigned, 1911. III' 1-mme , , l l Z , l f fyf ff X ' 4 Z We -X Q .i V-v. 4f Z .1 5 Qs Pi SW we be .6 3 if .,.4 Y -' f ith X5 S . 1 ' as x X D Q xx xx X fr, 3 X NNN ks as XX Rs XRN' be me 2103 - 442 ? 2 . y '. Y , A ' i 1 EDWARD P. DAVIS A Emeritus Professor of Obsietrics since l925 i .lik M.A.. Princeton: BLD.. Rush Medical College: BLD., Jefferson Medical Collegeg F.A.C.S. A Medical Director. Maternity, Jefferson Hospitalg Attending Obstetrician. Jefferson Hospitalg G4 gttelnclliigg Olgstetricianlziid Gynegologist, Philadelphia General Hospitalg consultant to 5 if ie res on ctreat anc ying-in- iliarity. Q' b jg President, American Gynecological Society, 19105 Pliiladelpliia Obstetrical Societyg Section We S 011 Gynecology of College .of Physiciansg Delegate, United States Government to meeting ' Q' I 1N2lt10ll2'll, Society, Obstetrics and Gynecology, St. Petersburg, Russia. 1910. One of the :ii ,jf foniiders-of the International Society of Obstetrics and Gynecologyg Honorary member, jr BiminizgStSti'iteu3fegl1calO iotciety 9 1 Cliiciigg Gyneccglcigicalt Societyg Surgical Society of X : 1 'V , o .cniag pi ia mo ogica ocie y o ,egyp . A Author of Treatise on Obstetricsg Obstetrical and Gynecologieal Nursingg Operative Obstetricsg V iirlanual ot Obstetricsg Contributor to Progressive Medicine and American Journal Medical if Sciencesg author of various original papers, clinical reviews, clinical contributions to j- , obstetrics and gynecology. Resigned, 1925. I .123 I fzwgkggs we Fw-1 , 1 is ss l X X ,sgf ing ' ,-: Oi saw Y X as xg-.W N WV uv is FRANCIS X. DERCUM Emeritus Professor of Nervous and Menial Diseases since l925 M.D.. University of Pennsxlx finifi 1Sr7' Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1877. A.M., Central High School 18118. Sc.D. Tefferson Medical College, 1927. Consulting Neurologist to the Philfidelphia General Hospitalg to the Asylum for the Chronic Insane 'it Wlernersville, Pm' to the Jewish I-Iospitalg to the State Hospital at Norristown, Pa.g Pennsylvania Training School for Feeble-minded Children, Elwyn, Pa.g to the Hospital for the Criminal Insane. 'it Fairview, -etc. EX-President of the American Neurological Associationg The Philadelphia Neurological Society Philadelphia Ps3chi'1tric Societ5 and the Medical Club of Philadelphia, 19203 Chairman of the Section on Nervous and Mental Diseases, A.M.A., 1915g Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases, Jefferson Medical College, 18923 resigned, 1925. President of the American Philosophical Societyg Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia' member of Ac-1dem3 of Natural Sciences of Phila.d-elphiag Chevalier of the Lebion of Honor fF1'1DC8J ' member of the Franklin Institute. Elected Foreign Corresponding Member of the Neurological Society of Paris, 19083 Royal Medical Society of Budapest 1909' Neurological and Psychiatric Society of Vienna. 19113 Corresponding Member of the Society of Physicians, Vienna, March, 1921g Honorary Member of the Neurologic-il and Psychiatric Society of Vienna. May, 19215 Corresponding Member of the Section of Neurology of the Royal Society of Medicine of Great Britain. fditor of Nervous Diseases by American Authorsg author of Rest, Mental Therapeutics and gestiong Clinical Manual of Medical Diseasesg Hysteria and Accident Compensationg The Physiology of Mind' 'lhe Biology of the Internal Secretions and numerous scientific contributions to medical literature. Forty-one 4 X :if I YUI 1- 51 ' H 4 , , v - P 1 1 i ' .4 . 1 4 1 , ij, L L I 1 C C 1 - ' sy , 7 1 ' L N ' 21 'iy ' , f ' 1 U C 1 t + 7 i 1 , 1 . 1 :1 '1 'f E t f .3 M' a is Sllg 1 ,l , fy e. 7 , 1 1 4,5 , p f 4 tw 3,61 l w f X I 1 1 in 4 I .? if I I 1 1 r f S i f if f 4 ,f 3' 14 Q 5 if J f 1 X C X ff 1 Z V 4 if Q f' , Z Q f 4 X ff ,fff 3 f if f fi W , f ff , ff ,Z O X M. X N A Nye fam ffww HOWARD HANSELL Emerlfus Professor of Ophlhalmology Y B.A., Brown University, 1877. M.A., Brown l'uivcrsity, 1880. M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1879. Author of I-Iansell 8 Sweet. Textbook Disonsos of Exo: Hnusoll S Reber. Muscular Anomalies of the Eye: contributor to Opht'l1n'lmi0 OD01'illfl011S CC. A. NVOOCU g Contributor to Eucycle- pzledia of O13llfl12Illll0lfJfIj' CC. A. NVoodD. Forty two f7,,,.4 if 1 S 'Q S? so A X ...A lei Ki if 35 QV! Av rv 2 4 4. ?? Q .5 X Q ,K f G 2 6 Y fx Q 34 I 9 f :Z 4 X E if if X , S P , 13 M if f , gs lg , Z? I , ,A ' Q , fb ,- 4 Q V62 Q x sl . 325 x We Q 4714 12' in ,l sg sf. 2 Q41 S sf 1 A 11 . L9 is , , Q 9 M., jgw Wg! it ,. 7 Q4 W M y .t v if EDWIN E. GRAHAM Emeritus Professor of Diseasesf- of Children since i926 ii B.A., Harvard Universityg M.D., Jelferson Medical College. Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children, Jeiterson Medical College, 1892-1897. Professor of Diseases of Children, Jefferson Medical College. 1897-1926. Attending Pediatrist to Jeffer- 2 2 son Hospital, Pediatrist to Philadelphia General Hospital, Consulting Pediatr-ist to the Training Schools for the Feeble-minded at Vineland, N. J., and to the Vineland Hospital. EX-President of the American Pediatric Society' and of the Philadelphia Pediatric Society. f Author of Diseases of Children. Contributor to Hare's System of Practical Therapeutics 'Q , f and YVilson's American Textbook of Applied Therapeutics. Author of numerous scientific 1, . Q contributions to Pediatric Literatureu ' P Resigned, 1926. 49 ' 7 1 Q l z - .f.7' I WX' lf'o1'ly ilnee f fa ,ff j .49 Si , fs X :X SOLOMON SOLIS-COHEN Emeritus Professor of Clinical Medicine since l927 M.A., C.H.S.. Philadelphia. 1877. M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1883. D.H.L., Jewish Theological Seminary, 1928. i Lecturer, Special Therapeutics, Jefferson, 1885-1890, Lecturer, Clinical Medicine, Jeiterson, 1883-1902, Senior Assistant Professor, Clinical Medicine, Jefferson, 1902-1904, Professor Clinical Medicine, Jeiterson, 190-1-1927, Demonstrator Pathology and Microscopy, Phila- delphia Polyclinic, 1883-1887, Professor Medicine and Therapeutics, Philadelphia Poly- clinic, 1887-1902 tsince Emeritus Professorb , Lecturer, Therapeutics, Dartmouth tsurmner coursel, 1890-1892. l Consulting Physician, Rush Hospital, Philadelphia, State Hospital for Insane, Norristoufn, Pa., Philadelphia General Hospital, Jefferson Hospital, .Tewish Hospital, Philadelphia, Medical Director, Convalescent Home, VVil1ow Grove, Pa., 1928. I . Trustee, United States Pharmacopoeia, 1920, member, Executive Committee of Revision, United States Pharmacopoeia, 1910-1920, Chairman. Therapeutic Section, A.M.A., 1901, President, Philadelphia County Medical Society, 1898-1899, member fE'D161'lt1lS.J Associa- tion of American Physicians, Recorder, Fellow, College of Physicians of Philadelphia, American Association for Advancement of Science, American Academy of Medicine, Honorary Member, Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland, Lehigh County Medical Society, Tri-state Medical Society, Medical Society of St. Louis, XVashington Academy of Science, member, Philadelphia Board of Education. . Author, co-author and editor, Therapeutics of Tuberculosis, 1891, Essentials of Medical Diagnosis, 1892-1900, editor and contributing author, System Physiologic Therapeutics, eleven volumes, 1900-1905, Pharmacotherapeutics, 1928, contributor and contributing editor to many medical periodicals. systems, reference books and cyclopedias. Author of TVl1en Love Passed By, and other verses, 1929. Forty-four IW 2 Q 1 -C l if I ri M is , he x I X sl Q X , 5 7 2 i S N gf, f I A ir, 2 , is Q WW 7 fin 7 ,? Q Q 'K' l I lx: F X-sv - 1. xi f 4. W . 5- , f ' fha? ,. 4 :z 4, M' 262 1 ALBERT P. BRUBAKER Emeritus Professor of Physiology since I927 . M.D.. Jefferson Medical College. 1874: M.A., Franklin and Marshall College, 13873 LLQD.. .5 Franklin and Marshall College, 1916. . Demonstrator of Physiology, Jefferson Medical College, 1880-19093 Professor of Pliysiology and General Pathology, Pennsylvania College Dental Surgery, 1885-1907, Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene in Drexel Institute of Science. Art and lndustry, 1891-1914: Adjunct Professor of Physiology and Hygiene in Jefferson Medical College, 1897-19095 Professor of Physiology and Medical Jurisprudence in Jefferson Medical College, 1909-1927. Q Author of Compend of Physiology, sixteenth editiong Laboratory Manual of Physiologic 3, Exercisesg Textbook of Physiology, eighth edition. I s 4, Forty-five f f Q 1 X W f 5 X ? ? jf K f 5 ? Z 1 f Z' X4 W , 3 , 5 W f 1 I V ? 1 f 1 X f f' Q. f J f f e f 5 X 5 f f' , W f f f f 1 7 Z f 05 ,f f f 'ffff , ' ff.-, , ' A' 1 , Zi , f fm JOHN H. GIBBON Emerifus Professor of Surgery since l93O MQD., Jefferson Medical College, 1891. Interne. lfolyclinic and 'Pennsylvania Hospitals. :XSISISUIIIY Denmnstrator of Anatomy and later of Osteology in .Tetiersong Cine-ii ot Surgical Clllllc. 1899-19025 Professor of Surgery at Pliilarlelpliia Polyclinic, 1902-19025 Associate Professor of Surgery in Jeiferson, 1903-1907. Professor of Surgery slnce 1901. Surgeon to Jefferson and Pennsylvania I-lospitalsg Consulting Surgeon to Bryn Mawr Hospital. Author of chapters in Saunder's Year Book of Surgery: Buclcs Reference llaiiciboolc of the Medical SCIQIIOFSQ Keen's Surgery and others: recent important COI1tl'1l7lllf1ODS to literature on Gall Bladder, Kidney Surgery and Fractures. Former President of tlie American Surgical Association. member American Medical Association, International Soclety of Surgery. Pliiladelpllia :XCi1llOIHy of Surgery, and President of the College of Physicians of Pliilarlelphia. Colonel. Medical Corps. United States Expeditionary Forces. In active service' jvith Expedi- t10lli1l'y Force' from May, 1917. to January, 1913. XVitl1 American Expedntionary Force, January, 1918, to January, 1919. Forty-si.1: N 'C J 6 , fi N E I Q R J ? l . i I 4 ' tm f 4 fffw ,fm y 1 f 1 Q 4 -, gf 4? ,if fs? 'Kiwi' ,ms ,1., l,1 X N fix lei se sk X1 . .: t N ,. Ni siege X , HOBART AMORY HARVE Professor of Therapeutics, Materia Medica and Diagnosis, l89I B.Sc., University of Pennsylvania. M.D.. ibid., 1884. M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1893. LL.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1921. Demoustrator of Physical Diagnosisg one time Deinonstrator of Experimental Pharmacology, University of Pennsylvaniag Physician to St. Agnes' Hospitalg one time Editor of Phila- delphia Medical Newsg Clinical Professor of Diseases of Children, University of Penn- sylvania, 1890-18913 Professor of Therapeutics, Jefferson Medical College, 1S91g Editor of Therapeutics Gazette, 1891-19273 President of College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1925 to l928g Commander, Medical Corps, U. S. N. R. F., in Wlorld Wa1'. Author: A Textbook of Practical Therapeutics, twentieth eclitiong Practical Diagnosis. ninth ' editiong Practice of Medicine, third editiong System of Therapeutics, third editiong many contributions to medical jourualsg The Fothergillian Prize Essay of the Medical Association of London, 1888: Boylston Prize Essay of Harvard University, 18S9g Cart- wright Prize Essay of Columbia University. 18905 Prize Essay, Royal Academy of Medicine of Belgium, 1889g Fisk Fund Prize of 1885 and 1887. Member of Association of American Physiciansg Philadelphia Pathological Societyg Philadel- phia Neurological Societyg Philadelphia Pediatric Societyg Foundation Member of Ameri- can Physiological Society. f 41 fi f Q F arty-s efvefn f 7 fx Z1 4 X 2 f 5 fi if .4 z J ,, X f 7 f ,S 1 f I f X. 7? ff ! 5 I ff L 1 J y ,f f W s s as JOHN CHALMERS DA COSTA Samuel D. Gross Professor of Surgery M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1885. Resident Physician. Philadelphia Hospital. April, 1885. Chief Resident Physician of Insane Department. Philadelpllia Hospital. Assistant Physician, Pennsylvania. Hospital for the Insane. Registrar fAssistant Surgeonl, Philadelphia Hospital. Chief Assistant of Out-Patient Surgical Department of Jefferson Hospital. Consulting Surgeon to Phoenix- ville Hospital. Surgeon to St. Jose'ph's Hospital. Surgeon, Philadelphia Hospital. Con- sulting Surgeon. St. Joseph's Hospital, Misericordia and Norristown Hospital for Insane. For over thirty years Surgeon to Firemen's Pension Fund of Philadelphia. Conunander of the Medical Corps of the United States Navy. Member of the American Philosophical Society. Am-erican Surgical Society, American Society of Clinical Surgery, American Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Fellow of College of Physicians of Philadelphia. Member of Philadelphia Neurological Society, Philadelphia Academy of Surgery, Phila- delphia ,Pathological Society, Historical Society of Philadelphia, etc. Author of Manual of Modern Surgery, tenth editiong Section on Dissection in Nancred's Anatomyg Collaborator with Hamilton and Packard on Saunder's Medical Dictionary: Editor of Surgical Section of Gould's Year Book: American Editor of ZllC9l'k2ll1Cu'S Operative Surgery, 1899: Editor of seventeenth edition of Gray's Anatomyg Editor with Dr. E. A. Spitzka of eighteenth edition fAmericanl Gray's Anatomyg Author of articles in Hareis American System of Therapeuticsg VVarren's International System of Surgery: lCeen's System of Surgeryg Oschner's System of Surgery, etc., Editor of a Surgical Section in Hare's Progressive Medicine, papers and addresses. Among his addresses are Larry, Crawford Long. Medical Paris in Reign of Louis Phillipe, Then and Now, Trials and Triumphs of the Surgeon, Medicine of Fable, Behind the Office Door, etc. F orty-ei ght l U X 3 re X . em fd ' ,V bb -2 Jef? 7 4 4 A 7 6 . 4 K sr 2 f is fe 44 if if 2 X 55 iQ t 3 f fa if 3 3 f Z, X 'Q s X 5 5 Pk 52 sf if 5 s ti i if 1? A WS We is X 754 Q X I 4 Q . ? Vs? X seg rf? I '. Av .s W K , fi fi YT! :. .f jiisfixi A rss S Q, A : ,r',.1 'i'fsi ,..x rss t ,j Nw, .. X f X1 :gases 1 RANDLE C. ROSENBERGER Professor of Preventive Medicine and Bacteriology, I909 M D., Jefferson Medical College, 189-1. Assistant Demonstrator of Histology under Dr. Charles S. Hearne and Assistant in the Out- patient Children s Department, under Professor E. E. Graham. 1894, in 1895 and 1896, Was Assistant Demonstrator of Normal and Pathological Histology and Assistant in Diseases of the Heart and Lungs, under Professor Mays, at the Philadelphia Polyclinicg in 1897 was appointed Demonstrator of Normal Histology and Bacteriology, 1898-19015 Assistant Pathologist to the Philadelphia General Hospital, under Professor YW. M. L. Coplin, and in 1898 and 1899, Demonstrator of Histology. Morbid Anatomy. and Bacteriologyg in 1900. Demonstrator of Bacteriology and Curator of the Museum of Jefferson Medical Collegeg 1901, Pathologist to St. Joseplfs Hospital, 1902, Associate in Bacteriology, .leliferson Medical Collegeg 1903. Director of the Clinical Laboratory of the Philadelphia General Hospital until 19193 1904, Pathologist to Henry Phipps Institute for the Study, Treatment and Prevention of Tuberculosis: 1904-1908. Assistant Professor of Bacteriology. Jefferson Medical Collegeg 1909. Lecturer on Hyeiene, 1Von1an's Medical College. Philadelphia, then Professor of Preventive Medicine at WOH1HIl,S Medical College until 1915g elected Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology, Jefferson Medical College, 1909 fin 1924 the title was changed to Professor of Preventive Medicine and Bacteriologyj 3 appointed a member of the Milk Commission of the City of Philadelphia by Mayor Reyburn, 1910: member of Pn-efumonia Commission, City of Philadelphia, and Consulting Clinical Pathologist, Philadelphia General Hospital. Member of the College of Physicians, Philadelphiag Philadelphia County Medical Society' State Medical Society of Pennsylvaniag American Medical Associationg Fellow of the American Public Health Association: Society of American Bacteriologists: Pathological Society of Philadelphiag International Association of Medical Museumsg Nu Sigma Nu Fraternityg Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphiag Pennsylvania German Societyg Aesculapian Clubg Medic-al Club. Forty-11in,e af , THOMAS McCRAE Professor of Medicine, I9l2 B.A.. University of Toronto. 1891. M.B.. University of Toronto. 1895. BLD., Tiniversity of Toronto, 1903. M.R.S.C., England, 1900. M.R.C.P., London, 1901. D.Sc.. University of Toronto, 1927. Fellow in Biology. University of Toronto. 1892-18943 Instructor. Associate and Associate Professor of Medicine, the Johns Hopkins Medical School, 1899-1912. Interne, Toronto General Hospital. 1895-1896: Assistant Resident Physician. the Johns Hopkins Hospital. 1896-1901: Resident Physician. the Johns Hopkins Hospital. 1901-19043 Associate in Medicine. the Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1904-19125 Physician to the Jefferson and Pennsylvania Hospitals, Philadelphia. Member, Royal College of Surgeons, England: Fellow. Royal College of Physicians, London: Lunileian Lecturer. Royal College of Physicians. 192-lg Member. American. Canadian and British Medical Associationsg Association of American Physicians and American Philosophi- cal Society. Author tivith VV.illiam Oslerj. Cancer of the Stomach: Author. eleventh edition Osleids Practice' of Medicine: Assistant Edito1'. first editiong Co-editor. second editiong Editor, third edition of Osler's System of Medicine. lfifly 1' mf N A gi 63. 5 X, s 2 ks Q 1 3 .W vt -Q 2? A 7? Q.. ZS' 5 X . VN Q Q if W 55 Q, if if f 2 . . N K ei iXX5 is 'qt VE Q35 s 'Q f .Q 'E .' . NN' YR is S 324 at J. PARSONS SCHAEFFER Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy of the Jefferson ' Medical College, l9l4 M.D.. University of Pennsylvania. 19075 Ph.D.. Cornell University. 19115 M.A. CI-Ion.j, Yale University, 19135 Sc.D. CI-Ionl, Susquehanna University, 1925. Instructor of Anatomy, Assistant Professor of Anatomy. Cornell University. 1907-19115 Assistant Professor of Anatomy, 1911-1912. and Professor of Anatomy at Yale University, 1912-1914. Alpha Omega Alpha, 19065 Sigma Xi, 19085 Fellow. American Association for Advancement of Scienceg American Anatomistsg American Genetic Societyg Academy Natural Sciences, American Medical Association5 College of Physicians. American Philosophical Societyg Corresponding Fellow, American Laryngological Association. etc. Author of the Cavum Nasi in Man, 19105 Outlines and Directions for the Dissection of the Human Body, 19115 The Nose and Olfactory Organ. 19205 The Respiratory Systemg Morris Anatomy, 41923-19275 Problems in Genesis and Development, 19295 Contributor, Special Cytology. 19285 Nose, Throat, and Ear and their Diseases, 19295 many papers and monographs in scientific journals. X e wi ge. X ' Fifty-one ,, is Fe E32 is 5' l , XC. ' IQ? Z 4 A or: ' cc 'Kg - K 1 2 f f E, ,xg 5 X A 45:5 'Sai ' 2 QNX Xxx XX QN se AA'-A44 X ANR XQN XNXNWXMXNXX rs so N X X Q sxxxsx N A X X 4 Qs cw X W r s s. X sus A V X 'rv X ' Q sos sexes X rf- xx .. kv, I gg x 5 H3 Q55 M fi V X S S Ss ' .T J. TORRANCE RUGH Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, I9l8 B.A., Adrian College. Michigan, 1SS9. M.D.. Jefferson Medical College, 1892. Gettysburg College, LL.D., 1930. Taught continuously at Jefferson until 1909: Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Surgery in the W'omen's Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1914-1919. Entered the United States Army Service as First Lieutenantg in 1919 was promoted through a Captaincy and Major-ship and in 1918 was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel. YVas Senior Consulting' Orthopedic Surgeon to all Camps and Base Hospitals in the United States. In October, 1918. was made Director of Orthopedic Instructions in States of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and 'West Virginia. Honorably discharged from the service April 15, 1919. .and commissioned as Colon-el in Medical Otlicers Reserve Corps, U. S. A. Elected to the Chair of Orthopedic Surgery in 1918. Has published many articles on varied orthopedic subjectsg assisted in writing the orthopedic portion in Da Costa's Surgery, eighth edition: wrote the report of prophylactic Work in the late war for the Surgeon-General's History of the YVar, and numerous articles on foot disabilities among soldiers. , 3 is 3' ,.c,.f:'1ff5 !' 4? , 3 V 3 ww: 64.35, , , Fifty-two ? sb A ff X 1 s K X K V , Q et S .2 'X Q ls Ar wr Q E N W ls E J ESQ 3 is is le ,K NN la ,Q , is Y ' if of v if x -3 t ,QW is is .Ap SN sie X I 6 f 1 , ff z ' FRANK C. KNOWLES Professor of Dermatology, l9l9 , M D University of Pennsylvania 1902 :L Formerly Assistant Professor of Dermatology, Medical School University of Pennsylvania and f e Clinical Professor of Dermatology, Wonien's Medical College. Dermatologist to the , fs l Presbyterian. Pennsylvania and Philadelphia General Hospitals. Consulting' Dermatologist to the Church Home for Children, Baptist Orphanage and Southern Home for Destitute Children Member of American Dei-matological Society ' , ' War Record: In active service, May 15, 1917, to May 26. 19195 twenty-three months overseas , service. Dermatologist to British General Hospital No. 16 fPennsylvan1a Base Hospital No. 10D, Le Trevot, France, seventeen monthsg Consultant in Dermatology, American Expeditionary Forces, six months. Started. with the rank of First Lleutenant and went I through the grades of Captain, Major, Lieutenant-Colonel and became Colonel in the il Medical Reserves. Author of book, Diseases of the Skin. YVrote the section on the Diseases of the Skin Affecting the American Expeditionary Forces, for the permanent War records. , 352 7 F-1 tl-fh7 66 '33 . BROOKE M. ANSPACH Professor of Gynecology, I92I Lafayette College. Class of 1896. BLD.. l'nive1-sity of Pennsylvania. 1897. Attending Gynecologist, Jelferson Hospital and Bryn Mawr Hospital. Formerly Associate in Gynecology. University of Pennsylvania. 1910-1921. Assistant Gynecologist. llniversity Hospital, 191-I-1921. Gynecologzist and Obstt-'trician to the Pl1iladelphia Hospital and to the Stetson Hospital. 1914-1921. Treasurer. American Gynecological Society. 1916-1922. Vice-President. American Gynecolofzical Society. 1922, Counsellor. American Gynecological Club, 1924, Chairman. 191-1, and Secretary. 1910-1914. of the Section of Obstetric Gynecology and Abdominal Surgery of the American Medical Association. President of the Obstetrieal Society of Philadelphia. 1925. Board of Governors. American College of Surgeons, 1924-1927: 1930-1933, Member of the John Morgan Society of the College of Physicians of Pliiladelpliia. Author of Texbook, Gynecology, 1921: fourth edition. 1929. Contributor to Martin's Surgical Diagnosis, Hare's Modern Treatment. Kelly-Noble Gynecology and Abdominal Surgery, XVilson's Internal Medicine. Contributions to gynecological and obstetrical literature include: Hemorrhagic llteri g Myopathic Uterine Hemorrhagef'g 'The Torsion of Tubal EI1l211'g8l11QlltSi,1 Teratroma Struinosuin Thyroedeale Ovariin: A Study of the Elastic Tissue in the Parous and the Non-parous Uterusqg The Trend of Modern Obstetricsug Conservative Surgery of the 0varies : Results of the Treatment of Sterilityvg Th-e Early Diagnosis of Adnexal Cancer, etc. Fifi 11-fm: 1' 35 fin 1- , MQ, , . 6' -5 07 ' -.Q Q sf 4 J? 2? eg Xi EM ego ss ,Q z 2, 1 4. is 1 -I W ai 21 4 5 2 Yi f , 2, s 4 W f , lf? 'Y ig 4 if Q 5 , X 3 5 5 s to 2 2 iw 'A , 2 2, sg 4 gi 4 We , , gs f iff! 4 M 4 3, 2 r .sm M. PM V t sl J 24: Q. ff' tk' Sl 7 ,1 its X5 'FP 2 . 1 is eiwww- X fa 5. F'. We ' .lifi fiff yah f - H. E. RADASCH Professor of Histology and Embryology, I92l-22 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1901. B.Sc., University of Iowa, 1895. M.Sc., University of Iowa, 1897. Professor of Inorganic Chemistry and Director of the Chemical Laboratories of the College of Physicians and Surgeons. Keokuk, Iowa. 1S9T-18983 started as-Demonstrator of Histology and Embryology in the Jefferson Medical College in 19013 Assistant Demon- strator of Anatomy for five yearsg Demonstrator of Visceral Anatomy for five years and Assistant Professor of Biology for four years fduring the time that a pre-medical course was given in Jeffersonlg Demonstrator of Histology and Assistant Dfemonstrator of Anatomy in the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery and later Adjunct Professor of Physiology in the same institutiong Instructor in Anatomy for five years in the Penn- sylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. llflemger of the American Association of Anatoinistsg Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity, 19003 Medical ubi. Assisted in two revisions of Gray's Anatomyg Author of Manual of Anatomyg Practical Histologyg numerous articles especially on Muscle Anomalies, Red Blood Cells, Acid Cells of the Stomach, Composition of Compact Bone, the Effect of L-igation of Blood-Vessels Cwith Dr. Schaederj, A Contribution to the Teratology of Domestic Animals, Effect of the Current upon thie' Brain in Legal Electrocution, Superfetatiou, Senility of Boneg contributed fifteen articles to the Reference Handbook of the Medical Sciences. Fifty-fire Q x f l 1 1 X21 lic r 4 A W , 72, .5 c ,Qs A is . X X -sees X X A 4 AM 4 fifgsl XY-X X X XX Nl XYNXWAN v-sxxskxx XX Xexbgeswsxwxsx XY Dx ' l., ' l FIELDING O. LEWIS Y Professor of Laryngology, l924 Ph.G., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy. 1901: MID.. Jelierson Medical College. 1906: Interne at Jefferson Hospital from April. 1906. to April, 19OTg Associated with Dr. D. Braden Kyle. April. 1907, to 1912. Hospital affiliations since graduation from Medicine: served in Nose and Throat Clinic, Jefferson Hospital. as Clinical Assistant, Operating Chief, Chief of Clinic and Assistant Laryngologist: Larynsologist to the Philadelphia General Hospital: Attending Laryngolo- Hist to the Philadelphia General Hospital from 1910-1923: Consulting Laryngologist to the Hospital for Contagious Diseases. Philadelphia. Member of the Philadelphia County Medical Societyg Pennsylvania State Medical Society: American Medical Society: American Congress of Surgeons: American Tiaryngologist 1 Society: American Laryngological. Rhinological and Oto-T.aryng:ological Society. Academy of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngology, College of Physicians. Philadelphiag Philadelphia Laryngologieal Society and Philadelphia Medical Club. Contributions to American literature have been twenty papers. such as Pituitary Tumor. , Operation by Trans-sphenoidal Route, Surgical Treatment of laryngeal Stenosis. Removal of Tonsils and Adenoids under the Local Anesthesia. Transplantation of Cartilage in the Correction of Septal Deformities, Laryngectomy. with Results in Seventeen Cases. The Treatment of Laryngeal Carcinoma. some Problems in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Laryngeal Cancer. The Treatment of Extrinsic Cancer of the Larynx. ' is 11 Fifty-sic: sd S X it ,s ' , - . L tv 'ff W 4 Z O 'S 'si fs 4 f f fcf q hz W 14 X , jg e 1 Q Q 5, :' of or Sli -if fi PASCAL BROOKE BLAN D Professor of Obstetrics, I925 M.D.. Jefferson Medic-al College. 19013 lnterne, Jefferson Medical College Hospital. 1901-10029 Post-graduate work in Vienna. Berlin and London, 19075 Post:-graduate work in Freiberg, Munich and Paris, 1910: Assistant Professor of Gynecology. JeWerson Medical College. 1910-1925: Chief Obstetrician, Jefferson Medical College Hospital, 19253 Consulting Obstetrician to the Preston Retreat. Philadelphia, Consulting Obstetrician and Gynecologist to the Delaware County Hospital. Upper Darby. Penna.g formerly Visiting Gynecologist to St. Josephis Hospital. Philadelphia. and the Philadelphia General Hospital: Consulting Gynecologist to Vineland Training School, Vineland, N. J.: Consulting Gynecologist to Burlington County Hospital. Mt. Holly, N. J.g Consulting Gynecologist and Obstetrician to Newcomb Hospital, Vineland, N. J. Fell ow of the American Association of Obstetricians. Gynecologists and Abdominal Surgeons: American College of Surgeonsg American Medical Association: College of Physicians of Philadelphiag member of the Philadelphia Obstetric-al Society and the Pathological Society of Philadelphiag Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, London. Englandl. Author of Gynecology, Medical and Surgical. 1924, and numerous papers dealing with the various phases of Gynecology and Obstetrics. Fifty-seren f f f f , 4 f X ,f V f P 7 K' . f 1, , V f N 5 C W, x 1 EDWARD A. STRECKER Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases I925 A.B., LaSalle College, 1907: A.M., l.aSalle College, 19115 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1911: Iuternfe'. St. Agnes' Hospital, 1911-1912. Visiting Neurologist, Jefferson Hospitalg Medical Director. Pennsylvania Hospital. Department for Mental and Nervous Diseases. Philaclelphiag Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene. Yale University Medical School: member of the Neurological Staff Philadelphia Hospitalg Staff Neuro-psychiatrist. Pennsylvania Hospital for Sick and Iniured, in Philadelpliiag Chief of Clinic for Mental and Nervous Diseases. Pennsylvania if Hospital, Philadelphiag Consulting Psychiatrist to Childi-en's Bureau, Philadelphia, and to Bryn Mawr College: Attending Neurologist, Germantown Hospital. YVar Service: During the first four and a half months, examined the troops of the Twenty- eighth Division at Camp Hancockg during the remainder of the time Overseas with the igejnty-eiglitli Division as Divisional Neuro-psychiatrist3 promoted to Major. January . ..7, ., .:. Membership :' Active member of the American Neurological Societyg Fellow of the College of Physiciansg 'member of the American Psychiatric Society: member of the New York Society for Clinical Psychiatristsg member of the Philadelphia Neurological Society: Secretary of the Philadelphia Psychiatric Society: member of the Interurban Clinical Club.: Fellow of the American Medical Association' Corresponding member of the Royal Medico-Psychological Association, Great Britain. Clinical Neurologyi' CBlakeston's Son and Compauyl, 19273 Contributor to the Oxford Medical Series and to Musser and Kelley's Text-book of Practical Treatment, and the author of a great number of articles of Neurological and Psychiatric interest. and Mental Hygiene and Problems of Childhood Trainingg Contributor of Section on Ment-il Hygiene, Nelson's System of Medicine g Monograph on Manic-depressis e Psychosis. Mental A Hazards, popular text-book of Psychology to be published by MacMillan Co. Fifty-eight Q I affix 20 5 ' W f- , V S i Ni 5 S 4. Publications: Author of text-book, Practical Clinical Psychiatr-y g author of text-book, . . S R I H . . Cfzffj VW aj SEQ ps. s..- x B or 32? E fi fi-S. is 32. 2 it f. 'fix is Jef? - fs if I ' 'wise . X Kiss --bb - ff, W 5 W: we X me EDWARD L. BAUER Professor of Pediatrics, I926 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1914. Interne, General Service, Germantown Hospitalg Interne, Contagious Diseases. Philadelphia Hospital for Contagious Diseasesg Interne, Pediatrics, Cliildren's Seashore House, Atlantic Cityg Interne, Children's Hospital of the Mary J. Drexel, Philadelphia, Pa. Post-Graduate' Work in Clinics, Boston, New York and Baltimore. Hospital services other than Jeiterson. Consulting Pediatrist to the Germantown Hospitalg Piecliatrist to the Philadelphia Hospital for Contagious Diseases, Memorial Hospital, Roxboro. Pa. Formerly Assistant Pediatrist to the Children's Hospital of the Mary J. Drexel and the Philadelphia General Hospital. Immunologist to the Bureau of Health, Departinent of Public Health, Philadelphia. Member: College' of Physicians of Philadelphiag Ainerican Medical Associationg Pennsylvania Medical Societyg Philadelphia County Medical Society, Medical Club of Philadelphiag Philadelphia Pediatric Society, President, 1925-1927. Menibeil, Society of American Teachers of Pediatrics. Publications: Numerous contributions to current medical literature. Fifty-nine l I 7 ? X 4! , ff f V 7 7 Q X ff 1 2 X A f W 2 A , f ff J if if X , 1 W 1 ,f I f f s 1 J X I ef, , , 15715 ,ow J. EARL THOMAS Professor of Physiology, l927 B.S., M.D., St. Louis University School of Medicine, 19183 M.S., 192-1. Assistant in Physiology, St. Louis University School of Medicine, 1914-1918. Instructor in Physiology, 1918-1920. Appointed Assistant Professor of Physiology in 1920. Associate Professor of Physiology, YVest Virginia University, School of Medicine. 1920-1921. Returned to St. Louis University as Associate Professor of Physiology in 1921, and served until 1927. Appointed Professor of Physiology in the J6i:i!61'S011 Medical College, 1927. Member of the American Physiological Society, Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics..Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Philadelphia College of Physicians, Physiological Society of Philadelphia. American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, Alpha Omega Alpha and Phi Chi Medical Fraternities. Publications comprise reports of original investigations in the fields of gastro-intestinal physiology, physiology of smooth muscle, the autonomic nerves, and Pharmacology. Szkvty , af, 6 1 57 if if ,K fl EW' 1 ff Q fs' 5 'Fics if 4' V x s X Q fi il: t ,.r. ., V ,Mt sr? V sz is we . . as . M... s sf.: rx t a ' 3 XX R xX MQ- if VIRGIL HOLLAND MOON Professor of Pathology, I927 A. B., M, Sc., Kansas State University. M.D., Rush Medical College, 1913 . . Research Fellow, John McCormic Institute, 1911-19145 Chief Pathologist, Indianapolis City Hospital, 1914-1922g Pathologist, Indiana University Hospitals. 1914-l927g Professor of Pathology at Indiana University School of Medicine, 1914-1927g Representative for U. S. A. International Association for Geog. Pathology. Member of Sigma. Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha, Society of American Bacteriologists, American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists, Philadelphia Pathological Society, Fellow, American Medical Association, College of Physicians of Philadelphia, etc. Publications: A number of articles embodying the results of experiments in the field of experimental pathology, infection and immunity. Siarty-one XR Nags Q 4 , L W7 I' ,4 ,, isa C54 Milam. CHARLES E. G. SHANNON Professor of Ophthalmology, I927 A.B., Colby College, 1899. M.D., Jellerson Medical College in 1902. Iuterne in Pottsville Hospital, 1002-19033 pursued course of training in Oplitlialmology at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Inlirmary, 1903-1904. Clinical Assistant, Chief Clinical Assistant and Assistant Ollllfllilllll0l0glSf, respectively, at Jelferson Medical College Iflospital since 151-U4. Instructor, Demonstrator, Associate, Professor of O1lllfll2ll1ll0lOgX', Jefferson Medical College, successively since 1904. Attending Oplitlialniologist, lVar Veterans' llospital. No. -10, Grays Ferry Road. since 19205 ODl1lTllt1ll'1'10lOgIlSl'. Presbyterian Orplinnageg in Medical Service of United States Army from September. 1917, to February, 1019. Member of State and Ifhilaflelpliia County Medicfnl Societies: College of Pliysieians, American Oplitlialinologieal Societyg American Ai'iUlE1llj' of Oplitlialniology and Oto-Laryugologyg Medlcal Club and American Medical Association. Author of numerous papers presented at the Section on Oplitlialrnologyg College of Physiciansg State Medical and American Oplitlialinologic-al Societies, Ni.:-ly-fu o I M, 1 Y :S I 7 72 N mee 4 ff? A , -Sir 4 I is X .,QQ we ies vs li PW so Q, N5 rss .1 '55 w w 9 K In if , WILLIS F. MANGES Professor of Roenfgenology, l929 M-D-, -Teiferson Medical College, 19035 SGD., Gettysburg College, 1928. Interne, Jeiterson Hospital, 1903-19043 Roentgenologist at Jelilerson Hospital, 190-L, to the present timeg formerly Roentgenologist, Bryn Mawr Hospital and Philadelphia General Hospital. Member of W, Keen Society during' college courseg first member, A. O, A. Honorary Fraternity at Jeffersong Honorary member, Alpha Kappa Kappag Lieutenant-Colonel, Medical Corps during the late warg Commanding Oliicer, Camp Greenleaf School of Roentgenologyg member of County Medical Societyg American Medical Associationg College of Physicians and Surgeons, Philadelphia: American Roentgen-Ray Societyg Philadelphia Roentgen-Ray Societyg The American College of Physicians. Publications: Numerous papers such as The Roentgen-Ray Diagnosis of Non-Opaque Foreign Bodies in the Air Passages? Peanut Kernels in the Lungsng Atelectasis as a Roentgen- Ray Sign of Foreign Body in the Air Passages g and Improvement in the Roentgen-Hay Diagnosis of Gall-Bladder Diseases. fliriy-ilu-ee Si L 1' 1 72 ' , ,Q J x 1 Ni? f Z X X ff f 7 7 f f f ff X 5 f f l X l f Q ,X , if ' f , if lf, , f f X, A f K X L X , , 1 I Y 1 X X f!f f , f if, ff , , uit' ,-7 gihirfi? je ! f 1 JOSEPH CLARENCE KEELER Professor of Otology, l93O MD., Jefferson Medical College, 1896. Professor of Otology. Jellei-son Medical Collegeg Attending Otologist. Jefferson Hospital: Attending Oto-Laryngologist, Gerinantown Hospital, Pliiladelphiag Consulting Oto-Laryn- ?'?lOglSf, lqgttstown Hospital, Pottstown, Pa.g Consulting Oto-Laryngologist, Newcomb ' ospital, ineland, N. J. Member of American Otological Societyg American Laryngological, Rliinological and Oto- Laryngological Societyg American College of Surgeonsg American College of Physicians and Surgeonsg Fellow of the College' of Physicians, Philadelphia. Pa.g Member of American Academy of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngology: Philadelphia County Medical societyg1Pennfygv:'1nia State Medical Societyg American Medical Associntiong Philadelphia aryngo ogica ociety. Si.1-ty-four f lx K 'V ,Rf f s lv if iff 1 f 2 E X f 4 iiifkxxw 2 fe Wy C 4, we X. Q , X55 Xi Xi X Uzfwafi? U' THOMAS C. STELLWAGEN Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery ,H Urological Surgeon, .lellierson Hospitalg formerly Attending Urological Surgeon, Philadelphia 1-,L General Hospitalg Attending Urological Surgeon, Jewish Hospital, Philadelphia. Member: Philadelphia College of Physiciansg Academy of Surgeryg Philadelphia Urological Society, Philadelphia County Medical Societyg Pennsylvania State Medical Associationg American Medical Associationg Medical Clubg Philadelphia Academy of Surgeryg Patho- logical Society. Major in the XVnrld NVar, attached to Base Hospital 383 was temporarily detached and went to A.E.F. with Oral and Plastic Special Unit. Served with the British at Queen's Hos- pital, Sidcup, England. Transferred from there to Toul Evacuation Hospital No. 1 for battle casualty surgical instruction. Sent from there in command of surgical team attached to th-e Third Division in Cllateau-Thierry Otifensive. v X X C 47 . X Siavty-five .Um l 1 , l f f f W f 1 if f f 1 I f eftimif, f 1 ' f f W f !' W W X N Se S t x LOUIS H. CLERF Professor of Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy, l93O 35 Graduated, Jefferson Medical College, 1912. .lellierson Medical College Hospital, 1912-1914. E-3 Chief Resident, Jefferson Medical College' Hospital, 1914-1015. Assistant Professor, K5 Bronchoscopy and lflsophagoscopy, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Pennf if Sylvania. Hospital Connections: Attending' Bronchoscopist. .Chevalier Jackson Bronchoscopic Clinic, Jefferson llospitalg Bronchoscopist. Pennsylvania Hospital, Germantown Hospital, Jewish Hospital, St. Josephs Hospital. Societies: Philadelphia County Medical Society: Pennsylvania State Medical Societyg American Medical Associationg Philadelphia Laryiieological Soc-ietyg Fellow. College of Phvsicians, Phl12lfl01Dl1iRZ Pathological Society of Pliiladelphiag American Bronchoseopic Society: American College of Surgeons: Xinerican Lafryngological Associationg American Laryn- ,Q gological. Rlnnologic-al and Otological Societyg American Academy of Ophthalmology gud Oto-Laryngologyg American Association of Thoracic Surgeonsg Association Military 1 urgeons. Simi: -size f ,. . A J , sw, Si PT. A if R W, ,S ks Q sy 'free N -5225 4 t? I 'Z be Q 45 'S 11 to V fi X 1? , 'E 5 ,N if S 5 3 N 1 4 ai Q 7 Q Q e 2 4 Q XX Q , 2 2 df 2 S ,K 5 X 2 f it 1 5 X2 3, A l V . 1 1, VQQ7 Ja f s 4 Q2 FW ff ' zt f f M ' K ii as Q Q 5 X SEX. -N ,r 1 if s EDWARD J. KLOPP Q? Professor of Surgery, I930 1 Philadelphia College of Pharinacyg Jeiferson Medical College, 1906. Professor of Surgery, Jefferson Medical College. Surgeon, Jeiferson Hospital. Surgeon, Pennsylvania Hospital, and Chief of Out-Patient Clinic. Surgeon, Delaware County and Memorial Hospitals, Consulting Surgeon. Newcomb Hospital, Vineland, N. J.g Kent Hospital, Dover, Delaware, and the Girard College. Memberg College of Physicians of Pliiladelphiag Philadelphia Academy of Surgeryg American College of Surgeonsg and Anierican Medical Association. Author: Re-infusion of Bloodg Carcinoma of the Lactating Breastg Imperforate Rectum with Vesical Outletg Acute Indainination of Meckel's Diverticuluing Sarcoina of the Sciatic Nerveg Reconstruction of Cornnion Bile Duct' Simultaneous Bilateral Mammary Cancer, Stewart Operationg Amniotic Herniag Non-rotation of the Colon and Surgical Dreatrnent of Gastric and Duodenal Ulcers, etc. 1 1 4 1 1 1 i r QW ir? 4 ,, W Q7 'Z 1 Q 7 i N , 2' 5 ? l WZ f 5 A 9 2' 4 'S r f f if V 4 z Z5 5 if ,Z . if 5 5 I 5 , i f 2 m , 7 j I . f , ,f 7 2 ff E, 3 f C Z 1 AQ Z Y? l , f f I i 'A 1 ,, f ,L f If V M . v ff f K or 4 - , ,f V-,-' r , lS1:L'f'I-861,611 'f N 5 .N i X N79 MW4 QW Sig? if k , 6? , SZ V f 2 fig? gf X v If I ww 7:4 fi , . i, 26513 42374552 ' 142 W I Z Q -XX Q ox X X XS X N l X ' ' ' QA Xl t JZWMALM, THOMAS A. SHALLOW Professor of Surgery, I930 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1011. Professor of Surgery, Jelliorsoii Medical College. Surgeon, JellSe'rson Hospital. Attending Surgeon, Philadelpliia General Hospital. Fellow, Amorican College' of Surgeonsg Fellow, Pliilaclelpliiu College of Pliysic-inns: Phila- delphia County Meilicul Society: Fellow, Plxilzldclpliin Acnclelliy of Surgeonsg American Medical Associationg Captain, U. S. M. C. Author of many papers on surgicfzll topics. Sixty-eiglat 5? Q S r 3 if y :NY ,ig w ' ' 6 1' 4' fy v-.52 . X Q S Q . 2 .. 1. P? f 5 if 5 . 9? fi? ? , :S ' 3 6 W '? 5 -i H t mei MQ? eff Ms ' -QWPZQQ4 1 . W SN Ari. ,. A X 2 X 585 N xr A ins .. :ex FRED H. MILLS Professor of Military Science and Tactics, i924 M.D., Jedferson Medical College. 1894. Demonstrator of Chemistry, Medical Department, Niagara University. Buffalo, N. Y., 1891- 1893 and 1895-18983 Assistant to the New York State Dairy Chemist for VVestern New York, at Buffalo, from 1895 to 18975 Visiting Physician, Harbor Dispensary, Buifalo, N. Y., 1896-1898. Army Service: First Contract Surgeon, United States Army, August 22. 1898, to June 30, 1899, in tl1e Spanish-American VVar5 served in Cuba at Pinar del Rio as Medical Supply Otlicer and Operating Surgeon for the Second Division, December 6, 1898, to June 15. 1899. Returned to private practice, June 30, 1899. Acting Assistant Surgeon. United States A1'my. January 1, 1901, to April 15, 19035 on duty in the Philippine Islands during Philippine lnsurrectiong Contract Surgeon, United States Army, January 16, 1905, to July 27, 1908. , Commissioned Service in the United States Armyg First Lieutenant. Medical Reserve Corps. United States A1'my, July 7, 19085 assigned to active duty July 28, 19083 Major. Medical Officers' Reserve Corps, June 30, 19175 First Lieutenant, Medical Corps., United States Army, July 15, 19173 accepted August 11, 19175 Captain, Medical Corps, United States Army, August 3, 19185 Major, Medical Corps, United States Army, August 3, 1918. Service during World VVlar: Adjutant, Base Hospital, Fort Bliss, Texas, June 15. 1917. to December, 19175 Assistant to the Department Surgeon, Southern'Department. Fort Sam Houston, Texas, December 16, 1917. to September 15, 19185 Camp Surgeon. Camp Henry Sanitation, Infantry Oiiticers' School at Camp Lee, Virginia tfor emergency otlicersl, March 1. 1919, to May 30, 19195 Assisting Commanding Otlicer, U. S. General Hospital No. 42, Spartenburg, N. C., May 31, 1919. to September 30, 1919. Member: Association of Military Surgeons of the United States: Fellow. American Medical Association: Alpha Omega Alpha Fraternity, Phi Chi Fraternity and American YVl1ig Society CPrincetonJ. Sixrfy-n ine 1 l 1 l W. ...Q 'fi We 4 ll I I 0 il l 1 , , f ij K f 5 Z 7 12 la .. t l, f U f Knox. Kentucky, September 16, 1918, to March 1, 19195 Professor ofl Hygiene and Q f I ff., W V if f, M Q. 1 W , of XX S X R Eff ' O X u N X X f X N 3 A , JY ilk NORRIS W. VAUX Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, l925 , M.D.. lfniversitv of r'0ll!1Sj'lV2ll1i2l. 1905. Studied : Dubin University, Rotunda Hospital, I Q Dublin, Ireland. Obstetrician, Philadelpliia Lying-in Hospitalg Clinical Professor of Obstetrics, Jefferson. Lectures in Operative Obstetrics Pvelitis of Preffnancv. Toxemizls of Pregnancy, Placenta IJ A I . 1 . tv . , raevia. Member of Council, College of Physicians. Honorary Surgeon, First Troop, Pimilaflcelpliiu City Cavalry: Life Member of Zoological X - Society, Philadelphia Zoo. Author: Edgz1r's Obstetrics, 1926. f 9 Y fr! , Q2 .Sevvrmly 3 O 2 , f l I i f l l l .. , 4 l ' r 1 . FREDERICK JOHN KALTEYER ' Clinical Professor of Medicine, I927 1 f I M,D.. Gr1'HClll21tGC'iIf1'0IT1 the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania in 1895, and It Til from the Jelterson Medical College in 1899. 7 f Interne at the German Hospital, 'Philadelphia. For several years he was connected with the Department of Pathology. Jetterson Medical College, and during that time was Assistant 55? Pathologist to the Philadelphia General Hospital. I-le was Physician to the Frankford X Hospital and to th-e St. Mar-y's Hospital. Philadelphia. During the late war, he was Chairman of the Medical Advisory Board. Jetlerson Hospital. 1 Clinical Professor of Medicine, Jefferson Medical Colleffeg Assistant Physician to the Jelterson Y Medical College Hospital and Consulting Physicianbto the Pottstown Hospital. Lieutenant- A Commander in the Medical Corps, United States Naval Reserve. Honorary member of P the Inter-State Post-Graduate Assembly of North America. A Fellow of the College of Physicians, Philadelphia. A member of the James Aitkens Meigs' Medical Association, the American Medical Association. the Philadelpliia County Medical Society, the Pathologi- cal Society of Philadelphia, and the American Therapeutic Society. ' ' Zi ,,'V , eteu y-one ' E. J. G. BEARDSLEY Clinical Professor of Medicine, l927 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1902g Interne, Philaclelphia General and Municipal Hospitals, 1902-19043 Externe, East London Hospital, 19053 Assistant Visiting Physician, Jefferson Medical College Hospitalg Chief Cliiiical Assistant, Medical Dispensary A and B. Jefferson Ilospitalg Licentiate of Royal College of Physicians. London, 19053 Lieutenant-Colonel in s- the United States Expeditionary Forcesg Consultant to Veterans Bureau Hospital. .-f- , Fellow, American College of Physicians. Q cf W i 5 fi N4 B 'XX ad l Ps R 1 5 5 ! lg? :Q s 2 l V39 JJWQ , Q Selienty-tivo , 7' 1' 4 S -so ,K,.. 5 :xx Xi: Q. 5-5: ev K A ELMER HENDRICKS FUNK Clinical Professor of Medicine and Therapeutics, l'-727 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1908, Interne, Jefferson Medical College Hospital, 1908-1909g Interne, Philadelpliia General Hospital for Contagious Diseases, 1910g Chief Resident Physician, Jefferson Hospital 1910-19115 Medical Director of the Jefferson Hospital, 1912g Medical Director and Physician ' Charge of the Department of Diseases of the Chest, of the Jefferson Hospital, 1913 to 19273 .Assistant Physician to the Jefferson Hospitalg Physician to the Pennsylvania Hospitalg Visiting Physician to the White Haven Sanatoriuing Consulting Physician, Rush Hospital, Philadelphia. Member, Association of American Physiciansg Fellow of the College of Physicians of Phila- delphiag Pennsylvania State 'Medical Societyg Pathological Society of Philadelphia' National Tuberculosis Associationg Pennsylvania Tuberculosis Societyg American College of Physicians. Author of Oxford Monograph on Diagnosis and Treatment of Chronic Diseases of the Lungs 119295, and of various articles in Textbooks and Medical Journals. 17 i Z in f fi f I 1 I I f ' 1 ,Q 5 1, f 7 4 13 i 1 W f if , if 1 A if , 4 f , af , Seiefzty thice we CHARLES FRANCIS NASSAU Clinical Professor of Surgery, I930 M.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1891. M.D.. Jefferson Medical College, 1906. Resident Physician, 'Presbyterian Hospital, 1891-18925 Assistant on Surgery Service, Johns Hopkins Hospital. 1894-18953 Surgeon to St. Joseplfs Hospital and Girard Collcgeg Chief Surgeon to Frankford Hospitalg Assistant Surgeon, Jefferson Hospitalg Consulting Sur- geon to Pottstgfn Hospital, Pottstown, Pa.g Newcomb Hospital. Vineland, N. lg Phila- delphia Unit. Shi-in-er's Hospital for Crippled Children and Mt. Sinai Hospital. Philadelphia. Member: Philadelphia County Medical Society: Pennsylvania State Medical Societyg American Medical Association: American College of Surgeons: College of Physicians of Philadelphiag Philadelphia Academy of Siu-geryg Sydenham Medical Coterieg Alpha Mu Pi Omega. Chief of Surgical Division Base Hospital, Unit No. 38, in TVlorld YVar, with rank of M2 jor. Ill service fifteen nionthsg A.E.F. Lt.-Col.. Med. O.R.C'. Seventy-fozw 77 i S, 3 ,gl lf., M we W, f B w a s ff!! i ? 4 Qs S' , se- W .4 . ' fe BA X V Q sv as ? Q J 1 . L? ai 5 5 Z au 2 27 3 7 , 'bf-'YW Pla. 35 X- ' Q Psi Y A ' iff me f. . 725 if 453 L: cw - W, ARTHUR E. BILLINGS Clinical Professor of Surgery, I93O Davidson College, N. C.g M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1906. Assistant Professor of Surgery, Jefferson Medical Collegeg Assistant Surgeon, Jefferson Hos- pitalg Attending Surgeon, Pennsylvania I-lospitalg Attending Surgeon, Bryn Mawr Hospital. Member: Pennsylvania State Medical Societyg American Medical Associationg Fellow, College of Pliysiciansg Philadelphia Academy of Surgeryg Fellow, American Surgical Associationg Societe Internationale de Chirurgie. Author: Surgery in Breast Infectionsg Surgical Signilicance of Abdominal Paing Diabetes and Surgeryg The Surgical Management of Gall Bladder Diseasesg Primary Cutaneous Diph- tlierial and Pseudo-Diplitlierial Infectiong Tumors of Lateral Aberrant Tliyroidsg Abscess of the Spleen, etc. v V A 7 159 M, Y y P Serenity-1?-ue li if j . 93 i 41 'QQ fi! ilu Cr: 1 bi 4 rl mrreacnx SP' 2 f. , 3 E Q. , l V P 6 , ,V ' al N . ga- 1. W, Q22 2 5 QI: , ,122 Z 2 V1 we ze Q2 Q25 ? 3 f 7' ? is e 7 ef 1 9 .4 3, ff f fl l fi? g, gs 9 X V ,K M, CHARLES R. HEED Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology, I930 M.D., Jehiersou Medical College, 1903. Interne Pottsville Hospital. Formerly Associate Professor of Ophthalnlology at the Phila- delphia Polyclinic and School for Post-Graduates in Medicineg Assistant Surgeon TVills Eye Hospital, 1911-19143 Consulting Ophthalrnologist to the Pennsylvania Training School at Elwyug Ophthalxnologist to Girard College. Member: American Ophthalmological Society: American Academy of Ophthalmology and Oto-Laryngologyg College of Physicians, Philaclelpliiag American Medical Societyg State Medical Society of Pennsylvaniag Philadelphia County Medical Society. Seveflty-sim Si 95 5 s V : , Q f 1 if : ,, Q 4 ag e. ff Q N S is X l a 7 S N 'X N? :QS ,KX Y . 1? 1 X w lim 4 if if f 'ff 1' SE i at 7 45 ? . f if 5 f 931 Q1 2? Qi 294 if Za fm Q 2 5 5 sg X i e Ss X Xi . X Aw. si Ks: X Q E. QUIN THORNTON Associa+e Professor of Maieria Medica, I900 M.D.. Jeiferson Medical College, 1800. Demonstrator, Materia Medica, Jeffer- son Medical College, 1890 to 19005 Assistant Visiting Physician, Jeffer- son Hospitalg Associate Visiting Physician, Pennsylvania Hospital. Author of Manual of Prescription Xvlfltillgj Thornton's Medical Form- ularyg Thornton's Materia Medica, and many other journal articlesg American Editor of Tirrard on Treatment and Mitchel Bruce on Treatment. Mveinberz American Medical Associa- tiong Philadelphia County Medical Societyg Pathological Society and College of Physicians of Philadel- phia. is X s s Ya? - JOHN M. FISHER Associaie Professor of Gynecology, l9l0 M.I.l., .Tefferson Medical College, 1884. Resident Physician, ileliferson Hos- pital, 1884. First Assistant Surgi- cal Clinic, Jelferson Hospital, 1835. Assistant Ileinonstrator of Anatomy and Surgery, Jefferson Medical Col- lege. Chief of Gynecological Clinic, 1893 to 1910. V 'Assistant Professor Gynecology, 1902 to 1910. Asso- ciate Professor of Gynecology since 1010. Assistant Attending Surgeon, Jeffer- son Hospital, 1900: Visiting Gyne- eologist to Philadelphia General Hospital, 180-1 to 10235 Senior Gynecologist to St. Agnes' Hospital since 19065 Consulting Gynecologist to Pottstown Hospital, 19165 Medi- eal Director, Emergency Hospital No. 3, Philadelphia, 1918. Member of American Medical Asso- c-iationg American College of Sur- geonsg College of Physicians of Philadelphiag Philadelphia Medical Uluhg President of the Medical Club of Philadelphia, 1930: Sydenham Medical Coterieg Philadelphia Oh- stetrical Society QPresident for two termsl. Y rel . if X M V Serenity-scren ff ,R S 'Ta if fd SAMUEL A. LOEWENBERG Associate Professor of Medicine, 1929 BLD.. Medico - Chirurgical College, Philadelphia, Pa. Post-graduate work in Vienna, London and Parisg Assistant Pi-ofifssol' Physical Diagnosis, Meclico-Chirur- gical College to 19153 Assistant Surgeon CClinicalJ, under Professor Francis Stewart, 1903-19011 Chief of the Out-Patient Department thledicall, Medico-Chirurgical Hos- pital, 190-1-19123 Assistant Visiting Physician. Medico-Chirurgical Hos- pital, 1907-19173 Assistant Pro- fessor, Physical Diagnosis. Univer- ,sity of Pennsylvania, 1915-19173 Associate in Clinical Medicine, Jef- ferson Medical College, 191.7-1920: Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine, Jelferson Medical College, 1920g Assistant Professor of Medi-- cine, 1929: Assistant Visiting Physi- cian. Jefferson l-Iospitalg Visiting Physician, Philadelphia General Hospital, Nortliern Liberties Hos- pital, and the Eagleville Sanator- iuni for Consumptives, Eagleville, Pa. Author of various articles to medical journals and the textbook, Diagnostic Methods and Interpre- tations in Internal Medicine. MARTIN E. REHFUSS Assistant Professor of Medicine M.D., University of Pennsylvania, 19095 University of Pennsylvania Hospital, 1910-1911. American Hos- pital, Paris, 1911-1912. Pasteur Insti- tute, Paris, 1911. Spent one year in Germany and Austria, 1912-1913. Captain, U, S. Army during the war. Member: American Gastroenterolog- ical Associationg American College of Physieiansg Philadelphia Patho- logical Societyg Philadelphia Pedia- tric: Societyg County Medical So- ciety, A. M. A. Author of Diagnosis and Treatment of the Stomach. Contributor to Oxford Medicineg Progressive Medi- cineg Cecil Textbook of Medicineg Inventor ot the Rehfuss Tubeg author of articles on the' stomach cloudenum biliary tract, and bowel. Member ot Art Club: Merion Cricket Cluhg Penn Athletic Club. Seventy-eight 4 x 5 17.2 4 iv 'fi 2 E 5 5 X 2 4 f is 7 'ri X Q Q i Q 3 X 3 Q s 2 vi X F Z f ll 3 f Q a fs Z 3 x X Q 1 P Q 4 2 J, Sy W ff L' A fees X. s -vs --we X - . Q. 'ri if fs 3. .:' 5 'Kg .,-5 I X NICHOLAS A. MICHELS Associate Professor of Anatomy, l9Z9 MA., University of Minnesota, 1920. Louvain University, Belgium, Biological studies, Puget Sound Biol. Station, 1921, Naples, 1923. Pale- ontology expedition, Gerolstein, Ger- many, 1922. Sarbonne attendance 1923. Private student under Fer- rata. University of Sienna, Italy, 19233 under Maximow, University of Chicago, 1925. Assistant Professor of Biology and Histology, St. Louis University Medical School, 1926-275 Associate Professor of Anatomy, Creighton University Medical College, 1927- 1929. Sigma Xi, American Association for Advancement of Scienceg American Anatomistsg Societe scientitique de' Bruxellesg Societe d'Anthropologie de Bruxellesg Nebraska Academy of Scieneeg Penna. Academy of Sci- enceg Physiological Society of Phila- delphia. Publications: Monograph on the Mast cell, original investigations on round cell infiltrations in .enceph- alitis, poliomyelitis, and lues. Vari- ous other articles on liaematological subjects. GEORGE A. ULRICH Associate Professor of Obstetrics M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1901. B.S.. Lebanon Vall-ey College, 1897. M.S., Lebanon Valley College. 15309. Instructor, Assistant, Deinonstrator, Deinonstrator and Lecturer in Ob- st.e'tr1cs. Jefteirson Medical College since graduatioii. Chief Obstetrical Department, North lVestern General Hospital since 12326. Formerly connected with the Poly- clinic Hospital. M-ember: County and State Medical Association: Obstetrical Society of Pliiladclpliia. Author of numerous papers on obstet- rical subjects. . 1 Seventy-iriiic W 1 N W Z Q S X ,. ss is s X, XE X ig 1 ARTHUR J. DAVIDSON Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, I9 l 7 M.D., .Teiiierson Medical College, 1907. Assistant Orthopedic Surgeon to Jef- ferson Medical College Hospital, and Chief of Orthopedic Out-Patient Department, Consulting Orthopedic Surgeon to North American Sana- torium, Atlantic City, N. J.g Hebrew Orphans' Home. German- town, American Hospital for Dis- eases of the Stomachg Wfest Phila- delphia Hospital for lVom-eng Betty Bacharach Home for Afliicted Chil- dren, Longport, N. J.: Jewish Sea- side Home for Invalids, Ventnor, N. J.g Emergency Hospital No. 3, Philadelphiag and Medical Advisory Board, Orthopedic Surgeon to Elkls Crippled Children Clinic, Reading, Pa., Pottsville, Pa., Atlantic City, N. J.g Lieutenant-Commander, U. S. Naval Reserve. Formerly Orthopedic Surgeon to the Jewish Hospital. Lebanon Hospital, Mt. Sinai Hospital, and Assistant Orthopedic Surgeon to th-e Phila- delphia General Hospital. JOSEPH O. CRIDER Assisia ni' Dean Associate Professor of Physiology, I'-730 M.D., University of Virginia, 1912. Assistant in Physiology, University of Virginia, 1911-19125 Instructor in Physiology and Pharmacology, Uni- versity of Virginia, 1912-19133 As- sociate Professor of Physiology and Histology, University of Mississippi, 1913-19165 Professor of Physiology and Histology and Assistant Dean, University of Mississippi School of Medicine, 1916-19243 Dean and Professor of Physiology. University of Mississippi School of Medicine, 1924-1930. Member of American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg Phys- iological Society of Philadelphiag Alpha Omega Alpha: Theta Kappa Psig Rover tlfniversity of Vir- ginial. ' X V .egg Z P SE '7 W . we ,. X . sf, ,Y 5 e Ai S. ace, we 91 X A 4 'FS D? gi s X 7 S 5 ks is fz K s s 5 1 5 ' 2 if 3 7g if f 1 5 2 1 f l M 52 Ze, we 11-0,1-fy s f s . . X.. , 121 7 if QS? sr a 2. N tt Q S. F. GILPIN Associate Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases, I908 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1396. Interne and Assistant Chief Resident Physician, Philadelphia General Hospital, 1896 to 19005 Assistant Visiting Neurologist. Philadelphia General Hospital, 1908, to 191Gg Clinical Professor, Nervous and Mental Diseases, Medical Depart- ment, Temple University, 1906 to 19085 Chief Clinical Assistant. Nervous Clinic, Jefferson Hospital. 1913 to 19263 Assistant Neurologist, Jeiferson Hospital, Visiting Psychia- trist at the Philadelphia General Hospital. Member: Philadelphia County Medi- cal Societyg Philadelphia Psychia- tric Societyg ex-President, Philadel- phia Neurological Societyg Member, Pennsylvania State Medical Soci- etyg American Medical Association, American Neurological Association and American Psychiatric Associa- tion. Consulting Neuro-Psychiatrist. State Hospital and Neuro-Psychiatrist, gloses Taylor Hospital. of Scranton, a. . s. si.: .1 RALPH L. ENG-LE Assistant Professor of Pediatrics l5.A., Lebanon Valley College. 1905. M.A., Yale, 1906, M.D., Johns Hop- kins, 1910. Medical 1'-louse Oflicer. Bellevue' Hos- pital, New York, 1911-1913. Vol- untary Assistant, Childrenis Clinic, University of Viennag First Medi- cine Clinic, University of Berling Associate Pediatrician, Jefferson Hospital, 1922. Member of Philadelphia Pediatric So- cietyg Philadelphia County Medical Societyg Pennsylvania State Medi- cal Societyg American Medical As- sociation. Author of numerous papers on Pedia- trics read before the State Medical Society. and the Philadelphia Pedia- tric Society. Eighty-one I I QW Q ., i 1 i i 'f ' 7 lv 7 Z f I 1 1 4 7 J ? y , J W 1 f f ff 1 I X f f I 1 f, ff, fi f , 1 ,X ,, , V N X.- MICHAEL A. BURNS Assistant Professor of Nervous and Mental Diseases, I926 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1907. Interne, St. Agnes Hospital, Philadel- phia, 1907-1908. Chief of the Nerv- ous and Mental Clinic of the Jeffer- son Hospital. Lecturer in Neuro- pathology, Jefferson Medical Col- lege. Visiting Neurologist to the Philadelphia General Hospital. Neuropsychiatrist to St. Mary's Hospital, Consulting Physician to the Mental Hygiene Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital. ' VVar Service: Major in the Wforld YVa1'. Neuropsychiatrist to Base Hospital 38 Uelferson Unitj from December, 1917, to December, 1918. Membership: American Neurological Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Medical As- sociation, Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, Presi- dent Philadelphia Neurological So- ciety, 1927, Philadelphia Psychiatric Society, Philadelphia County Medi- cal Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, Pennsylvania Men- tal Hygiene Committee of the Pub- lic Charities Association, Phi Chi Fraternity, Medical Club of Phila- delphia. Author of various papers on neu- rology. EDWARD F. CORSON Assistant Professor of Dermatology, I925 Certificate of Proficiency in Biology University of Pennsylvania, 1903 M.D., 1906. Resident Physician, Episcopal Hospi- tal, Philaclelphia. 1906 to 1009 Medical Corps, U. S. Army, 1917- 1919. Served in A. E. F. Assistant Dermatologist and Clinical Assismnt in Skin ispen . Q' ' f D Q - sary, Jefferson Hospital. Dermatolo- gist to Children's and Chestnut Hill Hospitals. Consulting Dermatolo- gist to Pennsylvania Institute for the Deaf, Chestnut Hill, and the Home for Feeble-minded at Elwyn. Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. D-erinatologist to Vxfelfare Bureau, Department of Public Safety, Philadelphia. Eighty-two Chief S 2 1 .Lf , ' SI, is 1 5? sf 2 2 36 ix if it Q. iv yt 2 l 'R li? i l l 5 .7 I' yes A f. 2. 'o'. if ibn 95 , ' ,gigs ,. , -,L -. i as XRS so sgf WILLIARD HEIL KINNEY Assistant Professor of Genito-Urinary Surgery M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 1906. Assistant Attending Genito-Urinary Surgeon to the Jefferson Hospitalg Genito-Urinary Surgeon to the Philadelphia General Hospitalg For- merly Consulting Surgeon to the Eastern State Penitentiai-y, Phila- delphia 5 Lieutenant - Commander, U.S.N,R. Member: American Medical Associa- tiong Pennsylvania State Medical Societyg Philadelphia County Medi- cal Societyg American Urologic So- cietyg Philadelphia Urologic So- cietyg Medical Club of Philadelphiag J. Aitkens Meigs' Medical Society. Author of many papers and scientihc contributions to current literature pertaining to Genito-Urinary Sur- gery and Clinical Urology. s JOSEPH MICHAEL LOONEY Assistant Professor of Physiological Chemistry, I926 A.B.. Harvard, 1916. M.D., Harvard, 1920. Instructor in Biochemistry, Harvard Research Laboratory, Sheppard and Enoch Pratt Hospital, Towson, Md., 1922-1926. Assistant Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Jefferson Medical College, 1926. Chemical Pathologist, Jefferson Hospital. Fellow : :XIl1iF'l'lCZl11 Association for the Advancement of Science. Member: American Society of Bio- logical Chemistsg American Chemi- cal Societyg Society of Experimental Biology and Medicineg American Medical Associationg Philadelphia Physiological Societyg American Psychiatric Societyg Philad-elphia County Medical Society. Collaborator second edition Morse Biochemistry, 1920-1922, Director Biochemistry. Publications chiefly relating to subject of chemical and physiological interest especially, Chemistry of Colloid Carbong Chem- istry of Mental Diseasesg Chemistry of Liver Extractsg Amino Acid Con- tent of Protids. Eighty-three , f r l l 4 l lo ,, lf 'A I I l X l 4 X , , X if EQ ,, X J 4 f 2 J f , 7 f f W 4 ff fa f 7 .. fe., X x ff LUCIUS TUTTLE Assistant Professor of Physiology, l929 A.B.. Yale. 1901. M.D., Johns Hop- kins, 1907. Microscopist. University Hospital Dis- pensary, 1907-19095 Assistant Deni- onstrator of Pathology. University of Pennsylvania, 1008-1010, Demon- strator of Physiology. Jelferson Medical College, 1910-1914: Asso- ciate' in Physics, Jefferson Medical College. 1913-1916g Associatef in Physiology, Jelferson Medical Col- lege, 1913-1929. Author Books: An introduction to Laboratory Physics. The Theory of Measurements. Pzipiers on various pathological and clinical subjects. Nxsss xss:Xe JAY C. KNIPE Assisiani' Professor of Ophthalmology, l928 Graduate, Norristown High School, 18S6g Graduate, Jefferson Medical College, 18903 Post-graduate Course at Vienna, 1896-1897. Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology, Jeiiierson Medical Collegeg Oph- thalinologist to the Jewish Hospitalg Ophthalrnologist to the Mary Drexel Hospital. Fellow of the College of Physicians: Member of County Medical and American Medical Associationsg Member of Ophthalmological So- cietyg Pathological Society and Meclico-Legal Society of Philadel- phia. Author of Ocular Manifestations of Nervous Diseases. a section of Ball's Ophthalmology, Vol. II. f o P X to l . l l 'S i t l 25561 Q PM . Ezghfy-four asses s is BU RGESS LEE GORDON Assistant Professor of Medicine, l930 M.D., Jefferson Medical College, 19195 A.B., Gonzaga University, 1912. Resident Physician, Peter Bent Brig- ham Hospital, Teaching Fellow in Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Instructor in Medicine, J eiferson Medical Collegeg Demonstrator in Medicine, Jefferson Medical Col- lege, Associate in Medicine. Jeifer- son Medical Collegeg Departinent for Diseases of the Chest, Jefferson Hospital, Assistant Medical Di- rector, Medical Director and Phy- sician-in-Charge, Department for Diseases of the Chest, Jelferson Hospital. Member of College of Physicians of Philadelphiag Society for Clinical Investigationg Junior Associate. As- sociation of American Physicians. fm? :i JS? ., E S X' HENRY K. MOHLER Medical Director of Jefferson Hospital and Assistant Professor of Medicine, Jefferson Medical College' l .ll.. Pliiladelpliia College of Phar- macy. 1907. M.D., Jellierson Medi- cal College, 1912. Interne at Jefferson Hospital, 1912, Medical Director to Jefferson Hos- pital since 19145 in charge of Lab- oratory of Clinical Medicine, 1913- 19141 at present Assistant Professor of Medicine, Jefferson Medical Col- lege. Fellow of the College of Physicians of 'Philadelphiag Fellow of the Ameri- can College of Physicians, Member of the American Medic-al Associa- tiong Pennsylvania State Medical Societyg Philadelphia County Medi- cal Society: American Heart Asso- ciationg Lieutenant-Colonel. Medi- cal Reserve Corps, U. S. Army? Commanding Otlicer, General Hos- pital No. 38. U. S. Army. Author of numerous articles on gen- eral medical subjects, X 1 4 ' me if W5 W O M.,-,M Eighty-Hue . , if i I Q. :Ni We R f V iw ' f' ' HARRY H. LOTT Assistant Professor of Laryngoiogy, l93l M.D.. Jefferson Medical College, 1907. Interne, Shenango Valley Hospital, New Castle, Penna., 1907-S. Oper- ating chief at Jefferson Hospital Laryngological Department, 1012- 20. Chief of Clinic at Jefferson Hospital Out-Patient Departnient. 1920-30. Member of Philadelphia Laryngological Society, 'C o u 11 t y Medical Society, etc. Nvar Service: Major in United States Army Medical Corps. Served in A.E.F. CHARLES W. BONNEY Assistant Professor of Topographic and Applied Anatomy, I930 M.D., J-efferson Medical College, 19045 A.B., Dartmouth College, 1899. Assistant Demonstrator of Anat- omy, Jefferson Medical Collegeg Demonstrator of Topographic and Applied Anatomyg Associate in Topographic and Applied Anatomyg Assistant Professor of Topographic and Applied Anatomy, 1930. Member of American Urological Asso- ciation: Fellow of the College of Physicians, Philadelphia, Pa.g Fel- low of the American College of Sur- geons. Author of numerous papers on sur- gical subjects. Eighty-six vi- .f 2 9 -Z A if 5 X N 5 'NX .. SQ Q A, RQ Q 1, . Ki 62 , K if K We , sw? M. slr' fc X f W ef -Q A F' Q v 'X BAXTER L. CRAWFORD Acting Professor of Pathology l926-27 M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1912. Interne, Bellevue Hospital, New York. Chief of Laboratory Service, Jefferson Medical College Hospital. Associate in Pathology, Jelterson Medical College. Member: American Medical Associa- tiong Philadelphia Pathological So- cietyg Philadelphia County Medi- cal Societyg Fellow, College of Physicians of Philadelphiag Ameri- can Society of Clinical Pathologyg Association of American Patholo- gists and Baeteriologists. Author of numerous articles of Path- ological interest. .aes-ss Q is fo 7 W 7, 27 Vg E HAROLD W. JONES Assistant Professor of Medicine M.D, Jelferson Medical College, 1917. Interne Jefferson Hospital and Chief Resident Physician, 1919 to 19215 Assistant Professor of Medicine, 10315 Instructor, School of Military Medicine, 191Sg Chief Section of Nephritis General Hospital No. 9, 1918-195 Assistant Physician, Phila- delphia General Hospital, 1921- l92SgPhysician Memorial Hospital. Memberg Association American Phy- sicians tAssociateJg Fellow Col- lege Physicians, Philadelphiag Fel- low American College Physiciansg Interburban Clinical Clubg Ameri- can Medical Associationg Philadel- phia Pathology Society, Section Medical History. Publications: Section on Blood Trans- fusion. Osler-McCrae System of Medicine, Hare's Therapeutics., DaCosta's Surgery, Contribution, Anspaclfs Gyneeologyg Author, Lah- oratory Manual. 193263 and various articles on, Renal Functiong Pen- tosnriag Blood Diseasesg and Blood lransfusion. V s 1,551-J, O fy., 1 Q: ' . 42.55 ggi- -:fry , 2 Q..-Nz. :- exif ' ' ' wif X x 0 uv Q 7 ,-sniff -:iw l' T . X! , , I f ,Q i f f f f , f 0 Eighty-sefuen fm, six - 1 Af -f X Assocuaies JUL Us BLECHSCHNIIDI, M D issocmfe nz Pedzatwcs Jnrrs R DI x11T11x, M D Assowate 'Ln Ovthopedzc ,Surgery B XXTER L CHAD FORD, RI D 4 vsoczate m Pathology A S1 ELCER KAUFMAX M D Assocmte m Otology B B VILCDLT Lxox, M D Assoczate zn Meclzcme Du ID VV K1zxMDR, BI D Issocmfe m flfeclzrme C H TUILXER, NI D r1SSOflIlt6 zn Dledzczfne -XDR 111 S111 xusa, M D 4SSOClfLt6 111 Devmatoloqy BDXJ.-n11x P YVDIDD, RID Assoczafe zn N67 oous an! Uezzia Dzveasea LDV um VVDISD, BI D 1350015116 IH Pnilzology RAL1 H DI fxbox, M D Assoczafe zn Porlmtvzcs ROBERT M LITKEXS, ISI D , A Qsowate m B1 omhoscopg and Esojflzagovcopy YN ILIIXM F Mooms M D , Assoczfzfe m Brorzclzoscopy and Fsophagoacopy JOHX B Loxxmab, M D Assoczafe 171 Gemfo Uvznavy Szugery J S001 1' LRITCH BI D , Assoazafe nz 01 hflzalnzology YV1111u1 H SQIIMID1, M D , flwoczfzfe 111 Aeroougs and Uwzfzzl Ilzseasas and Physzcal fl hm apy EDD uw XXTIIISS, BI D AS50LZIlf6 zn Jlerleazm S DMD L O1 5110, M D f18SOCZIlfF m Ophflzfzlzzzologg AVLNIR 1 110516011111 xKo1'F, Ch L , fisboczflfe nz Plzyszologzuzl C7ze11zz.sz'1y and Tomcology I 1-'11 Ib C Sc111:rrE1, NI D Iwoamic 111 Gynecology CHDx1'x M Suubox, M D flssoczafe zrz Gynecolooy QOLI rx Foumaon, M D Issoamfe m Obsfefvzcs JOHN B FLICD, M D issocmfe nz Szngmy HAIQIKX STUCKLR1, BI D 4.ssoczafe zn Obatefrzfs C1111 011D B I ULL, M D lssoczafe an Obvfefnrs Lec+urer GIDX F C1A1ch, C,OIlllU1Hdl.1 CHIC U S W Lccfzuev o11T1opzcrzl1Ued1cme X X5 Lzghiy elqllt M A f r , 1 . L4 L , k ,L - P , ' -N1 J . ' . - - n 'A V r 1 'g A -1 A H J 4 1 '- , 1 H ' 1-1 vt AA rq N L-A g V E4 A ,, N , q k - X, 1, . . 4' K. , r-1 KA ' 1 4 1 i 1, F -4 1 ' . , 1 T4 f ' 4 , ' 4 u - V I 'N P I 4 I A A X. ' '4 4 1 , J . 1- 1 S- Q ' - R r A , , ' A ' N - . J ' X 5 4 5, V L ,J , 1 , F A 1 J J . A 1 2 , . A . . ' P' . 14 A , S W A ' .. 1 - '1 D . - , ' X 1 'D sv X . ' A A ' , 4 l E 1 ' I L T ' I P i f R I-4 N, w N1 X N. - X A . i 4 ' ' J . P' 'T 4 1 ' 4 . ' , T 2 - 3 - 'f V v 'X . , . X . 1 ' - J ' U , -1 -. X ' , . X . X- V t I ' l J u - , n .4 - xt - . - -f wx F ' N. X- u . f ' 5- , - 'rf ,Q ' .', n bi - ' . ' ' J M Q. 1 A. . . 1. , S C4 I I ' -X ' . V' A .- . l' l.. -. Nr. Q 1 - 1 5 w . l , U ' I 1 3 4. 1. I f .j- A' il X '. N 1 - :. w. -f ' A , . T n ' ' ,l. S , I - P- 4 u W A A ' A 5. w 0 . P4 i . ' A 4QE -. i x . A -4 h , Q. -1. - . , A , F3 - ' i I 4 i'.-' I , . X: A cg . X 1 A , N' . . 1 - - . X.. ' . 1. ' f ' ' , ' 1 , -, - . Q - N . 4 - , A . A A ,, .' ' . ., Q - v b ' . QQ D . ' I h ' 1 , Q - - - - , , - N 1 ' ' , YQ ' ' I - ' 4. - . 4. u ' X 'N ' A L- , - ,N 1 . , N L . D ii -4 5 - - L w , S3 Qxyfffyfw yi-1 V-yww-vw' ,52'1-,1:'5zw,w-'ry ffy4.s:1-5, ,ff,,iQ.,1Q1,j: wig.--1.1 J MV N NX XX N N XS LEIGHTON F. 1xI'l'l.EMAN, BLD., DCIll0llSt7'!lf07' of Plwrzzzmrly mul Jlateria Bleflficfo. NV. P. HEARN, BLD., Demcmstwltov' of Clinical Surgery. GEOIKGE F. PHELPS, NLD., D6IILO'll'Sl?'HIl0?' of lVC7 ZJ'0'll..S' Diseases. FRANCIS J. BCLCCULLOUGH, BLD., Demo1zst1'ato1 of Obsfefrias. CHARLES H. LEFCOE, M.D., 1J67ll07l.S'f'FlLl07' of Meclicifrw. BIARION HEARN, BLD., .D6'I7L0'Tl.S'fTlLf01' of Otology. .ARTHUR J. VVAGERS, M.D., D0lI'I.07l.9l7'6ll01' of Otologgj. NATHAN BLUMDERG, M.D., D67IZO?1-Sf7'fll07' of Illerlicivzrf. I'I.-XROLD L. GOLDBUIKGH, M.D., Denzfozzstrator of Bled-icine. CARL J. BIICHIER, BLD., Demofnstmlov' of Pathology. ELXDOLPH A. NVALIILING, M.D., Dezzzonslwlfov' of Fracfzzre D1'css-ilngs. N. S. XTANVGER, BLD., D67IZO7I.9fTfll!J7' of Nerzvous zonal Dlcntal Diseases. G. M. TOBILINSON, M.D., Demonsfmtov' of Elecfro-T11crapeutics. JAMES F. CARRELI., M.D., D6l7l0'7Z'Sf7'fLf07 of Obsfctrics. HENRX' H. PERLMAN, BLD., DCI7I0'HSf7'CLl07' of Peflial1'ics. NORMAN BL BLICNEILI., BLD., Demonstrator of Pefllatvfics. DAVID R. BLORGAN, BLD., C7l,7'flt0'l' of the fU'Zl,S8ZL1lI, fmrl Demo11sf1'ato1' of Pathology. GEORGE J. BIUELLERSCHOEN, M.D., Demonstratov' of G67Zlf0-U7 l'7ZCll'gl Su.1'gev'y. NVARREN B. DAVIS, BLD., Denzo'nst1'afo1' of Oral Sm'go1'y. HYMAN M. GINSDERG, M.D., Demovzstlrrztor of Gynecology JOHN B. LUDY, NLD., Dem.o1zst1'cLto1 of Dermatology. VVILLTAM H. DEIXRDORFF, M.D., Demorzstmtov' of Laryfngologg. I. GRAFTON SIEIIER, M.D., Demonstmtov' of Lrzryngologg. .EXRTHUR J. YVAGERS, BLD., Demonslratoo' of Lcwyngology. REX'NOLD S. GILIFFITH, M.D., Demonstrmfov' of PIIIILTIIZIICQQ and Illcateria llledica. CHRISTIAN YV. NISSLER, M.D., Demonstmtov' of Blecllcine. ROBER.1' P. REGESTER, M.D., Demonstmtor of Bledlicivze. GULDEN JNQLACKBIULL, M.D., DEW!-072-Sl7'Clf07' of Histology mul Embryology. BALDWVIN L. ICEYES, BLD., Demoozstrator of Pediatrics. BALDWIN L. KEYES, NLD., Devrzonlstwctov' of Neurology. J. BERNARD BERNSTINE, M.D., Demon-strator of Obstefrics. THAD L. LVIONTGOMERY, M.D., Demonstratov- of Obszfetrics. JACOB VVALKER, M.D., Demonfstrator of 0lJstet1 ics. AUSTIN T. SMITH, M.D., D6'll2I07L'St7'6bt0T of I.fw'Iyfrzgology. VVILLIAM J. THUDIIIM, M.D., D67Il0'7ZISf'l'CLt07 o Anatomy. THOMAS E. SHEA, NLD., Domonst1'ato1' of Neufro-Anatomy. BCLOSES BEHREND, M.D., Defmon-strator of Afnatomg. NV. B. SXVARTLEY, BLD., .D67fL0'7lISt7 Klf0'l' of Afncltomy. E'iglL1y-1Line Instructors . 'I LEIGHTON F. APPLEMAN, M.D., Instructor in Therapeutics. MICHAEL A. BURNS, M.D., Instructor in Neuro-Pathology. LOUIS CHODOFF, M.D., Instructor in Bandaging. HUBLEX' R. OXVEN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery. FRANK R. VVIDDOWSOIN, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology. A IVIAURTCE BROYVN, M.D., Instructor in Dermatology. DAVID M. SIDLICK, M.D., Instructor in Dermatology. HENRY G. MUNSON, M.D., Instructor in Dermatology. J. HALL ALLEN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery. IVIITCHELL BERNSTEIN, IVLD., Instructor in IvI6CltCl716. ARTHUR R. VAUGHN, M.D., Instructor in Dledicine. HENRX' B. DECKEIL, M.D., Instructor in Bacteriology. HARVEY NI. RIGHTER, BLD., Instructor in Surgery. ABRAHAINI I. RLTBENSTOXE, M.D., Instructor in Nledicine. REYNOLD S. GRIEEITH, M.D., Instructor in Dleclicine. THODIAS E. SHEA, M.D., Instructor in Neuro-Anatomy. G. M. TOIILINSON, IVLD., Instructor in Nervous and 1VIental Diseases. CHARLES F. BECKER, M.D., Instructor in Nervous Diseases. HENRX' K. SEELAUS, M.D., Instructor in Clinical Surgery. LYNN M. RANKIN, M.D., Instructor tn Operative Surgery. JOHN T. JF,-XRRELL, JR., M.D., Roentgenologlist to the Departnzen-t of Anatomy. ROY VV. MOIILER, M.D., Instructor tn Gynecology. JOHN F. COPPOLINO., M.D., Instructor -in Pediatrics. CHARLES S. AITKEN, M.D., Instructor in Illeclxictne. STANLEY Q. VVEST, M.D., Instructor in Genito-Urinary Surgery. THOMAS R. MOIIGAN, M.D., Instructornin Gynecology. ALBERT A. BURROS, M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics. I HENRX' B. DEC1iER, M.D., Instructor in Dermatology. VVILLIAII J. HfXRR-ISON, M.D., Instructor in Oplztlzalnzology. f 'I' , ef ' f A znety y 4 9: Y 1 If Q A s K 95 4 I sz 74 f P - -guru X as g X .- If J, ' I f we. fs, M fb Instructors QCONCLUDEDI SAMUEL VV. Moss, M.D., Instructor in Oplzthctlmology. AARON CAPPER, M.D., Instructor in Pccliatrics. JOHN B. BIONTGOMERY, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology I. CHARLES LINTGEN, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology. VVILLIABI J. THUDIUM, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology. GEORGE B. GERRIIXN, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics. CLYDE M. SPANGLER, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics. CARLOS M. VVOLEROM, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics. LEOPOLD GoLDsTEiN, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics. LIORRIS KLEINBART, NLD., Instructor in Pathology. HAROLD L. STEXVART, M.D., Instructor in Pathology. LEO B. REED, M.D., Instructor in Applied and Topographtc flnatomy P. A. IVICCARTHY, NLD., Instructor in Anaftofmy. GEORGE I. ISRAEL, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. WILLIADI T. LEMINION, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. MAXXVELL CHERNER, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. ELI R. SALEEBY, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. JOHN DQ REESE, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. X C X! N inety-one , 1 KX Assistant Demonstrators J. LESLIE DAVIS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. THOMAS M. IQAIN, M.D., Assistant Demon-strator of Bledicine. LOUIS' H. CLERE, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Laryngology. GABRIEL TUCKEII, M.D., Assistant De-znonstrator of Laryngology. ROBERT M. LURENS, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Laryngology. LESLIE F. BLULFORD, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Surgery. FILANK H. HUSTEAD, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Surgery. MARTIN J. SOKOLOFF, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine. EDXX'IN GORDON STORK, BLD., Assistant Dernonstrator of Pediatrics. BRUCE L. FLEBIING, M.D., Assistant Dem.on.strator of Fracture Dressings. S. F. GORSON, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Nervous Di-sea-ses. R. C. KELL, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Nervous Diseases. ROBERT' S. HEFFNEII., BLD., Assistant Dernonstrator of Pediatrics. GEOILGE J. YVILLAUER, BLD., Assistant Dernonstrator of Operative Surgery. L. S. CAREY, BLD., Assistant Dernonstrator of Medicine. G. G. DUNCAN, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Dledieine. A. CANTAROXV, BLD., Assistant Dernonstrator of Blecficine. A. M. PERRI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Nervous Diseases. GEOILGE L. VVI-IELAN, BLD., Assistant Deznonstrator of Broncfzoscopy and Esophagoscopy. CHARLES J. SNVALM, BLD., Assistant Delnonstrator of Bro-nchoscopy and Esopliagoscopy. EDMOND L. AUCOIN, M.D., Assistant Deznonstrator of Bronchoscopy and Esopliagoscopy. .BLLAURICE S. JACOBS, BLD., Assistant Denzonstrator of Bletliciine. HAROLD S. RAMRO, M.D., Assistant Denzonstrator of Genito-Urinary Surgery. HARRY A. BOGAEV, BLD., Assistant Denzonstrator of Genito- Urinary Surgery. JOSEPH ASPEL, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Gefnito-Urinary Surgery. JOHN B. HAINES, M.D., Assistant Dernofn-strator of Cystoseopy. JAMES F. BCLCCAHEY, BLD., Assistant Denzonstrator of Cystoscopy. VVILLIAM C. YVILSON, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics. IJOUIS J. RODERER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Pediatrics. A. BL RECHTMAN, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Orthopeclic Surgery. EDWARD CARRD THOBIAS, M.D., Assistant Dentonstrator of Peririatics. JOHN C. TRAUGH, M.D., Assistant Dem-onstrator of Perliatrics. H. U. NORTH, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Dermatology. A. J. KEENAN, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Laryngology. HOWELL PEACOCK, BLD., Assistant Demonstrator of Laryngology. N 4 I I K r Z .1 0 1 Ninety-two 'Ns N1 Ni gs.. N W Assistant Demonstrators QCONCLUDEDJ PHILIP S. STOUT, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Laryngology. J. M. ROSENTHAL, M.D., Assistant Defmonstrator of Ophthalmology. A. E. EDGERTON, M.D., Assistant Defmonstrator of Ophthalmology. JAMES A. THOMAS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Pediatrics. DONALD H. HEARINGS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. HERBER'F A. VVIDING, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. JOHN T. EADS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine. ARTHUR FIRST, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics. RALPH C. HAND, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Orthopedic Surgery. RICHARD VV. VVEISER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Orthopedic Surg R. B. TXTOORE, M.D., Assistant Devnonstrator of Anatomy. HARLAN F. HAINES, M.D., Assistant Demonstratosr of Medicine. EN SHUI TAI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Dledicine. MAHLON C. HINERAUGH, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics. CHARLES L. DEARDORFR, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics. LEO F. TVICIXNDREXVS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Ophthalmology. Ninety-three ery. 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 1 X J' A 1 1 X 4 , WSL y XR? EX ' 1.5, I5 WWA' fini' -H + A4 , f y ff ,- u.AssEs V , W 1 1 x 1 3 W Y 1 N I I , V Seniors X QS S Y 5 . Q . - V Aa -ww 6-,QQ 0. S . , 4 X - Q. ,- ,rg ,: V' , sy, uv- .15 . .V : gr: f, ',: .:-4::x.,-N . Hz, . f - 221 Q 41 Sf F A gif- 1 ug., .A-31.54 ,..vg.w, 'lifi.'Y:Lfa: :1:::':f: :J X . Jan..-va., Q -. f 12. -wg.-gf? f Q5 1 gran-1, ' S C-f F Q. - -5 Qsilizsgy -4-.fm w qi N...x., ,X X! , X XX S x X ,xx X X N X 00 X uf Q Q ,xnxx , xl X-X E-pg. r, . .gg mg,-.-gan, 55591 X ws X N .X ggi: Nw :N V , AWS.. X ,.., . . - X41-.fy-'..A X N X if SENIOR CLASS t ,gm ' 5 w 2 I P 5 W f 1 , f , , W W 1 1 fl W1 f fyw' f 1 X ZZ M A 2 x Q .. ' X is -'XX -ti lx: MA QQ A 93 A ff? , Q4 X X f, 54 M , ff , f f , K f f , , f f 1 K , f X , , 1 , I - Q! lf y f iw' I, QA ,. 1 1 M X s History of the Class of 1931 ISTORY repeats itself, and in various ways. The business depression is but a trough in the wave-train of economicsg the students' Hnancial depression is but an axiom of the learners, lifeg the Volstead depression is but a lllosaic method of producing morality through laws, and, that even the depression of death is but a cyclic suspension of earthly life, was one of the fond hopes of Plato, who wished to believe that after certain thousand years he should again sit with his studentsg and now the great Einstein shows us that, if we return to this same place after 4400 O00 O00 years and look back with sharp eyes, we will again see ourselw es, Class of 1931 being turned loose upon an unsuspecting world. , Soon after the birth of this century there was a disturbance among the elements ,and from fire, air, water, earth we were bornj our young bodies filled with blood, phlegm, yellow bile, and black bile' and, in the fall of 1997 Anno Dom'in.i we came to Jefferson as a motley assortment of men, sanfruine, phlefrmatic, choleric, and melancholy-before lone only melancholy. The first davs were lox ely. VVhat a t.hrill to walk through those doors, and through the iery halls in which our Grand old family doctors passed the hours in gainincr wisdom! How fascinating were the lectures, especially that one on, VVhat a Young ltlan Ouvht to Kno I VVhat a fine Group of men the Be a Pi s were to pledge a fellow like me! And oh, what a fine man I was to be accepted here, chosen from a Group of three thousand. But sunny skies are new er ltstinfr and one sultry afternoon a bi , black, cumulus cloud was slowly, but surely, coming up out of the southwest. A terrible thunderstorm was brewino: A notice had been posted at D. B. 1 .... Frightened Freshmen went scurry ing hither x v, and yon in search of shelter, ewery one W ....,-,- burdened under the load of a hurre box that might have been -1 life-boat, indeed each one guarded his burden as one would wuard a life-boat if a Hood were imminent. Phe clouds thickened. Sunday afternoon no one dared leave the fraternity house and on ltlonday the storm broke. 1'or days the tempest rafred. lVIen huddled in darkened rooms, none willing to breathe a word, only the shuffle of feet was heard ind the boom- ing of the thunder. The air w as close, and hot, and damp' men tore at their sweat- soaked clothes, some at their hair' one of them lost all reason, he jumped onto table in maniacal fury, produced a human bone with insane gloatinfr, and by threats and terrori7ing with a heathen jibberish he cowed his fellows into obeisance to his osseous demi-god. ff Nuzety czglzf t ff ' 9 9 Y Q 7 c Q V A T ' ' , c .4 1 v 9 D D Z3 . , Y V . Y T Y D .f 1 r f , G C f b I C cc -f X , an , C ,D w D tl 3 C C . f o 1 v 1 v Us C zz- ' c 1 v T .1 D 1. C: f 7 7 I x 1 y VM NW J C Q ' r I . b c r as c A Y 3 C ? S C , 'I I x C 7 N5 D C X a f 1 v S is ' if X ' R 2 K4 rc f 'Q X r , ' Ac x 7 if sf v 3, Z1 s ' Ca X' , , , I gs, , X X as X KW fi ff X224 , - a- . I ' Aiff l r N' 93? EYE i Ie, :XX R, XX Certainly Wlilliam Shakespeare was not studying osteology when he wrote, G, how much more doth beauty beauteous seem by that sweet ornament which truth doth give l , but he might have been gazing upon the landmarks of a humerus when he said, uVVhat's in a name? that which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. VVe were completely submerged in names, long names, short names, fancy names, tart names, Greek names, Latin names, and just plain, ordinary names, but each name was quite enough to make our heads more dizzy than fifty grains of quinine could do. And in those formalin- ized roasting-ovens, formally called demonstration rooms,'9 aptly called devil's dungeons, we certainly had reason to envy the one hundred twenty- three British subjects who were suffocated at Calcutta. But misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows and after those two weeks, when the star of hope again peeped over the horizon, we found among our lists of friends quite an assortment of new fellows-who lacked an assort- ment of ideas. Every man had two beliefs, and only two: 1-Teachers are wolves 'in sheep's clothing, 2-I must never venture near a teacher. VVhen we arrived in the City of Brotherly Love, there were among those who came to greet us a set of pessimistic traitors, well organized liars, whose chief pleasure it was to relate frightful tales and glory in the morbid dread of the terrified listener. A set o' dull, conceifecl hashes Confused their brains in college classes! They went in sfirks and came out asses, Plain 'truth 'ro speak. Thus became ingrained in us a fear of our professors and that fear is not totally destroyed today, thus became lost to us the close friendship of some of the finest men alive, our teachers. Days rolled by. It was soon time to take up our trusty broad-swords and go out to meet the enemy. VVe were all raw recruits, none of us had seen any dissecting before, so Captain Schaeffer, considerate of his men, decided to break us in gradually. He went out alone into the enemy camp, deftly captured a burly foe, dragged him in by the forelock, and with one stroke of the sword stripped off his scalp. That day our class lost in membership but gained in confidence. The following hlonday we lost in confidence but gained in equipment and, with our scalpels, probes, and forceps, we mounted the steps, feigning bravery like a man walking into a hospital for his first operation. VVe heard the captain's voice telling us what to find under those layers of muslin. I said, f'VVe heard the captain's voice, which indeed we did. For words of learned length and thundering sound amazed the gazing rustics ranged aroundf' Clear, booming, and Hrm was his voice, some of us thought it was even surly, but before long we discovered that Dr. Schaeffer was full of those little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness that are the best portion of a good man's life. VVe bless him for his many encouragements and criticisms, always kind. VVe enjoyed dissecting. liluch anatomy was learnt, much philosophy discussed. In the presence of that shady one, before whom juggler, constable Nin cfy-nin e X. 521 I 1 Z l 4 7 f a z V lf! W V Y 1 J f z 27 z X f f 7 M Q l f ,f f if 19 if f f f X ry ff W! 1 Af f ,jf if ...gay S , f if f 4 5Z NEW CH EM. LAB. and king alike must bow, t.here was many an argument on immortality, many a debate on sects, and many an instance of each man retaining his old beliefs. VVe had to agree with Voltaire, 'fTwenty years are required to bring a man from the state of a plant, in which he exists in the womb of his mother, and from the state of an animal, which is his condition in infancy, to a state in which the maturity of reason begins to make itself felt. Thirty centuries are necessary in which to discover even a little of his structure. An eternity would be required to know anything of his soul. But one moment suffices in which to kill him. However, those in Section A soon found that it takes quite a bit of punishment to kill a mang although they were sunk in the very midst of the histology quagmire, no casualties were reported except the incidental passing of several hundred midnight hours and the perishing of several million red blood cells. ltlost of the fellows were really very sleepy and anemic. They had a monster standing over them twenty-four hours of the day, driving them on and on, never relenting, a green-eyed monster commonly called fear, who assumed the dictatorship when Pritchard handed back the first quizz papers of the year with red marks spattered over them like the sc1'ibbling on a bab-y's first letter to Santa Claus. Had those grades come back before November lst, our class would have diminished again in numbersg many a check for four hundred dollars exclaimed: Onward boy, onward! No turning back now I Certainly no boss ever worked his laborers as hard and still retained more of their friendship and admiration as did Radasch and The Black Prince. At the end of their labors we were all, to say the least, on speaking terms with the Ampulla of Vater, the Node of Ranvier, and the Foramen of lVIonro. As time wore on we began to decide that man was made for relaxation One 7l.'LM1id'7'8d 3 X it gina 4 L A w sf 1 E f V We ZW 5 7' f 9 X If Q it S i Q P5 ff 2 Q Q f 35 X VX X 0' r ii 25 1 s sk ff A 5 474 PN X 59 F 5 X 4 'S if Q y s 53 s W 2 2? A , Z bk K1 'Q 2 Q , , 2? 59 4 W 2 A Qf M as truly as for labor. Especially in Chemistry did we apply this principle. Nfany a morning was spent in the boiling of fifty-five beakers of water with the affection of serious contemplation over fifty-five test-tube racks whose tubes were filled with colored fiuidsg our hardest work was done in the attempt to keep our desks cluttered and our note-books splashed. VVe seemed to be busy, but things were not what they seemed. Life started to assume a real and earnest aspect., rumors of mid-years were in the air. Nervous students began to collect in serious groups as though someone, or all, of them! were going to be shot at sunrise. It is a wonder that Byberry isn't filled with erstwhile Jefferson Freshmen. As the Sphinx terrified the Thebans with unanswerable questions, so were we terrified by our fellows all day long, and at night we were chiding Nature too unkind, That made no medicine for a troubled mind. All our knowledge was so poor, And of nothing were we sure. Was the Vagus in the arm? But, if not, what was the harm? What is Acetabulum? ls it lnfundibulum? Sphincter Oddi in the Eye Where His' Bundle passes loy. Oh for boyhood's time in June Crowding years in one brief moon When all things l heard or saw Me their Master waited tor. VVe had reached the verv nadir of our student life. Our anxiety had reached its Zenith. Yet We were surprised to find ourselves going to the slaughter without too much apprehension and later, nursing aching wrists, our confidence returned. VVe found that we were actually learning Anatomy and, when that April with its sweet showers, the drought of lVIarch had pierced to the very root and bathed every vine in holy nectar that the sleeping buds began to swell and burst, our minds were growing too and they blossomed with the blooming flowers of May-and that's that. Even Psoriasis, that feline friend of microbe hunters, felt it. He was one of the folk who, in the springtime, long to go on pilgrimagesg and in his wanderings up and down, around his little world, the laboratory, he met with many strange experiences. One of the most uncomfortable of these happened when he was picked up by his best friend, not by his legs, his natural organs of support, but cruelly by his tail, and held out over that dizzy space that I I ll I I l , One hmulred one ' gg, , , V, ii i i i l i 1 1 I l l ll ll l l l 1 i i ,Y N, Ii as Kgs E an M. 4 .7 '93 A. if x 2, sr 2. f fffyz W9 fs i ii 52 4? ' ,v ff- Af 2: 3 ,gg 1 fgwigg, gm. r 23,05 2 ' A-9 i Q 4 HBACTERIOLOGY LAB. separated the sixth floor from the basement. Old Psoriasis didnit scoldg at first he wept a little, then his spirit calmed and he seemed to say, as though he were a prophet speaking for the many Freshmen who had similarly suffered: The quality ot mercy is not strained: lt droppeth as the gentle rain 'From Heaven Upon the place beneath: it is twice bless'd: It blesseth him that gives and him that takes. Certainly he saw many students who forgot that man is but a child of larger growth, who mistook intended wit for personal injury, and who were therefore saddened on many sunny days. Too true are the lines: And many a word at random spoken May soothe, or wound, a heart that's broken. After the ordeal, when Psoriasis stood on solid floor again, he turned a friendly face as if to say, To err is human, to forgive divine? VVe spent many happy hours in Bacteriology. Cooking media, raising microbes, watching how they grew, and wondering why. And why did time Hy so rapidly? VVe were not quite ready for the judgment day. 'cldlould but some winged Angel ere too late arrest the yet unfolded roll of fate? But Gideon was not here to stay the sun, and while the Juniors were still plodding through their Hygiene we were already scattered to the four corners of the world, anxiously awaiting, with hope and fear, the man in the grey uniform. One ll rnzdred Miro ,Eg 'bi 'Ei' ' 5' M Q2 A 33 25A J is 1 '90 f f x msg Z it F KN i 2 S X X P X Pb J iss fs, X it if S , 42 i Ag ,Az W, sw i xxx iid 4 ef , in 'W ZX P71 i V ,s N44 1 X, 5 , , 7 Q Qi X , E 1 7 A , A V If v4 'E X f s 5, 4 'S ff S if Q vi , , .7s Si 1 5 5 X f Nt r , s li, . Q, s -4 K X be S Sig fri so Rs 2 X X Ns 1 X. f sr, X a -1. sq, ,W X me Ns X .. , Q . K X Kass? At last he came, bringing joy to some, grief to others. And how profound our problems seemed to us. Fools! that are but pygmy inhabitants of one of the smaller satellites of a rather small star. But little hair greyed and a profitable summer was spent at cultivating colorful complexions. The next year started, as next years are apt to do. Full of anticipation we returned to school, almost with happy hearts, but unable to lose that feeling of helplessness which Omar Khayyam knew in his immortal lines. For out of the one hundred seventy-eight who started the journey with us last September, only one hundred thirty-two survived, and, out of the one hundred thirty-two now with us, several more were doomed to go, and we knew it. So we started the year with misgivings. As starving sailors battle over the meager ration dealt out to them, so did we argue over our grades. One-half of the class were sucks,,' high-hat,', book-worms, uhand-shakers, Hwho never have a happy moment in their livesf' and who will never amount to much because they learn by rote, the other half were udubsf, ulow-brow,,, lazy loutsf' 'cwho never enjoy studyf' and who will never amount to any- thing because they are so dumbf' Too bad, that men in such a mercy field as medicine should be so unmerciful to each other. And then we wonder why charlatans and quacks abound. lvhy do we, who in our self esteem appraise ourselves the most important of men, not see good Sir Thomas Browne's philosophy: that our lives, like the lives of commonwealths and the whole world, do not run upon a helix that ever enlargeth, but on a circle, where arriving at their meridian, they decline to obscurity and fall under the horizon again? It has been written, Homo 7l0N'Z'l7Z7i Zapzziswg these words imply that not only is man a wolf to his fellowmen but he is also a wolf to himself. In that fat age of pleasure and of ease, the Sophomore year, the rank weed of laziness sprung and thrived with large increase. Around the old library tables we used to congregate, forklessly flinging the fluent bull, but rarely engaging in honest toil, while in our more solemn moments we thought of the many things we might be doing, and of the many things we were not doing. VVe realized that absence of occupation is not rest, for a mind vacant is a mind distressed. How strange that man, who naturally knows what is good, should naturally do what is evilg our laziness even caused us to cut Daddyv Thornton, that model of geniality, whose lectures will never be surpassed. True, his talks did not resemble the eloquent orations of Patrick Henry style, neither did they simulate any vociferous vituperations of the Sunday variety, but no lec- tures will ever teach the arid subject of lVIateria lVIediea with more success. Wlho will ever forget that strychnine is the antidote to chloroform and that one can accidentally poison the neighbor's pet dog with both? Wlho will ever forget that methylene blue colors the renal excretion green, even in horses? VVho will ever forget that pilocarpine causes sweating and that it may be used to discover the thief of one's best vintage? And who will ever forget Daddy5' Thornton? From him we learned about the advantages of medicines, in Pathology f X One lzmzrirccl three l l . . , l V 1 l I f K Q f Z f Y A 4 f F f 7 J fi f f lf 1 'ff X X ,, J f W 3 2 I 7 , 5 f ,I f W if: ff O f ' 'f df f X 5 X we learned of their futility, and the futility of anything when the relentless hand of Necrosis has taken his toll. VVe saw these things under the microscope, colorful representations of the various laws of nature, bringing us closer to an understanding of the Infinite. VVhenever we could not ourselves invent a cause for what we did not understand, we had but to ask the nearest pathologist, who always had explanations, at least enough to humor his fancy if not to satisfy his reason. Pathology was a fairly exact science however, and we wished it were not so gruesome that we might learn to like it. lVIicroscopy was delightful, gross specimens were not bad, but oh! the horrors of post 1no1'te1ns in those basement rooms with the smallest number of open windows and the largest number of hot radiators. Outside of our reluctant interest in the science of the case, there were only two other attractions in the morgue, the roll book and the beautiful reds and oranges 'in the fat of those who had played deep when the dice had gone against them. Sometimes we were held in wonder by the awesome expression on the cold one,s face. Is he appalled by the width of Jordon or is he no longer responsible for what his old frame does? Like the frogs in Physiology after we M27 glmfle stuck them with a pin. Every day Dr. S. fm, ffailagiillfca luttle used to scatter a jar of the unfor- - li rj ni' tunate amphibians around the laboratory 'EL Qi, lmwleg' startino' a merr chase which end d in .-J - jwf In , 3 - the puncture of the weaker ones medullas. f ff 7 I s V ' 1 ' ,KKK IL V. llhen Lucius schooled oui ieasons to the 1 tk wisdom of frog le0's. lVith arithmetic, .5 it, . W algebra, Geometry, and calculus he show ed tx Q us why the tiny things jumped, and all the while we waxed, and all our wonders Oren, that one small head could carry all he knew-and that one man s pockets could hold all that his pockets held. H carried enough equipment to demonstrate almost any experiment, nails, cork-screws, ropes, rubber-bands, is histles, thumb-taeks, lenses, strings, and he could deftly put them to use on short notice, even in the artistry of musical sounds. Sometimes Dr. Thomas would take us to his laboratory and show us the more complicated experiments in beautiful fashion, wires and pipe-lines were everywhere fastened to the animal, while bios machines were running in perfect harmony with its life. In Neuro-anatomy we were further impressed by our resemblance to a Ford. Had Darwin lived after Henry opened his shops, he would, perhaps, have traced man's ancestry to the Detroit factories and spared our peevish friends the thought of progenitors livino' in trees. VVe had beautiful brains, on the lab trays, I mean: large gyri and small ones, where many a noble thought, we think, was born and died. Over them we read the Elegy: '17f . sl Q wi S w fi 4 6 I VW I r b Y I e 9 I' r ! o f an Y X b '-.A C y C7 1 7 z c S 4 f f I C 2 Y 'X F, 4 X C X X A X if f .2 ,Z 'l 5 N ,D Z 5 Vx 2' 5,4 fi ,f be AX6 H dz, ye One I1-7L7'lff?'Cfl four I fa Aff Y .X - -figs X we aw: sex ., -Q s, ,., Full many a gem of purest ray serene, The dark unfathomecl caves of ocean bear: Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetness on the desert air. Perhaps if those brains had been in our places, they would not have allowed the year to slip by with so little accomplished. The sun had already passed the first point of Aries, and we were already praying for time. If only we knew where to find those ten days that Pope Gregory XIII omitted from the year 1582. But again time was the doctor of our ills and soon our troubles were enchanted into pleasant memories. Then we left school to put on the khaki for Uncle Sam. VVe went down to his house at Carlisle, rapped on the door, expecting him to invite us in, but he just looked out at us and said, '4lVhat's the idea of coming around here with your clothes on? Beat it, and come back tomorrow stripped I Wle were petrified, dumbfounded and amazed. How did they run this man,s army? Now we were the Son's of Jefferson, so the next day we returned, every man, from the little third-platooners to the big galoots of the first, and we pre- sented a fine spectacle. The day was dark, the air was full of cold, drizzly rain. Around Uncle Sam,s house was collected that crowd of bewildered youngsters dressed in the clothes of Adam, but lacking the don,t-give-a-damn attitude of Eden, for their innocent faces shown radiantly scarlet, and this, with the chill-looking 'fgoose-pimplesn covering their skins, made them look for all the world like a bevy of plucked turkeys. Old Sammy must have had a little thickening of his cerebrals, because he was quite eccentric, after he had painstakingly measured us for our uniforms, he just as carefully tried to Ht us up with some that didn't fit, and, as usual, Uncle Sam was successful. We looked like the inmates of a county orphanage. There, on the drill field, we learned the gentle art of sleep walking, at least all but one of us learned it. He never could move on if he happened to be asleep at Forward, Marcl1,,' and, hadn't he been such a good friend of Sergeant Haas, his six-foot-two would be six feet deep with a twisted rifle to mark where he fell. He did surprise us one day on parade when, for some unknown reason, he was wide-awake and began to Sound-off. VVe had the best company of all. It is true our line was sort of crooked sometimes, but that was because the Three lVIusketeers all carried their tobacco cuds in the same side of their mouths, and We eouldn,t have interrupted their soliloquy for the World. VVith such carousings and side-shows by the man of loose joints for a background, some generals were teaching us the most eflicient ways of blowing men to pieces and fixing them together again. And all the time on Waliiut Street, Philadelphia, a modern Aladdin was busily engaged in massaging his lamp for, when we returned to school, there 0 1 One lzu-ndred ive X ,N XS X was a most beautiful temple awaiting us. It was grand, gorgeous, exceeding all our expectations. Certainly the necessary inconveniences of the preceding year were now well repaidg the noisy lecture rooms, and the strained laughter at BIorse's oft-repeated pun about pneumatic woodpeckersf' VVe were proud of the lecture halls, especially proud of the libraryg but the one room that drew the greatest praise was the lounge. In hours-off it was an answer to a tired dream, and in hours-on, it was a land of Sirens to the passing Argonauts. Especially in the Junior year, that time of doubt, and pain for pointed tuber ischii, was the urge to anchor there excessive. There ought to be a law against so many lectures. 'cVVhy should a man whose blood is warm within sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster? He shouldn't, because he ean't. Even our best lecturers could not always keep all of the men erect and awake for a whole hour, how much less could the many mediocre ones accomplish it at two o'clock and five! Wle went home from school fagged out-no en- light, and wait for gentle sleep thusiasm, no ambition, lackiiig 4, Q , any desire to pal with our cloth- - , ' - - .,,l ' bound friends and streams ot A f knowledge. Bv holiest eftort, we s s ' 'V . g would trv to studv, but the hand 5:1 g T ' - ' . l i 9 , ..:..f5f1Q3, of ltlorpheus was too much for ' , r.,QiQ,Yj,' .V even the most dutiful minds. 3. . Then with a start we would wake ' T . ' ' T M A ,Q ' 1 ' etli- 71- il again, pick up the fallen book, ,gag and try once more only to admit, ef- ' ' at the stroke of twelve, the great- V ness of Death's brother. Softlv ' ---f a - ' H ,.,.. . if we d climb into bed, turn out the Rafi? to kindly close the records of another unsatisfactory day. Some might argue that The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven. But optimist as the blind author of those words might have been, he certainly did not find their inspiration in a hard chair while listening to a poor lecture. There were several poor lectures. Ctdle would go to class expecting to see a clinic and all we saw would be an ambitious doctor who loved to hear HHVISELF talkingj VVhat learning anyone derived from them is hard to see. lVe often wished that Alexander Pope were there to sound his Criticism: To what base ends, and by what abject ways, Are mortals urged through secret lust ot praise . . Some ne'er advance a judgment ot 'their own, But catch the spreading notion of the town. One 71 1171 dren? sim W '73 S X sr Ni. f ie K z 4 I , kv! 5 Q 2' I , 1 it X if I 5 fi? , 3 , 3 V X 2 Q 6 2 , 'tx Z 4 X , i, W ix 7 vb . Q 1, Y 7 QQ if? 3:3 ofa? sf Y Q f fy ,K 4 ,es A ff? af 4 ave 1A W5 ,W df My ' -1 mf M54 5, 222 FQ Mfg, L Such sub-assistants are like mosquitoes: But fix'd ye are 'mong human ills- Whose bitter cup your bitin' fills: Nor auld wives' cures nor doctors' bills Can mend 'l'l'16 case- Firm as th' everlasting hills 4 Ye keep your place. lliany things made the third year well worth while. Doctor hfIcCrae's clinic was one of them. There, like the changing of a clumsy bud to the prettiest flaming tulip, our teacher would transform the least attractive cases into worlds of charming knowledge. For he was extremely clever, wisdom impersonatedg yet with it all, he was ever humble and proved again the old Persian proverb that a classmate brought to America: Sa1'as7z. zev' darcld Sanmirwrw' Da-raMwt.,' Q The head of the fruit-laden tree is always bent.,'j There too we learned to face the grim tragedies that form a necessary part of medical life. H70 saw our first patient with mitral disease. She was a pretty little girl of seventeen, delicately carved, and pale Cbut her pallor rather served to emphasize her beautyj, who was sentenced by a judge of sterner mein than laws of state require. She was like the rainbow and the rose, of whom 'tis said, Loveliest of lovely things are they on earth that soonest pass away. And while we thus pondered, we often wondered how g'Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long l Twice a week our class looked like a dress parade, twice a week shoes were shined, hair brushed, and clothes pressed, and hIcCrae never found it necessary to exclaim, God bless my soul! If dirt were trumps, what hands you would have l VVe always looked forward to our evenings with Doctor Hare. Now we all knew that it merely requires one apple a day to keep good health, but we also realized the professional appearance of a nasty dose to those who PE I5Dl 15,, 'lb X ff lla --A - He - T -... ,...,MN..e.-... ' i TT! le! Q 3- :V - One Immvdrcd seven fs xf Q X mg . 4 W Z 5? K P l A L . Vx. ,y ' f 7 ,- i Z x Q53 i Z f, lg Q A Y ' Wifi yi Wf , Xu wg, nf f cy fm , gf f ., ,, , ,f A a, X X. ff., ' 1 X X have not learned the rhyme, Better to hunt in fields for health unbought, than fee the doctor for a nauseous draught. And so we learned them all from Acetanilid to Zinc Sulphate, with much stress on Alcohol. The lectures were all absorbing and energetic but none were half as vehement as those involving the question of the Eighteenth Amendment. That is when Doctor Hare is in his glory and the VVomen's Christian Temperance Union was headed down the Styx. He was always interesting. He carried a bag of tricks that could hold the attention of the most sedentary man. If his stories would not engage us, his humor might, and, if his humor proved inadequate, he could at any time captivate our interest with timely literature. One of his favorites was: Wake! For the Sun, who scal'I'er'd into 'Flight The Stars betore him trom the Field ot Night, Drives Night along with them from Heav'n, and strikes The Sultan's Turret with a Shaft ot Light. And as he told us how to work with lVIother Nature, when to wait, and when to fiing a curse into the very teeth of Death, our respect for him knew no bounds. So too did we respect Doctor Gibbon, that great man who always met us with a pleasant smile. In the classroom his wisdom towered over ours like a Brobdingnag giant in Lilliput, still he was ever free of that characteristic which marks the Junior medical student, haufrhtiness. VVQ acquired some humility in our first demonstration of labor. Horrors! VVhy should womankind be thus tormented by a loving deity? VVhy should mankind endure such torture for the whimsical distinction of keeping the world's dominion from birds and trees? In silence we gave assent to Dr. Arrowsmith. He denounced Nature for her ways of tricking human beings by every gay device of moonlight and white limbs and reaching loveliness, int.o having babies, then making birth as cruel and clumsy and wasteful as she could? VVhat mystery is behind it all? ltlust we sit by like beaten fools chanting, All is as God overrules ? Or can we reach beyond our grasp and hope to find some mercy? Obstetrics taught us one thing sure, A mother is a mother still, the holiest thino' alive. Sometimes after the babies were born, when they had recovered from their amazement, when they had begun to take this cold, noisy world for granted, we would begin to see in the little youngsters something to love and wished they were our own. VVe naturally followed them to the Pediatrics Department. There we learned to dress them, feed them, wean them, carry them, and we heard all about the ogres that are ever waiting to gobble up the chubby little morsels. All of the monsters were cursed in a row: Damn gum diapers, pickles, and candy: Curses on toolers and on patent tood. Down with cow's milk, mothers' milk is dandy. - Drat the use ot baby-milk. Boop-boop-a-doop. S. 4 VG! , ts is 'wb 1 SQ .f.. gi af . A i get . M az YK A H a 'Y Q Q a U Q S 3 or g : Cl Q. F' is U Q X ii - 4 Ai'iWa.N X: r 1-3 - ' 'fa - : - X ss, xii Those who violate these rules might get Tsutsugamushi fever. We almost got it while travelling about Schmutzdeeke, Framboesia, and the Freibank System, but luckily Doctor Rosenberger was there to pull us out of the bad places. In those foreign lands, of which we had scarcely heard a single tale befo1'e, we were amazed to find such strange contrivanees occupying the most important places in the real1n: sling psychrometers, Reinsch-lVurl screens, electrified dust catchers, and Imhotf tanks. They guarded the diets of oysters: Went gunning tor tsetse-tliesg Connived with the king A demography ring, The records ot Mors to disguise. There were other strange lands to travel. VVe visited the Egyptian pyramids with Im-hotep, met Hippocrates and Aristotle in Greece, admired the works in the great Alexandrian library, walked the campus at Bologna and Padua, saw the deeds of Harvey and Hunter and Bernard and Pasteur, and then came home to glory in the proud rise of Jefferson. It was all doubly absorbing because no threats of examination were there to mar the scenery. VVe also studied art in the third year, down at D. B. I. Like the devout translate the great mysteries into a thousand living gods, we trans- lated the innocent hue of a drab sartorius into a million flaming shades that would cause the pretti- est solar spectrum to hang its head in shame. But all artists draw heavily upon their imagaina- tions-and we were artists, we moved in mysteri- ous ways our wonders to perform. VVe thought we had learned Anatomy, had ..e perused our compends diligently, but, when the X' grades arrived, we said to the timorous little beastie: But, Mousie, thou art no thy lane In proving foresight may be vain: The best laid schemes o' mice an' men Gang att a-gley, An' lea'e us nought but grief an' pain For promised icy. ll All of the grades were above the three-quarters mark though, and we returned to School quite cocked and primed to shy of books. It's an old Senior custom. How different from the first year when books were more necessary than food, when it was not surprising to see someone starting out on a social call with Histology under his arm, and when we all spent hours in the company of pretty damsels but were completely deaf and blind to their charms. Like Sir Isaac Newton, who was a student in the other half of astrology, once in the course of an evening's courtship he fell to musing, and, reaching out for A One hu-ndred nirie X X W 1 W , , I Y X , 4 fi 4, N the young lady's hand, began to raise it gently toward his lips, carefully picking out the little finger on which to bestow the evidence of affection. About this time the lady also became lost 'in pleasant thoughts. Sir Isaac squeezed her finger a bit, then absently stirred the hot ashes of his pipe with it. But we Seniors were now in another species of daze. With a far-away look, an assumed posture, a stiff-chested gait, ..-Ang lr. was' f--fb mrtnhd the wit dayf' 4? delusions of grandeur, disorientation, and ff-2 , Wfaffa ew even loss of memory for friends, we pre- T' f free WZ ted 1-obl th t 1' t-' t 'lt a s S sene ap em a psycnaiissmigi 4 properly call Dementia Cassis Altae thigh I hatj. Nevertheless we were suspicious of 'Wg the future, lacked confidence in the past. A 1 No more did our merry songs make the ' , I very rafters ring. VVe had to soon earn W our bread and porridgeg we had to act professional, at least so we thought. VVe Q? had become Men of lVIeasuredlX1erriment. It was a stern business, that hospital selection. There were many appointments and many disappointments. But, when the excitement died down, we found our- selves comfortably fixed for the coming iifgfggopexahns year in places scattered from the land of Q' A -1'wflff':,hik . igloos to the land of iguanas. M M Sum A ' 'Digg NB vw. Although 1'ushed to death, we Seniors ffffig 5 1.5! usually did take time to go to classes. Q Thus, when the Scotland Yard detective if QWZQ dropped a bottle of evidence on the clinic I L Hoor, we were all star witnesses of the f ffi. crime, we had all noted how he tried to '5Slg1 conceal the odor and the more material evidence with a Philadelphia newspaper, and we were all ready with advice: gAD M us: N1-E QDQE1-A-rn on OF A onsrnos J E ,J U No-STOMIA1. ADEQ-runs! Oh what a tangled web we weave When first we practice to deceive! The classes were, as classes are, gay, drab, lively, dull, operatic, or pale dry, seasoned with the spice of personality from a hundred good fellows. Doctor DaCosta's personality was brilliance. YVhen he spoke, the clinic was neither hot nor cold, the seats were neither hard nor soft, the rest of the world was neither here nor there, for all we felt or heard or saw was the Huent teacher feeding the many hungry souls jammed into the room. i . v , - me 5 'LL' is f k g Q: , A One hundred ten i is i s X X X Q15 ' 'I 1' , Q5 , fe sasfgfqgp xi f Q? f f We Z A23 if-Q xx xx X 2 st- is . ,, 5 as Ex X 1 sz as t XX X N ix X X x X, X, .g J 'F . fs X NX It behooves us to pay tribute to those other individualities: Paracentesis tympani g Wear the proper shoe ' i ll ll ll ll Modus operancli, Armamentarium too: Wl1at's the physiology? lin a nasal wayl: ll ' ' ll ll ll -er maxlllary sinus, ancl --er 5 Per se. And now this story ends. It has a curious endingg the heroes have not found their fortunesg they have not built their cottages by a waterfall: and the tale does not say that they lived happily ever afterward. Instead, they are just starting out from home, their little magic bundles on their backs, to - find their places in the world. At the turn of the road they look back on Father Jefferson, wiping a tear of gladness, shedding a tear of regret, and move on. X x The bird ot time has but a little way to tlutter ' And the bird is on the wing. , , J ll 4 ll I f W K f ,a I if K Z IN K W f f X I I 4 f Q , X ,Z W 1 1 X 7 I f , df Ly X One hurzdzefl elezien ' 1 J s 2 s ' r .5 I if ff iii. iiifizf 'fi 53' g- . . . '. e 9 .9263 fl SEE? ' ' f rs ' xi - If -LLA: 'A .. .. .. ., .. - V ,..., . ' --My-41 ., '- ' tf' '1-fu: V Q U if CHARLES LIGHTFOOT BALL, JR. jf' 'tom-lie ff ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. - - f.:,.- 5- .gg-4. ,-, 4f . ,f4,.,J ,N i n 1' Bachelor of Science 'iifjlwf-.f-,ggi..-7152f'f'P',i1fg'li.:.',.:,.--:,fflgffiis T. University of North Carolinglzg-if MAX ABRAM ANTIS Moon, Bland, Hare, PattersQn1Societies.,, -'i3?QS4,,,xEZ Mack .2 1 .5 cf., PITTSBURGH, PA- Wnllny from ri-avei 'icliai-15672 pai-ixszhisf, Q - 3-gr Bachelor of Science 'cycle 'neath the sliadowiisgoti:tl1ej:gcii15ggj 1 . . 7j ' University of Pittsburgh lege and looks with a searching -f gl QAE the sign of Jefferson. Finally restedffrogiib 'V in i Q.. V alius Societ the wilds of the big city 'lie- bec0gngs3.,.a3ig, 4 .13 ' QS y active member of Stl? Jusrxior3ClpssL5Q5E3.?'5f Endowed witlryagiteen 'open illllilldei .La Mixx 'hails froinltgie 51110137 city andtin- ceec is a creci o me moun aiu re I in A, 5 M 5, A.: ,, - . region of Wfestern Pennsylvania. He is i7l1QS9 11H.DQ1?d2 ?f15Qf1I2QSYmi1BF3.5 1115 lf, tall, lanky and good-naturedg a more en- EUC actlvmeg.iz3???,319fl??df 5459339 i!f?Q Q: 1,Q gaging fellow than Mack could not be SD81'fS COIUIHHS- 75 f-'nf s fou d. H' .EIS f hu o' to be en- U9 C211 1102D1Ol'Q'? 153417 5U.mlS'I55?S-3 9d J 'J viedt his isitq ygefyosponizlariedils and his the field flf'UfE.lf3JhDQF?7f ,LF ability at mimicry an art in itself. surely Cf11'd101pgy.2 gferg gtg is 155.1352 Qlggtsglig' 1 3, Mack could imitate any member of the has fllfffildl' Cilllsefl C??1Ed?3Ci??f1li3121'5Q'- faculty, and his discourses were one of thmiils befleflqhil71T1D4f3?ff?l?3l21jQEl5QSgiQfg the niost entertaining parts of our medi- WW fel' 5e3Sf':fg1fl'gf5'f : 'tiki 3-'E if f cal career. Max is another of those lads Mjiffylsnd .Gefier-Silt:3-lgtkigf-151fi'f?F.Q5 iI 33 5.1354 whose interests are wide and varied. Flite f 'ii 1 Q4 Besides preparing for his regular medical iff? .j' Courses ffMaCkH always found time to be present at the opening perforinancfes of LQ I ' f, the latest productions. Wlfhen in doubt Qi Tgffjff concerning the merit of a certain show, 2,5 if-tiff 'g jig! i'ggfi2Y gm. 3 he. could always be consulted and his .F Vgsl:gQ5f5Jk'ilA. RES 2' 1 E .5 opinion would settle any indecisionj . ,J--3fj1j,f QQiffm ' glgkj-luff.-,l-'E Xw71fl10Llt doubt he is a fellow who Will,5:'fQ i ilj'f',a-3:-Igifj lj .4.AfyflH-ji' be missed when the end of this year sha1'l.'4.Q' jf Z., 'N fxil ,Z 2 ij! Senawte our paths. . , . Q L ' ' if 1 Passavarif-fH6sySi+ei.4 'A .1 jjf..1LL5igf2iQv 35' gg-ff+,1g+ggeggs'-Iljfl . ' Zf.f..f'f55'1 p- bf-' H1 if +1 . a 'f f -fs - 'H5 1-FQ .--.PP-v .,:r:f':15i:1:-h-i-- .ee Wil-e.?fg,! N, 'nts-ff.'-1511-or -' 'S ff I- Q1 SL'-,jg . I i,ifvg'.iQ34t?'+?f Ei-A 1,: f Q. fF'-'1i'f1,- : g.j.g,.i l fi 4 J 5,-5135 . -1' ,, i 1',4,,-27 1 - 351, CQ- .1 .V ' .,. my ., , cr- ' . ''-ff-. f'1gfA'7fi:.+.,-X, -4 aff- . - 1 ' Em - 2 - 'mfr 'Q . 1' 1: -:Zig L':fi3v-CPe?i655ffl.1f11i'-L5ff:Q. .ef 1.D.-y- H- ' F ' 'i'f-1.'V F'-A , L' If jrlw i o . . , W , , . A, h ,, ,-L':'I.:l.f':?:sf1-. .nfl if-5Q'.. 'fi..,'f. iflj- - ' - .' . . .F My Y. t. E, .. 4- E ,Vt . ,B , . 1... 1 ..f-..1 I . A f ' rf. f-: r- . -If ' ' ,,'. '-, If- 1 One hundred twelve , f , ,, Jil..- A s' ' f-1.12-fgxfgQQ....li-Q1-Qjfzzef-'f',5t'-.-.4551 ' .-..zr-'ff-' :-:--,1fl11'1 'H a, 4 fe f ,x -'ei 4.51 ob ,fs ms fig , X fr ,f fave , SSLXFTQE QTY is SQMW 1 3 eisx N. X x. r s AS N M X... N :. ia, Q jf 1 ,N gf 32. w N'- X ' 1 ,. 4 J w ROLAND W BANKS bhadozz bonwoon, I x Bucknell ,. X .L -s i A K X Xiwxxx 1 Ns s, - I ' K NN sg . -I E fb i cafnfw s ' -- K , -F' - ' -'- --.if-,Fi-io: :DPL Bk 4' . 1 President, Junxoi Cliss, Ilfue Society U' MQW OLAIND is one of the smallest men in he class, but scholasticillv he is ex- Sceedinglv diligent and clexei On many occasions he has enlightened for us many -pioble-n1s,of the couise be D1ID1l1l1lf1VG to be sure but courageous and ready to fight for his own convic- tions, 1 pleasant and charming fellow vei reads nrth a helping hand. 4All however, has Fnot been work, for is sdiolastic lctivitves are dotted here and tlieie with exploits into the land of htlyentiire, fun, land Qnteltamment where- in he Bias accumulated an aimv of ever- lasting friends : 6 Q 'fi ,z' I 3 Chesien Hospital ' .5 'V .I ., 15 5. f-59 4 ' h-:' . 1 + -We-f'2f1f - KA-.5 , Q1 5- E sg, I LIL' ,. -' - l 2. -- ,-,.f:.n., Q H -- rf, ., .Q wgx,-ways-fw f'- BLAINE FRANKLIN BARTHO HBIai-ne MOUM CARMFL, PA. Bachelor of Arts Johns-Hopkins Lniversity AT9 NEN AQA Keen, Moon, Bauer, Bland Societies HIS quiet and unassuming lad came to Jefferson with much heretofore un- recognized ability. Moreover, he has taken the opportunity to develop along new lines. Natatorial demonstrations and the furthering of aviation among the members of the opposite sex have become his specialties. Occasionally Blaine suffers from pe- culiar seizures which require him to make startling announcements regarding his marital considerations. lVhether or not these are on account of fond mem- ories of Baltimore still remains a ques- tion. With these thoughts in mind let us turn to the characteristic Blaine. I-Ie is above fill fr student, and is keenly in- terested in every phase of the medical sciences. Perseverance and dependability are the key-Words to his present success. V Stump Smith can swear as to Blaines . X ,.-J., -. Fperseverance, and th-e' rest of the Nu Sigs '4..Q.'4 A ,A .vig -.mt -': depended ,upon Blaines knowledge of Q,wlierejzincluylreiil to ,go to class. -fhthiriieid'--Hospi+aI af.-zaefrisbefas Pa- .....,,,,,,, Y .xi , -A xr .414- -2 W- 3-'.,.', ' - tra'1eii?Q' il ' , ,qi -.- ,, . 'Rn ..w'- ' cr- -V' ' R-' ps. xifgrmsnaimnasg ..,. One hzmd fl th t 'ef' . yw eg ill ' -35 if-E 9 la: W V- Q ' 1 '5' f, ,xg .f . rn ' ci iff- ff .fu A V, Zu v I A .-Vg, .. .-'Qin we ag - 13. nli . ,- , yn - at 1: f . 3 ' ,ff ffgi N . . 5- ZW 1 ' . - 2 .45 fr of ,fe U '-' ' ' ' ff, 7 l . ' Y . J, , ' ' Q ' l s- , ,S , , ' .' 'Z-,., :L-I L of '1 rv H. L --T 1 , HQ 9 r l' . ' 4- I ' ' 1 1 .:-U! - -' ' ' ' -2: ' '1' ' 1 4' -fr- :--- N- . ' F ' I: .I - .' , . Mgt - 57-3 1 ff . .,., .s fl. , .- , Y' 'l ,. . vu ' fini 1: fy -.. 5. - .. A-. K ' J ,-'?5'I'r, A .1 . ' - l . f 3 '., - 'N-my 4 44.4 -F. .-. .- 3 . 1 - 4 . . cy ny, 43 af' '- 1 S . . 1. . -. 4 .- . -ez ' ', , 5 .V eggs L . livin. -fr: .nw el,-,i 2 3 A . h , K . . - 'f'-216-,. '.: . ., , f -1 , 3 ',2' 1 -r , 1 A z . . , . 2 .- JL 'Q Q . lsf -7 51 We .- 3' -A .L . A i ' 'i '1 if it iaf'l .' ' L zfiiwggge f -' ' 1 ies - 57, , F sl 3 'f,' 1. : 2 i- ' ,V my-1.1.-I , 59 I i 4, 5 Yell 511,12 5 I l. Hz, JE. - P' 'Q 3 :K .3 533.5 ftit Hi I line. in: I gi .:- Q. i . .1 i 1 iw si , ' 3 2, 2' f i g z' jf l K Lipiisfig '-'i-'it f 3 , -1 --.Ji '-SNP, Q 1 ' ., si T 5' 1- . H ,: .Jw .- ' iE.-5 51 ? E TJ EE'ES5ii 4 , 4 'l 'i'f1f:,f5 ll' I te, e Al , 1 l :ci 1 , 5 254 a , ,Q ' l f 5 . 5 , E . ' f - 1 - ' ,,- zx ,uf - I 3 lf. K K Li, i t 26,1-jc.--:ze-.1315 iz 'A N ' ',,...r i f c .f - ef , 1 2 1 - , ' f -'mm 1 , ' 2 ' f '1, . 1 f L, -.A . v ll- 1 2. : . T2 1 - 1 . . -ew '1- f f . ' .' aa- 1 '- e.. 0 31 11 'lil + rn Y ' ' ' .15 G ff- . j 'J' , l, ' w:f'5 ' + ,. ' af' -1. ,- In J Tl K ,U 1 1 , X' 1 . ' ' 4 . , 1 .0 f i J nf, -I 5 , . i f ,c 1 L. N gf if 5 b -4 NL 4 I. t J -f 1 XF' 1. I' K vmv,.u'a,v ' ' ' ' X 1 v lu , gl . 1'--. , ,Q lx, ' 'Q if . . F '15 'mf ff' J' Q X , ,,,, s rf ,. . Q N' 5 ' ., ' I 'Q 1' ' t S3-U we 1 ,. ,- .,':1 5 eu 1 . . ,. -+14 A f rf 4 . 3 '. ' , -A ' f. X f ' ' .- t I l M 'ull' Q .l ' i ' 'tv 'We V +HEiLmw.wQk5w7M 'v. M My 5 .. jvirnh I 'rn-,f 1.11, Q - T6 'H 66771 f '- ' 'N-' lt 4.-, --'.f, ncji-1-'.T, .- JN? i .2 , l Q, f v f 1 l A 6 1 l i f 1 2 ll 'J lf f 'Z f ff 7 1 C W 45 5 1 W Q 5 f Z 7 if f 2 4 2 W lg y 7 9 7 X f W 0 f J Z f 6 f 7 1 X 4 ff ff X X f f , if f ff gs! 1 my I I VC ' 4!'.4f7 S X . . IQ s -1 111 fl' -1. ' 4 p s X N S 1 Y 'z of k QV 9 5155 y 'WY- li is .Lv ,Q 4' iff' if 1 ' :V ' fx 1 35. 2' f . ,fi tf'-19 ' it 4, fab 'ben ': fit.-f 1- - 1 - -- -- -- - .1 A- ,. .... ...YY --l-N.. ,,,.. 21 f 7 -1: J 4 -1. of ANACLETO BERRILLO I 2' Kick ' gg PROVIDENCE, R. I, 651.11172 tj- T' Bachelor of Philosophy -- ,Q5.,.1..,.., Providence College 5 ' E MORLEY BERGER Pasteur Society f . K, K , .k.. fl, nf, .exrll B67'g,, B is fi 5' E QQ ,TC 'J Y i -I , 3' ':f..?: Mclxmlzsroivr, PA. Enom, gentlemen. the imimnacuzn land-eq, Jfjeg Baclleloy of Science student from Providence. fqlief inan :Xv'hQ,,Q:f'fX .I--2 University of pittsburgh camelto Jefferson with a 1ne1ge'Pl1.B.-Ijbqggg -Q 2 I YDAE is going back to Rhode Island gvitli-faijjv if ,QL f , V K . . , BLD., learned, sedate and ifull of311oDesfsQi, fhomas, Yesahus Societies and ambition. lg 51,3 4 .If it is true that QiTe's lossfof Q, FROM out of the bushes in the neighbor- ?3:f'?CfF1liV .21'?1l0Y1QE'ff?Uf1l'T flinogileflgef I ,Qs hood of Pittsburgh came a young lad Cocillleligsulge 'lf lofi- . ' to Jefferson. In fact Morley brought one miqgd .1 .1 Ioezfclkbs fmf L of the bushes with hi1n. lVe have to ' ,T ,. 'v,f1f11nl?D'221ll3l5WQ MTE' E 2 6-15723-'J'51 g', 'iQTf Deer behind one to find Be1'gH 1 Blclx IS a1Wf15'5Z'lqHret' given? 35119115 171' ' After you have tound hun you realize XfgC.?FES:dS11ffci,E QQ: faux it was Well worth the effort. He is one Amd westiculflt e ill ll-LflEf',ClCE191?1Q:lg Q great skate, He is always friendly 2101, E' t .ij mP:.15151fb- 4 -Tv and willing to help and co-operate in ' ' Q 2 ffffg fe Q- anything from studying for examinations S+- A-?QF,QP.l1'j2..iH?5P'ie5lljf3 I Egg 2 ,,Qj5j':?37.iS2gI to having a I'l'lD-S11Ol'tlllg,, good time. ,g'Prbxiiclence1 5R,15I.!i5 1, 5,.:i5,a'2iS f 'fijqbii . . sf. . .. .' ,pu 11.L, ..1.:.---,-T.. - ., Though one never hears hnn discuss j E.: jig-'f gg .ljgrffyj Q 5 Women, one does hear rumors that. he has if T - 5 f Q Q many social conquests. As explained by ' -32 V aj. 'ig one girl, Oh, he's so handsome I But -' . i1Q,i5 -E',',jFQ'.!'G??jl' have you ever heard him tell about his W I I operation? No? Then ask him about it. in Igigfl-' 5 1 -i lVe wonder how he will ever carry on g- 55? gl :iz glrelk Q feljf without his fellow associate and con- A -,lf -,L -ez-2. ' , 3531.-Q ,fs 1 ! .2 2? sultant, Gipstein. Howlever, many close I , i.':fi, -ljiizfs' K .- Qlfigff ' , QF associates have been separated in tl1lSA'--'iq ., Q-,Vim :'- A I Q 1 world, and each has found, successful. ii,-, :,g4I,95fL,fi.l- ,if - 3, paths notwithstanding. 1 f ,fi ,VZ f ' P '.,,EH3'fr 5'1,.f E .fig L ..-' D ,ry f,'j.f,' 2'1. L 'v'.'-glagigggs -f,',2 .f -5 ,' 5j,,gZ:',--A 7:3 5 . 1 x S -' -auf... ' MeKeeSPOi? H0596-iff-f ' ii -. 1 .Q as McKee-S l0rtA.?1Pb. -'S' ?:1f1i'19' i7 'K' .?2Saiiff'L. -Y -5-f'7f,'-LL'-:f4.-f -A V . if 4' . Eg ,N , , 2 . 1-U,-h.v,r55,,,1F,.s. n! lf.. 's.gm.'l,,N: , I 5 5..,,.I E., ,. .13 .. I, V 4 ,. J , . 1 .7 , ,fin ',':..L I. 417- ,, -' A ' - - U 2. ' '51' 5 1 -, ' j , ' .,1'g5pggfz1fF3fd?.-549 i 2- '.f'- ' ., :H w 1.41 . -44,2-nr:1,1.:-:,,:fiQt3Li4ffq -'.g may-.rrflii I, 3 iii. ...xl A 3 L Em, li . 7 P U -A L, QE ? ' ,fl 5 -Ha 'l:5l.IfW' 'ff' if-5 if-if ' - 2- .vu .,,'. 2.'. .-.- , if ' 'J '. . -v 'if eie1's-sf 1-lit -If ' ' - V' .f Y is f use fx 1fz,1g.-m - al F ,-. .,.. -M,,,,,V ,, A One hmzdred fourteen ' wr -3-f-,jj-'-A V' 'I f f f ar-fi ax emi? X2 X. ,....-. 5 ,, W ,, L9 W H.:-. issis- S..:v.i1.:p I 'Xb ' 'E fm SAMUEL JEROME BISHKO Stfmley' CLEVELND, Onio Bachelor of ki-ts Baldwin-YVal1'ice College QJAK ,Q :Is Deans Committee X W r Lx ph ,dl Q17 IL fl '- uliiiaiilii-ihxfaits before he -insu ers, -,:lii1't7'1tl1Ae1i?IiE fdlw-15s takes his time in 4 .Ipfigig He lends dignity by his iilejseiiqegto LIES! 2lCt no in-itter how trivi-11. 'lHdfgQ1lt1Q11lE1Il1j deme-inor, his Siigeiitjffzgncl friend-liiness have in-ide him likedf zinihgizspected-.1 dBut beneath this fgigigfilic-ici?eXte1'iZjij,IItlfe1'eflurks a love of fugni iiljdl gooclinaitin-edFpl-frytulness, that iris igiainedgi Iij1nf.ing1n5f -1 friends. frginil5C1eyel-ind, Ohio, to 113315 itiiefgb-eiietitsgfofoui' f'iir school ,ixiiieiel tlgziti botLi'fl1e.isinftfsifefferson were Epgelli repiiid ffoi-Q tHa,tgifErg2oSy. And now 2Sai1ii,QgoesQ:ibecIi'toQQ'Qlcv.e1g111cl with the 'Qoldeiil B Eeetiejtoliggzisci the fpains and ills ' rnnf'f'U I , , I I I : :IIII1 ,I Lfii tu. iQ5rf5g1at4.i. 'fieffpfnweff . .J A II .I, ii Qf?f+riitQE ,' N Q, If if : I '.4 .fiitggg-f '?fE3i5., . , .-IIIg,i:,,, .P W X ' ffj 32,--. 7 'i-,FQ - cn. Y rt I .- I ses so X .I axe B Al te, 1 ax X5 gigs x N is N ts X s X 5 5 XR XSS Xkxiss . 6- . V V . 'X ,-. -. .'1- ' 'Q i.-- -' .-QV . .. 1'.:'S'. . . nys ra. , J II . ,ggg II qw .W II , II II III, IzIII1,zII5:,5.,I4,,'y Y f in om ,,. -.5 . Q- H 1. ,, A F f'fI:f1l: ig, 5I.gI, .-jg.-- .I-I..I, ,y!12.I'j.,-'j... DWIGHT TURNEY BONHAM Speed ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS Bachelor of Science Blackburn College College of Vfbostiei- Miss. A. M M. Schaeffer and Thomas Societies HIS square-jawed, exacting professor of science and music came to us direct from the west where he had perambulated hither and yon from New Mexico to Illinois. medicine and even on most rainy days with umbrella in hand, he was seen trudg- ing to Classes well laden with books. Social life at Jefferson seemed to play a minor role in his life until the Junior year when he began posing as leading inun at one of the well known girls in- stitutions in town. Since then some un- known induence seems to have diverted Speeds attention so that frequently he is found missing when the roll is called Monday afternoons. Among the student body Bonham is known as one of our most conscientious hard working men, but to those who know him better-well, why bring that up? i i1'f-.1 'Speed's present ambition is to ap- -----Iiigrii'---among the Bz1bv faces of the if!Tf:5'f.'5. ' 'llffbii gII.QfIg gg' ifilefii 'f.ljg3gif2Qt,fiQ.innsJ- and in a few years we ex- fpQef5gtoIjseg.Qiis'-Qrigfne pei'-se on a brass .Qliiqu-e' 01.1-Ifgfllff H1151-1? line. Hospital r,g II,,,ff, I I Ilfggl :jgfif 555 QEPI-1iIacIeI phia, Pa. - feng: -sr s .-5-fx. t X' - V li? 'Lili-is ' 2.-,.. 'L ' --, - ', -xffdxz-W-A1---fs - gf- .-se..--:c.. .Y - -1.-Li-I. ...V '?:'h :i '.U1ze 7LlL71,fZ'I'Gfl fiffeefb II I , --.' :f.I:1I:IIiII -1,1 .II I ,rIIIII,I-I ii' iii EI. . 2 s Q ik V51 3? fsy fi ...- Ffi. if' , 3:5-1' .:ff4-1 '- 2 A' 'R' A Ui. 3' 'J V. -- 47. :exft - 11' liz - . - --.-9.12 . - Y ' -' ' f'7'ff J7'Z'EEE-'f5:A i'FQ' Z .-1 'f L v N . f Q3 :: 9 , 1 , N II 1 i I Af , 1 I, 1 I II r I J ifi. Q ' , 1 ,...fisjQ7.. 5 'I 1 . , J, FI -.IIIIIII II . -I frat: if fy, Q' 'l ...s SY- N .wif .r in 1 3 . ,-.,,. A. .,,. . . . . T211 Ts 92-ff , 1 ::f-1-, , ., 1 .. .X ,Z JS 1, -:. 4. 7295 I-L I . ' s - -'- -1 ,I .. . , gk xgz, -. . :- , ' ' -ii-. s. 5,-QM ' ' 1 1 nz. 1 - Q . 2 ff s Y' L . . -,I' I. ' ' ' 4, 51 I'-2' 1 a isis '- 'WV st -.1 37: - 1 . . . of . 1- :ig I' I f I His ideal was to achieve the art of teefrw I ' I. X - . 'Q 1 - If A f 'I . 3 I 'gig -,.,1I I F5 j A , 7494 .-F., 5 I f .s .sql , I . I I I -I , . 27' - , .Lf . 1 14' L, 5 ' ' I , 1 i j-:gg-Q,-.qc I I T?'f:2-'H : 1 ::' I ' . S 'I YI F ' jff, I 23, Ir. I, H . I II E 1 1 I , , , I ,I i 1 ,I Hi , e H11 I ,f I I I ' vi I ' ti 71' sl 'H I IF 1 I' 1 . I 5,1 'Fifi fl 4 is Q 553' L 1 gg. 1' j I v I u - 1 x I g din: I I fi 141: , -'III Q rf If 'if Ir I4 f --'f . ', ' . n-Q . , 1 .L e I 1 i I -I , . 1 eifiifiiirgf ,Z f. 'I H. 14? I I if, li ' . -' I I 1 ' 4 ' ,. , , , . , 3 - it n A 'H ' A ' '11 ui 4 ' by .1 vi T . I . 2 ffl . ,1 . , -' -. r . z . I. I P , , I .5 ,I-ea A Qi III I .1 ' 'H , - ia, Qi P 2' . 1 s I 9 If QI ,Y P ,,, .J J . . .. 1 . I Rive rwiw' 1 ' of .-fy 5 ' 1 is ' ' S, 1' ' I l 1 -1 . Y -H ' ggw? X' J' M X cfs.. Z i I ' f I ' J V If C ' I .V . f ' ! L 1 I 1' 4 J' 5251? fr ' f ' J v ' ' 4 I W .f 1 x , . so so X f 'W ,, K f X7 f f V ju P ,I f if X i 6 J X 1 gf 0 f W ,, 0 f X, K f X A r zz W 7 V '27 7? , f ,f 14 J 7 4 ,- ,, 5 i .A YQ to T is Z. iii fx Za 'K E. .tu 1:2 i l . 1519? :Q QQ wg' ii' Si' Tie Ffa X ati , 1 lf vt :fr 'iii ff ii ' B .- V li' 3 ,A , H 'Ll ALBERT WHEATLAND BROWN MAZ77 LANSDOWNE, PA. .,.::,.,v,: : Q5.1 L x: u F Bziclivedgi-lqofovicience rbi- A ' ' QPE. AQA JOHN NORBERT BORBONUS 3101.505 Schuegery Hare, Bale?-, fflga,-fy 'fj300-b0,,', Pasteur QPres.J, Societies .52 Jo1iNs'1'owN, Pix. Bachelor of Science SCHOLARSHIP and persongiljtyf U11iVG1'SitY of PifZfSb1U'gl1 good nucleus for a successful? 'Lf University of Notre Dame These two qualities are well exirnpfligiegfg , Qi f q5K QBH, KBQIJ in Al, He has been 11 lilard-:wor iergf if Bauer H-Ire ,P-'itterson Pasteur and ing these Years: 1s 99P5C1eHtl'E1lSf Stllfifilig '- 'E M 351.6011 , l -' - , I '. '1 ' ' lu and always a fe1lqKv3goAbe,depGIYC7Q6d 12139111 -N E 952' lei bocletles, Rabelais Llub, lJo1 H. ff 'ti :Hi H fb . V md .eil -. Keg., , 1, CLINIC Photo Manager isl e 31 5fig?gilizigegfqtieiigledXiu, :, ' ' ' warcec. as 9.3 , S-.5 . gg ' -1 L M scholarship, A35 5 n'rno1ncAL as his Teutonic for-bears. mates and tlie12e's,ee1n+1gfi3i, Quiirrcsxlleii-EQ : . , . - . f 5'P 9'T': 'E'Z:5L! 'L1 -Z- '4 M. Barry has studied medicine with all those XVll0gfllk0QY31lm1Q'jf 1,55 admirable system and with excellent re- Alf is alwagtsf2fLi1lf'1Qfi 1'9WQ'?ClFf11SjQQ015Pef Y suflts. Moreover, he finds time to play of which l1el1i1g5stilQ'QefKIi'If WXgowlEkg,Q1l,gi1!LdS j the role of down-town clubinan with a knowing how seriously?Klg2lgtaEe,SQl31s.g'Q.IllSis -' ggi: penchant for politics. In his gayer mo- we can lsagelgg ?i1'efEac!:3xtlratgi311ig,QQf!1'1PSfgjggggxf ments he reveals to his friends a Great years wi C.'.ll'A:,O? I1Q?'QIQ:Bl11SQ'.g' nijsjf., sociability, an even lIGIll1J61'H1ll6l1l1billlfl phnadalemgz Ggrleglg 5 rar'e gustatory. gifts. One'of his chief delights is originating and circulating the 5 gif 5,3 5353.7 'i 5 g keg yearly crop of Jefferson rumors. Barry T: . i V15 Elf-V Q has very positive likes and dislikes and he 1 5. E :ff loves to defend them. As a critic of I I ,, plays and books he is worthy of your lg. Q E I 'i 1 sgiiggjg attention that is more than can be said : ge Q' 32233 Fifi, file 2 for most of his colleagues. One final Tl , gf l ', bouquet: he never fails to drop down to 13-xjlgf-fig-Q'-'ff ' Z1 b'i'51Qf3'k.l f ,lf F sharp after We hit that minor. ,lf ' 'gi I S St. Francis Hospital - n-I Pi++sbufgh., Fi-323 . ,.g,1-f I pl++l?l, .ef-ns-1.4.1. I e i1i3l1' ' '- 4 . - ii-55. Y. Sgiffrif-'LFE . : ' fii -- 1 ,H Li. X. ,I nj.:-5.3-.EQL25 ., Qljmfiff .ag . I ,Q . Ji ,?f'smz.'pF-ff:'+ifg .4 FGM:- sr rg 5 :4 if . .sl -7 -' A 'Bti-E f.-:uae--.-.Y-f::ffs35M, f- 1 tg ffzsf - '- qw. ,. - L -'12, . '. ' fifdiff' ' ' ' 3 fi' .. .' A- 51 .' l. - I ' . - 11. '.'-f'?f ffIf'f97SiTf3'iQi. Iyggggi ',g S9'J'i51Li . - lf? illlcl-l:7'.'3'1t 'tif ,.,f.7t?yj2R ' .- 152,411 Q r':-- ,jj it I. :Z Q, -In - . .:'f,fPtQ.J.,,-X4 -1 L4 , h- 1 ,F One hundred sizreew'-- 2 Alll. 12554 5 1.-f Liv- 5,34-3 171,11 '. l .1 4. X fa.-.-1:1 is 'ii 4 ff' if . 2411 . . vlyrnr .. if -'H I W ' ai A X . X ss XX X . . ,. X X s -. N : s - ' ' ' NNN . sf ,. A is .s F : fx 11' , QT Q e' if Hsu- 14. :Ya -w-,Hs 'Hx YA -V' 541 AUSTIN FRANKLIN BRUNNER lustre IIARRISBURG, Pi Bicheloi of kits Dirknison Collehe I fag? Ac Ldemy, Tunioi Class Secietiiy USIIB betfei knonn 1 lustie t 1,ll1S fellow Students, is one of D1cki11- sons gifts to Teifeison lhfit he was vsuccessfdl 1n ieaching tl1e cilm 'ind rsDe'1CQ of this ve'u IS evidence that he mfmaged to 'ibsoib h1s share of '- fellectual knowledge dining his stiy at Lfnlisle r Austin, although successful in lllq pur- srut of lea.11J111g has 'failed 111 one of l1is moie important quests at Tefteison This 'has led hun throufflr num a 1n1le and fu into the night Oh where can I fund sa fouith at B11dge'7 Rewxaid if infor- Meihodlsi Episcopal Hospital Phladelbhia, Pa l ' 1 , ,. ., , , . ,. - . ii? - .f f' 1. X -I-fff1 --3- rf .' ,. fm! 1 f U : : ' ' ' ' 'f' Wx .Z .1'1Wd'45, --:ffl-f'7 lil. 311 -V 1' 4 X s, X Ss, mls 's- mv-fe -sz rbi. 1' 't if' '- ' ' -H-I . ' L.- -. zf,frLr:2.'ff,3f - . ,,..,!! el f!f1,!,fQ ..'a!1:57', .ser-1ff.+rff1'f5' . -Q-.:.1..1-we-.-.'..-1, --V-1.3,--.--,. A -,. BINGLEY LYMAN BURDICK Bingo YVELLSVILLE, N. Y. Bachelor of Science University of Buffalo Alfred University University of Pennsylvania EHOLD a cl1ap of elongated stature, cheery smile and genial personality- a true representative of the sidewalks of New York. Always dressed as a per- fect man should be even to a derby hat, he can daily be seen sauntering forth. In his earlier days he appeared a bit too modest, but after due association with the now well-known columns of Gall and Burdick, the necessary nervous stimu- lation was received. He now reigns supreme with the female element from Sixtieth Street to Lansdowne. Bingley excels i11 obstetrics-many de- lighted mothers Whom he l1as attended have even conferred upon their babies the name of this debonair medico. Hav- ing played a leading role ill the four- year drama staged at Jefferson, there is no doubt that the obstetrical world will have an efiicient and conscientious star flngiits realm when he assumes practice. 7, -M' 3' je '-' fi 2' :ffl 3 5, If K-ing s I .Co u nfy H os p iial ' -'-' I 2-Q53-qsvoqklyn. N. Y. 41sf'f'.s.U . , ':. . if ,-.Q-jf 1 -...ff 4 ' ' ,, .ln , .. E.. 5,543 .Jug 1 N 5. . s 1, - Vg--4.-f. C ,. flyer. r , PTI'- ' -1. ht..,,r,'f1, 151141. QL -3.-f x-.-are-.. ml 'GSL' '- A Q T N H A7 1:-:w -. 1. ri ' 1 - ' L ' . - '. -- J ,--4-1-1-24 , A .,.:-. .' ,cgi an 'YP .9:'alQ- q K . ' . , sl A ..,, .,., ,. H: it U V il'i 'iv 'sfggzlgi : -els,-1ii:.1zI1 1- ff One hfzmrlred sc'0enteen fd ' 419' 'P ,lx ,L f 115 .ga -1 'i' 'fl . :iii f , .H.1P.', KH: if 17:35 2 ,cf 2 'sa I LSC-, - if ig iff?-1 -T, TZ. if sjf' Sgr A' .1 li: I ' ih' I, .if .-1 ,, Qt. ini. Q' . . 'H ' ui? ' fr -'-.PQ Zi . Q ..,,L -,Au Tw' .,if5tr?.f,Qe3' 5 H 323 'fi siiv I Ulf I!! Q . . : Q. . ' CPE 1 Ny .flu F? ' 'NIUE 'li 1' ka ' - . -1 . l , - 5, 4215513 12 ' f 'lf-'f 1- ' js 'Fig ' - , rw 5 BJ ',. .VA git- I -K v ,L . . L L si my - . iff' 1.,'5 I . v. es -1 A 1 1. , 2 .. I? .- . . , . 'f i'1 L t QS'- -' . ff 'Z ' 1- J . ' '-Q . it . .' 5 G X E. 'S , 41 I2 .t ., 7,5 kr A. AKA . ' 1 . - . R -' ' 1. ff! if 1 Zlllfiilillii lfsagfverrf wi above-1 ' ' I fgzf Mg- jf if'Ei.f:- 'gen-v.,f!. git ':l'i-,i- X 2?'f ,1 21.1i5!. 'lj 1 . ef ' ,-gg 1 2 lsr! -'L ,q I J- sl - g e , 1- ,l 1 , i - 1 4- s .. 1 -wwf f 1 ' B V, g.25.' '- l - -Q ., 1 1 Q, s , li v II 'Hr 'i li li ire 1' ' .Q 1. ,vw l1 iQ' , ,fi i s I 1 4 ' 1 I A K I '- Wires' 2 L ' 3 ii- lad if .VS vid' - 1 , gl S' K1 .Ji 4 '-we : ' ., i his Q 1, 1 5,1 .tg I sr ',' 1 Qfiil, 5 rs: , nf 5 + A l .. x 1 ,rw rg' Q, 1 S' W' ,, Us-,M , at f e , .5 .-f-u X . 1 . . xl 1 ,-qi. qw ,.., .. ze :Q .- f ,W -ev - ' , ...,'q',, 'i'45fv1,.z I z , K X fs 1 sl n N 1 , 1 F ' 9 l bi 4 'Z' ' l -'33 -ji 'ff X ffl , E A 3 X To . ,- ' Q 3 V z : I hp ig p M 5 Q' 4' P -+ ,. 1 . ,fgZ.74fIfi R ' Y L.-H 'v ' ' Z 4 v ,.,, , f , . J Y 4 K ' ' .f w 1 .. li i Xi s CY R s s 4 S sl z X J .5 4? if at ..,: Ii: -p ,. . i,'f7.14:,!.F5l A'n x --4 -..-.. 'r 1 fZ1f- . . - '?iT'Tf'? CLAUDE HENRY BUTLER But' DUNMORE, PA. Bachelor of Science bolumbifi Pennsylvania St-ite College KIJAZ KBCIJ Schaeffer Loux Strecker P-itterson Academy CPres.J Societies Deans Com- mittee URING his yG ll'S 'it Teiierson But has been without rival to the caim of being the least of these' in stature. lo offset this are his spirit and adam-int courage which carry him on to successful accomplislnnent of what must be done. He was one of the true mourners of the passing of the old college building with its convenient pillars, behind which he spent many an hour pursuing current periodic-ils or pursuing Morpheus while others wrote hurriedly or sat in dis- content through interinintible dry lec- tures. However he always woke in time to successfully withstand the periodic onslaughts of the blue-books and other exainiiritions. Despite his nonchalfint ex- terior, 'But' is ever at hand to 'lid in any manner possible. His abilit5 to gi-isp the essentials quickly solves in-my problems. and we but envy his succ'eisi'f.'i of Q .. ..'-' 1 fist .1 r 9. I. ffk . 'fb . .L . n ff: X S i P- ' -f:w?wvv:'9' 'l ' v-.Hz f f- e up -5.3 - Jig .fJ .v 5 Q,-131,-1 ,-4 . , K , -5 1 , , '!,71.. '.v, U - 'fl ROBERT KYUN-HYUN CHARR for the efise find rapidity .yvitlil,xYli5icl1 gjlie15',3j'' ,N Shi, ix ill achieve it. .I .fr Lfk fglf' - - Moses Taylolg H6sp'ifaT,'A1f if ' Scranton i.Pa.A-f 1'1 .,.ju,35.L ' -- '. 2-5-xii-f 1 pry. 2 : I J A-:F-A-I h- . tj- an E I ,T L-nf.. -. ' H b,1i,gG:6Lq .x . as V .H-::i'iQj1,Y'l'v' . ' - :ff ,Q fg'5f,:f .f?'fP LMf:. Hi' P 1 wa .4 4' or J. Sm. CHEN, IQOREA Bachelor of Science Huron College, Huron, S. Dakota Moon Society b Qgfsg, ROM the rugged Lills of Efaiilfiiwizflgi., 't1 '?55S'-:Tilt countrs Korea, comes fthisl 1 Siioidf. philosopher. From the firstg flajfflie-Zgeiiii' Q 5.15 . tered Teiferson, this Sf1'Rii'g,'?,R2l1'1l'2lGfQklf' Q '- eman-ited his philosophical 1 3 ii1iiire11cisE::3? 1.,, -unong his few intinrite Colleiigues. ' . '1 cofit button was torn '111f'f'Sll08S!Dl1u6CjLj-: ' 0 while being passed upff Freshm-in days, Mbiila, tlie e1'1-isitijigftr, 2 eilinntss and inqliffeggenqegxvere gti'uegito3 : his p11ilosophy.,5 V In spite of5'liiSge1iiilit1si'z1si5p- ,oven gthef works of Elxictetiisgjliijti-ciis Ajtlrbljus, arigf Schopenhauer fiijdg jpriifitei in German Cli-irrihasgbeeli fiifflii ittie himself in the Ai-tics-nfggtieiues s.1EIiszfi2f1sr: experience -it ,P.ihE.l'-,Stieet 1 f,,',j1,' gg:-1. :N r Q. z su H 1 .t- 5.51 ,ai - ,Iii ' V . fm- ',-Li.: in .,g,. ,.. 4 pai-tment li-is leifto? his if6Q0glIitiOI1f3Q'aE'?d, :S ' fi ki expert physic-il 553.5 Q gi! Chester! Tiff-. ' H fi ' ' ' 1 ' ' frfif f e f 1 fm' 531.-P , '. I -, u . E., . -.NZM ., ., 1. 3, inf , ... 4, .- .. F f h :'5i:S,.I. ,A siiifft .1-J I2 '. rg..-, .1 . 1 519. ' ,J stiff ' A . Qi? I - 552 .gr 'sl IM- x,-E I. x...f Q .4 nf My ,1 l f 1 5: Pfil-9:2-1 2 , , j 'Pig' il sg -i-Sil t s 5165 Z5 5 WE? as s Z ' ii x? 1 fs if s A v x 9 Q e , ' 'si One hundred eiigltibgif lilv Wmlfi' f -'J-'.,'---rw, -- i7,. , 1 me 11:1 KJ il'-' 5:55 -if ' 1 - fa , ,- : -- we 5, . .- , 5? . -S, get mf-- -5:1 1, I P 2 55' is 1 ,C r ' ,Y ',.L A ' N. 19 . ff 1 ' 4 u :' 1 A 1 1 . . , f Y , g V 1' 15 at 1 1 1L ' vi' N 1 2 'f fr. I ' lx Y E i t C ' A A '3- f'ffl'q- . 1 1- 1 , , A J 9 X 1 1 J Y f , v X Y F l 1' 1 1 l sc 1 ' n . ' F! 1 I . 1 . , 1 . K, V K l V 1 1 1 5 l N Q f , x . 1 K . Q 1 1 1 1 c 1 fl 4 X f Y 1 1 , . My L A , K we it lx I X 1 1 D 1 1 - 1 111- 1 1 1 . Q 1 4 .0 X 'Z' u 1 LW ' .5 I W rw 1 e S 1 1 1 1 1 , ' I X ln: 1 ,Q 1 1 if N - , 1 1 1 1 5 1 . 1 1 K ' ie 1 1 'ig L L L L Il 1 I ' js 1 -J: 1 g 1 as , I if ' ' Bi Eg L ' . 51 1 14 1 x 1 ' 1' 1 v 41 K V I 22 ff . .1 .efifmerjw fy ,js 1 lk I 1: f':Sp,f 4 A- if vw I Y 1 1 i 1 ' 'Q X Q fl r I fi 1 1 1 I A 1 1 gy I 1 ,f - 1 1 P 'v 1 a ' ' 1 is f I l E- - if 5 ,f , , + 1 15 -, ' 1 Q If 1 I 4 J .11 1. r 1 :ig I .X J y I 2 . X 1 1 ' I, A - I K, v 1 -gf i fl x 1 I 1.3, . , , -gl 1 V , fn 2 . 1 fi ' I V ,'i'.' i' X f 5 1, 4 1 ,Q 'C , f , 1 1' y ,P 1 if 'Y-ZW f IT Q . , A , at ,I .M.,,1,1,g .f J, ,111 J., '., t 1 1,1 ' fi, , ' Q ' 'M A- x . x' 'Nl 1 1 , 1 1. X 3: 7 , , vf ,. -A ,gnx ' M.-1,1 , . , 1-5 .t . , 'Q ' ' -1.. r 9 9 ' f '1' 1' 5' is I1 ' 1 1, ' I if 1' 1 ... 'f ' . ' vf ' 2. 'V X, i I ,- I s , 1 fy ' itil? D ,QQ ,,, 34 1 N .1 - f . 'F i -1. M il w I HI H rx ' vm mg. W- ii W Q 3 xi E2 2 4 ff sf A 4 ,,. ,. A X i' X f N X its :- S-. X . 2 'ff if .L 111 1-Q . .. r,- fzl 1,5 .iw if ' ,L avg -- A . 453: ,J ? ra J Min., Ig . .,.. ,, I . . . . .. .. MILTON HARVEY col-:EN 'Qt Milt jfi LEWISTOXVN, PA. , Bachelor- of A1-rs L ' r? .:e-'siffzfffv 5 Lehigh University 4' --H ?-1175-1 'iff T-'-771 - ' ' ' HACIJ CIJAE ' 1 .c.5S? Y- 5 ' HAROLD J. COKELY X K if Z I if . 1: fag. -.115-fu, ILT? -being naturally very genial Coke 15faiE1d'.gooil-Eiiatlh-ed has an unlimited num- JAMESPORT, MISSOURI -'52,-her ,ot triengls, . . . V . Y, Bachelor of Science J 'f21i'.s a,-1 ,Besides -, lnsg scholastic fabilltg Bgllt University of Missouri f ' -1 1' . - - . .1 . . . . ag- ,' , 5. --Qshqwed :great 5 diversity o min anc is AK? ff .Tff g , -ii-the it ' e Drip Beardsley always lauds. X, . . -9 - H1 - - - Patterson Louv keen Societies 25611111-lrffsted 1n'!ned1CU?e to il glen flffglti L ' ' ' ' q iliejis not l'Yill'IOXX'QQ1QQi1Il'-'QIIS respect. Milt -f f'vT QQ10.WS3 ills. fflkeiltfg-9V1l1FTg9fYf fool? actlge HE qualities which insure a man suc- e- ' ' -U.I'-?1lt?1'ff-'Qtfm5SP0,FtSTlf4'Pf12!Q1'1l1y me tm ' cess in any environment are difficult ji' ff A' .fix Q . A.1jfgL',-fb t h, I .al to enumerate but easily recognized. In T .lf 531, , egg SYQPE i,f??5?1-,?.,0u B151 Hof medical school one who possesses them i ?9Ef'.,'Qj,: 'I 10 1,922 gains popularity among his fellows, .the il- fwliellv If S15-IVE respect ofihis teachers and a keen enJoy- .- 4vr1'2Q1a-1-- 9 lg 0. ef- ment of hfe. ' if lim' iWhEPJile1'. hell 'f?r5tfu3me IS Alma' YVel1 endowed with such qualities, ig- Bali-nnfyorre,Cniiygljlqspltal whatever they may be, 1S Cokely, who irL?iI'.til?.' 2-3-. Balfi13f0rg,.:'Md, came to Jefferson from that State made .15jw:3,,.gz ' 4 famous by .trite epigrams and corncob 0 i ff 5. if l 3 , pipes. He is, in short, a transfer among 5 g if, 5,3 5- 'YQ transfers. Among his other attributes he 5 possesses a handsomeness t11at is con- QL ,-Sig-Q jj clucive to envy among the Arrow-Collar ,E 5 57 men and cardiac palpitation in the ranks of the fair promenaclers on Chestnut ffflf' -Q. .. Q fli1i1'A.rsjsl'.2'1tgL '-Q Cokely is an exceptional Missourian, 3l6y,s4, R q..4..,-l,,,, , , 3 1 ' 43 '-.,1IgiQ-ijt. .H iff,-,3,...25jh in that we have never heard from l11m silt, .,1'j.g'-f:-5 , 1,25 'ligjjf--.15:' ,V-Q. 5 that old platitudinous statement, 'Tm 1. wi, S . .. H1451 ,'.':f?f--from Missouri, etc. -- ' - - ' V 3- ' Y' ze. ' .M ' :Ti .r'Lf31 I- . . 2 1 - J H334412 if an 1' - 1-. Qmfed S+a+es Navy Yi- l i g , .jf , '. ,-if 111 fit' W ' li' 1 ' 1 - 13571 'FEZQTE -f51f'f7Z17 il-'S'ef - 1 ' ' 'l ' an ff 1.-I . .- vs- --Liam, as-,llqi-.re---.',:--. ., . f- : Z2 ,- :Lf iii-5-, -7 'lisa' 654 irilgzia-'fi-.f'-Qj,f.l2:2 .. A ' -'f ii 'iii 3 I f .1 'i - 15RL'2ZEx3-i i i' fvelflibs-3-f?1 :s5?-'i .--.H - 4 N n F1 . t X :Q 5... I . ,I f- A s.tg,Q.4x,:,5i..w-7,-, SY .. . . , - . -- . '. 1 -f at 1- , u -' -E : - -' pf E Y '- .,,r2'f .-'Q-file ..-eizzfgfk-'.fTr-V 1'-T-' 'I-u-:is-. ,fc ,.zsf,,Q,f, .-,,. s - . . . - 1 . Q . K .lf v , uh ..-. X - -, fa - ' - 1 - l , . . fit f- fair- t f'13!J,rJ: -Ll ---N thx, , 3 V- :L-igTP?lZX?W -fffff'-f One hundred 'll'L?l9t6607, , -. Qiw an XM' 1 fc fff I. A go . pl. X. X, el- ix 'if X- N1 .. Zi Ei fi I, auf' it ,fft .?. 4 it , . Qt y. 35 9.3 532' lf - DF- , .. --:ga - 4' -fit- ' E542 , ' ijt JAM-ES ADRIAN CONLAN if Jacko Pittston, Pa. ,:,i.,,,,,,,, V -. -.4 Q if ? Bachelor of Science g - fi f 5'5:'1'if .311'Wr f :?,. 15'-p '2 f1+,s4.. ,',of:i??ff' 5 P-eunsylvania State Collegegig-Z ...I QPE, epic if flf,.g..5g55.,,Y WILLIAM RICH COLLETT Schueiter and Bauer Societies'-,'.V-:5i'-.A -':?.251,2,a-.hx ' SIDNEY. MONTANA WHAT no! It's Joclco.'ffi.2iHna1i wliojsef 3. .iii Ibiuivm-sity gf Xwlslliugton fume had reached our edelgsfi doug- 2. . ?, xi,Q,3.' QP? AOA KBQ he entered the portals of lefEersqn5 th W , f' V M C . x that memorable day untitfnoxxg ilieeilligsn, ,fb uf Moon, Bland bocieties, Dean s omnnttee won the hearts of an mgmbelfsgogilgygj -v . ig . class by his SlIlC9l'llf,X1,:g'iilCl his never fgiliggif X' ,L SUCCESS as a student does not onlr mean quips and,WittiC,i5nl5fl AAn QQFIIGSY 'E 553' :1 high scholarship, but also in addition U- dxlscernmg Illlindf ?asP?F4f?1f11?22'5ZfQQilf'-fi1'f3t45Ef' ' Q aptness to obtain :1 well-deserved popu- H1959 ,beSI7eilIii,2t,lQgQl?lilJ4f19SJQQTEQSQ' - : ff lairity through activities :ind personality. 500131 flC'f1Y1f295fV 53Q15a L. It is this combination which has made muted by tl1eE1MiQ59?f99L-'flff 'JEQQIYOE 5 Dick the well-liked fellow that he is in D1'0f01111f1 k110Wlf2f1s 32fig,4gE.jIpgtii.theftllsolitfet' Ty r. our Class. I-le is both sociable and in-ight, C211 and, i13'f1ct3Q?3g 215116955 fvfgtlge gregllgflgj r ag and his friends are numerous. As the Course' 15 U-Id9?fg :ig fg. foregoing is read it is seemingly brutally Stl .Adrjefil-Ibipfqitiejg-'Q 5 I fc E5 fi ZZ? trite. To really appreciate this man one Pbiladglpjliiigyqggf l ' 'I' 5 must meet hun and on very short uc- Af:-g ,ttf 51345352 quuintance the reason and logic of his i' 21 f position in the class is rearliily discernable. Y lifjf Although coming from the wild NVest, rffggfg I J 5 I 5 3951: he was easily captivated by a charm ,gt gl ,f!,i'f- 3.5 5 of the fair East. .gE5,2:f E .jflifggjz Soon he will be leaving us. but we are 4 gf,-5 I ., sure that his character and his ability QI 4' a predict ai bright future. rel. Genera' H0SPi+f-I fl ti L ' .I S lg! Tacoma. Washington ' il 'flf.5::QijQg-QI. 5, mln if 'J ' AH: 1'Eig'i1i5I me war? 'I 5 'frtwibff-I-QI 'I s -v'Wif'?., ' W . 1 5 itil 5 2? 'Lin'-!'..nF '- ' 3-I f-'I C v-- -'I' .J fl - it. ' 6-'3 .-3-..,-J 5E1 .mm +- - WIT 'D-',E7!i.:.' -A 2' '-1 .1 11f.z.'r:.-w53S1z'?z'tf:.:-f.- - . .Ifts-SI-fm? 'rf-f Y - .34 F if ie -5: 15':fS1JJi-ff-1,k- -fv12q.:52,x g -f ' ' .Iv:f,i-1f.T'5f4,s 13,-1 'A f . x ,g fs It , .. , , A,-I. Q---.+A Fa. 'In-gi:--gf, ,' .f me-.f-I H- --1 ' -K - ' K' I .w-I-S lff5.L fl.'1--Iif-5. if.q14ff5. 'Z v i f ' f V- T 'f 3: A - 1- ' I ' 154 -.r as ''-!.'A ?F- fl'?'f'2E':T.9'iz9-4 ffggil A 7 4 .Jai 7 zzlgx 'zf'--L11 get . -,g.g.g:wgqifSM'L'fsieglfii-A, fiYf?e-2..f.p- ji' F .fi J' 2-3 Ing J.: J. I Q 'fi to 111 - ' 191 b One hundred twentyw-1.1.,-.f'fs:g,:Qg4'.j5g, ,. . ,, p ,,.1r',, 3 5' :Def-13 'C'..14 .--- S ' -1:-Z. .----,'.jt'-sky, 5. , 1 f N? se 112 I H' if ' 1 -.-.3,i,,-w,Q.i:f-'2.,, ' - G SZ 3,., ,..- ,. iii.. Fi' pi , 4- ., :-1 .,, B12 JE 1- 5-C, ,.. . 3,4 4, 35.15 ,Qs .5 . I-QQ .ia - A-41' 'W iii- . -Al Nff Je .1 ,,x . 1-iii 33' H.. 1-I :P i- .. Q-ss , - :if sk , as ss -Y' XFX S21 5.1 NP: sx sk X. , s. :Qs rs. .si v ff! ?3' 'LAK .'4r B: ji sf ,. 13 1? Q. 5 -f. --I.. i 'a , , . T A ' . .,,,-'f-'Zia-N . , . .:'11-m.. 1,1 fe- .- '--'fvi f J fjiifizf-,7.. -. a-- VTP- 7 1'g?2ifj?3:15b3 .E PAUL MEYER CORMAN ii' D utclzf' COBURN, PA. Bachelor of Science I- - Pennsylvania State College 4' ' 3 AKK, EX N., r15 17f' ' ,V-.-sgzsfiff Keen Loux CPres.J 5 Patterson, Ptolemy ' 1. ' A . - . . ,J-:Kg-' mi, f 1 ' Societies , , - N Eniorsntn companion. Slow and ffgsleepy 5Di31'IlliDS' in appearance, but hidden ' ,.iQ'iinde'1- tit is' the U' A V lsl, L . . , curious and analytical .Qliiiiifxd ciffthe triie scientistg a sympathetic 1-Ltiouch iof ,the old practitioner. A faith- 'ffiiluess gliog ,his --ideals, a devotion to ,5Di1quesigegasgtl1ou'gh'itfbore his own name. . jtfegis an futteiijbufean'GratiQin his support tlipflfostf bfgcgifg fg-553511. 'chemist lie' SHI'- Birsteiiiglifoiyf ,his gzigield also includes 'fanetjalluifgys iAs::af'1i5icoh1ie1xr of the homely QfQf?I1i?s'?iftg5iIfi1l,1f1lSQCIGIHGDS in his ii1QG2Ll51varas County. Jim WOLTIQ fliayeg io ,guard his laurels ','?Ilg2'llliSt t1liS geopiioisssqi-K of fine and ssparklingifgeinsgzii,-Sffg2lQirtch'?ris a true pal. ifiili Q Q .3?fE'ief f?zivE 1H65Pifil f 1 Q gfG3efmidf3!emn-IPe,- --Q'-U.1.a -1- -- -- 1- ,. .,,. .. ,., .,, .,. Aff: 4 :LSE 1 5. '2 si: '. if , sf 1 . A ' -'-.15-S..-.ew .1 Isvzssg Je.,-, ses - - -- J 1,1 .:- - - 1 ea.-I.: ...- - , ., , -'. IL ac: 2-1:93 ' . - - ,, f .,- .U --v.,, 4.,, if 'GSE 315 ' , 1, vpn- 1 . - . f,., -.,'. .. .fx 'VL A ah 'f. . ii 1 1 I JI . . -.- , . -r!i.' .f'1,r'a':' 77 ' ' - as--I ' g: Gjf?QU1 -' r, . 4. .,.,. WILLIAM NATHAN CRELLIN Bill -f Let's have a pm'1y j BLLOREA COLLIERY, PA. Lafayette College NEN, KBQ Morse, Keen Societies, Junior Class CSec.J T0 BE uncereinoniously awakened by an unearthly stamping noise, in the middle of the night, simply meant that Bill, the night watchman, was making rounds. He came to Jefferson after three years spent at Lafayette College, pursuing, along: with numerous other things, such knowledge as he deemed Ht to acquire. Bill, early strove to perfect his bed- side technique, until today, he is a past master at this very important part of a successful medical career. His colossal memory is most astounding, especially' for limericks and other oddities. I-le be-- came keenly interested in the art of certain methods of transfusion and later in other forms of research. Bill is tl1e most amiable of friends and possesses all the attributes and sterling .Q 5 1 , ' as-Ni . . . . ,,Wn 31. 1. Y if 's,3,,,-!j:'.,g F qualities of the perfect physician. He S .,.4,j, -SL pl V4.5 224223.-f,',,, ijzw-carries w1tl1 h11n the best wishes of a -1 , -- f' g,,j,,-if J' 33,1 ' ilio-stfof friends. ' A . . 4 f-25-:-'1'g-1Fi-iakfoffi HOSPHG' 5 . 1 ..1.i.fj .: ..f3w:-.r,.,-.'-1.-Q.. . A '...'.ph't ,3 it h- p .- fzf ' '. !' 'L rr . Fil'-1' R- ' ' q'.Sfl34f'T '--'P'---'rl-'. 4 -A I5 'a' a' . ' a':'- ' , . A -if-f'i'4V?frf1s.Lp.a-'L - ,ez 1 ' -1 1-it 4 f ui .gA ?3x1ig2f?ff'EfE'7fffT '!5'.Q'f'' ., '-.1':f ' f ' aff- 5 A- ' 'T'.l7':' if -I'34f-i.-'f fLs'- Z-if 7-'fam 1 fl : Y -13i 'i viz, -'He . , , ' --. ri- '.??3I.1S.fr.-..-.-.fe0ne hunflrecl twenty-one ,--'f1.3:7-:ff.1 .... .4-. ' -V. 4- .1-, H.- 5? 5 , rr if YE Lf ' L 'YA it rv '1 Z1 f 1 rfb? I xl 7 bg? 5 rims! 'fegti 2 '31 if G4 ..-Q9 15' , Aga rl? I H ' L 1 ggi -Silk 9 'ir ii . . X ag, Sl ' S J , I fxligfvgigifiqn B LJ 1 I X' ful' Y ., . 1 fy 4 g , 1-xl 2 Q,-3' f ik, , ,I Y 'I Y E I , x 33334.13 Q' itvwi i fi'i'1n'x +1 'iq ii: tk .atm U ew .1 lg r twig, 4' P , L ' If ww ffwsaf- xl Afi it 5' gi-tl, I F! f.. gi-llbinxvgi' ff o A fi -I . , 1 :gr - . M 5 SL' 'A r- ' J v .--.-11.0 -I .t ,, xvfvvx 122' xi xi ' ' QQ hw . .4 .2 .T A V L! H . C, . . ,, . .. . . .., - . -,- i 1 ,xi ,ie- 'K .5 T3 Qs :fi -n V: e :QI 331, GRA. 1 if? if ll gf he I 9 ?E5?'l . ,ef e ' Z Tiff' if fi , , . , ,M K, X , 3 ! f fffe f A? M., -el 'ff RAYMOND CLAIR DAVIS U .1 Rayn f l ui VINELAND, N. J. Streeker, Hare Keen., Bau-ei' CARL LEON DANIELSON Dezui's Committee? 'ES A 4'Da.1111ie St gl? Ji Z-iq, fif SHEFFIET-Di PA- - RAY is so entliusiastic U P11-G-,-B21C110l01' Of 30191109 nature studies that he has-g Become X-, T 1 ' P1111adel1111121' College gf Pllgwliflqy Owl-like himself, eontiilhing gtlgigijgffesg igi ge t Allegheny College, est X'11'g1I1l2I Search during most peeuliaif' lJOI.l!gSg v ,Q L University While laboring under lIl1Q1If10Sff ziclierggjiffa Kip, QKXIQ IDBH Circumstances, Rq.,5Qi5.k.w,l1asf ' eziigijieail -., fi through joys and -5o1'1'iayi'g., t0:CfDH1Q11HIl5l'f :fig 'E Q 7 . , llllflyllla' ziclliiilfilioii fiiQn1 2. his felldxg ' ' ' QQ li' IS funny that ai fellow can be so quiet studmlg- yvegfvhoih!a.gQ525I510i,i1gEiingfljegtj , and unassuming and continually remain fool that Suc1g250i,3.gg1E,gSuCH i55lgt51.in51im 1 ... rg in the background. until you stroke his tion. must i119iV31itiliBliV?Il6i1l.l0h13'kfe61f5gf5,v?5,'f?'3gE- fur the wrong way, lVll6I'Qll1J:Jl1 he has warded. A 5:31:61-I il.Cll2ul1g6 ot elim-aetel-, Thats the way uudQ'1.tukings, Q if Wltil ?H.u13.e!.d0uf Ofltlf meet agheeable requisites of t'1iQ 1dQ.iil'E 1?1fli'SiQiiliYI.':i i 52-li l' fl - ' A 1 ' 1' vi1 IQ2i:l sfflfi-:7'jI'5 '42 hcieet Ounlill Hiiosd iiientilon ut?C'll1'gll?ilE' JeiliE3r?T! ' kg alopoeeia CllSS0Il1l11i1lZ21.U He' will tell you P5 'fi igebfiigfi5afQ:if'?3,f Llg Q gf -. grail that it runs in the family. Outside of Q 'E F55-'iv 5,f5u53Qgi,g'g Q' that one little sore spot, he likes to he 5.2E.5ej'l 1 kicldied and provides his friends with an I 5:5515 jg-f3Qfff2fQ3ll-f I opportunity tomelieve that tendency. lVe 5:32 rfllgj, lhggggifj I have only known him ai short time, but Q .3 Ai, it does not take long to like him, and 1 I ll f. , he is sure to he remeruberecl by all of us .jj I fjggi X who have had the Contact with him, which inf. 'g 535 if gif fir. 2 ' years in a Medical School necessitate. . ff 1 K' ,S T - Allegheny General Hospital , Q I . Q'?':'1'2.'g?' fl' i v - .lf ..- '-f H ' I Q 1: Inge: .- ', . ,-'-43' P'++Sbu'9h- Pa- V 51:45 ifililiil A 5 fit?--iii -.3,'b3!J i?iQ: .,' 3 PM 113-?,4,.Ql'3-'31 - ' .f1'I'::.jn57s . 'itat-',,..fEll'f . 1 4 5.5-ole' we pf --1'C- '5'1 'FiX.'7f5X':l-, fiFQ. f1w'i -.-fl.1Lr'-.mz en. 1- 'Q f- i- ii in 4' A k.l:4E,.,.....-.'J,'., :'.,1:-2.13 1 :Ft lsxigaawf- 1. X.-'Vt .IQ-win' jiri... if V .ox ,E J' ,I-I HX! I M If ' Qi'.25iF,f:2g5i'iif' .it1v ig' Ftf Q if Il it F2 '. xi I - ' 1-'fi T-A51'.FSi.ife1 i3 i5?5'e'5-i'f ' . Q lf- E 7' ff , ' - - r -. -1 1 ff. -if , . 2 1 ,1jf.,:Qf.,1l.'i '-Ii'-5' f at 5'?'55zf3M5 .-Y' 'l?::0 ll 7f2!QlL.' I ff' rf 7- ff fe ai- w-fi, ' '45 wff -' r- .-fm .. .ami-5 fi rm'-,-fi.-.1 '- ' ' - 1. .' .1 'r.:-ran 1. . :L7?5'PEkZ55t?1,'E:13-.,f,,?f?:f- .pt 1 .'-. . Q I : ,, S One hundred tweintyftwo'-Q1-,-if-mggdlgfgeg. , I xhlff-Ji f ff - . z Ifjiwuggfw-g,.ge...rl.f3g75fGa':.-,,-.wp-'QS it 1- 'tfiaf-'.'f iff- :I.?f'g1f1'i1'.g',jf'L ' l- L , . ,...,.... J it fe lf' 1 ' Wa 1 M J J W Ji ,111 5 1. I 9 :fa -I 'e -5:41 ROCCO ITALO de PROPHETIS Roc CIIESIER, P1 L111ve1s1t5 of Pt'1111SSlV1ll1l XIX Pasteur Society W' 11 It fi 1 at 5 Z L ERE you see the likeness of o11e xx l1o eailv unpiessetl us 111th his mcle scope of knowledge Reseived find mlm it all tlmes the above' smillng Countenfince is not the pveiv day expiessiou nhich gieets those with Whom l1e comes 111 contict Although Roc 19 one of the voungest membeis of the dass, he has pai taken but httle 111 the usual pianks ot some ot his classmates Unlike many of us he has not l11111ttd 'lrimselt solelgg to medical leauung IS fikeen love foi ,Poetiyf and L1t81H.tLll6 his inanifested itself: on numeious occisions gllavufg eiithlallecl us fi equentlv with d1s seitatioixs oi Dante and Pnandello etc, We cannot' deny thit heie IS 1 futuie Ohvei Wenidel Hoflviues, .1 gieat man of IIl9CllQl119. and letters Chester Hospntal Cimesterg P N-n-'uw vu ul' A- .1 0 Hi 1 1 111 tim Q 5314 4-4- 312- 55. if X. Q is Q S .sbt . is if., ,L iii ,. 11,- 1 11. .,,,. 3. 5.12 :J:. 1 it nw vff C L 112.41 v 7 er, 1 Y 92,-J 'dbx Q var, 'I A J . .. ri X ! Jp- -Hb 'us-:f ,'A-e f'3'4X-ff xiii' R 7' 'J' 5 ed H .Q IU. C a 7' 'rf ' if ,.- -. . OSCAR RALPH DEUTEL Oscar TERSEY CITY, N. J. A.B. B.S. in Medicine New York University and University of Nlissouri ONIE people travel for pleasure, others foi business and still others to get -111 education. Deutel traveled to get the above three in o11e. He picked Missouri to attain all of this. He must have been 1 success out there because we have he 1rd much about it. From Missouri he came to Teiferson. D1 Hare noticed him as much as tl1e lest of us did. This was shown to us ll the fact that his advice was asked in the subject of fherapeutics more than any of us. He also proved himself -1 favorite with Dr. Rosenberger list year. '111d acquaintances. 'lhose who follow the sport pages closely may iind his name i11 the lineup of some of the leading semi- piofessional city basketball clubs. Christ Hospital Jersey City N. J. Q ,VLi'5f.g-3.51:-Y.. Ii Q . fs ' 5-1 if ' ' f . Q 'f VZ 5? '-1. ' '51 F1 .' ,151 .' rm: i- ' :Q ,., ic., f . 6:2 w. .. ii 1-iff. . f' if. L J:-. 54 1 iff.-, N 'ii J, 'La ':f ' - ,f - 1:- '. f-1-.-. fi- .1-fu ' ....,. -. , 5 L, - .-. -- . -- V- ,-4 .1 5 . ' iff - f- :R ' ' 'V ar ' ' 1 ' ' ' E 1.1 .. I -. 'Z ll T ' . ' v -v ., '. 't- I 4' 'Vg ' ,H v.. V ..-gy , -- ,,.-, I .- ' , 1 1 L 1 - ,..--5 -4-4, -M. . - -. - , w e . ,., My 13 .1 ,ZX lf,-,:.35:15.51'f,g -.,. .!L.- -:1.L-.,,.x,,,E5g-, frffgg .- U N - . 1 - i i-: 'fiffii 35 'rr if nf 1 H11 U A Eff- -i rj FY' i ' . 1 f 14 'ff5ilA- -f .3 1 - 12 Q Q K - - 1 ii 1 L-, 1 . 511' . F, 'ri' L . ' . 1 -- .Y 3,1 g -If tg lj - mg, ' . --.' Y . . o. , If ,5f3Qg.?,y.:,1Ui 5 I , .. , .L .. . 2 i . .- J .. . x 1 22: I I v , . 'I . Q f - '1 U., 'V' . gj . ' ' , Qs' 'gg' ., .. 1- -- . H. Ji? if r ' f' Y' .Y 5 .' 1 -' 5. ' . '. 2 L L. 2 11- f. -. -2 ' ' A 1 vi 55 1 . r ' -1- , . 1 1 '- f wt 5-.-tip-1: .. ' 21214 1- ' . 5 .fi T io if f-. f ei ze-2 L.:sif!71'ET 031.153-Q--.Ar. -5.25. '- we 1 1 Y 2 lim --'E55'.,... fishy .. 1' . I , ' ' 1 5 I 3 . -- .5 ' . . 5 4 ,S. - 5 1 g Q fffi' ffl... I .sm 55?5Q'- V H1s fame does not stop with his travels 1 ig. fe 31 .P 5 ,I I-115-1? it 151.5 - K L 1 wel: 4. V ' 43 I E me rQ:2.':'f-1121+ 2, -ef ' 1' A . H A 211.1-3. In : 1 , 9 ?i 1 1 1.51 In - -. Y C' I, 3 i 1 5' 'Li 'wfiviifflil -2' ui kiln' if :Lil-'1 ' 'i' 'I' ' ' 1 V115 '23:..l.f'g'1.f' 'f ,ix C. ' ug. 5. V-1. if 'C'-vi . . -' , 1.1, , ,ru f1ei4. ,f1-'Q' , 1 1 ,, . 1. , - - 3 A- y 1: I .,.- 4-M 1 -I .t 1 1 .fkiff 3 VC- -'- . 47isi Jixv,'i'1. ' ' Q 145- . '41--. 5 i ' '-Q 1:--.P . 1 ' '1 :. .3 57.414 , 1,5 ' ei ' J , . 1, 7,3 , A.. .1 , ff .M gf.-, 1.-,. - 5-.qi Q 2 5 '-,gi f-.12 ,lf w -. : i.-11:11.-11-. - - y ' 1 'i -. ' .- ' ' .' 1.1 '-' ,- if. -riff--1' f ii, .-. 1- - g.:Pv.:v..i53.z-5.1, 'JT ,rl f'fi a,wfe':-.V - ' ' , .1 sf' ' , V: ,A Q. g-A .. :gf lg-- 't.51', . 93,9 M42 .. -Q, 'V-11, 75. yy-,,:. gg- I. . . - 1- -- ,.. ,- +L ,of . ou. 4' Qi --1--f-H 15. ' : .1. -- L Ka. 5 J l,:,.-V. T -P.l.A::...!.4 G -1 14.1 55:15, -:LW .a fgfl -:ggh,.,5f4,w,fA Y- A i sf' f i if ,. f' -' S1 1-EW'- 1 - ' 'viii'-. 1 , ,. - - . E.. 1 pw 'I . ' firiftif ' ,' 'gxfffh '-Fig.-14-f,'Wf5v , f nr '. 1 E1 1 'f .22 1 I . S, Ref . , -'j ,rw , L-fl., - 1 'L E 1. ... ' .-P A ,, 1-.1154 'H' 1 1 '. 'Q 9- Q. 4 1- Kw- -,'I:- gui: ..- , 1 ,bf li 2 - : , 1 L . -553'--I.: vit.. t ', ff , '- . 1 '- D, 5: 1 'N '-..AV:- pi-gl - . i- .:K --T..-vm ...gpm .W-w..:g ,fs . 1. '- -. 1 1' 2 ...,,.,-N..g-,.,1-pq.n,,,.,.-egg...---.-. it f., , -K I 7 - 4: .,1- . J.-n - .. 'S X .+. 42344 Ciiayie' ' 4- J , , A . I vi. I I A A . 7,121.5 .52-5. , . One huozda ed twenty three W n ' fig Qfjf.'fgfyij,:,2,l3-'if':1'- N S X . 4, , , V ,..., 1 41-f-Wfecfffsxse. ff .. IRVING SAMUEL DICHTER S'1uxM1vonn, CONNECTICUT Bachelor of Arts Columbia University CDF-TA, CIPAE Vesalius, Morse. Academy, Rabelais Art Editor, 1931 CLINIC F ORTY-r1vE minutes from Broadway, coupled with a preliminary start in Gotham are important factors in Dicks training. One often wonders why medi- cine has claimed his main interest, since there are so many other occupations at which he is ably and even naturally adept. Th-ese might include painting, music, literature and others of the seven arts. But the fates have decided dilter- ently and we have Dick studying medicine in Philadelphia, away from his native lair and favorite haunts. However, his travels and studies are 11Ot over now. Some five years hence a a resume of his activities will probably read: After receiving my degree and completing an interneship, I attended the University of Paris and later studied and played at Vienna, Berlin, dear ol' London and the Stroganoif Clinic, Leningrad. am not settled in general practice. xV ,... fzjw, A K,- ik.. -a AX x XX - ' is - N i s Y.. Sli ,r fi .,f. Q if 5'-.1 fif, -5. 5i,.- L . A . vi. . .1 '1 S . i ft N- 'xi'- V J. ' ' or i f .75- . . -- - .. . , ..,., ,..., A--.,..T1,-,fm , .. - ' HENRY W. DIETZ Parson SALISBURY, N. C. ' 47' Bachelor of Arts . I , , , . A I lfniversity of North C2l1'OllllQ EiL13d ' ' Lenoir-Rhyne Collegegi ,Q-1 'if-f5'f 11n T , , if AQ ii Elifi x?'i?5'3'2'f?sL. 'AD-fgly' wo years 1S entirely too shorten ztilnewltgoz- S be with a person we like, but Such iS'5QHIi3f' . -, , f-1. 1-' -. . ,X-,,'1.' case with this man fiom theySot1tl1.,5wlrog.l:,a 55 -.-'-1 has captured our respect silegnztlf, 1.,s ? -,, and completely. if 3. 3 Seriously, here is 'the type of man . -A -,5 Societies studying medicine fifty yegirs ago? xyoulglilg have aided in inalt-iffigv tlgeyipifoftissitinfffly ga Q 1. man what wepciongpjonlybgtkliiifiii pf3,'3hjiii,.Jif,Z, :I A today, a COll11g.E3lid1 -tlfrgluij ilgeyeliligafled' X iq and sincere, yytitligdilieen giggling: if - presses us widrihis Qdgptghfg1nd.:gsCiLU1d1iess5 ,lk 1,3 42 I-Ienry, even wjitlggltfijlfljoolq lciiqiyjletlggii ,sg,,i ni'2:3gbi: could administer 'tbgtljelfsicli iig Q 5 '14 , 5 Not sei-iouslyt-gujef.ftiiieilx Qtoicoqgy Jgisj -'i hand writing just? p1ic'egE !n1'gougl1,5.-2 ,l,.r,.ii ja X ' i x75i:,E: 54,1259 as 4, -- -'E U. S. Bubflid HsaltHf.SsfrY'P,eig1aff .Q 59,5 ,:1.:1- 5-5 gi ,, in- Q . ' ' :fri me fi sing:-. Sufi Q35 -5 V ,Leif sf, ' H' S- L i X fesgaf it-5523514 gmac? are 1 is 4- ??fQl'f 5' gl-Ffxfxblef . 1 ifffa , :Maia ? .5535 -f c-' if - il iasffffi il Q , 1.-:piv:?g1- 1 .: .-f:.3-wut., 1 if 'Af NEW . wr-'gli 3 ' w'fif.-'- fed :-'i., ' 5-4' 1'1 i watt v . ' f ff is '. 'lf-Agz A- , F15qJ1i't!1 'I' - P 1-F ,. . .I . 4 3..--:g:e.ff , gy A . A - ,,Q,51,.'j '-2 V f 1, .js Bridgeport,.HO'spii'Bl. p- ' ' y','f1-.-ffli-3 53-r g,fg. ii ,,' in fix- - 3 . 55 fix - ' ' K ,- ,1---2f1'-- 'wi' 45-':,2. ..-fa.-:fy as-1rt'fg'.'.'!L. . f '-+ --A-25 Bridgeport, :cQI'll'l4.1--'- . '1f:,i'QE'1gLfQ- . .lit-5f..Q1.:gq'-I-5-rt'fvgw -jg : if n ,- . - 3 , fp,-H ,'i' , -.A .f c'!'Q1-:jg X -,' r',,,, -3 . rl v 1. ,. , f '5 35 -' I -nl .' 1-5 f'i 4f' , ' 'J'1'ff-Tf'.'f i1ii55iEf7J5gI11 'Els :il Vi:- 1fl.'57 I -2 .5 fi at J 'viii . M.. 541-fi-,-tl-1fr'.::':1f1'+qsQfsffiw..-12 gg 3 if ' .l 51, Aj' ings . 1 --,.LfMms1,' 2 -' zf'?1.12','1f,,-'Ii 511. --:S 5. gy H, f..,-qzp-,.v-.'ig5'i,.,gs512' 53':'i.,g,,,5.,-PL,-.. -'ij 1 I ' - .- -. .' . , 1 ft 1 plea UQ?-11 g ggi 1 il F One hunda-ed twenf'Uif5iib71 - 'q3 'Y':fiffLi:.:v.-Sgt....rzfihi-'iiffifrng.-v.-'itfg'N wi-f .up-..-X,-..v:,:'4. ,f-:eff i,:,.:1P .'.i'-'-v ' L 3 ,Q A ,f w Q.. ,- egiiys - e ? E3 f I S. . lf fl: 5-. f 3.1 . Qu!!! af' H gel' A ' if is- 7 ,V '11 '.-. me ' y --,. 4 -Q.: - 7 7, if . :if i 251: 4 'ug ' 1-1 355 -1- qi -1 -7.1, TE ' iff ' ,E-. . f- '-' I' ' ul? f ' . ' EDWARD JOHN DONNELLY ij- we ' - .. . ff 1 Dopey' ,- 1 PHILADELPHIA, PA. f A.B.. Bachelor of Science ., . V . ,,,,-- , , ,,.,pf,,,.- Sf. JOSGDWS College f -QQ. l WA A i - -- 4.-,1,.:, ' '-' ' ' f' ., gas: le. 5 a 3 QQOMTE g.nie'11Jz11'e born great, others have CHARLES DENNIS DRISCOLL -3, Sigreatiless t't1L'.lIfllSt upon them and a third H . H -,1'fl.Q1 .5 kgflfgll-iI2lQQgli'Q ggreatness. Dopey belongs 071111416 fftof- the firstgfclitss, for his inherent ability PAWTUCKET, R, I, 51 jfijtjpziili-oy3Eii1fto', a cataleptic state has QTKI, ,QQ fi Qgrieseijvedg, fog Qhim a perpetual place in P' .1 C um fk'f 3 ff --4. t11?1'STqa'l 1'5W9'1m5' 1110112 If has QYQH Qc-1 fl ff ' ilwuimcelinoxxgii Strecl'er r4',1Qiused5E1i1n to be blessed with the title '1' 6 el' wlggiaetieso ' I X . M 4-41 ri- ' '. P' ya - ' F . Q ,, -if-'EfffD0peyZ'ZQ hails,--fi:omif'up on the hill ' :S 5129 Uf df? OUIf years ago, after due preparation at 1 1 , , '- '- ?,ld11?4i.Ql2l2eUUUv 115 man h Providence College, Mother New England , 1: .- ,! 3115 3113353 it E3E.i5. '5 sent to Jefferson another of her promis- Q,- silltlifwlloiidertiilfgi' flf , Lewis and he ing Som 3 , -,,, .. ig,., Q :.4 .f.,fQ,:-sang . . ' . -.. . . . '50 ,- .fi-'-1T5l'1:g'i ggtulg i9Q9l43?'f29'P-Q15 Joint hae In Charlie continued his educationlwith I ' A' P1gQll5l1lf?l?1l9FgFf1d1lf4F1011,day means a spirit of determination and sincerity of j, Eiliifllsisollllglll 9ELm?Qf'0Qhe5 Wwe Damo' pursuit and now completes his work at 5' 5 -'3J5'iyFllPfl?113?-l59f33lf?0,Ui E Inj an-V event JeHerson with an air of satisfaction. 'Q 3 1 Each man possesses certain qualities of ' 551221 Z gift? Hospital character which are admirable, but I -:'i,gif:f f f ' E -gl,.fgpmfla5glbHiaIiipal?-V? HCl1E11'l18,SH are so numerous that he has p3 fF.:-.Q 'b i 'Q-2' 5 5 p I gf -T gained unusual esteem and admiration Q e among his fellow students. . The tender- 1 'Qjig1.lk Q gal ness and compassion of lns heart, his Q 'A Exj t N. true congenialty, his never olfended man- f T ner and his ever assisting ways will be ' cherished in our minds long after he is :Q 1 1 , F 2:2 1,54 5 is . YV1th such qualities as a student, and if ' jpg ' Qgf-1,l:l-4. excellent gifts of character, success for fl ' ,ig-Q H113 Hifi lv him is inevitable. That he may attain A if Z, - A' Y our Siucme W1Sh- 5 3 ,- I- .4 s,. if uf? 4 fl eq .ig15:.5,4, H 1 j . ' 1 Cqoper Hospital ' 1 1 ' 'li-'A' . 'T 1 4 . - k 1-1 , 9241-71 ix ' Nfl! . N f 'Pia i H f ' . :M 1 237.1 ' Mwsf-,w1g,.-I ' ' - - ' ' ' G Q N- J- - sf , .1 1:1 ' .4 : -3. -9 rv . w- ., g,'f1i,Qf,'- tm.,--fa :gg :ga ' -3 , i 1,4 5 .Qz:'.L...:S.1:5,,ggf4 I.. !13:k.igg,'v5 .5E9 !3Q 5.'.:Qth':3.'.jg,-,-' 4 ' :,- ,5,.x iz, VM., I n .r .I ,, .. 1 1 A. v. ., :V R ,, r , -,. ,.: -- . - : '..'44s- .,-,sg-, . - . Q, W A - V. -fi ji Lf Q if . . Q, . ' ,V in V 1 - 1-I ' I 'isglgi'-fin .E1:xQ,'gfJ' ' .t.t , ' f K -.Q Q 1 j 73-'i' 3 5 a 819' '- ' 5 il' '-----. :'5vll la'-'15'?,.i '4.,l -L 35Z3: '55? ' - js-Q.'-gvi,,, 75 7 fifty , 1 Iffmff' -M at ' One lmmdred twenty-F-ue ' - J ' jj lf, jf :rg :.jY,-:-- 4o51,.q Q-1:21, ,ff ' . , . X 1 Y. 4 l A v . 4 se. 'Q sv 5 4 X X X X -,Q av? f 5651 Fifi. - 1551 1 fp v' rift 1 Tw! f S., 1 5 N .i. 11' az 'RK . , V? QI.. --.-- , if 'fi REGINALD CAMPBELL EDSON i if 'fEf1die'f if XXKAYNESBURG, PA. f.5v. :A ,.g: - 'r l ' 1,-545-11 .4 5 4-nw : . ,M., g, ,i -ff' Baclieflor of A1-ts .F. ,J-X .--HW-Ay. r. ..i.. ,'..' 45-gvgtffffg,-5' ,.1,. f,3.3f.,f:i4.:.i Lafayette College V 1 Jwiw ..,. QA2, IQBQ ALFRED WINFIELD DUBB5 Sc-haetfer fTrens.Jg Louxgs'Streckei-Ei-J.,'F ,x NADH, Societies .-XLLENTOXVN, PA. . Bachelor of Science y.H5dNEE1?5. thevre Has. , fix Muhlenberg College a H ' C le ll as -lele uofvf 15751-.5..f5:. .Q 1 ,V as one of our best informedclzgfssinlgrtegtiu, . , Req A91 AIX X Persistent attention to detziils axiylgtql-at-lre2:.,: K if Keen, Schaeffer, Loux..Acmleniy, Ptolemy practical 211JDilC2'lfl:OI15.,.0f Brnegliqirie Societies given him nn 11nns'1uiL ,fQ2is'D..ofgthe A Cipifi ibiieflf 2 ee-l ..,. . V + c iel rstg fame? ieige iris? niotiwi 'r RANDOBIZ At Ocean iityz in New ,, hen, 4-1: 5- 1 2 z 2 1,4 4 1 fl .- on the campus at Bryn Mawr: at the ' ', - - f we-f.E 3 5 '7fEi1?sij -gzsqlfi . . . e, , , . 1 . non it is S0IliQEji11l'1,g'-1,lfI1S.9:E1115555!lQl'9f.f6l2 -- social functions of Lxoucher, in the quiet one mqlice t6w,1Mi,5g.h6wbry56156 :ggfq ifli L ,, 1 .- 4, J -lusion of the C01'ne'll Club' in the more , 1 1:35-g Q 5' Q-'fi 1 Sf 5' se? ' tn o D211'1l11l0llll31 ant, rests 52il'65,lfilibb1fS iairdggv i . Y' i re: boisterous atmosphere of the old Haver- Women and :ww fE1iSSye,i1n3g.3.15jhIi lhblagef, 'xii I ford Clubg at the stave doorg in the I .' f iii 552.51 g 362.-:yew 'Qu 9: learned discussions of tlie Loux Societyg t1i3.'feSfud. Ogzfawnfli gimfgin i-Zi wif . .V . ,I , H . po ice audit chgisei131111.-.ieti5i'n1ngif,1nvan ,-4-'lim in the oratoricnl sessions next dom, in ambulance ,55,...: .fig-is .gi iczwiilf, 1yq.,1.-.L,2f4:. clnssg on Princeton week-endsg riding in 'kigiguii 5- i'fj-g,,5jgg5?gf'5f':i' jjj. the Park on Sunday morningsg even at Q Linton's his scholarly reserve. his tein- 5-ig, .1 pered enthushisin, his delicate finesse. his I fiigigfi e A- adamantine determination, his courteous I niien and withal his sincere good fellow- . Q ,. Af ship have endeared hiin to :ill of us who -.1 . have had such close association with him. ff i Qgfif 5 Q31 glfg' Q May I anticipate the epitaph that R. ,f if ' gl Q Macnair Wfilson gave Sir James Mac- , I L51fg.fTw',gN'1 .,3gq5l,3,gfgj kenzie The Beloved Physician. 5 I 5. .Q ,'f.jNf'Uf4.,:,i 'ef . . I p si- . . . fr:-- wi . - -- -1 '. If fa - 'L F Philadelphia General' Hospital. In if '? -XV' ' if 5 ei Phliadeighinil,-hpp.. . 4 : YV. 1 r - f-'Zin '- -3 ' I l,31'J51'fix'f i?'fe'f 5232532 .-L' Le-ff f'-1 517764 1' f. gf' , I- S..-I 4,.-HL.i'FvAg:.-, ?i1 A1:. Qslhrgtflgiglz ,js I :Y F5511-,14 .:1.:..xi'i, 55 A 3 Hex .zg I.. .jig-. . ' i:312''.24'fi'f'-'3ii'7 '5679-Q-.4 4 'i5?-, 3: 'ii' fr 1 1' ' haw. 'F 'f 1 '11 .i i. E' A ' . 1 V ' 5 'if' , if-ai 1 .15-J. , .IL 5- V... ,..g-.. ,-f Lie vt -.ri-h, g i-Izlojl .IZ .4 .. eg .eyiew ifj,'1,g,-ii'fcf?. -' -. ,rs .?,',,-Mft .--,- - .... H .. ' V'l' W . , 435 ffimxai is 353 JE 'ea QZN5 f W R, 5 tai' 4X , if-5 RY N W E gs mg 5' ? G31 i 43 .A 2 5 3 2 vi S, A i gf F 1 if if V I E ' J ' v ' SX Q53 . lf Y' V - ., aw , W, 'i,, up .1 - - - f V. k,sZ,., fw- ' - : 1, 1- fic. - I' 15,3 i- , I ,,, 1 ' .I f f 1 .' 1'w'2' 9fIQ,f?rfEFlp fy. .. JC , f One lzwzmdrcd twenty-sm: - M ' l.'i':'i':'.-- x-lf'-ff,'7:,'-:ii If 1, -qi X Q Lf! X Eg Q I av Q J W rs, P, i , as ' 'Iwi . :gsgg 5 . E I 4 1 5? Z 2 if ' 1 Q 43 XZ 9 Z ? '? se :M S532 . we fd X ,-Q 5 4 ss 2 - '441 7' -::v,..s 17 JAMES WEIKAL EMERY Jun GROVE CITY, Pa Buchelo1 of Sc1ence GIOVE' C1t3 Lfolleg , ololf if IIII,xf M0156-, Moon, Bl 1nd, II-ue SOLIQUQS ROM 'lil JIIGOIISDICIIOUN school Ind U1 snnconsplcuous toun m Westeln Pennswl vama, tame .Tun Neltllel, houeve-1, has ft-Wei been 1 lmrnclmap to tlus fellow K A sunnv smxle a eheelful hello, radxarntg cllsposmon well uhat me the Inaklngs of Such an Cllglglllg pelson alxtg f Bhgurelout Tnn and vou lmwe the ormula Zeal for xx 01k Wltll plentv of une lout ,fm play, but exen accompllsh was 'ng sornethnig that flbun 1S lun 9 He has been an asset to us hele and Qnjly' 'tuqks hke Fdte his nevel played efozlq will evel make 'hun .1 l11b111ty nvwhele 11e orltls seem to be on sue cess fm Jmr-we know they sue Ffanqxb Hosjpxtal Pwlrklnlirgh P e Q l5e T4 Els 1 sl HfJ,1 i lin I l 'lw1l3'3.QSgI,?l I .uf lffl-fum if xy :Q-N5 41 III. in I .2. T s '. 5 -. R., xy' im. -:-1' :JI e El 1 -4: ai, .fl 451 xv 9 x ' 1 :C ay' 53 -p.,',A1 ' ,1- Sf f-SKI' ' -G s N X . EK 5 SCREEN U 'I fi?-'W arm' + ri .rf- 1-L' 72? JOSEPH LEONARD FARACE UC Rosnro, Px Un1ve1s1ty of Pennsylvanu bcluelfel, P-Isteul Soc1et1es o ASSOCIATE mth such men as Joe mlkes -111 of us leglet that ou1 school dflvs have to come to an end 'When peltoumng the necesvuv dutles of 1 student of medxcme Toe uns, at '1ll tunes, found to be an alelt hfud umkmg, con SCIQHEIOUN young gentlemzln ilCC6Dt1Ilg hts successes mth the modesty of those who ue, to themselves, unknowingly gleat He lS the env1able possessol of that happy facults of an abxhty to make and 1eta1n fuends II1s acqufuntances ale many not lnnltecl to men alone Xll agxee that xt IS a p 1S the natulal owne1 of an unusual w1t winch leasule to be 111 nls compam Ile 1S mole purelv mtellectual thm All of us beheve 1n the 1310111150 111111101 of hls fllfllle success XVe me Confident he u1ll meet the 1espons1b1l1ty and ob 11g'lt10Il ot lus chosen pxofesslon wlth lntelhgence, fd1lZhfLll116SW, and sk1l1 Frankford Hosolfal Philadelphia Pa 1? Qc Q3 XKAQ XX ss we ws sw! 2 ks vsmxsvsm XXX wc vw X NN ge R' IExg?kQx -wx. .A- ka A :koi PSQAMA.. ffj on f -QIIII4, AIM be Xb Q hh fit: V 26 l ,, x Mi 'iff 1 wg-gg 4 S V- .,f Vg -. .:,.q.,-. --.:-- . .Inu ,.v.- -.TM ,c.m,,:. -1 f'--- L , 4 - W ,- 7.1 'qjfg' '. 5 f - Sp., 47.93 11.3-.iw-5-5fLX5i1.14.j! '2Rgc.f-in -ldv 'F' if, '57'l1N-flltfif ' 1 F 5,-4 i--gf-g,'1, . 'L1 1-Y,-' 'Q 1, Q, ,N 1 ,9 f. -4 5,.5'q,g Jl 'ig 8 ' -- Lf ...-.-Q. . . .,.:-.. 1, A ,- I.: , v jfg.fbxI,,.,u-!sI5,,i'e, . .1 ,, . - N- . -: - 'v -HI -53.11, ' . '- - . . ,. -' .- wid:-' . . e f f fed! .,:.L..q:,. 5 .,4.,.g.1'21 '.,-.:..uS.,... A 1g.1.2:.........m-'f' . A 1 . ,Q II5.-v-ff-1' '1 ,I r.. V- '.', - -.Q fewgxf ' 5-we ' ,-- , ' -' 1- ' , ' .' e I 'I.--- Q-F:-41.-.,.-+,-,-. .1 ....q.-...,.l,..,,-,-.wvyw-W--v-. I ,' I, '..gl:- I KI- -II-K Q- N in -' . - ' ,, - ' -','.,g .- s ,- -. - - f 1 .. .c 1. iq. g :' .- . ' -: f..-,LJ --nl' ' 1:5-WWI '-feqfflw . .'.:.,n11v ' f- UQQEM .Lf-.-. 'i ,: .3' N:-fx '-lei 2'- . ---U - V - v ,..,...,..,...-.......,. ..., ..... . ,.,,,........c.. ,... . 4 - -- I- - --lr., - MQW- ', -,J ' c 1. gs 'fc ng . , :4 , , '. Lag - .www .,:,gLm- .ef-W , v. J: . -5. w- .. I :' lfruffv' 11 nc' .ge L-...p,. 14- , 1- ., . I ,, . . I v ,. ..... . . ..... .. ,,- ..,.. V- - .. .. ,... , . ,4 ., 44 I, .,f.,,, ,fq.,f-.--, II ,r '. A 4, 'JE' Ig '3j'.,.1e-f'- I Ii - NM iz. .1 I V- r AI I if 1-' Qi- '- ,'-n , ' -Lg'-5, ,A 5- ' ' 'W' 1T rff 'C .... ..J. f '... .,Q..:f-....,.s...-:ff 'T' . 'Q '1f f -.J-ll - 55 'ff ' -4 -- 1- 'W' !Lt.......I1Z'f1Tf5f- L.: .. 1l',Z..wf- 42 ,,.,:'s'-:fr , , 2 4. . . , I ' 'I-lr 4- ' lil il . . , , . , ' ' :, Lg '- f ' '- - I'fI N.,t,,,,.g....I:,11I'fz:. m,-will ,, ,.,..,,,a,.,:s:.j' S. ' - .. . - .. 'S ' ' A- lf - - I , I,E ''fe:':'f5,f'I:g,ylf f'-lf,-. -' - -1 ' ' .I - ' I A If - , , u -we I.-,.....,,-.,,,.,.,s .,, -. ....f..--,.,. ,.... .- H., .. ,I Q.. I, ., . c- ,. . . 4 .N I , . 5 : . .If .1-... - -. ft -,. WII ....,5...,.....,, p..4.....I,... . .. .iq-,.' .L qv - -I ,I -. -- . .v 1 .- -1 -'x::.- ' 1 ' .', '1,,.....,,1.Z , ., .M ,, '.,, , . - . - . ' A g'.IfvI AI ':+4.0ng1QIf,-ii, IIIIQ, A II1gf?,,,,,fQfI....1V,'ZIjj:....jI's52-1 . ,,,. c.,.:I j'I,-, , . . . , - II:II .II n .,t.4.,IF,,?1?II.LI.I..III II .III I .sp-1 ,.J,,,1.,I.,I .... ,IIIIIII .. ,.,.,,4, ., .., IIII, .N , ITJIIIIIIII-2, ,FII ,I 1 . II , ,j I. I, ZF --was -gil' 'fW'l- -11-1 , ' --Xml f111:-654W-N.f,:.1.f'.-f'1fA 'P --- --' 11,5-'e HQ' 1 - ' A ..,: I, . . ,,n., .,.. ,... . .,..,.....,... - ,.,.. W ,.,,..,.. . .. l. . , . . I Z ',,x'--..l- ,v ff. rj. 'Y-.Y.l:.-+:.n:m,..........,.,,- H ,lj-f N I lg' , V .r r .Is -L,-,. 1 I f N., ..... . ,,,,. I . ,, 1, 1. , ,, v 4 I. ,I ,Id Q I . I .,,...,,,,,I I ,.,,.... I, .. . I I I , I I , I ai -ii: , --'-s 4' 'sf . ' 51.5. 1.1 1. 1,1 .f . - f f -'fa-3, -1: If - 2- ' ' '- ' A. A . A . ' gE l 'E - -.- a '- aw' f f ,'.f'ff'1' ' ' 4 ' ,D ' ., 1. . . .W ..... - - - i ' nf 1. ,. UZ-'V -- an - 1 'H - 1 vp gt .If jj' 5.u+.4vnl'-. .,. .49-...Q .., Pg Izfnf? 4-14'----we-.4 .,,- . . . 3 ., Uv I -y .1 .f:.. -. ,,, A - . , - N 'S .f in .firW 3'7i- 3?5QZaff',Ei 'ip 'IT' . - ' - F9944 2' h 'lf f':'ml'5f ' '-fl-Jil '5Q7f 5U 'E-V' . ' ' A' ' . ' N ' - X: .:1r:'QwsfFZJv9?35:'-1.-' 15211.12-1 R,-1 . , . - ' - 15' 4 'Sw 1 f I . ., eff: E is 1? I suis . . . s 5 112:44 Q a-,, ', .. .ff 1, lg: g,.:g .f , ..,. -- 1- - I, ... .. I, ' Jr 54-lgkg gg,-, ,ff , .r.,-ily, I. vb.. I H- . . - ,',. . .. 1, V- ' 4 ---1--r.-I-11:-,N 1' '.,. .:, 1 . . M A. -,, ., A.: -4 4-K- ce Z--f-'r' f '1 1 F: as. 1 ' 5.-3 rfi-f?f..- .-f9T 42r:r17z fa. .,f.q,I.. sg - .lpfgpzhib 1,145 2 ' -'ff x , ,' :img '?1'g:.-: 7,1 4 3' iv-'ij ,',, 'f :3W1:.-X737 ' S 1-:Ig 'if ' 3,3311-.QF '-II,.rI-II ',Ij' I I E f-'lf' Q3 451,53-Jif51'.'11 iff. b5v.F-'Jilin'-Q ka-sf' 1 H- -.Jef 1-. 1' - ' f-f-ws , - fs... 5,-, ga-41-.. . .a- '- 5 ' --.m.'nfv.f-ffw. g ., Ii.l.I,I. ,.II, -V I I I N ..--. .:. .1. -. HX, L I . ,..L, ..,.- ,,... , , . fl fl ,- - . . ca .'.:,-3'-M ur: -. . - . . A .- .A fe K. 1 ,Q viggvw .- . . - - . A- 4 5 .,- J, ,H 1-. fra ., . . . i-ra ,-' ' -Jw., :IU gI .1 A I . . I,, 2 -V -2lf.E-.ffl-r1f., - ' '- . ' . . . lf'- ' . f -' 1. ' Lil, 77, N ' ' ' ' ' ' 'I ,455 ffm... U , - .1 II,,,,'1:Izi.., , 1 . ' ... ,1I-.', fx .4 ' . -- 4 1 , I - I . - . . 5.1. 55,45 I . ' , . .XJ-g . , - egg' . . - ' 5. I , I - - . 1 1 . :Ig -1 . , .-, - - . f . A -'1 1,-g, , . I . , ,, , V. I ' r I II L2 LZ I I . . I I. I I I I I I . I I,I III. I ' . I . III I . 4 I . ' 'Ib 2: .4 '- ii , - . - - -. fi.-V 1 . ' ' ' Il . . - I I ,, - . , I :I ' II , I , ... If . f - ' ' A A I' I - ' ' . . s ' .ir - I .,,, A , . ' QI I A l l - I A A' 1, ,az ' -:al ' :,x' 4 .X 'R f ,. ,.cc - c E A E e s SQ ss Q.,xX .v 3 Qt .A Qi ff! J. 2,31 Zi ' 22: .Q Q3 , , A .fa 3 V 15 Fai '. .awe O53 A' if ., .f,:f x L. ' ' ,TV . .ia .jiff- f 'fQig.I,- I I H . 'iff if . -,psyd .I -vffv--'f4L S ' ' C ' ' fgf 3 KENNETH E. FRY ' Kenny Pnossisn, WAS1-IJNGTON. ' 'f2g . ,:5. .,3, af-' P' ,, 'R- f' -'41 - fr , ,,,,.. :e 1-X. S' Bachelor of Science A h A 1 'Tiff' '-'i'if'5?'.f3?f5.5 'f5f-'i2f1'ff'-' 1' .' lVhitman College and Universiityifoff Pennsvlvania ' ' V: 1 4 ' . -155-If-e, EDWARD JOHNSTON FISHER BQH, AICK, A95 ,cqgbjsglsqggx n.ElIlI'i6U Patterson, Keen, Loux, Tliomasflocietigs-if UNITED. PA. Dean's Committe'e: g ? 7 .1 - ,ltr :ng-r Bachelor of Science is if i :.:Q. Q :V ' U ' 'V Pit' of Pittsburnfh C , f , i Y ' ' 1 1'--'tit' 'E F ' 1H1YS' b A D LRIOUSLX, ne all learned tor xgnqg-, X .nh KIJBH, KBLD Kenny in the early part of-your first yeaigig . Sclmel-fel., Morse, Hare' Baum.. Bland. He was diH7erent:, and his audacity - 1,51 Patterson Societiesg Dean's Committee HS to marvel. Later-we learned' tl1?1tf,,5ti?!5J'.- Lvf- 9 was a gift. Inevitabh' weregzerve retorgts g W from him which - faftljere. pruclence 1 f b' IVIEN we wanted to know where the cerning our own IQQISTJSSE' . - 5 . next class was-whom did we see? lV'hen In lectures and silrrpthndggi -' lla. 55-' 'gt we wanted to be sure that a certain thing by students nflio-iefplgoyiltige Qcliqerfulnesggfg Riff Q-, A would be done and done properly-whom his conversatlprl, Jesgieletfugtlgeg so1gnX,iiJiQSS. ii, did we ask? And when we wanted to of his Judgment,-. aridiiseek-1 his I1'EQ15iTlI1'Q Sand' ' ' f have a good argument about women- with whom did we argue? You guessed it, and that is why we call him Steady.'l though, that idlilaliftgjii so 'much ild1'11i1gQ Eizu glurriilfis iteiiierity faiiti . philosophical - .1 ti ' . . lf 2 ang t'Steady Eddi-e '-always dependable, al- poise ill aclvanciingsljrqqfioijglifisi ways trustworthy and ever ready to help. tions-has cansedgthe, alfa j If we were going to make predictions, his a ce1'ta1111-fQlaSS'fQ5b9'SHIg4H1a'fM.I1.f3SQlYf65l 3 1-.F? '5 .!335-F . . . -1-f.-, :--1'-' : 4.x..'.' 'J -MRF seriousness and pursuit of the right, 533E3J5fFgfgoQn'.gH-agpHglgg331.-5fi i Sei, would allow no forecast other than one ' ll?-1 5E 1'I:-:' Lien? ,J . . W Phila, e phl,a,efEa.,1.. L, 5 .U ,Mg 1,-..Q...K. ot success. After tour years of his asso- -315, iigg,-f g 3 .s 3,5F1.-1555, ciatiou, it is going to be hard to lind i I A K, someone to whom we can turn as we -, have been doing, but others will benefit Q.: if I irgtiiw :4-IX g where we have lost. :eil jj F5 1, iff 1 S 2' 5 .5 2- washingam Hospi+aI -.,Wfi:1Vf-s.'f-kflv in il :ibfi5s31I if '- 5 ib 1?-it-f . . ' TU,-if I . ' ' if ':1 E-5' ' ' 'f 1559 Washington, Pa. 4 Q . if , . 5 fr' 'i 'Cl ' ,kiiiifiiif 1 - ' -ii 3 V. '-g,?' '-1.1-' - :'L-f,ffiQ1i? i. .wx l Q E91-l X X A. .. ff- ff-'ff-H12.2-t1'i'Q5?iW .. ee. 73 -:ii fffl-if 15311143-f1:f:i li'f'fl 5 . -ii ' ' IES' E541-'j9iTbf?f?Ii-1 -,'- .5f-ff'ii-fflfifsi. I, '?f - egyzfrgl--1,1 f .. ff'-111,'fzf'1 'Sl-inf 'iw 1 JZ .JC-11af'4f 'iLCTf:ir-Y' 1 ' -1'4'i3T.-fi: '. 1' 1' ' 'if' su. '1 iff 'L ' 1' i.'c f-y'ivZf50'5'fi'1 , . 1p15:,'4fy. -- N 2, - :,. .- ., , wr--zine,-':'f1'e- - 1'4f .- f'-f-F f - P - 'Q' '-'if-gi -1 .S E I Jian Y gr A-gg Lg' F,-4 ,ti- ..:f1?i2ieQ222235'F.fs?4ef56ing. ' z+5E.1??-'ii :1'f'3'ig'91,'1'l 1-F 5? -'Zi . 'i--' 5 -' 1 ' 1 K One lvzmdred twentyfglyphglzrzmfi.,irQ,45g:.L ,H - M Ry-rj 'Nqif -'-79Ffifwgiii-gnu----C:c2'Q7Cifif?':w:go2-i!'ffF ' ' we712227.-.:-I.'v- .F-'f- tr' ' l. is K -4. A I so ss ,. e 4 ll, 5:1 ,E . .L Lis? 5 ' ,gif ' 1521 , nw. 4 v 1. ii. 3 xr 5.31, ' ,,,x--e 'iffy 2 'I 5. . ., -..,,.s. - i . . , . .--..?ffi' 1,211 5?iT:ix.' 172r' --:di all , . 1 , 5 172 -.4 3 s i ' amz ' - :- 'ill 2 ff '--Nif.gif-'12.2i?11f?s1ff2s'f ' M JOHN FLEMING G-IERING ii' Ch0ppie YVILKES-BARRE, PA. Y Bachelor of Science f l Q St. Thomas College Q lf! QIJPZ -f-'mgff .F , , wi 33751-'A' ,.bCl.l2lClfQF,' Morse, Moon, Academy, Bland, of -,g,,,g-,Q Pasteur, Rabelais Societies: ,-.w 4: .- 415-. N he 5- eg - my , lifffk- -33 -.Associate Editor, 1931 CLINIC 5 .E g, fiTjkNV::'1'fIH liiiesent day parlance one fre- lg A5 1, , - '?.'53q'1ienth'i meets the expression, Lucky i f- t f9Efi?E'I'l'Sl3lll21i1,n and when anyone meets John. - 2. 711' 3 V 'fthe ' 'iforementionedyphrase immediately -is is 5: 1,5 ,-fr K 1'- -Z' 46 35: wi J. .Of .A , C, N W A - ,.k,se ,.f.,-..- kg --,, Y 513,-, e Lv-,.-3,-2-: DENNIS RYAN GILLEN CllI'd'i71lLZ XOUNGSTOWN. O1-110 A.B. A.M. Ohio State University KDBII KBCIP l'I-ire, Bauer, Academy, Pasteur Societiesg Iiabelais Clubg Associate Editor 1991 CIINIC Fifi E' f to .mindfjilhiiglowetl with good I - 3 Elooksgag pleasing,Apersonality and all the RADUATION -will be only -commence- 4 . H -W QagSg.3ffsg td :make 51 fsglcgggg in medicine, ment for Dennis, for at that time he vvill ,X ,s EfChQD1Jie?i5is indeed fa.ifo1'ti1nate wearer of 1798112 to shou er on the unsuspecting gieglijiif public all of those outstanding qualities .fi gfrmri gufjxsqtajge? of beer and that we have been lucky enough to share. df I, .x v-.pregtge1Sixg1Qhn ifglmeyd-own from the big If he so desires hehe-in work as hard as Q ,-4,3 ,, j, f3g431gIi,22'a1i11i4f0fgfg116 njostfpiart of his first he plays and sometimes does at that. If g35i55EgAiyaS,rggflbmgfggdgintthe work which you get the opportunity and want the .5113551.35Qfiigggstfrftire Freshmen. During latest dope onlcurrent news, take ft few ' ,P Qgidaei,sgecondgjgeanggfiglgngbroke, into the lime- moments of his time, and .you will be , asa?-Z iilhglhliillfiyi li,ecbi11,jng,2'yv119h ,'fj:3fQXY- Others, one amply rewarded, because his storehouse 2 I .fQ:jm-ige3mpi1S- Since of knowledge includes every thing from the 2555533Q.gilgggsgypghgrrvqmjgyi13genQ,'3'eHeg1ti11g the Wlnte House to salt-in-ilung in India. He 5 ?Sfl1l'JlQ5lSUi'QiQ lfllluiphsfzihfifll QVCD re-ids Mencken, Time, .' Phe World iggggesgdgig 5 and liICC1'Z16,.1S newqer Hithgut a nefwis- ,5-:'-,,-'L' V as 1- paper or a Wise-crac 1. ' e 0 t ' ' silly conventions, raccoon coffs Hair gift 5 lifters. He likes a good melody-to sing .qi I 1 V I K : -I, , Lt. our play plus good coffee. And for all his l I ' .Q'-',.,f45pif:Qr5 if :K E '- -fag-,. : likes and dislikes he is an agreeable com- ! ' 'FE'-llllill A ull: f2?1--gigt' :Vg ,Q J, pinion, because you surely can find some- , A A ,-4215 ' -f iff - 'HH-.5 5g5??i'ff3fgg2 fi--fists.J1,'1 e.igl1ii1g in common with him. In short he 1:5-55 ,E 2 A j jg I 'firing j Q-Ag.j-jgqzajirsfiones of thoselindividuals who are boiind - , fill?-.114 ein-e - i fpsfe'ess-1a1Q11s febecwse he is funny um A 1 1 , ,vyj :Lf f,9i:',?e?,:rgf:T1iE','Q: if-gifqtfziigrgllf55,-i'Y-fp,iii-.'f ig ,f':-KU19?-QQH7T+Y Hospital . xi -1 - ,f as -Brooklyn' N. Y. ' kg' V , 51 - --R '- ' 'aff.ae.:fg'fw1Mi'-241512y:'Q,eZf1fg,,j3QL1 i H 1 Wg--. 5- 1 , 'ixipdgi i Q ' ' 'Wigs.,-,I-::g.3:,..3.32, IAIV ::Af 7': Oli6 Inmdred twenty-nine 4' . .9 ' H-'.1--1-w,v--',:-1.-.if ' A . .fi mnlkll' ,., ,. A. ' Q Hr s. Y ' iw. W E , N 1 .' F I-NV hvfq, A ah , yn! ru. Artist 'XJ , . ,. . ur 1' f - A v f f f A Q . X U , 1- .. F - 1 9 v . pe L, , 1 ' ' .. 4 2 . -L L Q M 9 A A ' 5 -4 : -' , 2 K H Nu 1 gl Ll ' , KA A L Q- 'r A-A ,Ma V N , t X X 68:3 - 5 i YA bf we ' , X X. y 4 , A , 5... 1 -.al-J.,- 3-..' -- .-Q ,,,- 1,-,tnfzfry sa 6 ss i ffl! 1 f ,. 4, rf -:-,rr -f rg. --r.. anlgtfshfgfikmy . - -,Ja D .4 One iiiiiicfrelil ,. -H -.--r- Q ,N Qi .1 . ge ri-27. 1-if 'fffa' Q? ili- rs if , - ,jf . -:A gli in , . 5. ji' . , 4. vim W i . ,Ep SQ r - se w . . - . Qtr? .??if2T'f'f' , A, ' ifgjigfejfurgfif57,573 --f. '.:.g 1-If .-.14 'r '- T , . , . ' 'if EDWARD GIPSTEIN .,-1. .r Pl' Gyn ' if New LONDON, CONN. , ugh' 5' lg.- F,-- 1 5-17. -. , ,M.g :, i 1 Bachelor of Arts 9F5,fLl,-fy-JFK f- --.-115-r-3:1-T5f.':2-:ggi-,f,-Frv. ffr-'.f1 fT : 5' Harvard University 3.g.,,7-raw RIFE GINGRICH Ptolemy, Vesalius, Tliomas-'?S'oefeti'es3,33 Gfl1!j', 3' ii Q,'.L,rC,'15rg1-:V -Fc. 'rg 1 -- Ti F- f'53':'f' :LT if 5.51 M1m'LET0if'Nf FDA' ED THOUGHT that coming to ,hilaclel-Qliiagrr 15 ,351 Baclirerloi- oi Science merely meant a Change from aked: bgarfgig, 1-P. : 5 A Lafayette iTlllVGl'SltY to pepper pot, and Harvard yarcli toj,-Lgeijli I, AKK, KBQJ campus. His desperate seareh ,oy l , 2 A A IJ P, tt same atruosphere alone ther'ihrnterlauQL.:',QErga lf... Schigciirri11533351Qrrfiuxsor-ifrfigigon little Aglcflr behig -Pfifee ervHg51f111Sf2i??g2f11- e r ' K ' pulsive uixote i. 'ingtlfue ga.. , 5QI'9 'Mfg ' 1 -fi ion seek to saveiboof r1IE2i1.f1?I2S5 ff., COMING from l.afayette and boasting to wandering in ' - . be of the same staunch stock as the great city. 2 g 9 'fp' 'Q Samuel D. Gross, Ging has made many Three leaguegsfidgdvQie3.sQifi0tQTi1g2yTfVi!9QQggfsiflgnlr-:gg friends. He has impressed many of. us in .the darkness,QIIQQQQEEIQEQPQIQQQY1 rg with his marvelous ability to quote points obJeCt-turning-r 5 at exam time in 1-2-3 order. Nor is his as to scatter ligisgvits,-'ilgigi'l1e3.gi?5IQ9Z9iQfE15gi -. 1.9.-,Lrg ability limited to studies alone. He has set up. Divesiiedrbf PHE kj, tak-en active part in numerous societies and smile, lie glid'Cli2i1fZQ 21X.i21'i1Ti and social functions, and in entertaining or-none fas ion. Qljdr-'ffg 5, aging hrjifz, 5:- the fairer sex with his wit and person- Philadglwgaz ality. As for the latter trait, ask him JKT, ?hil3a5lP,hf5gri-P1113g-ig? rrlrfgffj g:3'5g '-82-5 about his escapades at Carlisle and 1 'x,.:jfl gaf,23ff, f 1 5'-31 Hershey. Of late he has been caught making frequent trips to Baltimoruand 1 --Q .,,..:g A iig.5ri 5' it would appear that at last he has become r i F 1 I I serious. l ggi 5 I i W'ith his wit and cheerful outlook we I il ,I , ggi! 1 sity glrelr l are sure that success will soon reward . r -jjgi,,g.f,Qg'i'. 13? I i5'f ',Q,gfg . ,--QT' ': . ,r,f:' A' ' f EH, ' 'rr '-1 'v,-','. Harrisburg Horprrri - 4 ,jigrira'E2i.! ri . . prsgiil 5 ilrreie- Harrisburg, Pa. , '3 I i ., 'S 1 'f- 1 : 1' .' ezfff' .1 .' r F VE? -nil , L:g':,g,.g,-c ?.2'fE.'9.5?5: '- ,'f.gi?:.'-F ,. ' f -'ji Q ' ' ' -r -f'af5fiQ?r5i32'i3-. .fri iirllfi--7AfE':fif...fl,r 1 if r rf ru.,'1lf ,lffw1?1Q53-if-'Z -1.261323-'U ' i Qi g5..'i:f4.5i ' . if ff If - . lL'.Sv422't W E'r JQSSEEJZHC-: 5 :r FM .-.V '7' 3, '55-fr-.Q , 2' T- .J . . -rdf-13bf.rv-w' A-Las.-1? , - ' 9. f :-1 Q, - ' 'Q-. r-'zf An i. . .' fda?-C - , ' 71 :r ' 1 1. . 1 r Agn.'.jf'jf1,:,l,Ql'fsf1',sk.wJv N-' w 5 5' r ,l'j. gg '- .1 T., '- ,, I5 -g.'f..'-7?1'af,3if:- .!T y :1 i Ay '.-ffifg' - t tx A ix,.r . , 31 A V Afi5'ff:irg,55-337155: Qgfwl Q' - ff : 3 1 Li' 15- :'!i::1.3pIi.'r.: A L ' ff ! ,. A' 'r rr,.,.y,..- ,.., V7 ' . ffl. 'i 'ij-Wi!-'q, ',,.,ftl,i frtvj pt' In ' ,- X-.4 i bf! . 5 I 5 rf-'4 .1 ' 1 ,V .Ill ,!,,,.,-...- , ..- ..,y.. l. 4 '--,-4,3--we.---'r.,r .,.... .,.., - - - . Y- - . , ' ' ' 'li-'f'b1? 7'?L -1 ' ' 1' 1 ' y f'9?k' i I lf-ri3'Q2',LW 1 .4 L : ff .', 3 . A. af' I if '31 N1 px if-3 ' 4 1 f if i' . . 1 .- 11 up EUGENE BYRON GLENN iiD7'001J1l,, As11Ev1r.LIz. NORTH Clxuotixlx n Bachelor of Science 1 A -.Universitv of North Carolina Bon, ox , enhhti'- ,. ef- -1-3Strecke1', Patterson Societies - ,4. '5 . h ?.' 3' ' 1,,. 4' Q u -w sl. er. 1,51 ,, gy-1i,G'N lbeais-Ea. name rich in the history 1..,,- :Vg :- K.. g1?gofv1Ci1glisQli,literature and like the famous 1 If if N Lrg fi if ff.. 1-- V. ::f nz -,. ,se l. I u 9' .f iff:-11:.w.,-.sw-fiiffi1-fr-:s --vf '- .-if -ff 'fe r I- A ' A JOEL GOLD MAN LJUUEJ LEw1srowN, PA. Adelbert Collegeg lN'lestern Reserve lTEHSil3E.iigll11D9Stl10llS disposition. His U1m.m.Sm, .,:. -- ,gspeecligis slowq and often more isl left KDAE ' Ethan told. He has a code al his I .1 Qkiiiifiiflil-Qellidi is illelilleihis? C211'1'Y it througll Bland SCCIQU' pf 1 noignattqriiwflmlo1's3nEl3at.tlie obstacle. I -, ,,.k gl 1 y10g15Qa.nge.,tQ.1tsA,?1qi 9511 . 1111101 56111 1 . .' Q . . .1 -1wlklepielr2ineeef-'i.hf1frSe1ff-211HOWH fo flu- f.Ettlifioifi1XEilEfffE1111'S5e2ftilliilil315125 P4 1 -' -l fl? l?fial'SjDf?5am1fqitiQH:w a?!y0ne buf mm' Lin them lIl1'l1' hill?s iithis is thel aiihority hi fi? Eli 'sdfflgeg ih95t.Of fuends' to consult iles ite the fact that he comes - f-,ff-1 f,-.2121-Ipt l3lDQf1'IfQYVS'.f111jI2h1QfY?1llS and long, fro th ' 1 h Ifl mx . t w--, '- , -'liJ1'i2,'if'i:1lf11le'r3Flibill-zi.iSl bE6115'bZ211teI1 you will I m .Use pal S1 le HS mf Su Glen .- Q 3555835g1gti5,g'ff6!.,Q,3155fg11e believes to urban influence so that he represents the 5- - ,hdlggght H.5.3,fiL acme of polity. Philadelphia is Just an- ,f ' if 21535 other way station in his many t1'avels in ' V' 91552331 QR quest of knowledge. Among other places jfgggfgi ' contemplated are included Los Angeles iii? , 5 for the Olympic games, Berlin and the Kaiser Willielin Iustitutej and also the ' Allegemeine Krankenhaus. The accom- ' 2 V i if l , X plishments of this spell binder are far too '-,lil gg QQ' many to enumerate in this short space. gjtfslflgi i. xg Q V 2 U VVe have learned that Joel can concentrate 321.52 N best when wearing a pair of wide sailor 'l'l -.: af pants, so that many a tar will weep. He Nair! 5 Q i A -gl -e 9.ihg.1.y', is cast for bigger and better things and gin, at l. -I-,,if,Q'2l4.1.j A IQ !-gZ,..:.'1.,.:,.f4. 1 ,X his ambition is to discover a new method 1 5 Fl-15 ff we fizffffffwolflecfomy- 1.5 fi E 1 ' ' ,f 11 Q lL-.. :fit F2161 U 5-5-5 Philadelphia General Hospital 'Q-g'L:f'lf?,f1 4 5 U '- if 521-:':',,.:'.'.'T5 ' ' -1f,.'.--,Pliiladelphia Pa. e-:T . it ' 1 'l-Wg. -'3r,.frj,2tg-af-5,-2 ,j, 'Z,7ff:fsf-mf-1-ig gf.: -- 1 ' ' 124' iv. H 1' -eff1-..-lf-ha.-1222.-ll...g-11:1 4l'l ,'aQCfj:':!3Q'15fsf- .- ' iaf.. -. S 'fl 1 i '- -' wifi ' I3--iJ::?i4fl7-' f il'f'Wm5Yt-'iii' ' fr sw- ' 1, gf .Q -. 24.2-1:4::Y5.sL'1,S ' ' ' xi V -F 1 f ' 'f 1 ' -Hf4S?i2Zi?3ff'f?f3e.:1 .I?11'-F - . - ., ' , -g . , -Q . ' ' :?1'2fI'5. ' - wr 1 .3,,--',33..g',5gj 5,,.:',,- ng'-. F . . fi.: 211: l -2 4- f- -fi: jijlr .- , A N fx if er- - S 5 f i '- ' 1'ag,46l2,35if7?f5--'-'1tf:f44f'.2'fl.'--'.lf'.-' I ' 3 'I fQ'g 'f':3iFgiif:i'lf Q if I: .,.- - - V . One hfzmdrezl H1-11'1U'0'10 .1 ' ' -'sit-1rCf:. . - '. .-LAN.-L .. .. ye 'c-zg52.wif:'f?F?Eg:'gff-'Y N -' -' f A V . -,. 1 A f.-. - t 7 -15'h':n?Qij:,. . , W, -ssl , S s -, rx .--t we .sd s -vw,-1. 1 ss: XX 0'c'N52NXXXwwNf1m NNN QXXXNYYX VX xX x if Zfyfff we we Y eu 14 1 1 ? f 1 W Q Q , 2. ? 4? 4 13? 114 ' ,fx 9 fi - fi as f gf? 5 fi . M ' 4 ,wwf Z x em s s X s s s s J ii A i. J at ,l g Q. -4 'ff if V. L. N . . -Q ug- ' :Ll A ,, , 3' 4.1 It. ly .gh A,- . ,I . 4. ' ' H ' 'N I V A 5951- A - P--. ' ' - -- - 141- - - :.+55,.5.,5,: ,fA, N, ,A.,5, .j,,,.,3L , . qgegqqi -- - 1 -- ..:.-nv.v:4fi,.:,:.-,-,, .1,.g.i,1., ' if .. X X he ,, .rv nf K ,l 'v 3, . CLARK GILSON GRAZIER Clarence PHILADELPHIA, PA. Bachelor of Science Pennyslvania State College AKK, GE WITH courage and stout heart devel- oped in fistic activities at State College Clarence came to Jefferson determined to win his way through medicine. He has succeeded admirably, being aided to a large degree by his setting sail on the sea of Inatrimony. 1-lis excess amount of energy is well demonstrated as he rushes from class on his way home, pausing only long enough to light a cigarette before breaking into his distance-breaking stride. It has been suggested that this excess energy comes from frequent naps which he has been observed taking in class. Be that as it Inay, this energy, along with his sincerity, and ability, we think. shall not go unrewarded. A splendid physique is not the least of his attributesg and only we as medical students can ap- preciate what such a combination means in the strenuous practice of medicine. .53 United States Navy -' ,.. 1:-:JA-H, S X X f mv? 1 19 Al Lt If' 5 Ak - . . . f i fiff t f ' I I I SOUTHGATE JONES GREEN ' 'Bus' i DUIQIIAM, NORTH CAROLINA Bachelor of Science NVake Forest College 1.4 I KA, 91911, KBQ Moon. Bland Sociqtiiigi? SoU'rIIGA'rE JONES GRIjEN,lipopii1ai2lyQ 3- :fig known' as Bus, is onefgofftlie Y'iM1Qf.K., -1 1'-' Forest clan that transferreik into the tlii,niiQ2 fP5 'j . h year class last year. Very qliicklyilfllgggp. 1 1 f' q- adapted himself to his neiv 'envi1'oanieriy.g , l QE, and with his jovialggqinaiinei'rand . acteristic lillnionf became ,the populaii A ,, -H ': ,I33f5' friend of all xvitilfwlicimi-lie gcame' infcdni ' ' -' ' - ' tart. 625 1 gr? E . . In spite 0fg aifn1t0rrunaffe,ia1f,eSs Sof several weeksial gtiiefiflisgse oftdais ilirnioiiif year, i'Bus', was i14l1l??3CCi'3171fii1if21i1r his lilklii .Tiff scholastic sta1idjng5f,f 9g-:jf ' 2. ij Armed withfairrf'-2Llg1Zgtj2i1i1I1g?,i.abilZit5j Qtoify g make and lcee'fi'gfi'ieirds,Qiaigefzipaeiltygitog' ii grasp knowledge: .easilyigfancli E1-eigini-tive, , - 5,54 11191110112 and a kietei-IIiiI1zitioiihg,toQfs,ueeeedE,g !.gj-5.31132 we expect t,lie:gSoLit?li'1'hi'ill 'iljeg prplidgitai , call him 1'.Sdnl f ,biffii 54, -,- .3g..5,5'E,3 Q fQQerzewsHQffsf+aI,:fifi I 1 1 2 S ifwwmwwmmnmwbegi 1 l Q f lffrf is vi f f it 15:1 sfisiig-?43l3mgf'.' if A 'l il! . -Tl 1-if zigzag-5 i'.,'a'2ff L ' 'L r rf i ,XC-4 fi. :QL : I-ii. 'N,.B'5?'-' 'ini W 5 Pi Ii gilh aliiinn-, A 3 1, , , -Y 1 ' 'Q l n 'B P 5 E 4' iii' Sf' r :wit X 4 L- of -4,-w 1, wap wvf7G'5'N if 3 P52?HSKTf'3fE? W 5 I-all 2-fit., r ax ,ap 1 A x l U Q ,K Ai, ,twig -. 2 .- - ' - ,, L .-',.'.','k2if '1 H gel.: fs A -I ' I -1 'iz-'-3, Z ' 5 . ' 731 K J252 -.ji '. Vw 3'gj'-.- ', .i,A'f31--'I-TL '. ' -' - 'Ki ' .f.'- 'fif- ' '- ' .f 'az -' w 1?a f flf71' sisvai- -- - -1. i -.Q-T133i?lI'5?'is .. I '- -s -gif, , 6 , ., YJ., Q H., ,Y V ., Z 3 , 3, . '- . 1.4. .' -' , r, -5 4-'. Z: Q- 'r .,,'-.- . 'fi ij, x 3, ,' 1 ,NT-TIS 3 4- Q4flvNm,,,v g. ., rf. N :Iq.,.A5fr:J.. ,E Z.. in . MR 2 . .vs :,.Q:,N - .Ar . .1415-,-r..4f - . - I fr , ...H -:I . I J H '. we .-'ns ' ,. 3--' -., :P' - ,v-hw-aj,-,' 1- - : -' - -1 1 , 3 A .f . - 71 .. 56 ,4Q.-j- ., - - .fir-rl-.4 ,- 1 sa 4, : - iw I 4, 'Q ,fel ?' aSf 'g'f' --14552. - - Q. ll:-1, 1 - V E f m-cj ' 1 Q-',-' ,Z .. ,- 1 ,' 1- - I ' , , Ii ' 'iw M555 fEl'Ziii?S4f '7- iw I 1 2 ', 2 r :,'li rL': '--'13 I ' r fi 3 ?-Mi.5Q. .. .3 Nikki, Y V- '- rj' ' 1'LJ'Y-'-W: 1 -,FA I '-4ifi'? T-- ' ' ' 7 . I' r' x f' V . it uf- sg rf 151 :4f :a':m - I 1 I I ill - - q I ' : i-. One humired HL'l:'I'fjU t'l00 '.',':'-?l 5fKiET5T7-in -e. ' M . Jfl..-3 n X ' ' 1ilfw-45'-':,,4Q....f4fe211Zif4ii-?'-'.,' g1.f ,:f2.g:.:, - '- r-.',:-,avg'-Ii?-:Qi ' 1 'Q 4, A' U3 , f I 1. - X SX X X if f Zlf 1 is 1 5?- if Hi' Eff Tv- fm -9 c AAI 'VN P N1 'ttf' -1-ss -vc MAURICE GROSSMAN Mmm y BIFBABE, YORFH C1111o11x 1 X2 w 4: 'E UIIIVGISIEL of N01fl1 Cuolinl 1. . -, 1' K 4' - 'I - --- G2-F5?'1:if5:fi12?t':f CIJAE S - fs:-.- Lil MW Thomas fflieasj Moon Societies M ANXRY hls all tl1e t1'11ts 'lSC11lJGd to 1 L well known el1a1'1cte1 known is the old S011fl161 G-entleman Altll0Llbll 111 111y do not now it Mfiwiy 1S one of thc, woungest memloeis of tl1e c1'1ss, being 111 the child D10d1gy division Ile soon ,,,a1ned ieputation 1131 schola1s111p bg l ways bemg one of the inst to w 111 out ot exams YVe all have iecollections of hat tall student who was the fnst to get p fold 111s papel, put aw as 111s tount 1111 en and walk out of the 100111 to the tune E many gasps and how does l1e do it? Irs g1a1les 111 these wiitten quizzes showed him to possess a giant intellect J,eFFerson Hospital if rg! isa. Mr? I b. Lf:f.f:'f,t'l1a-11- is parfimount to all other desires. K 31 .1-'ff ' . .5 1 ...' 7 ' 4 11' nr' . uf ' elf -9-f3'7Ail LQ. 5. HENRY GEORGE HAGER JR. Hurry CHESAPEAKI: C111 BIARYLAND Bachelor of Science lVesley'111 University QZK fI1X ADA KBKID Hare, 'Strecker fVioe-Pres.J' Morse, 1J'lfl'0l'S0l1 Societies' Cll'C1ll'1tlOIl M-111a,,er of 1931 CIINIO WFRE far easier to tell what he is not than what l1e is for l1e is so 11111ch. A brilliant scholar, a keen analytical, al- though somewhat presumptuous mind '111d a personalitg that has made his name widely know n throughout Jefferson. Hippocr-ltes then chemistry lost 'in able worker. He toiled not too much but the eflse with which l1e grasped the principles of medicine is attested by l1is election to the national hOI101'211'y scholastic fra- ternity. I-larry has that certain something that has wrought h'1voc among the charming sex, yet he l'l6V61' tarried long enough to be enmeshed. He has an intense desire to teach, 1 1tl1QP than to practice the healing art, 5, -I .jefferson Hospital Pill: T351f A?.f1:liRhil?dg1p,hia Pa. .' , gg ,K I P 4trX5'Aky55:.-34:3 ini .4 -1 .. . agix 1 1 - . F E .. Q.. ' '?f'if :U5ie hundred thirty-three 1 ,f:A1,-:-- ' - Vg:-::.' ' -3-. .Ji ,, fri fra eff 1 1:1 .H mpg.. gt. FFP. f' , 1 'I .36 - .gg ' 3 T 1: X' -: 'ii' Hifi le H1312 3' .1463 Q, Prfr ,' H ip' Q1- 11-.13 gf, Jig- 5' --'Eff ,,f..- ff? ' 1.-45 'f' .. lx':3' Tk ' - ' .-'ENT' Yar '-vL :-- - -. , , ,, ' 1- :Az ,i5- '. G '- '-A- 1 si'-M f'-'-12:3--'::'L':2 ' , - if '11, ': f' an V ., sr '-L - L, ' . Y 1 ' - . - U. i D41 , ' ' ' 12 ' 2 '-vs 5 - Q. -1-1 ..v. - -,,. Q- .A ,fr-r .:::., . - 'A - i fa : 's - ,milk ..,i' As:5lElif?fqZ,,lv.L1.,'.,F3Q 5:'??iv.1i-51. if 1 L f 1. 0' 'f . ' 1 Hi 'C 15 . z f' 5' 'ii if iw e 1: 1- -1 , yy 13, : C 5 -1- ' :, , Y 1-:xl 1- ff. ' -1 ff . 1 QSSZL. gt I : J .5 ,1 . 0 o- - 4 x 'F' ., iff L' .. 'E .5 - .1 4 5- 1. 1 '. ' - R . -'If- .A ..Q 1'f'-ge 1 1.1 if-1. . . . L -1 fi, A, fella:-til'- E, Q 1 . ' . ' ' ' , 'yhj 'J STU - 1 I ' ' N V 21 , , I nz, I Q.-15 1.-j-5 e Q -V N - . ,A , i 2 5.1 -ff-' -all E ' ' 1 - - ' gn: ff . t -' 3' 'JfEg.E111.,, f--,e.,1-gk. . ' 5. '- 1 1 ' 1 f . -fx' V.:1 I 3 afi Ziarphalaaelphia Ps. ' - BQ: I, 3 3 A.. ,1 1, . 1: When Harry decided to follow t11e art of if 9 si,-. 'Jil il ' ' 1, .-.-:the , -,-Agn 17.4. veg- E,llg,: 1 '1-12-SIN' 5 ,-'gum-' 1 ig. 1 1 - ,.25f:!f' Eifiifiid-5 . if. ' 5 ii f- ,'f3.'!A: EW J-6zv.f,'A1'n f .Ig 'iff-41.-'V 1 fit -3 5511 fi '?-' 1 425.5 l' E.1+- . . 1--3, 1 1 al '- ,.w,s..5!11f.4... 5 : , I ,. ::.: 3 9T ii 121.31 G-2. 1 . 'M'-ll! 9 '5 g':.::.fi1alH .1 'f ..f':. vf'i'+ 3,1. . 1 2. - i.3i'f.1f . ' ,.-,uf -V 4 x .,-144-1 -1 f 1 1 7 1 f55w:,1.i gal, iffflziq iij -1 1- 1 H3 A f S5542 11,1 g ,' 1 If-A1-1 iitlr 1 f ,K-. ', 1 1 , 1 3 A J ,ailyilv 14 f : wh ff, H 'S , , .. 4. 1 gg-,11..i. -H, + ia -QW. - . 2-...r 4- -.A 1-xi. az.:-' 1 N, , , , if. l 'EH l I 1: ilivh: x Il K P31-gt ery: Tris I L 1 ' x I ' 1 1, ' ' ' , 5 11- A L K., 1' 1, 5 l 41 'lv-:msg E 1' 91.1, , Q K . ' ls 3:2 :7 71' QI,-,pf xlxfilffw 7 . M, . .' X 3 ' 1 '1 r V l , N3 A. 1 w z-4 in . 1 .lj 7 '-,,' 2 R -37? 'FF '1-ig ff, feel., K v .via 1 A ' 1 .M . - ww-'1 1 5 A Q R. .1--1,1-, 1 1 1 Q, , , wa . .8 . fzi ,R ll. I url' 1, i: u 'I ET bv J I . . ltr -..ff .51 -A+ eww. A 'rn ., he w ,. Q 'i..--1:-,::w,:L..-.-.iJ..., f v - 1-.j1.-4- :f:',,, ' . -, ,, A : I , ff I f if ez. ts me fi s Q, X s X Ply I ,Ls X . X ss N X C B X X X X s X zz .N '41 JL Q5 fx' 9 l 935 QQ, W ,il . it if 3523 1,5 'iff ' ., . 1 .. 1 4 Fi ' ' .2 in , ,,,A, f SAMUEL HALPERN li Sl 1 Iv bam Q f A'r1,,xNT10 CITY. NEW JERSEY -fwfr? 1 Bachelor of Science ., ' f3'f' 'fi' A 'iiffffre-5ti 'f' - fi-' Rutgers University ,-fviffgq. QEIL CIDAE WARNE l-QENEIZL HAIGHT Bland, Academy, Vesalius?Societjesiyg A '- ILP' Dean's Connnifliee iT 2 1 i'iQ.3QA rf, if-sg, ,' NAXNTICOICE, PA. S 5 if gf.'-ligi-4l5' g-' 1' Pennsylvania State College .. . h 2777 Franklin and Marshall College AM' qme? In mannel' igiiqnel 95 '5t2l.95W i1f ,P v GKXP KBQIJ rare fellows who nevergincun g61l'l3Q,l,l21iQiC .Q 5.x 1 Besides many other talents, Sam Zliajdgkeli. -' , , uf Editor-in-Cliief of The Clinic, 19315 original golden voice andfhis singing-'.jisj,, 1, 131211141 CPl'6S-l- 110011, Patt,e'rson. only rivaled by tlla.rtf'iQf the 'si.lverQr1iiiskQll f . Q 1-Iare, Morse fVice-Presb. Thomas: tenor, K .. Dean's Committee During the siininiingygnltions3SQ1m'3ii'zgs' 5' f Q H one of the 1naji1,stayf?fot3t.lle,-iNtianiQc t .V , . 1..l- P4 -IAP excels in many thingsg his neat- Beach Ifltlolefz 1Ie'f-Shim-ed' 11315 lllelilfifi' 1. Q. ness is perfect, the quiutessence of sar- torial splendor. He is endowed with those salient features which mould an attractiv-e personage. His ability as an extravert and as a leader is continued by his successful election to the respon- sible otlice of Editor-in-Chief of our Class Book, and by the many otlices which he holds in the several societies and clubs of which he is a member. Such is his enviable status. In academic pursuits he displays :1 cer- tain acuity which enables one to realize the practical potentialities within the man. He has what the famous Sir lV.illiam Osler wished that every medical student and surgical aibiljtyiaiiitliis tiinel ibeiiigfiqiikf ' 'fi ' - of the most soiiglifEf,iiQf1lergbeQucl15iuiggebifs V- - ., 5 J ag . at the seaslioiei1'esZi1'f1ffLi11ikl,it5 not if likely that allunsgllrgggealrsgzii-ei-eesbf :grep male ge11cle1'.3'?,Anioirg,i5 lo'tl1ieigQ-gelziil115g'?t11S'- -1 distinction SHQIIE liasgakieeiyiiaigj ireseiiililaiide - ' 5313 to the famous5D1g. 'gtjqgdadiigfiiig 3 first year coilldiieasily hlaive ggsgkeixji the 2:Ainaf1ife S Wi.: ' 'I'-iiifgrg 1 , Defi: f. '55 Ml ,.QJf1,. I , 1 Itlglg , I A - ij ' . .43,gfi,f '5 5? fjieff ff iff -: 1'... '?I2 'E - ' . . -,fi ' 1 might have. 'tAequanimitas combineglf- with HIIllIl1lllt21SH1tNV0 attributes w-liieh most of us stilil have to -fle,velob'.,-, '5:'JfiiLL1 fl'i:9 ' - 1- i .V was born with theing Jefferson' :lrfl'dsEiitalf.'if ' Philad.6lfihjqi,-fffav-z3,5 .-.. 3 . ' '- -4-'-'- F ' L! '3i'f1 4 1:41 -Y. f .' 7 ' . '- 1'-Q,'?'. fvlgg ,fs . 1 - Lv: ,c 1 ' ,Q V. -1 ' ,' , , 1- ,: 4 , -4,2-in AL f 1 4 E , X . . , . 4. 1Z.f'f'L39glZ'T'-5?a3'l1J5W'13?iiL'I-.' ' ' . f A 5 '- '-s A . Ji i I i i , J'-f.v'f 'ii ii ij! : wr' ll E Pit! in 54: .X x 'f,,Hxv lx i I5 afllt' off , wo, ,Ali i Q,-g,QZ,,. a:'ev5Y,.,M , , . 53125-F31:ff. - lg. 2-if 'J 51 -A! ff, I 5 2 1 -fm ' -'e is 1.1, . , .-QL' ,. .- ----:swf .5 '-.1 - -v.'.f c'1ff74cf5fi'-t'r4'f1 A' 'T' '1'- '7'f'.f..1- : : ' 4- . .. - ' -- --1 . F., - -5.1 L 4 - V ' N v 25,1 , 1 we 2:-4, , .,. gy-Z o'f.:22f fi' ' 1 Sky-Q '4 9, K -QW? . 1' .fav 'ef 1' 'L 1:5+il5g.1lig,g If f ,f1Q.7.,,..:,,,,Y-',,-.:f3we':-. ,, -' ' ' ,571 ' One Ylzmdred thirty!-follr :'P-'52-2gg,.:.,..A, r,5Qf.-.wa-:,f x1,g,T:.:.jj,..r3s.f-,ly psf'-V-. 'l-' ' ,I ,yllgii ie 1 Jr. 36 X 'I 14' 1 -rf -Q. w ?- 1 5 ii il L x .gl A sr XXX Rx Q 1f '1' N 4 RICHARD VERNER HAUVER i'Dick' AIIDDLETONX Y, BIARYLAND St Johns College feknnapolis GJKXI' AUA Xsxuthltx Iuditor lllbl fLIhIC' Morse Moon CV1ce-Presb Bland CSec.J Patterson Societies '- iigIIvB1Iiiisfa'lleade1', and -1 teacher when offfein Eqhietfbine might be deceived into N llievgng hef wasnt thinking sh-irply. Jeni itibcomes to,:.dQping out -1 problem -anti. follqfvging, ,tlris11Sbj'.,,tl1e right action, Shfiiw ?11?il?f3X.lif5?ii?-1 'A i 5 ?Di,ck EcbirgbiiiisjzigFpiimitive vigor with '32 iilBntga,l,Qaierj31eSsgfthatA.iends only one fl yiheiegzieliiey-es-'Q.hislaiuns-ancl they fire llfl1Y'-Pile'-Bly' this 'Fifi-j'5 i 3 f ,- Erxbrei tistiiibtiveififatlire, lie thor- Zziougliljl. g1islikesQQhej1'1Qir1gf5Ql such things Qaigboutfliiinisigdfiibutiii .fully deserves all Qt-hisiias 51:2 D'gf1'tj7n,ig glib 1' f j1Hfisi1,Ql1 a man needs surely has NP? - vihr-.1 rx .4335 .ref ,f,. -em 72. Lf'E!2 ff --O. -u.. 0. .:v,?i:,:.. Mfg. ,L D. 'Q UIQ- iflglliiifuig- 2 1' - :ff -.1-:sa-25.21 . -ees..- X f .f ss Ns s Qi f 333 .2- ' 4 .gl , if A J, v X 5 -v ' is .2 Mg -.TE i Nl 3 if f fi X Na ,sv W Xt e sk .,-. 1-J 1 -.. . . -A- -. 'A -' -i. 1-.gp--' 'fz'ff'fz,w - J, 95. :Hf. ff2f,., - -.4 1 tap'-,, fb-22.-?:'lf5k-5 ,.-,.. x- , . ,, X 'L I, Nr J, Lf, rl: , 2 ' e, .1 ' 3. , ... . ,. .M . . Q, . V . . STUART PRICE HEMPHILL Stew NrcnoLsv1,Lr.E, IQENTUCKY Vniversity of Kentucky and XVashington and Lee University CDA9. QIJX HE1:E is a man, and more, a gentleman. From the blue grass region of Kentucky, where even today they hold to their hearts the ideals that lived in the days of Chivalry. He is quiet and undemonstrative, but he has set himself a purpose and is carry- ing it through with straight forwardness, inclined to look down upon all things which are tinged with the elements of politics and Heeting popularity. Stuart impresses one for what he is rather than what he does or fails to do. It is said that all great men have a secret foible, but in keeping with the rest of Stew's personality and char- acter, his is not a secret one, alas-it is the chewing of gum. A Southerner-no sir-a Kentuckian, horn, lived, and will die one, in truth, one . iril if N -z 2. fear, All i 1 . i 'sf J-5. YLGHV ...st l 'l.,. '- ,.lv'g'9f1'MKJ'x 'L its f 4 Pwr F 4k5f.,T .. .AL . J of the remaining few-21 gentleman. Duval County Hospilal Jacksonville Fla. 4 3 -j. -LQ.. A: Q gg 14: .la sax -1 e gkgugl 55723, xx.. or W '?'X '5f- One lzundred thirty-fire ' ' ,. '- w. :hifi ' -br ..'L':1'::'f'i. 'X 'N ' '- 2-W .. .,:-,QQ -Tiff , 'f 5ilf:'f7'?1.,?f. - - x 7 'T 7: f '. '5 J- if if' - ' .4 'f 'S -. -'u.'- v ' Z' EIA. 1. li L if F . . if . - f-'1spI1w:w.- 4 -'25 .- -. .- -. . ., . -- , - ,.,.f..-'ag.t. .ir-. .. ,. -. . . . ..,. . - ,- , -. :. . , . 5 1- . 'Nuff' '-N.-. 1 an ,.--- , ,., . -, . . . . av., -. ' .. , xigl, a,,'+g,.z -:. -A - , L , 4 .,, npr- . - . - -- ' -- fr.. - ,.,-ri... J.-,-x' , ' . gr ,i- , - wg- 1 , : - 1-3 . - , 2 jg. T. '. ' ' 2. - ' f 3, -v. '.,:.., 1 3 vjg -lgw . . L' iv R11 -f 'Q W-1. n I ,. P - .H , .G .,..V W ., h:.-w,, - '. 5 -. v - ' ...-. -.-...H--.-1 .A Q 5' .4 ..-'nazi .--.-Q11- . '.'.. .v-.,,' I l AM.: f , . -,4,-'- ..i Y :fMz..,,, , 5' .5 .- . ,V , -4. ... ' ., . 2-f 9 . jk I. E21-E aij Eff ijt nfl: ff A li, :gift :fi 11 A -11: ,lf:.-- lil ,, , , . . ,. -..?fl' i'1+'1,'r.'e-22: nr--:-'qw , f-1 ,Lf L'7-T lffr:,+f, 1 ' '54-53?fi f?FjF15QQ?f?::i?53:eiZ?54F Ji 3, . A 1 .. 'rfnzf' 2 -. - ' - , ' ' H r 1 i3f'.?f.f' 'TM 'fff'-1.::Qf ' ' iff if 15 .Q.f'i1:gfi. if gg ,iflff ey.: :1 ' QF . 1 f .. ' .' L 1 5' gg,--lxeibso echooses. BIGL-in every wayg Ji g Y. Q,-h ., ,aissbel 1 ' - K, .,, V -...il A 1 .1 5 L I v fif?gQ 'f,'l4--N Y' 1 , N K :gf .ll 'A b, -'Q L ' A ' L 4 L :j mi: , y iiqggifi. ,c ' . E Elise-elif r ' 1 t A Jag!-L'iE,g, lix 5' N L 11- -1..', :fb f ' :WM ' 1 y 5 lag' l Q 4 1 li fflfl ' S ' 'l' ' l like J. Il Hal , Q f all l A lil! -? ?f-'l'l'eS:?4 4' '.l1'g-Air' 5-ning'-f 5 1 ff .lmff fi, .f . i J' , , H X nf f . li lr 'if I m 1' .v,l ' ' vu it a' riff'-1.-at . l' 5. liz .r .fee-' . ig' '., , f '14 rf 1l,1,1rlif -ivzlh .. 1 :ei N e ,1 1 1 ,, -3' , i ,yy 1 T- ,E if 1, 4 I 1- I , t ' V .X f 4 ,, -1 slat' . fl, J. an ., 'gage is t dl Q2 f 5 X mx ,II kr 1 I-mi A ' ' ' 'S X' 2' l 2 5,-yi It .sl ' 'Q 1 M ii' X f-iam C B X ' G - ,- , 4 ,I -.t r vi' 2 : f X 1 1 y? -X 1-H, 14' -'Q T r .- J Y . l l if? 5 1 W V Y X ff f 2 Z if K f Q 3 l 4 f X! 1 Xf Z f if Z l 5 1 f ff, ff i f4f , , 'U 7- ve: -e i 6. -f ng. A wb Q , Q: .i . -S 5 fl. g i 1 fi-: ...ju In 25 3232. .iq fi ' Ll, G- i n fi '57 7: ' 5 fl: in . 4 'fi PHILIP HENSTELL ig '4Phil - f NEW I-IAVEN, CONN. A If ,. - 1 'Mu -' Bachelor of Science P - 'L'f'ff V --PT..-5,.F5a'2fZ2g'iE.fur.--,ypf:if?ffzT5 ' Yale University CIJAK . '11,11.RH WALTER J. HENDRICKS Vesalius Society f'u'a.1f' O .4 -'gg fi PERKASIE, PA. UT of the North, witlioirtt liera1dsq,Qfioif 34 5.11 Ph.G., Bachelor of Science t1'11111'De'ts, from .the sanctumtcgf 12116, 1i11?E?QgT'i. Philadelphia College of Pharniacy and 3123941 our mldstv a q1112,f111151-Ssugfrilqfggi fi in Al, - 1 M ll X' C ll 0' ' ' -. T 5 :Zl': E13 , J L- bcience Ind Aulisenbug o ese P1111 has made good with a vfi1ggffag3'?2fK i' . ,, ,,-3 ' Early in his life atX,Je e.i'son,3eE ear :gif that to take a girliont morejthan WHEN- good old doctor Browne igleelig h ' Q turned his thoughts to religion. he wrote ghs.. alfa: ttfcirdg , 5 . . Q a line that Hendricks can truly apply to AS aflesult ?Q'1S?FQ.ii1Vf1a.f?1.gSbr 5 I, himself, I dare, without usurpation, P11115 5011015115913 Eg L EEC assume the honorable style of a Chris- ffverager gag? -firi- tian. Amiable, industrious, unobtrusive, Very 'eil 01. ESQ 1135. 5 1 T YValter studies to become one of that fo ledhze Us jijj? dwindling group of men who represent S+. 3Vl'ridqni'Qsg?7lpppiijg:lQ'j sg :gig 'Q Zi the nearest model-n approach to the all- BfidgepqjrH'QfQi:ng1ifQ 5 ' . around geniuses of the past, the general 3 practitioners. I-lis choice casts aside all hopes of fame. but his eulogy will be a ' ' ,QUIT f . Lrg-.5.Jgg.,g song in many hearts for his gentle kind- f'- ffl Q 'png ness. Not long on theory, his practical ffgy? knowledge of medicine is impressive and L,-55512 5 Q tri?- his manner of handling of patients should g 'i fgzfl bring confidence. At the end of our , i , v,g.QEf3 second year VValter left the ranks of the , .1 ,, iii gig, I celibates, thereby deserting the com- , Q Sgy , g lnuters. In spite of this he has kept his 1- Qmvfif 'ily E5jgg.j.'.Qm. if' 1 g fl! SHIH0 gracious, simple style which impels-1 -1 w ,fAj,::53f LiT H991 'J - 5 fy 'j'lfg-hilifmge a friendliness with all his classmates. X,-.',f'.f:EFi3. :,!i.f' .I 5 +L, .vi -1- 9.7: H . . 5 , ,': A a 5 , N :V Frankford Hospital, f P gel ' U li iii. . Phllade.l,phja:fPa,.51 . f. . FI, -,H -r ' r . f .n :L 51 5-'Q 1.?-.7s'ifiar2?f,v?3,? -'f,- ergo - , -5 9 'F ' T 3.1 !:3'7r'7s - ' . ff 7. .:'E'2.3f-' -3 1 P '5 I' Yu--55 ' . ' ' ' 7 5' f.. . J iff . 'Ax ' if-'E-,f , -pi .1 fi if ' -1Qt'Q.i-gangs. 5 ,fs .. ,if .,--f . .-.f .- 3 l ., v , , 7 . 'X 0 J' 'fi - x. L... F ..4.ke.f 11.1 -iff'-ww - I - - ' , 41 X S. .' - w . I Rv , -,, 1 . s One hundred tim-ty-s.1.p,:,,,,'r'.,,..,g,.a-,,, ,V 4 - ,., X ' ' 'i N ij!-A55 -,AJ ,.,-... Y, .v i ' -gf -' ' ' - ',-.1-,,,.. , S? f ,ff 'QI -DF 3 W .151 2' ,141 to is 5 X ss QsX s ss 41 'f -ns 'N Fw ROBERT EMMET HOBBS Boo-Boo BIIENANDOAH, PA. Unix eisity of Pennsylvania QTQD Q.-1 fhO11l'lN hloon Morse Ixnowles. H-ire in Societies, fSec.J bophomore Cl-iss ls 51 OB 01 Enlunet as he is better known to slus intinmtes, iniakes up for his slightutss oi build by his greatness of nature. X 'naiufre that is not incompatible in its ff piopm tions of love of fun and seriousness. Emmet s ieplitatioinsr 'is A1 student is 'lvaled by his reputaticin. as a DC1'D6t1 1fOl' 21k6S,h1l11 a p1,e'asiriit2co1ii1Janion at -ill times - H0 !SH?2f.. , . piomptg his cygirjiggidtioii :find with true cozniigfieiieeg Sig ljisijaqtionsggglf determina- etion linlfi aiiebniplishinent, success is assured 7 student and 3-savhilafdelriliiasni-,eieral 1Hospi+aI 1 ' . .S : e.l,',5f- .2 1 nfl: ae. 1.3 4 . .. v 3.4 - -1 -:L fi 1 :' ' 12,1 - 5 vi r c vi , uf . 'f2i2.'5fii':7 -T r,.?- ' A , A -1 yuifgjz -V 1-.. .Ji Sxs ff Q 7 Um' 4 -, ' Wif i? WYLLYS ROYCE HODGES Hodge CUMBERLAND, MARYLAAD St. Tohns College GTIKXI Morse fPres.J, Moon, Bland, Ixnowles Societies from Maryland. From the very first he made his abilities known, und it is no paradox that his replies to professors 'ire usually right. An utter disregard for system, that portrays his genius, and a genuine 'md a sincere interest plus a mind that grasps the details, are qualities thfit will m-ike him a leader in our profession. Add to this the ability to make friends wherever he goes, and we can readily visualize one more occupant in the seats of the mighty. A junior interneship -it Maryland General, in Baltimore, while a great boon to the patients, was-alas-a bane to the nurses. The noose has yet to be made strong enough to bind this young man, and though many have sought. none hare con- 5 ijuered. A Gordifin Knot would slip like 5Z7fQrfa.nn over his fair brow in A ,fm 'f -fC 2 flgfferspn .I Hospital -xt 1'4- Q nl' if In S ' f ,I K ith' 5 wk? 15.1 :-'.'Z,f'. -.ill 'nf' M ---- s i e e r Phiikdelflhla Pa. y ef- - .gk . Pkgfvui-....-M 'QL ' P f QE Z 5 4, 21 z fx Am One huozdied thwty seven .t . '.,' :sz H 5 -V .H':fj.:Jr,1, .,.. P-3.-',f'2'l, ,Qe:T-'- r 1 . ii? Sifii - xii. EVE R -ra'-Q Vi, iii FT: 72. T: .116 'S is-7 5 ,- L, .1 ff Ext- ,- 3151.1 .jg :We 5- ' -rf' A fi tif' 2' 95 . - ' -fef 3 ,Sf--, if -1 ' 1 U ,.,. U -, .. i 1 V. ,.... - .... N . . ,. 1 ,AA .1 . 'N ' A '7EL-'4 .,. ..-fin, .. -i f,. , ' 'Z A .--,5,e:f.,y 1-,gf-ff.:j N:,--,-- 1.-1fszq..-- - . ' ' ' f A - ':7 '.':-'ef:'gf'f A gs' ' in - 1 L , , AF u H ,, Y J ' 5 e ' ' ' Y fa- 'H- ,2 ' r, -H I ... f ., , , ,. 5, 't 5 . s.S-Z3.- ' T -. . QQ ig J' wifi?-r Vw.. W, 'K I 7 1 4 L 6' ., . 'N fl' -- 5.55 ' W, ' .. H EQ if 572111 H' fl ' ' 4.-.Q . ' - ' J' - s 1' T ' ' I ,.5.1': Ef, 'rl N'5g,.l -a'L--64,1 . 11-5 rw w y J , ' -'U'-, -1 1 - ':. rg- . ZQ5' an fi, '1-.1:'.7.: ,Q . S ,E 5 X , 1 The 5 3. in , r ' A , if ' 1 . V 'ag fs.,-1, 3, I ' ,j 1-v., .: .- I lf . , 5 ,X J 1 E: Zf, L H K , '- ' I -, , 'f? ira ' Q ny 'if -1.11 'food humor H ' ,. 5 ,. gush ls' e 9- fafh, E 1, oDGE came to us as a modest lad 5 ' 'trs f -N f , .Hg '7 T 1 ' .1 gli! my L-Egg t 3 : 2.:'- '. . it as.-J, 3 , KJ ' . f et' V 'ff . - Z. ' . - 1 xr n 4,-Q, , .V , .:,-.- K . fi, fs YM- -. - -' i 'A X T-fa ,. if ' 1 , QLJLQQQ . A- - B :snff 'Th AE , , W 1 Us 4 W,f,-x--- f a.ef..,, .1 1 f gp.: fxji, 5. A-.7 , Y f . 4 Ying , 4 r js. , 1 2 253-1 Eli: is 1 ' 1 1 , ? ff: L 5: f , L ' i. f I , . 1 4 Y ,I :If1'Fr .-'1-'I F f S in if F - 1 ' J ' 4 1 5 Y 1 I . 1 v ' :Q-YD, ' 1 I I Y 1 z,,3,,f,g'Qr. ' if s . in s 3'9 i 'iv fin t I I 1 6 I I I i ' Q , :Q l .6 'f 54 11 ' 1 fd -if A 4 i U f . like 2 . ' 1 ' ' I I Q X ef gi ff'-1: all ,f ' mi- 1' f .., 1 , ,K .f. y n ,N will . 11. , , as :fg:1r45':.5L '11 V4 - N ' -iQAm.:1 . . 1. il .f Q - .L 2 1 . - f tm Q 1 , - f if 'ie-RX! tv 2 f 1 r 3 4 'I 'M w 1 H v 'fi gg-gm: Q 1 I 1 . - 1 , 4 ,-M 44,1 N 3 X3 gy Hg' 1 , L ., 12454, 4. 1 ' , 4 T' ' J ,. 4 , 1 'JC H' 1 l' , 'K , Vg ,fl Lg 9 7 1-' . ,. ' y, M fn'-.1 f T31 1, , if I af, KVM: ffvyvlh E fx pi , xx, I 1-afar L ' .3 L' . 1' . '. -'-22, g i ,. Q I .9 .- u,,x-ff , e-fix J-':-J, , ' k ' .X 1 ,.-. '-Y, 'I H 'W-4' , 1 Q . 2 1 . :UN ' '31, f -' A P . .. , tv 1 -QL see- ,43 53,9 4 I 5 fs I , ,L I vii, S3 1 g- + 1- M ' II f- New V 'f 4 2 O .- ' , 5. ,, 1 'I ,, f ,Q . ,ff I 1 ie Q I r. 1 i V-H T, ' ' ox 4 ' Lp 1 ' M . ' ! 1-I cv ' '1 ' 'J' l P ' 1 V, f W I , I 5 I X S ,vw f I X 1 1 f if , 1 A I 1 i 1 X i 4 W' , 9 1 S 1 1 X , J 3 , y 4 7 f Z f l Q f 6 1 f f A I I V -V. ..1f ,, ' .-5 ,Z Y - - V ,I -: .1 3 r., .1 t Ts-Q 1 0 if .Q i 22514 .22 sci ?- iii' -v-, .,, 222- .. Ffsdf '1 E. pg . Lv T' N. 'IF'- il X? -.1 122' X 1 'A .I --:fxn',.., 4-- n' 1 l ig? MICHAEL JOSEPH HURLEY y '-Mike . -.M JOHNSTOWN, PA. - f ' Bachelor of Science ' M'-1 fl-fe''--W1'i .3i?45f'f1f ff95 1'1'l-'-C' .. Pennsylvania State Co1legegf'5.Q.: '- QKXP, KBQ 'UCHARD J jfjK5f,N HORWELL Morse, Moon, Bland seeiiet-ie3'.'gAii',.4-3 U00 1 f f f ilu-L' sz. if 2-1 . - f I Qf- ff ft 55' IL? IAFGUQ 'L' JOHNSTOWVNI is the hoinei townx.. -Q Qs Bac me oi of :.Cl0I1!.9 Michael denies A having encountered' '1g, f. :1fL, Laffw emi Cflue-ge flood even though it did oeeur ililjhejlgkfi f QQ' if KE, TX, ISBYD I . eighties. He received his jpremetl1eal'5edEri9 ' ,, ' 1jj Patterson, Streeker, Hare SOCIQCIQSQ t-ation at State College, wliere lie'tlg1jxg1ggQe-I, JI' Assistant Business Bialialew-1' 1931 on mountain air andiztext booksgofgpliysies-Af U, CLINICQ Rabelais Club later forsaking thengfor sueli adissiljaigi' nj-Q 'Q in Philadelpliiafas subway g1'itles,gst4ud?ex. 15 .- 4 . . nurses. and leiidingrlibrariesi g g E Z: 5 '9' V .QRDS are inadequate, and space lin- He Wm belinenigdwfgrgdifdfgliis Sliugggig I :Tl SLIHZICIGIIUL tg atgenilft 'tifllilltli1gl1Ci response to quest-ipngi.-jug.tbeiqlqsgliqqmfi 4117: most versative ouiiiclivit ua s s or ,f and for the :uhuSuQ..:.QdS1t?ohS5lgggicpmkki as tie vsintly winc s-, we iave v1s1ons 0 assume on the Clasgi-fxmin. elid116S.EF.!ii.E.:?-A ,, -. quaking hguryes within the walls of D. B. A rather Slggueigengdi fg11i1iiiOiq5afhdA as- Ll fe: 1, 'asl Jack battered at the gua1.ded pleasing persquajitjyiai.?5diSfQi,ifMI 1,5 5, poiiilssiiers uvuments ex er administered ufwr 0116 has 5'iW31'Ul1Y1'15ffh5 ?1T?1thff5ESf1?HeI E923 . - T . -' 2 'B 5' 7 ' cult of task bfik11oW'inQgFEariiliitlitlets aln - 1 E-5.1 ri, in divided doses, are a feature of all in., him .ggr .azffifig .-ge? fi ,Q gtaii, iizigiie discussions in which he takes a partg and D ' aff' if Q J. . ii 2.sii53i:?i'5i'qT tlT,ff-P951 . . . ' . ' gg' 7fi'.1'-'15'-,iii - -.--' 'v-GF-r he partielpates 111 many. jfgii :'9193'?SL'fig9?Pf4?l::L5,f 155'-g g 2 s Q -. '.-.nf Jack returned his Senior year with a Liga? most distinctive and, we must confess, 1 it j,g42g.gQ, 1-Q gl V---2455 ingratiating adornment upon his upper .gf lip. Now he has all the necessary re- WEE Q 2 Ei I ' -- ,jgffjg quirements, miental and otherwise, to go, : J' iff, lil - is to find and conquer. We beseech all the j ,QQ iii if Wg' Q gods to aifl his cause. ,:1fg.LE5f i 1. 1 Eg.:-Q-je if 'X 5 34122 When the wires hum with amorous J.: A QQ-f,.t'lf'.Q.i' Fiji ' Q Q! f!'EY1'Q.'545, ,i tunes and it's long distance calling, yye:-ffl.: 4' If I-,rw-!7f,,'.,.!'2j A I ,gpg-5, know that Jack is there .happy 'AA-antjl-lqjgfri' A, 41-J. 'aid' ' s , Alf 3.-l , content. V - - ', g Be+hIeheTw -Hpspffaefz Y- P-lfifti f ' if 3' Be+hle-i1e5i.,', Rs.'-i-'. ' .f3.fQf1L..-E'f21fq5:1ia'NT2Efs fig' L. '- 1iii'63i'E---3 E. . 11.-'1 .11.sie-iri'-1?.f-rflialazffi at 4.ti?fE1'1ff5fS H5 ll 32. -.eff . Q ' 1 Lib-'-f:1eia.:?riif-CW' ' ' 2- f' 5 'fi 2531 f.N, a.--.a7.f7?.3-Things' 5 F .7 rd T.,-Q fl ii , , ,-,.,,-., .-.1'.- '..,-1'.,.t.....'3g,u-Q...ent-4.-.-1swf.-1-.i.. -- . . .' .i if fi i s'ftw,,ii,' 'az 'lf --'IN' -'H'-1-zzeffl'-'ifi'73Er52f11 I fr, ',. ,,, ,. MTL- X One hunclrecl thirty-eiglrlqnw ,1 ' if- ,-,yrr . .. 9 il it 1 ,lf il S3225 .L W if ijgc fp .,:, , -if , - I 1:92 .I -. if Fu ' :- t '-rl 7154 -1' ,ii ' rep' 1 -1 :JT ' W ' f ' '11-if - , ,. ,-,E x HAROLD L.-,ROY as:-ILER ff' Isla i'Lon'l ff? STATE Co1.1,1zoE. PA. :S A Bachelor of SC'l1'llCQ 1, f , .gn-'-. -1- 1- '.,, 4 ,femfw I gPe11nsylva11ia State College 'fl .Q 723,-Hr iiE i'f ?4?'i ,3f ''A' emf y33,? :'-'i,.Q11grl.1'1i1a11'of Program COIlllIlltb90.Q Bland, LOUIS C' JACOBS ::,, -I1j,'-13.5.-5. BIQOHQ'f,LIi1l'6, Morse Soc1et1es , , , . 1. 1 fig' .gfffsgv-jf.: 1' Lol :E F33 , , NIIDDLETOWY Pix. 11253 t?f1,:ffgi.ff- ,li2IS Smiling youth lvlfll a sunny f1lS- B. hh I i f QA. A. 'jg Q4-f-positibn ahdra warm heart was welcomed PeImS':3Vf3 QQ Ostffglelgeu U ...Q- 'S ff' ,.9:Vfg1ft LQfJeffe1'son,' an outgrowth from the - 'mm A e 0 che I ,,'Qj11ikiCturegqu.e town of State College, Penn- WIJAE, B-'SP T Eiigfffiaflmlllliilf H55 92-lily Qflllwltion was re- Schaeffer Morse Societie 11 -. ,' 1 . 21.1. .',' ' : if . .' 1 , S Z- N -Qgxcgerved atg jill? historic fcollege. Penn State, Q F .: Q Zamji113tEtgtfQ'n3,Wl1Qiglr boagts of many tradi- L , 1 gr Q Q iVbYLdel.,1fISh71 missed the '0U, another genial lad fro111 Centre U ieampuglgwhemahe, fmmdhimself gmdu, Lountyl where he was known to all as 'L 1 1' - Tl Lttl I NI- y - 5,2-ff? LET-lf - YEH1131zaclapfgrngfhixnseli-to 111S new env1ron- 1? 1 9 P011 in 411, C111110 to Jeff61S0I1, -25321: g:-Q . fgjfngnig- 55 5 ,-31,5--if -Q 1 survived and IS st1ll known as A'Tl1e Little -' fh6Efii9g5g,i11rgI10t be entirely Iron Man. What with sandlot football, f . -Eg11ej,vaitd5Qtl1i5 2aQl'ditio11. E02 that conceited golt, tenn1s, Wfeslfllng and nlfwmg Plctufc - -' ,52y1.mm. Sphht most of the past Sum- showe, cinly tan .1l'01lulll21I1fi ccnrld have 13 kllljl- f?h1:6I,:rSg y3mMiQn,iaflipiyiuo, some of the remmnec acive 111 il an stil attain isgfzthoroughly ex- hugh 'scholast1c suceess. Dimiuutive in .L,g:?i5:,.33 T posed togdmtingz ith? Zpmmious three years. gtature but g1g?LI1t1C 111 mental abrllty Lou -giqilfjg it -if1lj:Tbgt1iiSEG6n,+gehjM.fl.iendQ ,His many 3550, impreseeg all wl1o meet him. His success Q gciagtqgg, vggsltlllimgioiitflguimee:bf-,-his pleas- 111 111ed1c1ne leaves doubt 111,110 one's Illllld ..,, ' - A f : ' '-LQ?-: '! '-l',.'l'E.f' E 'I f ,E - ' ' ' , iWayE51audJASp.: hegshaM.g0N:Qne to ful, and It IS likely tll2'ltnI4Ol1S only wo1ry 2311! sfi111f11 511201-thy -Iiiiizpbsle Q11s1ife.- s U1 the fume W111 be when W111 I break :QQ 'Q' I ' ,Eg 100 O11 that golf course. g1fg5Qg3z!+90g E i2fs.P!+a55 1 , lelaving received his early education 11. fgQgQ'gQlf1?.g ti ' 7II11Cl campus environs. Lou l1ad to apply j,-if-fu-g.l,: Q 15 .31 l -ff the DPIIICIDIG of adaptation upon arriving i' 1 f lf ' 59 1 ' -Li l l N'l?'fA i T 'xt lelterson -kll this l1OXX6V81 11 54 1 2 A ' 'F '-1 ?Tf15v -. ', 'J ' N ' 4 V .' ' '35 P1 Q5 2 K simple mattei-,b for we now find hiin about lQ5:ff5': .553 Wig I , 5 ji efglg L, ,-:mto invade a c1ty.where our Pennsylvania ln f1'f1CF10'1- l . . .2-'-':,HZaf'FbN9 '0SPHa' f' if, n ' 2 -,ff,FQ14?33f7g'?,.t?F23:3g'f' --Y It ,. E32-:H3?fFi5l?l1f9. Pa- -', .1 1:1 f ,u .' .Q gl -L rg: 315-Q.f,,a',:3r' g:,.li.3Af.-I-'gg' -L fp:n..,.'l.2:, 11- itll- 4,5 L f-- uf- 3.53f'Y5',1jg--'FM :Tl Z'-,f5 f?f 5Tw4g1z3f5pw'.-A -1,5 -'51 . 1 N -I . 3:5 1 Q. 1: ,YW LJ., . ,I on P-..Sj.v1m-:,xl - 51.64F 1 . . . ' 1' ' 1 'P 1 . ' .:f:f. ': . fwv:.: . 1 1 ' .II A .Z-5 ,V ,fx-, - FF:?,ci',gE?,,g: ! fb1.-,,!v':2:qgST,:Qi:.,,::1:iii-g.:r71:vfr,,914 1, - 1 ' . -Jf , ' -,ay f - ..I12 ?1fv ig1i'1 553131ffzx51:,?f,.1f5'Fu:-q2' V qfyw ,. f, . :, Q,-if . 3. qi 2 ,- . r I 41.51-.' -4, ,5Agv?Qx,,.jfL!fg.,.g-1,1,- 13' . if 1 -3 ff R 1 :TT l ' cf'f-F4':f-A5fff'- -1.72 35:7:+'ff5JP'3'RifRf5:-'Q-Z:g.QA.-1 , Aw, , .. ,,,g1..V.:N.!.f.::55,rg.Nh-rEd::,II,-V5.r,x Q di omg.- lvl H YM P -11 affix? il .ziL3:L.v : M?u2E'l5'fff:51 W x V, 1, , 1- . ,i'f:vi'2.tf1 7.-15:--fft' . , ' -11--M-5-'.',,'i'f5 :JT'1-fgao..,yn3'-'Lg-1f.i,'1.15 ' One h1md1'ed tlmlrty-nme Q .l fi' If 1-'- ' ' i3'3F-1f- -Q .1 vw Q. Y Q zz' of 532 fx' up Ly .K 'js 25? J JA Ii: ii 75 5. :FEL 1? E? if? A, FSP : .- f-iff 'll i n ,f Q59 if if ' J. 'W' V I, Il. 2' V'-Y '-Tl, W, ' 'lynn Y J, . - .. ea- I A M 2 . Q? HOWARD ARTHUR JOHNSON ff, '-Doa' f CRANFORD, N. J. 5.:4', '.,gg.. L,,,l. , M 3, ' - Hjfs g ag s? ,Q 1- T ' Bachelor of Science ' i ,.,y,v,.,y- 2 1 Rutgers University V Xxlf, NZN, KBCIJ .3 E. '- RlCHARD PAUL JAHNIG Bauer, Keen, Academy ,Societies.'.?5',-. 'rig-Hilo? abicku Rahelais Club, Associate fJQditb1i..-ii .,f'- .95 RE mms Pl 1931 CLINIC? f If -' , 1 - J 1 -fl ,Lie Bachelor of Science ll ff 5 , if! R52 1 Pennslyvania State College W Ho's that knockingjiagt'm5'?do3jrfffe? fs . QKXI, KBQ It's H. A. Johnson, M,D.,'--2fRusli X , ' ,- - Saturday night would he dullf Qvit ,. H Morse, Moon, Bland SOUCUCS the master of ceremonies witlnhis liiifolisjig-'T . 'Q fied talents, rangjnggfrom' soul -ul-3,r'eii9' ., '5 jing- Rici-IARD began his career in Reading, flition of 'iTlf1fZiD92ff1iiQi'g?El9?l'?1z f0u,1IlS?,'Q '-' ' Q I'a.g yes, you're right, it is the ,original OH Phe JewsHarp,gbfa',snap1Eygqapgdg115ceff , , pretzel town. He was a star HJ pupil W111Ch ivould-snake 5355 L, 1 , at High School, graduating in short F011 0011111 0111! 5V9Q1Q,fQ1.fQ11PS- Q g trousers while still in his tender 't-eens. However, IHS '?f1'?2,i11Qt Following this he entered Penn State Wnsned to th?-fuft'1?fffj?1lfi2f?f1'F?21!n??2e!-PM HF , and managed to graduate from that in- 13 Well V9'1fS0d?1H PlE1lQi0731l55 .1 .2 stitution. So much for his lurid past. allied Sj1bJ0CtS- -Thlgf toygglllfgf-E 4 ' ., His colorful years at Jefferson began Wlth hls good llumolfvf i1llT?l'5ll11I tbl? the following September, and as is usual good stiadtkglgenf with most of us, he has had his share of conques ,, :Lg ,-fO,m?,1Ff151?-'?i'3'5 5-fijfifiilx-!k5f doubts and ambitions, dreads, fears and 4553- Jeffegsbhlg 552551545 Q' Rfillgiglfigizkiyfgo ti-Zach cthetioug sought 'Y 1 A 1' 1 fa ua - :iiggi:'ag1i1i.-I3 As to Dick himself? he is an innocent, ', 'ilgg A lgggjli-3' ,igijf .5 care free, rather unassuming youth of I -E some twenty odd years. His chief inter- - . 2 S csts in life a1'e medicine obviously, sleep- , Ig gf V! ET iii, glrrli. 2 X ingfhe considers eighteen hours daily .,. A- ...fi jxggltgjf K ,S 2' ! Q is? sufhcient for any growing young man, and -1 :ff ' ' , if 'Vik ' ,Q Ql5fg:E-T . attempting to find a suitable partner to., ij -r, Hill l flfiggfn iii? Qi, accompany the ever present pretzels.,1-g3.',f.'l,:7' 1 .1 J 51:11, ' is ? it: .. S+. Joseph's Hqspitqlf ..'. C , . 2: . gy- ,4'. -jf---,t31,g1.. .:. ,F g:-71.5.-:gev-..,m' ,p- . N -.-1--. 45, j R'mW 3'l 415.3 g. 1- ' ' ,'.vf,ZgZJfjf1i1Xi.-ik 'LI -. -.gt ,K ,g 2' - ,tg .. 3.1. l a g? 4 1, jf .i :Qi jg. li. f'iff,'fQi-:Qf.f15fSf-7.3f3Vf?M' 5' ' ' T 2- EN, 1,51 .f ig -1 ' A 4., A , .. 7 .1 . .- x .?Q'K'f:'i2af.frj,'l1'.Lf2e1lg2f'. sill, . 3'i'?f:',' - 'g ',.' .' ,Q-Q, 2 'P 5 , . . a.5-ffiiafiesi-g4,,,4 If Aw w , 2 - 5.3 'gs nj :'J'A:1Q:Z,'g-74 1 is V., ., w.,.,I-' -,L 4. ., .. 5 7 r. 1, ,, .4 .., . of ,Q . -,,. . . - . - I ' . 1 ? Q, , 'FI .ff Eff 1 ', EQ.:-6 f 5 .. -, ' 'B fs 5 ' if' All lit 5 li ' 1 l' 1 'S -4'-, - ?7'?2::Qs+1v'i.g N ,mil Y , . , , W b as . Az , 4 I One hundred forty A 4.3. F513-gf'-':V,k' ' a,.'-' Wx' vs 1 X J L. T L F. QNX W ' N if 395 'iif-L' ' Ex fr ii? Tf' .311 '34 Sfff- TJ 17151 ,' P34. . . '-1: 5- . QWFQ. W' if-I. W 'Q ,, .. A -Q ,Auh , . H .,. AAU: TZ: ,Q . PETER ALFR-ED JUSHINSKIE F' ttpefgef MT. CARMEL, PA. Ullivmifl' of Penusymllia if f' - fi - e ff fi g . s f - We-.sw,fs,:H'-515-1'ff ' mir, AQA f -' ' '- hyfifif-Slj'iiEffe,f,liMo1-se. Thomas fPres.l,.Moon, L'- Ati,S',-zyipf ,..,51.,-liiiewles, Bland, Hare Societies LEO KAHN .JV f., f--pq. 5 1-' , , 7, . , 33,ljifYIlie-37, can-gt tell you everytlnngy ULGG' Q' ffNci Quan IIS De1'f6Cf V' ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. 'QjQ5?,'f7,:5' . 5 ., Q .5 University of Pennsylvania Ji ,7VfASlffINGTQN had his Delaware and QAK Q- A'f,l9e'tgi haicl his? Schuylkill. Leaving his fT1.eaS.J, Senior Class 5,1 tg f,?,'.tfrELlXIEX?' Mater he crgssed it to this Title Wg, -1 -' -fltia-13'st11il5? ithe, art off alen. vain iie 12',f Q Heaclerihel crossed' with Z sincere THE life of a medical student was just .it - ', decei-pgimgfionesandia fiery, urge to over- made to order for Leo.. Lndowed with -X - ' 'honiei anytgdbsthples that might stud 11is 11 keen und grasping mind he found lns Q ff - Y, wygadgto gsgcggggg-:zz -3 L QQ '1 short sogourn here a pleasant' experience. :?Tr'gg:,-2 ffi j he513i5ias'Qii1fQgi1'iiior5gof sound thilrk- The usulal terrorslzind Rardships of sttrdy fu -- -I 3nf?isQ5 Elizitfjuieigwoiltlerfno more at tie were un Known to uni. mere g ance 21 21 2, ,- swyiliiclf-ljergcztptuired the trying page, and its contents were :rt once etched g-,fi . . firnck 11ec6ieE.gti1'st,5 thatggdubious second, that on his cerebral cortex, leaving plenty of K' ie 5eoniplitzrtedQtortui'ot1s itliird, and the rest- opportunity for far, far betterhthings. Erik L ' - fu:1'iijf11:Eli Qyfear,Ljg,g,i,i . 3 ' 1 And during the good old summer mine Leo 2 sleek Qforliiidtible :Board record, languished 'on the Atlantic City strand, Iqr.'jH',E ? ian','ei1vizrb1e'.f-itlzissfstfintling hetoken a suc- working CPD as one of those mercuro- cessf-iirliq flltl3'll'k.E'j if Q- Pg chronre artists known as breach surgeons. Qi,sQ3egr3?F6gqHbgii+aI:'ig -A likeable chap 'with 3.-l1lI6fElbl6.1J61'SO11- g , Qg'5PhHa-dQe5IBgik. If ' aligy fis tthe firstt nnpression he nnpnrts, 3:31,-3,,-,f k -jg-,Q , Q 'gg-,T.,gj ' an ur ier con ac on y serves o em- ,Q E, phasize' it. Leo has so fur faced the Q3-332, 2.1. battle of life with so much ease and Q 35.135 lf! I-if confidence that his future as 51 physician ls? 212 -I can be nothing but pleasant and success- if' 1 ' ti-lggff-ff A, 5 5 , 1z'?f'9--,I. ful. zfgf 'l f '- - ' .f -11. f 1 . . . . I . ,,:f' l Aflanflc' City Hospital -5 1 1 - A- .- 11. .ar 'zfffu ' A+'-me C'+v. N- J- W: 11515 3 - ' +19 if' ' Eff-Q:1 - ':Z V5 i , 1. - Q , g 'wx W-:ff 4l '7'.-'-l'.g 4 lqj fxfs 'Wlwifzf-sfli.. '-.. ,ff--V fr ' - A .1 -N H+ -Fhziwv I-'II-71-:.-g,,-,Z ' ' ':. F-f 1 ,'. C-.-T- ff- :.f.. '4 ff 'ffj5'f'!f'.,, , .5,' F. f1:g 'ljjvirf ,'ff.-ejz :L ' ff: :fe is Il ?Z i f rf' f! f ff-' . . 'f - l 'iff E 1 -4. v e ' -5' :iii .5f::f'1::' ,Qi , ,,,,, .3-gs rail -L1-Q , 2 if v 4'A'f.1Q-,:1A5:5'-Tie.-'.2' ' ? 'Es . '- '- ' i' 13 'fy--r'.-:wi .. 5f'?.A,j-J'Eliff-1 '., ' -'l.-T4 fi? Ptfffk' ,k.' 1 1 V mg I rl -z-Q. --Q- :3'?.'ff?52I.2F '?-' 'f 'Onelmmd1'ed forty-one . 443745,-,3,-f-fjs2f7'if5.12f.,..vz.-1'-'iLgf-ff' V 'r ,Q ' ',,Zfs':v1:'1 4f,1 991' ' Q1 1 fu f A X f f X W., va f X115 7. 1 1 Q fy: 2? I I X K 1 4 4 Y J 1 1 X1 W W f 7 ff 3 f X 2 1 Z 1 2 I f f f f X 1 5 z 41 J W 1 1 M 4 fi X 7 W Q 1 ff Z , 1 4 ! 1 , 1 f i ' ff :YAY 'Q1 M1 I 1 ff M 714 Z X 4 I. x f. ,,f ss V ee X sg - X iii -1 rg J- . -. 'if 1 Q2 if i' 5.. .' oh- .. . fv- E Qi f?-fe 4 - ,. ie. , lx A. S: Cm. h .fl jg? , -32, 2. , 'l ' i . ,A L . . .41 ' fab gg, . -1 X I'v ' li' - . 1 .- - -A -4 . V f- , .4- .- - --4-::f-ff A:2ff2:e?f:i:e:f'f . 2 X .1 I i 4' MARTIN EDWIN KATZ Jlar11f' 'Hi I'111LAnELP11IA, PA. Bachelor of Science -i f JM iW5'fL!'f fj:gA57' - -? 'f-'f'fil???'7J ' Pennsylvania State College BEP. CDAE 1 HERBERT KAPLAN Vesalius Societyf ,iv - . . .- . E 1 '- ,L ' 'S ..lIel.b!lv1.iItap,1 F :, Ei . -iii. IQEADING, PA, ROM the wilds and mouiiltaglnipus B. . . . . .. of Center County. Pennsylvanraf, gM:1ii1t5cg,:f ' .-.S .icheloi of Aits , .- ,- 5 z 7 .-,,,, Q -5, , L, 1 - , , . ,- , w, . 11-. -. lxatz emerged from Penn :Stateg tp ,qQQlQjiY- 151 . -'L IHHUNU f1Lmm mum quer new fields in the wiiiy-of infiedicml-3 -f - QA' QAE, knowledge. ln his .Vsecondiff Schaeffer Society letter year in Mz1i'ty s3l-ife+l1e - H prominence by begig gihfiiiifqrifiefiilliiilligriljyf ' R . . i . r lecture-in fact? ' i'f,S.,Z1.lQ5K'i3'QdlIQlt: Q'ff:Vf5li ' .ff ERB is one of those easy going, good Start his weekuilebtwglglzwitlloilltEipqwmiliggl,,- natured boys who is readily liked by all lifter the Drewhcermq Kimi ,-Kiln 5 Sinbeig gary. 5 who meet him. His spontaneous smile Rlnn. welljiiigdiirbgagiaiulqijg' was a cheer on many a dreary day and T ' ' ' , -' fggl5?j1i'f7.5.2ff QE'-jf. in ' a comfort to many of his friends when ggieq?g?1uC3ip1:31ljilid ' . v .. if 'v A . U ' f M.: ..',.5,1.-,3 w:.,q.f1s,3f, in a state kiiounl-as tvhev dumps. Y lleilm Should do H7611Q-hi't11Bg:iJ'lgaQd1Qe1,QZlulegljcilmgysggx ..,,, took his pxeniedica-l xi oik at the Iiniiei- he has tm amid.Muighegiofvyaflfgwhog lmmvsl , ju ig sity of Pennsylvania, and though he haxls him ' 'O I 5 5 -' s 5 ' 1,55 2 2-22:5 ,wg fi 1 5523 from the land of soft coal and hard liquor ' 5 If -ELS,-SirZ1lV'2,E1.i-- ' his knowledge of Philadelphia was far from limited. A fact unknown to many I PhllfsdelphiaQyQfP3a.ll E' 321-jlf. is that besides l1is medical knowledge 5,15 fa:-gg ,f 3 A Herb was a connoisseur of women's shoes I V.-5f1 z i psf f 11.2-:LE fggiyff j' -gl and was the 1'l1'ld0Ai111d joy of a well- g,?sf 1 ij- ,fj A5jFf.si1s'if12Q known Chestnut Street establishment. fig!! J - i 3 ' qi- I ndoubtedly Herb gained much knowledge g ' 1 in .1 fjfgfgrf. in the way of salesmanship and we pre- ' gf, lg: gap, 5 dict Herb, with his pleasing personality I ff iii ' gg Y I E 42 :Q and mental alacrity will be a much ...fl -f . f' 'IJ ,i Uiigj-lj, - ' .nl sought-after medic in the upstate region I, b 3-h.':fj,.5,5i git. i,pD1,Z-if' - 3'ij-ggimi of Pennsylvania. 'I xg D Sf. Joseph's Hospital ' Q if Y -'Q Reading- PQ-. 52' if ' iriililik ?22vL'S1f,:s' f is-ffl'-al' :fa '- f-li .-1 f ' P 1 . - . . . sul. .. .1 v 'Es-.fl - V. . . 1, P ,- -, , 3 .'41.p5.-52+-if-. .l:!'s?:i'A'U1 5s-:ii-g'X 1 ,.f' fi -fi -L L ' . A .. Q-43.1 if1Q:':ii?13A'T'1Qx'-?7KiiE1i1EQE2i -.F .5-f'?g'Qi41Q1-ifffif -ifi ri wi' .ff gg! -,Q . ., .eiai:'-1.-'..fWlL'-2-.'hEf't N -1- ff-is-342'- 1i1ff1 4 f' 3 'T 1 fafel 112' -f .. 5 sf' f . . 3:92.,l:..j3Q::v,?:,i.v,,j?..s.SQFQZMISS dbg T Ui .V -Q ., in :Vg Q :.5.f'-5:5131 it-x,ar3'C':,l?i'YC1, -swjgy by 5 -1-.5 ,.. .,. . , .H ilu, .Ai v I jg: 'gr -'fQ,?7Q.-1:3'.Q?5QMf? Ng. kyl e- .1-1,5 : 1 - L-I., 2. 5 1--:Aa -l-.:1A.u.' 'IT A gre .,.,-:.-'-- V- .' --if ,iv 'Z-,nf W A-',,,,f.,,.,gx i, ks -- 1211,-N Q , . V L .R f- .- ,, yi, 1' f If J' -' ' , . - v f we TZ A is 'few-.i1,g,gi f -A One llfIl71llI'6ll forty-two ' 'V '-f5-ifr'f'i'I---if-'-E'yiiiT-l'?iIiIff .'f '-t I .x :xM:-:g.j.fa.- 1.-sf 5.51.2 -kr-:-2: -.l'.A-N I- . uf X HQ X . ,m.,N X . N S 1-. L, A.-. 5. 'Hs 'nf' 11 ABRAHAM JOSEPH KAUFMAN IC CA1moN11,x1F 1 x 4. A, I F. sl- X..- ra., E, , 512 5 .w- 1: Ar 1 Q xl., A12 E-:vi Nr J R x X ssss 25 i- asalslrit 'v.'.r. 'QW 5 N . s X Q' E N- ww 4 Bacheloi of Aits -11... ,g '- 3 , . , qt 'lhomis College . fiE:.-i'51f. f -f'.2':,fri-gfT'f3'1'r'.''-3--T-.11--X5if.5 'f'f5 ' Fx, CDAR 957' IJ2'1l'l'61iOll Ptolerns Home Schaeffei 'societies 1' IS hald to sas Just what it 1S th-it ittracts people to 111m Peihaps it is his heels smile possibly his 11 inning per- ,,-sonality, find then again it may be his alfuble derne'111o1 Le1t'11nly he 1S one oi oui most enthusiistic ind popul-ir classmates 5 A .T has obseived well and mulls 'is lie of om best informed students Per- sistent attention to details and to 1T1eCl1C'1l teaolnnb h is gli en hun an unusu 11 grfasp of the punuples upon nlnch success is brsed We iinow that this, togethel with va iernar able memory f01 facts and his 1 1llg6H10l1S powers foi then, practical ippli- gation will pany him fai above the -11 er- 1 age in his chosen pfofession Allen'l'nw,n, a l 1 l fl 1. Q 1 V ' -l.1:-U71 ' if- we fre. 'i 1 W' f' te 4 i Ln-tE::.r:, , A L- V 57lpl':ii7.h'l ' U, - Q. gpm' 95:1 4'7'xfL'3f..t35jE:.' .1 W. 1 1,2 5.1.-'ASQ 4, , ELI JEREMIAH KELLER 'Jerry' READIYC. P 1. L-iffiyette Colleg IIDAS' KB? AXZ bcli-iefffer, loux Strecker CSec.l Societies SIICTIOB of Pennsylv-ini-1 which has -ilrvidy snellecl tht r'1nks of the medi- c-illy greflt has sent 'mother of her sons to Jefferson. Jerry started out like all of us-in 'L due. But tis said th-it one of the doctors when inquiring who had lt, wus promptly reminded even in tllnlt first ye'1r when silence was golden, tw-is Clara Bow 'ind not this member of the three- inust-get-theirs. Here is one of the bookmakers of the cliss. Figures, scores injuries, weither conditions are all -in open book to this young fellow. 'lhe sellson ends but the winnings running into one iibnre will always show the 'ictiwity lerry hfis not joined the Benedicts-as yet but we think th it he is well up in front i11 the line, uniting for the oppor- tunity. Reg-irdless of this, he his been zz h'1rd worker during the years with us. Reading General Hospifal jp- V ,Reading Pa. -1 f-renee-pweefwnfn WZ 4 QW' l 5 .ff . f. .. fr Q. 2 it .-,. 1gL','1-'if'-'b'..,3fz.'5.-q-Q.-. if, 1,6 53:3 ,gg .gs-. ,yitfil Y 1:11. fi. -. . '1.-3 A -1-js 3 7 5' Yi? gl 1, ni: 1 ,,'V,.' r '-lip K .--Jil' f-we - : , eg- A ' ' ',.s 1 ' ':iY:Ti 'f .. ...J ff-' 1 '--53?r'-f557?-F L'-g:':L2-..l3'3-E-Lf3 Tf .P Q .. .. 4 Y, 15 54:11 -f ,I I 1' .., H. f . - . 1 v 4 7' 'Sf . ' ' ' ' v 0- Ib - at ,, N , ,, we 751 .. - -. L ' :Q ' 'fl ff ' 94- W . - -'--i A r 1 .isp - , I .- 1 If -. L A 1 . .5 ::,A j 1 -1 1. . ff if 5.v 15: A -' ' 'fl W, T L. . i , , -5.-..' Pg I ,' -F , , , . i J' . . - 1 ' S 1 -. Lv sea. -A g . ' '- H 45 1- . Anfjy: ,E ..11 . . . . 7 7 . .1 -1' pc. ..- f 1 .Q --Q . - - , 1 1 , , 'pl , Q Q. I C , , V '.g.1? , Q . -A '- -p' 'L gg.. .Q .- -sr.. 5 -1 1 - r-1, - I I ri. l' 11,1 . 1 A A M 'K '. f . -. f f 1 1 L .f 0 ra' - 1 ' , L 1 L L.. 1 1411.55 .. if . f .W 1. C Jeggsgrl 514 3, . 1 .ag 2. Q 2 K K 1, , K f .- U' -. ,. Egfr. is-'.. v..,' ' f 2' ' 1 gg,' in aff- fy, h - 'gig 1 1 1111. ' . ' 1 1 if gg - i- . . 1 1 fr-,. 1 1 z . - ' ltg 'i'ff - 1. . L 1. 1 01'-.-it A. fi-135. sir 1 ' - . , , +5994-'1' -H--,g 5.'1'??i'll5UiPWl l'l9SP!+-iff. ' 3 if wi. ,.:..-f..t.?.P'F. 53. X L Safiif. -1 eff .Ef1!.:l- :s A I J '1:'- 1 f ' .fi ffygf. V3 '-' I E 13 -vi-:5..JfT1'E1-,.' I pg :FL l 1 gg TF 2: isiqiei 1 2 -f-' 1 4 ' ,.:-Ass-5.g',gi-. I iii? iii-,.,. ,553 - fiilf-f:-.3 E '92 as 1jf1'.x.i 'il . . 'L if'-'fiil' sl 'F '.r.lQf-3?-Hxgiq .G ' ---!5Z '-'..'- ' f s, , . 4'T:s-13.3 f Q -1, 1 C Y .- .I A-1.1 Nw- .- lf 1 . 1 Q-,Six -fi 5,3 -.aw-1 11 .1 A 1 ,t 9-r.'-br-'..lg .f.4:'q'., sw 1, 2 15-'42-'l 1' 'E' ' Hi : J:-. E ' 'l .. .1 S 1 s Eze- sl - M-.if A 4 1 'ww -10.11.-V f - - ii-..---11. . 1 - Esx iq 1,1 1 r, ,,. ,-,pl .gk fs, x I L-,A . W . . - :M 1 . 'f 4-.l '- '- fgflfrei, -ii 5 - R13 b 'H lr f- 1... .- 5, .-.1:,,.vey1 1, 4-,sf 1. 'F 3 -Hz.l-'r'?.,5 X ' awk 1 5 1. ff 1 .. '-1 .,,.,-1 . 1,7 .? li Qiwwi, 11. 1 5-11 '. Q' ::' 1 I 'rib F i p 'X A 'Sir ' -. .. .-Ar-. W, v ..,. -- kv-:. ',,..Ar f 'N gl ei Q ln- 11 32: r 45' -3' ? if ssfi 'UZ q 't.v,5f1.,+f1-' V e Q- '4. .Pli 7 '1' G' 1 fs- v. ' S3 ' . A,4,f.1.,, ,,,'.: 3 .3 -1 Ag f - , A .il 'tim Q 3 Q ,C -H. I ,- Z' .I 1, K '- '. - ' v ,1,f , -'ui ,. 1 +1 f P . I 6 dri li.-. 1, HH! - ,,, 1 .- . 1 '11, ' . ex 1 ' - Q . 'ffl-':If'7:':fvM y - ' -.1-'-e. 1 - .-,. , e ' -j'.',,. .f E - 'ff.. ' f sl A ' f.-.1-+110-710 humlrefl forty-tlz-ree, f,f 1 - 4 '-Z'-if-7 -- 'K s N if .. f. .a . My X S xx' . s F , ..- ' isssl . EE 21 1 If? ' Ii: kv ,' 532' 5, sl x' TEJ . P Eii-1 7: A f si. Q' '7 1,. 3 ' - Ii i.. i Z. 515 1 4 4 X : 15:51 I V , . . '11 'L -dir.: , ,' - - ' ' 'fj '21 HARRY TAY KESSLER '1Tubby Sr Pu1LADELP111A, PA. . . -. , , . 523335-. .:rV ,Q fe' 'Q11 1-E--':1 '. .'-:ag 1. 3 A...--.-' B.S. in Biology . 4, ' ' 4' 3' 7' f'-1. fi-T1M'.'w2f'1'?i??23i-Q. - :f.P.1fHi?:'ff1f' z 5' University of PennsylvaniajQgfff'5Lf-.N ALFRED ABRAHAM KENT, JR. Moon, Bland Societies--'ig h.L'l:Qll-fllillrf H 3 1- i Q34 'S if PT ET 12122 LEN0111- N- C- TUBBYH came to us fouig-yearsypagog. .fp 535.5- Bachelor of Arts A from that school across f,SCI1.l1bZlli1llff. K-: Y xi ' Duke University and University or During the four years Xwfrtli ns, l1e1:fli?5Sg2 fi:i QV 'North Carolina acquired several things, nirnelyz 3w:lli'1fgLTg,if.- D b. -- jj Qlixlz mustache, a professional ront, ang .as,.-Iggy... lg, .ig - K , . 'Coup d'Etat1' tliegfrgight to he sca111ed.5.lgQa,'T -'2 Moon, Bland, Hale Socictles Benedict, and Clmibgg-ly.:-enough gig sgem? ,E -5 HA to agree with j gp. E I 52 1.-' 2- . . ff- 1 Yeriously S3t 'l.lQl f.l10'firf6X'i?.il'i3QI1,i3QCf7l1 Q p I, af' big man ?i'oiii'ietiieOg,ciiii:l?.,?f lfigsltieziiiit 11015 11'1S11 f01' ,Nu In-ofessiolial education in the Tar1H.e'el D1?21S111g Tl101'SCIl1f1l!1i3Q,.gQgfi1'-515311915 j State and joined us at the beginning of 11111161-n Rflflflggi --1 113 ' -. the third year. 11 23111211 5' 15179. :QU 1-12555-55 -1 ff-i i: T ,-f In spite of his extreme quietness Al Dio matter i0E.Q1il9g1cE'1PQ .f has proved to be a fellow of good cheer 99015.50 b11111'S?116. a1f1Q9'if11111ft9g2EEgii 1' ' ggi. as well as a student. His chief indoor 10 W1 0 S .f2Ce5FQ11QQ.i1.11C 51531.55-,'.,1fi1g il 1 1331353 sports are. sleeping and letterwriting, t1101'9f01'9, 0111 gbQSQfQ.fXl,1S111?Q-5 while his scholastic recreation embraces f5IJ1giT.Hq5gi+1ul'E P the Joy of tripping up his 1llSfl'l1CtOlSS on fphjfQgel'PhjggQQaj3 l the pathways and byways ot the cerebro- 5551-Liejagi it fg-15.1732--1.3--1 i i. 3 '. . '15 spinal tracts. Ei-55:25 Q3 V511 5-iqxfi fi1 .:':f if-iii i 1953? .5 xL,,:5fEP2Q .. -- - - - Q 41,12 - .1 lzwgf- 4:1-rt i -.1 s.f5':s'g-xr Q Al is the tlnrd member of 21 tr1o 1.5.5 .55-LgggqiQ..-giAg,,551,fj,,. fl5Ej,1x.rj,s.3 and when you see .Ball or Sikes you may 1 I 5 safely wager that AI is near at hand. ,. X gif i I .in 'lggrg lVe 'inticimte with ea e' iiterest the -1'.-153571 E4 '11 --'I' 1 L .lc . gl' .I . . .--:-'I21ii.-,is3:.Pse?fice- g'v l g'A'--.-.ld outcome ot the genius back ot this mans 55 1 -1 if calm and calculating manner. 1 :iii3i'4Qi'54.-1-, ' 5i5Qj.r-:5..tV- Ll ' ' g Episcopal Hospwal ' .Q ifttlff' - 5 Philadelphia, Pa. , 1 .. 7 -f 1 U I Y. 3'-gif: 1' . 1 .- ' wi if -fi - i 131' .1.f -.'.'..1se--:Aw ' f.?51t'S5.i5o ' fgviff- gmrigq-41135251 , 1 -..v egg it E559 '. if f5.'J,iL2jTQg:fiJ'1'- , ' .,?g41.g,,g1if,A-X iffy :A is .23 ' ' Q!-in '..-1.-,1.1'.lgf'5,--5',-j tp- ., Q1-Q:Qw',Q ,Qi 'jg-:'f':'.: .Url -,L -' 'Q 'L' I- , 'F 1 11---?gQ.'f ,-,'op15f:l4if'ff uY 1i?f53. .'5':QE1L-gikf. 5 , 'Yi'--1iL1i'E -'I P .TZ 12 J ---1-13 Mero f.-Y --2 -f V. 1' -'-' -- f' r 1 . 1--I -. r -- T: .i 'f: -. ig .f-2,112 ' fe W 131175. 4.1,.,fA- -,. 4 3' ,E,,-55511 ' f., , - 'ri ., ' ., f -,..7a1.,e1gEs1wf:l?+yg1 . . 3 . gl. -1 .gfk f.r4,,-.-.4--Jzm xx. hifi r, - 1 U. lg.,-,..L. 5. . ,, . .f .1 - 1 i, N .wwe v ' '-..-:..,'f:f'1.'1L?5.'f!y--1 --lift .,,,3- it '5'- 5'--' - 2 ' R- : Ln L, -L 1'I,r1':-.f -:vp .,g e. . I 7.f-7t45-6'5f?f35Lf'15'i553'3-2'-7' a'.'6?'ff7 f2' '-' 5 75? 25- ' M ,g,,',:g,2-.'j .'1'.3,A- 3- .-Qin.--.. g.:5Q1:. Ms.--g,f'Eg'1 ,gwv-T-.-.l 1-.-- -- ' ' - .- -. . ,- 4... 1 ff -P1-. .A '-4121? . One hundred fortyffow- M Q N' Q E ff' N It Q:-:Alla Yvx. ,..,. h 'V , . iii S, .I in 3 . :ffl X sfillie xx X sig QQXN N X , v 1 . A XR..w .s- 5. 5-. 1 . its 1 if l , 7 l s' ng, 97.-.-'p 1 0. EL- 25 '51 3- Q rf ' ,. . Q L. 5. 353 .-:T :v,.., 3 K EARL ROSS KNOX IJIIIII C1 nsuui: PA Bitheloi of 5C16l'lLL Wnsliinbton lllil lefleuon Collt ATO 'IDX KBKIJ 4, 'A Pdtteison fc,OllIlCIll0ll Stietliei Z II I1 e Societics WHY he wis nick nfnned 1s he nas ue can onlv guess, but it: is oui congectuie thwt it was because the fue of his -1rnb1 tion was fi red blow, loner lasting, thit kept llllll ever it 110111 111 his seaich tor meditrl know1ed,,e Punk came to Jeffeison a Benedict and tlnoughout hls Fleshrnan 3ea1 the pages of his books were '1 scieen fO1 the gprogesttion lof an image He woiked haid ftenacioiisly and studiously This descubes linn exftctly llle loves a fight whethei binentai oi physlml and has e11Joyed both ,to the fullest Do- not talie avi ay the 1mp1ess1on that Punk was a giind fn fiom It e was and alwyavs will be classed as 1 boot fellow 1 1egula1 Washington Hospital Washington. Pa 4 if i K 1 f' l 1 flu' 155415 ,1 O fb LGWF may 2,7 sg X ss ..pgPh,,4 'VI-' OTHELLO SPRINGER KOUGH 'Kelly TlNIOhTONVh. PA. Bachelor of Science West Virginia University Alxlx fP1'GS.J 'Senior Classg Moon, Keen Toux, H-ire, Patterson, Bland Societiesg Rflbelfiis Club Q CCASIONALLY 0116 meets a man w11o inspires one as being absolutely depen- 'ible 'ind sincere in whatever he under- takes. Ixellg ' came from the University of W est X irbinia endowed xx ith such quali- ties. VVlith the passing of each gear new actomplishments were achieved Amd new friends were added from his many asso- cifttes. I-Iis 111ilitary efforts before entrance into Jelferson were not in vain for l1is quali- ties er1'1bled l1i1n to serve as one of our otlicers while the Jelferson contingent xx-is i11 camp' and at W'est Virginia Lui- versity he won recognition as a sharp- shooter. YVe wish l1i1n a great deal of happiness 'llld expect him to continue as he has begun being -1 credit to his class 'IS well as to his profession. lit.:-' Jetferson Hospital b ' i . Fhiladelphia Pa. 3 'f 4-.wE1:',i'ff'1fT' fi. if -7 it -ff 1--Ul'1,'f..TiQ!1-Zi . - ' j- , - 1.1 1,11 - 1 . .. 1: . '21, J,-if ., ,, 23.45 ,. .,..L-'ur 1, gm , +V A 1. xi 1 - l ' 1 Q .. .M -1 V----'ffcTS f'f vii. mfr., .,, w..9m'.1 ...M L .4 qmgyu ,FN A -v 1-.W iid.. l l if 4 -41 r J 1 Eff.. i,.1.:v4,3,,i,1M5,..4 .. ' tf ?:,.,,.,..Of1Le hlmdred forty-fre ,Q ' F gf!! 1 ' - - ' -,551 .fu v -' :. 5-.:r: ' -wr: 1: riff . jg 153 'fi' Eli., , :-A -, , f 5551 51- .vt ' .L-A .4 7114 J.. '-Gi' I-5:21-' 'V 1 ' 1:5 f 1 A on ,.Q::lj'ZfLirff77-ff -lflsiy' 1 'gl I lc: P Q 17' .. I, Ei J.: ' 7 J, . ' 7 ,-. ,- -A T - fif 1 W., .. I . M h I1 . 0-V 2 . . .S 1 ,ge jd fsficgfaq lfiszyy: - A JJ:'iii'-.g-.1.1?Ef'1?f?4.:-h,i,:.:.. .. .-a-- , 1 -1. 1 . ., :X-z...tr' - . - v - -r-333-' T157 x 5 .'. ' .' . . .- . gf' 7-5. 3- -ji 1 1 Yff? 45 '- If ,-' , .lj-'31 ':'. - Z ' - K in -, - 1 1 3113--1:1-kj' 'f , . . - , . I A . ' u Y ,, If 57' '11, L. . . v.,:-'Q-4 f: Z 71 . ' . ' 1. - V . L11-S QW 1 .' or I L . 'L 1 , A ,A7- QT-Z ,ll 1.1 -I2 ' Q ' ' ' ' C gi, 1 1-. Y U K: fl. .Hn .V b .1 7 'Q 1- L11 .Em i. film?-5 1 1-1 -' 1 1 1 v h 4 L v 5-'r Fl - Y-fr .f 1. f 1 ag-ffl 5'-IQ!-l -7511 , , ' gtk.-4 4' .Il S Q gi VK ,gi . . H 7 V, -. ' 2- -.Tg..JE 1 ' r ' 1, , 9:11-f' r-22 1 . .. 1 , 5 13.2 1 .Q A r 1 . i 5 1 ' 1 ' ' ' - H L if 2lg'::i'b -e .J 2.1.1 ' '2 0' 1 3 f '- we fgff . -' -1, f ea 2' -V , 1 5351 14' if . ffl . - 1 ffilfsfi-f if L 4? 57' I 5 1 'L , ' ' T 'Emi ,-'I F E ii 'Q iz.:-1 22 Y ' 1 ':ff1r,1,f 4' Lf Q 5- 2 5112.5 1: 'fi-'M -.. g,!s1lwLa'se'. an-gee.: . 'I C f 2 Pi eg ,Uri . . f 1- 1 :wa-:wliaie If -1 . . . 3,g,Mt..,!ll S4 . V : -3,151 W, T, .'1x ...5- 1 nfl' i-gig g Url? . :ff-A, .11 -f-1, fe , , -1 - .1 . 1,-'. I- .,'.7-. .25 ---I :until 1 E L' ' H ' Ing?-'Z ' Yi PT. -'- ? i f.,'7'l'rilf 11' ,J ,1.,5l .1 . 1. , ,, .-,.. , -f f .1 ,,. , if-1 ' 1 ' fi 'i 1, 3 - ' 1- 421 '1--C:..qi . '.' ef. ' sf.42,i'.: :f-: '- 1 I 1 11. R --f 2-'rg' ,, s , ' gf' 1' ,f 1:1 ' ,ff LL igfx :-,i ff-2 .'f!6'..,,1v.. -'P QF Sc 5 ' ,I 'fa-fiat' ' -5 1-.ivfgg .gi 1314,.,g 1 ,, ' ly '18 'E 'f if: ga, 3l'17, z -' a ff .,', ' ' . 4.-5, .-1 ':5 ' 3 .lt 11.-f 'wa ' . -1. f -1 . : 11 . 1. ' 4027!-.,, 3 . sk 1 :V K. 1 ,.: 1 ,. vgau y igfwfi, fjx.i5'7M,-L+,1 as. v 1 ,elm 1, . ,-41 . 1 1 2 .A vi, Q Q fp 1 Y 6 fe . ' U1 f I fi f '. ., ' ..-4-.1-,1..:.!.,,. I,:1r 1 L' Q 4, A . . ,e . . . P --' - .' , ,I . -Arr.. ,. .- , ' ii,-552,12-?,1J..,,,4.3-rg.,-e .',v . iff .I ' .i .457 1, In V., i e if if 'thi fi 1-31 T A A' Vw i' ,,. ,140 T, Q Q -SQ le- , .' f 3,g - D V: 'ii JOHN J. LATZO f , Pete - Lats I A Q g, TAYLOR, PA. ffl-' : EfF.vg,-q., , f , ,Q ' , j ,., u.,,g g. . 1 -- T' Bachelor of Arts ' ' ' ' -' l - '1iT: ffi 'ff9- fi-f'i- ' ' Bucknell University and St. Thomas ,... College ,ii MAURIC-E DANIEL KRAUSS qnpz ? 4. yy : f --r 15215 ,g Otto Hare, Strecker, Pasteur.'Societies-..-,S',.'5 af PHILADELPHIA, P.x. :gt EQ gg, B. -1 1 ' fA-f ?,1'ffg1,'lZi is -Iii- C llc 15105 0-V .1-S. JOHN was not entirely unlinciivn mipoiiprhisbfat ri , oine H1 eisity 5 , I ,,. , . ,v in ,Q P3 IDAE AQA entrance into Jeffeison. His dirothei- Reggie. 3 ah it l had sent the name of Latzo gjoriouslgg, . fb j M Moon BOCICU' refounillingbto gltfog' colrxgeirsgf , . b ' I Wien e rou I .1 9, e 'roxy ,n'iplA,a3. ' 1 DRRAXC entered Jefieison under a han- Mickey Wgllkel. mm?-blosei. Ledntadtiygm- X E .bb dicap which many could not have over- the Canvas Covemgd rffsgopsdf aj-5QX5xf,,'fiuga , come-but which Murray handled with However JOluf5wa5.55fgL-BQ: f5,5egtg,bgIjeE ' .C ease-to wit, his reputation in scholar- Ht bv a' b1.0E1ie1.:Sf22gI3ig5j11Q5mgf,CgLg,Ii Qthg. ' f gi ship at the Cornell University had pre- L,0nt1.Qu.v he waitjfiiQHf,5i1i6agL3,3fd-zgaingfd :-7', ',Q ceded him, a fact which would dismay :L very bnviahlgjijidrii-ilfegiica 5615 mug - Bragg f-qji nlzggghx all who are modest' Muffef' Soon proved Jefferson botlifsocialldiiiiihd sdhdlasitiiallnvi ff 7' T that the rumor was not unfounded. and Good studejhf 5g5'f,d-gEI0101fg5gih,i:'gO6ci I .,-,gif even during l1is first year could answer Companykare ib2g6nfe2Hi32iSiuiE3.?ddSe-riptfxgeg V --1-Qi questions which caused many a Senior to of John rye? have gfijsffgelrnqqf-'in hihiaflmf E Ponder deeply' In fhe b1.eak.aud .dreary earnest 'desire ito ' be-5fi'i'e11ds.?:W'itli-iallf' tive 0vClOCk lectures, a period in which the Testimony of ghie p,diiaiAwityMg:gi3vedz Q Q iff average medical student's mind is at its the univershj jgldmiratigh 5265 lowest ebb-W9 2111 fan. remember Dr' st11dents.1f a3id the4'Dersgnal'frieiid'sliiil43of7 Decker, after indulging in the why and many ofgehe-.f5Eu13:vg,fg?igj343 1553-f 5-5 X 5 he wherefores of immunology. attempt to ff: ' ' 'fi V EY-if LE 5 elicit certain answers to puzzling ques- 'il 5peIg?WP!'95'I'Tg9SR'i9l1Q,E,,2'ffffggii'-5' tions and finally end up with, VVell, W1lgiinqion,1DelEiSjE ' f S - . . . e -e 1-,e-J..-. ' .ph-.' Otto-what do you think of th1s'F' I gi iggeeggf Q 1 .- Murray, a cosmopolitan lad-many of his . ' 5 f E gggj E fili 2 like being in New York Cit'y-pe1'soui- f -,Zi Q Q - high ' sf 7 ! z lies geniality, good fellowship and bril- ,wif if ' .e Hiz'2'Q'g All ,s L55?b'f1 . . 41 -- .,-5.. 1x . ppp: ' -42,4 HQ-Mg. llant SCll0l:l1'3llllP. H - I Tggfgg ,Q ,-,ru UL!! :. , 3 gifs.. Chrisi Hospiial . -viii 5? - xr' .. , - dk 1. 1 ' - S 1 1,--' 49.1 Jersey Ciffv,1.N- elf-I 'Ii L ihI i'1ffg'L .: s P 1-lf .-- . . , ..., 4-gwlwi-R f 43:-', ' f-fp-'-'i f.,v-- nv ,lib , s- r .A V. , . 1. , H,-i.,.,f'1 ,ASQ 3535. . ,. -rg-g Qvgfjih ., an , . . ,.t, - V 4, .- -v -f -1 0.-f, S'Zy.',..,. . .Ire-M..-Q1 -E - -,L , 1 v., V-11 3 I ,. ''15.7 .:f'5771lui5':'-k'Agffiili 1. ' 'A-5 1 'i'-' flilsil 15 'Z b' f fi ' -i - 1 -i lift- 1 .2 1 was if ' 1' 5 J, 'ff e x . . 5 A -1- ,-e:7....x:us,-. fgqfr '- ' fl sc i ner ,rag One 71 mzdred forty-sw ' ' ' 'Egg-1.,f.e:,A. if-:megs--'.V:.,.-q,f:+f-Q zum.,- 5'1 'A .,. .M 3 . 1 x' ., N xx , Xl Fif SE D' 25' :Ei 5 3,5 i+ X 'IZ- 'ftfi H.. 'Elf . f . m a i fi 5' 1 'J -'-.- 1:31-.4 : ,'1-.,..--.1- .ans-...-.qv ' JACK MORTON LESNOW gf HJOIIJLH A N Nnw I-IAVEN, CONN. f Bachelor of Science I L A , W.,-.. ,-I-',,-V-1- .-sg -- - -L. ..a.Q:1i1-V 2 Yale University .- Ckfifiiffzf, ,f.. a: Q?5'EE'.54- 113 if ,-1. 5 -???:'34 -- Chl? ' ' QAK ta ' l f g,22gii'a57fQ1giaqng1,giviehse, Moon, Academy, Schaeffer, JOHN EDWARD LEWIS 2, iffgziuggf- Efg15j'ZfVesalius Societies lfjackfi if -'X ill - ' I ff L I 5 ' 'X 1 I A . ,. is -111. -Q , i , , ,ia SHARON, PA 'it' it fo our fold from Yale' Bachelor of Science -1 5- 'f5Helzai1i11i1'eSSefi: US immediately with his Westminster College sf, '::f gjgj1rti'et gahd unassuming disposition. I-Ie FQ' ' we tyjjqssesges a Congeniality and affability that A 1 l H Q H ' '13'. 'i '3'iiH'1'2g:'aCfSi:Qne dn-ectlzyq of 3 kind that is S SH,tRpN has given Jim Davis :gi -i 5 .2 inked gm pjengfwqmlehb-alnd Children alike. to they political world, so has wshe given v5,g'1t.130gghi1jeji5. dlminuuye in stature, his Jack to the medical world. Clhe call to Lgiritelleptualgcapaci-cy.sisf..s1iel1 that his col- Jgffelrlspn mlilst have gee? abloufltfine, fOr ,-glefaglies EvQ'ill'nfever'1bejable to look down 210 to EWG leal' 1 21 0V9 'Q foal' r -. 'QQ Li of machinery ancl blast furnaces. Never- f bE1g',, 3:-5,-1 gthejcloulggggygiliis sojourn at theless, whether it was faint or loud, he , gy ' ,'y3JeEejg-gong he gugepgdiargggveye attack of has answered and accepted the call. 2'-1 i 'lf igalopeqiaiiugfrofm' lVV'h:iffl1g fheilxas never quite b During his stay at Jtetfei-ion, he gashnot -E-' '- - ,,Q1QecoWe3'e' egg, hisirnaybetniore accurately een very oisterous, ut as ma e im- fg3Q.ti'ihuteQito ghisiextiensive week-ending self more or less conspicuous by being if 'xiii thfg5qigin?Fy.3-pfllflgew,foggy father than inthe company, a great deal, of a great .1-3,-j2:,--EQ 5,'ni,h1,sgin'ten,siive s,fnayihgg.w1n1e at school. Irishman Commonly known as D0pey it :pl-,QQQFQ age?-glsqrgifijati hisggmbition to Donnelly.. Not much is really known of 3 1-3-5 Q beacon?-Q. anhoiistgetficianiyvillSbeEs1iccessfully this combination, but it is rumored that gm, 2553-,eal12.rgdZ5sQ,,sQgE, 3,2 gi 5 5 they are contemplating a reopening of A ?i'f: 11 5- . f iv '-g -3,5 .5King,fQ9dn+y5,HosPihgI,5 the Great Euiopean Museum. I ' I' Vg j Although of -somewhat of a retiring rgjfig Li fu -K nature Jack is a hard worker. These , if are the People that 21CC0H1D1iSh things, 2 A, ,H 9 'lr -' and we will eagerly await his contribu- ? -, ' '3 -.j lv-If 'F5-,Q.,,fQf tions to Medicine. In meantime, we wish ply, gilt' Elw-,jg-f:1f I gi'. f5'S,,.f1'1 ,1 him every success. EQ i i Allegheny General Hospital lil V ' g ig ffiiijlz-,j . I j . ffjtfsburgh, Pa. f ' 1 I fl -. 5,123 l11. 'w?5vf11::gfl11 W. if fi' z fqff' it-2 ' '- if m ,, ' H - - -fu fn 1-1 :Q if 3 -' . . k , . I l-. I-1 , '5g':,.x'. '23 -4 I v r ii- xl ,421-L f 'sig Q Q . 'Z , '- ,iv lr: ,. Z 31-Q f 5 li' lf, -3.,-31.595473i'i'Q:gsg:g::g.:jq, gf ' , D R ' 5 tp K if f:f5'fi32f57rg?-'Lr'71'-f 0 h . d S d H Y I I . .73-:ffifl-3-:gfWN,-i,1,l,4: ., , -n ne un 'ie foify-seven .n Q H- ,,'mir551.4--ff.X--1:-1.-.,., i., 1 'X ...- -e -x nz .A 1, ..- ...x- f .P 1 'rl 3? ff.. L5 2 ag- ai' 1: K' E. Qi iii . ii' :ii -f fb- Vl, '94 , g 'ff nEoNls MAUHEW LuPo Don STANFORD, CONN. AIIJA, XZX FORREST ELLSWORTH LOWRY qxfiee-P1-95.9, senior cms. Mme.en10g0ii41-, fs ,. ,H Academy, Pasteur Sofietiesf Q'-4 -ff. 4 Fmsty 1.5, 3, XVESTERVILLE, Omo ,T f Q Bachelor of Science NEW England Sent this 513671 Jllanyiflifiiif' 'iff Otterbedn College Jeljferson. That same yeaxiiseverlali 3, AKT QX AGA ambitious young medicos from that gsecijg . - g --f' K ' ' E , , I tion were numbered amonlg 'us.i ,ju ge Strecker, Moon, Patterson Societies every the St1.enu0uSg..i.Qptiue,-Off D.gSI555' V: W four years finds Qneof the -- . .- 'Es'rnnv1LLE, the home of the Anti- Englanfhmen t95gl7aqu?3le7SfY'1t?295'5 5 T 'i saloon League sent Frosty to us, hence 1 DCF. 15 fa,52?gI?CbE11fiI5tE. ' 1 perhaps innocence, shyness, and quiet eil PV g.jH?i,cir15f93,-5,92 L2 speech. Four years in the effete East 'I .1 me In anyfirggrz-:':':-gr' 395269135l'?'fi.'wi..3 .1'x2G'F9 has failed to change his Cll'l1 1CtEl' Phllosophy of hifi f1S51lU59S'thf'3Fi1D1e2!15Q1!!T-5 A ' ' - , , ,L Y' ' At any rate 11egi's'Qei1'ijXired gjiglqei-'21 fnfffiifefln-'iii-f-,sllfillififfilflf Sfgiyllliacgiluflli 2?11:2liginf1'111s' apgpygggngg gsgcgessgrag - ' - - ' ' -'M ' ' i v iii il... n.3x?'?fI54' f 'F flightTil!vfxilgfihililr-tfhfioig 3535053 We Hafuffllli' assume that t1LeQ,deSf111x1sS2 P 5 Je wie ' , , H , I' of our good friend 3villQ,begs'l1ig11ed' by 2111551 2 Another memoiy-he' ranks as an expert - 1 . -- -f .1 .'fev.'-for , 1 l-.Iii'i we in in Dicking All-American teams in native stagiffflcpnlgfctlqglsl Elli facultasf' , fl 1 llTi0FQf I HEYQ QSPSHQE' 9 13 l--53. -if 1f'rosty has always. been torn between ambition and reality, h1s philosophy seems 3 5 5 J 4'-53-1-if to be, If I do l'1l be sorry, if I don't 1' Q f 'Q I'll be sorry. But above all else he has E 55? E A E :iff I V. been a student, first and foremost as - Ly, Ls? 6V1dS11CC. he was elected to the honorary ' 1 l- 5 E glul' 2,2 scholastic fraternity. A-1-.4.j'-.51 .i mfs 4 ,'! Q Kings County Hospital 1 if Brooklyn, N. Y. '.f'ff'Qf ' ' V- 5 Hi? '. 11351 ,.2l 'L T ' ' 'I 5 535-' .v,,. ..'f.-',,t,L'g '. ---: '1 - il .I if-,5...g!l: . f V4.3-f ' ' ' .- 'r f:mlazf,atf'f',??l4 , f f D ,,f+5f.Q.,fkg-.5.,--Alta2-5 g :ga fr .eg ,gg f 51141-1-51kt -tl -. ' ' ,I-f'ff,V.f.F':X4ff 11 1 ' . S if s . .3 ., , fasiteyzf-Lg: 5 . ff.-Q ju QQ :sig 1-L22 -4 .gi I cliff? iff ft . li , ' I '. fi? ' 15' 'Z' .-if v - Q?-:feta , 3 . 2,7-5 ' .1 9-jfq-,:',,p.L, , f Q f ' Aff li If ' .... . ...V ,Y JN: . Q .-4,1 , '5'f:fQ..,- F5 1 lm Q. One hmzfdred forty-Gigli? ':'i f:7 572.354 F V-Q6-7' ,'j,I.jQ-tf1I 1.g ' 4. Q L56 --... ,.,L.q,.-I. . - - . y ,--in-.-as s X- -sm ex 3 N , . fs e.. 3 fi IC. 'a-fy I. x - -' iii? . L 3?-' Q2 . If ff Q ijt, .fe 13? iq. ,LAM 'vii it Q' if f., .' P' L. .n'QiGe'! .' 2'Q 2 L : 1.-ea, E , 12' itil e jimi. .If -iifer if NI: ' . iqrfci i-. In f:..'. 2,5 I 51. 'YJ ' .2 -. ' F an-5 7 Hulk' . ' W . . V 7 ' ff i.,L.--e'-r.1-'::T'-- - . ...-5-.ffiawe-' ' ' f' 1.1.--KH-1 - ,' E' .-' 1' 'L--z'-'-' -. ' fc.- 4 W' ' 'E . -,- JAMES MILLER LYERLY it 'J im ' 'lf ' DALVILLI: Y-IRCINIA -in Bachelor of Science ' 1. ., ' t . 5. NW X YR . get K N y N ss Fi .: :Qt N. ,X YY? .. N. of A V Y V.. -:. .,' . -.,.,. A . 4.9.9-5. :ll 7 : ' 2.4: f'-fe'-:'.-'-.ff 7' '- .5 .IV TH- : f:' :.h'e: - . , U Y V Y 1 I ' , 1 . . . . .. . . T . gy., ff-' M L ' ' N N ,N .2 1 K UD1VOFS1ty of lNorth Carolina be ff-,f Q. 15- L ff . ' . .i KA QX, AOA lf .: fY1.'f- , e- .153 . . ' Elqlaye, fS?lIkl.'8CliEl', Patterson Societies out of the South, but ' +'.':seld'o1n doesfso much arrive in one person. 4: fi.3:K1rovv?1xig has served to give us an ' :iidtledE appfeeiation and respect of our ' llififfelloxvis Sbelonfflithe Mason and Dixon Line. . QfEQnd4oived vvith that quality of cerebral ' f, -fcortexi iiiliiclifmaliesifall work easy his -1 fniajrcli ihroiig,lr5.f-fQtii'.Qilitijcult years has ibeeing sci Qti'ii1njipii,afiit:':1-115161he occupies a apnea a1f1oggfthe5Q.,el1ibeE Enei1'talite to which H?a-l15as1fnii'e3QeEqi1a1'.tohnyeinergelicy, quiet 'f - wff giassiniedi iiiialtgiiis his presence h-.ffjaiidfioibiniciris great portent. . 5YWe52.regret thatgvvei part but we ii cross' and re- Qw- U . , jgc-rosscfilpoii gmanyfg ag jqyousf occasion. ' iH'dsfFi'i+al . 1. -.. . ,ff.,- Q 1 : 1 -1 3' 2: JL: I .-5' 59 E 5.1 P- Zi' -,,.. ': E' .' E 'I 5 :- - ,if 5 - :,- 3,-Lf .: .2 . i..- f. glen: A' .jj'5 V-.. -ww. ...Yrs U .Ye -. ' iff 1 '15 22 if ' : '-iii? 5::' E: ' 51 TSRWS- rl . '-151 fel: 1 V --...a5,.. 5 . . Q--: f--,f.1...L .-v-f azz: , 1-.'- if 1.-: 1--en! . '11 . . ,.. .-of . -' V' 4 -- e V... s. . . ,A ,' E . . .H , ., t .. I- - '72-.'-'. -- .1' ' 'i - X . , 'haw 5- -71 , . 1, ' 5 i'1'1 T-'-4' '1'L- 1 V- . f- ff' ' 2:5-f' . itiiiiilbl if .11 - fi . n 1' . 1, 1 ' a, S 1 Q .yi . E, V . ' ,,, , I-.gz,:1,!-Q-,-' ,ev-2. '-.,-g',, .' L. 15... ' Q, 'v .QQ-'f..1-gi , ,..., . - V. if.., A... - w,. .-v I I- . L' sf 4,3 . I, 'ARYQI J-5, 1' x-'Q ,-' nb., . -- -- 5 vt 5. Q'q,,', 'rv ' if -.r,'3?,aulW -AL 1' ff' EDWARD THOMAS LYNCH ELIZABETH, N. J. Manhattan College Bauer, Hare, Pasteur Societies 'HE boy from Elizabeth, N. J., and incidentally the only representative of Manhattan College in our class. Sons of Manhattan! there should have been more Eddies. A diminutive and elegant chap with more aliases than anyone can 1'8'11l6I11b81'. He is the founder of the triad Latzo, Zangrilli, and Lynch: the inseparable t1'io through thick and thin. ' Besides being an excellent student he is a most charming companion and friend. For a time he was the big triple-threat at the Cushman Club, but eventually he smashed the line and turned to activities less severe. He is loyal thorough, and ever friendly. To say more is almost futile, but We must add that he retains his old friendships ant means unknown to us. Such a quality lnnust. surely be splendid. . Newark City Hospital 3 Q-::.fN fNgwa-flr, N. J. . . .. -f - if - 1: i, 94.1 'r.+,.L.f3,.'2'+fgr'.- . f 1 5 . -5. . -. , -,,'.1g- e.-V f l 1. .:: -:ft 1 Ugg-f, . .- .. ie, 0: ., . .. 3 -,,,gk,K E -,'.lx,?jv,,v,v.. L 4 V X33 azanfvwmg NP 'Y ' , 1 1 ., , 4 ,.z ,, . 11. .fxf vas? -' - , - fi ,- - ,,i- . - :LQ-'Q-,if - ' 4.2.1 , Q ,itll--:.f.',.'.1-'gf'-f1.,'-MT' .ff T . . A A ,,.1, - ga-1'2:2f-4-gy'.:7.. ., n 1 . - 1, --.-, .- f , :-.::,-:- -, ' f. .fa - -n 1- 1 v.:,'-,,-,--.. - 51: L. - . . 1 . . ,, ..L'--.,- 4,.A',:x..,E4.r.f..-...A fr - . - f ., .:, gg, - 5 , -3 5. 1- ,gl .pf Ay- . W- 1 .., A I : r. 'f '2-'-'ff .n .-v','f- J:--iq H- - -.- F -ri--4--..:.---H Lp: i:'y '?f'-'g-..-- -1, .Er-M36 . -'hifi-43fAQvX-:'.' ,, ., Duc humlred forty-nine V V A ,..-rl '. .. . D , 5, , V , - . ,nf-:xm 5 ' .. ww . , , ,- Y, ., - 1 --'Q '-r-,::i:.1---:.1'- -rr' E 1 ' .2 . - .., ., .- -'-. ,al .,.. ...- - - ' ...1--Y .-, . ,,.- .I 4. Z'-..'.' '. -'A 1' A .-11 4-,M i X R nn 51:2233- ., Lt M 1 EW .L I t ri I ,, I S j Q 17 vp KIJPE uf , , 3. ?i , T I! KN . :gk 235 bl V?-L fairs Zi F 1 ...Q ga ' iv Mig eg . , , ' H 1 515, 55.15 . . ' I , 243 3 I JH 4 I N951 ,i 'F 5 I n H 3 3 I - 51 lxvp and gains new ones daily by somepleas- 5 I fl' af qty. ral lik . . . me 2+ ' f ' 4 Y rw 1' 1 ff, 'f , 1 1 l x 4 V -J, 'lf I I . 4 2 .3 Q. 1 J' i I F J L +1 J fll ntl: J rg' qi X' me ' i 4 .J A . . mi ere X I E4 ' 2 Q X3 X Wil ' 7' 3 4 3 I E gi -Y X it Asa 'fx fl! 4 f- ., i ss' ' f ef.. A 'A if 'V' 1 -P r J v . --.--urn,--L .- .r 1 ., J ff XWM is Ie? . - ? . 22? 1:2 Z 1 I e 2' 9 ?T j ' 7 , .1 LW ' W- . A -I, 2 J ' 1.4,-fm 5.5-:gf if? i ts X X x, X ' s SSN E s s X s a i x 'XE s ,I- If v jg. F s J .V , fi Q1 ,M 4- ez? 'I' wg .Sify Y V 53. ij ,Eg Q Qf 4? aw E. Q- gf IQ 'lf ing? I Pk Q IE 'I -It l . ' yt. if it b .v . ,,f if I 1' WILLIAM M. MCCORMICK in Yi u ': I .I ill!!-0 ' V X FALLSCREEK. PA. ffP.'Fi-g. ',ggj.-5. ,k v fif fr iflj lj T Alle5kg1yAQ51illege Ah,5-M A ' ' ' .IV , Q i 3f324?fT'ff'w:x 'X Patterson, Keen, Loux, Moon? HARRY CAMERON MCCLAIN H 'LJIUCN IS father an alumnus?iiiadfe-ifteiietl' :L PIUNTINGDON, PA. Jefferson with a very cleiiiiifa i'ealiaa.t'iiQiiQ.E,i -i ti C ll V., of the Work to be done. 1. - 1 , :ng e T-3 Jugi 1K1g,I,9t'e Singled out by Deckerftliat 5'i1st,2'-53:1 -Q ,. if ' - u he soon had won many friejnds. ,incefb lit? , ., ,, 3515?gt1?Cg?efqP2'fF,efbP31' 5131? Flgifsfif time his buoyancy, Congeniality MIC Qclff 195, f feds- in umm JN! friendliness have served tofplac,ejhinIfg:higi11-,' 5 .ii Business Manager, 1901 CLINIC in our regard. 35. P, 3 , K 1 Not sansfiedfskin?iiisfffcemngiiishniehris -' -- as - - i. 1 iff'-'.,l': ,Q H f ' IF YOU had Chanced upon our ancient Qt the hfbt W0595gQb.v1g-11953letllfxieaft? D j halls some day and niet a group discussing Efihoffl Vtllat failfmft 5? ig. J political matters, you would have known lm ,Mac :sge:2 ,f'.2611?i that its leader was an Irishman, and he the hue Hfeaslli?Ff?fj!QP2?1?e1lEt5'Q none other than McClain, for that is the 110921 Devel fgiflfgil e11F7g'F?X2ftf912 ,' proclivity of his race. His interests are bl-5111955 deP1'?b?lfmEi'5'?51, f'i?114'?-VQQIQQQ A--5 1-.fi jg varied, from politics to business to fair- wud huge d1V!d?ndSEfl? 5mii11Y5i?EX'1fiLifif2-E?112' Tk gf est Coleen. ' Jackson Last year hMaCw disappeared for ten .Miamiggpigi 9:1523 555- long days and then returned bearing :1 - Tits .gym ' 5:55 35 sign, Quarantine--Mumps as proof that ' sf Q 'ii if ,ll he had been unavoidably although pleas- K L' 5 antly, detained. Elf ,igijwf iii .J .'L:,f,5-Q There is no more popular nor busier ii'-i man in the class. His extra-curricular I -.. activities are varied. Mac has been . ' , Z . gig.-LQSQI our class treasurer and is the business fgi :- 3 5 fgiiv glfilw 2 lgfiij manager of this erudite publication, but f 4- ,E-5 , f fait?-fi L. sg 7 '! with it all, he has not lost sight of his , ' ry- if EriQ,E 5,11 Niki ,lm greatest desire, the study of medici11e..s,'fE T 3 fkbove all, and outstanding, is l1is gei1.jgyliQ.'A,E52' ' ..3,'1Ng:,:g3gg1gfQ f1ff, '5.52igi,5f3gi, ? g4li:- 4 U 3, Q , jovial personality. He islwnap, we.,sliQ'u1dj-si. 'j1',,,..f1-,Lg25?fi?j 'i ,, I ',.QH,'ji Zi 'y Q gjlgffif like fo be but 1'ea1i?9- wel'caullfofi1 fit ff-'-9 lit it fff'7Flii'1iff24iiffi'igi -1 ' 1--f Q Philadelphia, Pd.f'v.:4 '.f , L'-:f.'f ,3-E 5 ,, lg-,f 31 , N. '1I.,,,.,,1i2:f3gr.yt,7e,56,g,rS Vaggie-'4,34 .5-: I , ,j , -IMF, .,, zzz, . an I A. .4-lltirigrgg.-,5,vg,,V, ' 3- fi I A. ,S uf, ,I 31,5 3-'T'1.'5f'f'Q4 R1 'wif'531:11a???' 211' YQ--H I'-il-t'3'i,' - 'gt ',,' 4' 'X' 4: : 1 -3' , -.I , 7 FZf 'ff'i3E?T-9'?f5'L Qian W5'5i'5 !, . E - '? ' :tl?':gjp1'.' - ir 3 ' ,Q if f i ?'fi4a5Wi'?3'f'ff?'?f,T-f' -1'.'f'i:ft?1P-fi' 'i f'fi:T?.7f,- ii fl 'Ti 5- fi 5- ai' L H ,atm -' i ' w5E3JQf,gm 'f r fu ? . . . ,- f . . 7 . 4, W ,.,,yv., . ,Q - ra .,,,.,. -: 1 . ,mfs gm :pl -:'il,:7.VT-,-.1 .-,.7. ,U v ,v -, V. .L. , 12-2 ' 'LT A '-'i:'1's- ,..'- tiff 4 I I ' One' lzii1zd'iied lcifill' H wx:-.'7i'5EfQ,3Ei'?F'L --. I- A X i , . V , :ii:F75..4:,-A-'A.5.i?!..:if5:i.-3.--l,x,'.l-Wynn .yvfyf , aaa-fwmmaiakw' t r ' -in . . ' f NZ? 2 ix 'e ii ,, E vm ws . -AW '55, ,M A Y Q 7 W Q. ie fe '- A WJ X , if if . Qi I 4f 'PWZ Y N S32 5 J iss Rss ss '-.v , .. :.if5rf7i'f? 71-T'-'. f5fIZf'vfTf'5U HAROLD CLYDE McDOWELL Crrnrmxvrrrrc B. C. Bachelor of Science in KIJX GJKN KBIIJ .ig--5125 35 A Q7 E .1 '11, N ICE again Fate was kind when it sent ' 1 '. - ' .'. 14: -1 A D, -'tw - 4 2 'fp-gh: ii' Lug -.1 , ..,,,.., f'fH-flto-'usl -fHe has been with us onl ftivo, yearsfliavirrg spent his first two rt ,' F123ye'ars at 'Wake Forest but in that short lrnagde -1 host of friends and QQ-if ,Q-.Q L gztglrese are by no means limited to the male ,A ' gfgfbgxl . 2Wfrith Bus. Harold has formed a -?j,' f.gQanio1fr and Pytliiaslgcomhination that has flfgg 3' ffig-U itaken Qritsa toll fanrong the fairer feminine - i f -.avenulationf 1Qfi-1?ghil2IE1Ql11f1ie- During his I . J V. jthirdg gyegrzx his A -'World' Qvtfirs apparently -1 - . 5bl?l171iiQd2.?f?EJfl'13i2!1U1521115-Ninth Snr-rice. ffl? Qfginef1rfQStri:eUS:f?..Cl3Ci'elJy proving the ' 51,11 !,tl1e 5hlue,,over' the pink 1 . lgf-'Ami 'Egg-Iiliibtoldgghasi1116-,qllahjzres from wlnch .7153 .'Q5f!QQYQ1,f3Q1d'Qt1fi62tQ1lSfQ2IliQ'L112.dB, He has that , cppgbiuagrgognofs 21iCl1661'fUl disposi .smigg etimiiaSfisdibiisireSSQEfQflQ!14Qir5' and 21 deep a Sii1te'12?2Sf2i!1's1?6ief1r1fiif11fQa?.fi1i -' Sw za . I -T .W 'Q-7-E? - .. fl. i . Z, 2 '4 z I-' iQfe'.21---z.: fi' ' N . -3-11-L , 'Tiff' . .1 -q i U . . , L. QM - ye. ,pq ,,,.- 31-:2 - i ' - . if e ' . ,f fghgbgir Lili' 'ii -' ' .SRA ' , ' of - -gr ne? , ,, . . TL, .--.. I . k A, -V. MMM ' o A ,ff 5 4 ' .iff '-fi. .f I . . . - '- '- .' 1 2-, 1 v . y 1 . -Ls-121535 , T '4 'A iff,if.-P'g 'f'ff'fe-A,' if . I fi ,iff 'V i if -J l 51-'lf-.,,,, . r . .. , r .4 ef..-1-'. . :w if -'f.Hw..s A .fr-rv, V bs ' wx Q rx uf if5'T'Au..- , 'iiiff 5 f - fre eymg, ,ah . fiss.. Z is of ff-'v ,L ff- o-'+.F '7 x WILLIAM KITCHIN MCDOWELL Mac Scoirlwn Nrcrc A C Bachelor of bcrence Vifake Forest College CDX A9A KX Deans Committee X EXXNK NAYAKX N swf Wxruf Forest his sent many men tc lelferson but rn Mac sire must hive reached the epitome We vsrsh that M rc had been with us for .rll the 5eus instead of onlv the last two, for oncr hfrvrng known thrs big husky Jovlal fellow is to Want to keep l11s friendship Since his arrival in our midst he has tiken an intensely actrve part ID all things pertaining to the school, and hrs become one of the most popular men in the class Nlfac 1S an excellent student and tl has been recognized by hrs electron to the honorary scholastic fraternrtv is each vacation perlod nears hrs inter est seems to wander from matters mcdr cal and he seems unduly aniclous to head southward again, Just why we are not sure, but our guess IS as good is yours Aflanhc Cnty Hosorhal Aiianhc Cnty N J XX sXXs ANN? NNN N 0YS0sXPXYN-NX s X xx N f' 1 'rf . 4 ' ' T s:'fi'5ff2f !ffr:i2' x . Ii.: . Ag. . N Vx, - -E 3 , L lbx'-mln ' 2. ez '- ' 5 -. - ' if f.-.lp-2:7 L95 4 :ff 54,4,E-s:-1-fuf-.':w-- ' fwfa- lik v mhgtf ' arf 'Laajli ii will , ' -'f3g'f,l,.,.H,6-s5,3:T.5,:?3, ,4'. yLj2.4cL:ffff335f? '551'2 f ' Une hundred fifty-one .. ' 51, 1.g:2f,4g,1.gx 1-1,-.:.: ' A mn hs. - if ,444 -.Ali ... 1. -. ...- - mr J :P va 'iii N fm ... ...,-.-- -- 3 -' . ' F 'V' 0 - fl T.T -'-3' - 'il --0--r--1-' ov W' N- 7 if . 1 w . - 4-yn-:nag-F .i- - , '- -X ...T i,g M 4 Q PQ' , H 3 S '.5r,,, ' 5... : 1 . . 3 I Qu-whine' I- -:TQ A 1 r r Fi ,s.- .Ju r L E3 f- - - S , , s . . , A - M-aunt , V fi, -It , . rg . ' 1 swap -1 -H ' W s ' o 4' v A 3 14' J ,,, A ' .1 f P-: Q , 'NSIH1 - - 3 r-L4 u' .. -r - - - 4 . im .L-:s-.:'- - - f ' ' ff A ' 'E' 1UX - - ,Ls .f:'E..,.,.. Q W , Q W . wlulh cr- '-- ' - 24 4 F Ax P14 y-- -v - ' ' f r ' ' '7 T4 Lc'77-'L-m A U5 I- f KW' M V L'c 'x ,-A M cn 5 X ,lf 'I ' - fi ' 1 A L -'J 'QA JH: - - , ff K' ' ' ,rl 1 f A 'udfixxflfz k 1, V ' X ,Q-,gf 24. ,ies 3. .f I ,, N Q . I , - A 1,14 , ',- .. ...Ia ,D . I .-' ' ,nh Q , , ... , ,. '- ,. . . '-. H- E2 mg' ' fi?F'. 'Q: .'.. I' 'tfain 1 ,,'if 'b' ' 'T L,,.':- .fr ' , as-bl - An' -Sfs44wgrfimf-..--ff'f'i. ?i'i Y'Fi'Q W .s , - 'false Qi - -...w..+ sq ,FQ-5-?s.g..5:,,vg :.'.12.::,-41.---.','-was '- ,, ,, , 1 Ji-.sl fx 573, .-,. 3,-rr:.,,j S -..,i,,,.,4- .1 .., ..,, .. -,, : wi 'Ng-A - s -1f-'- me 1 ' f T'? 71? '73- '-'.L7 ' ' ?-1 W WW yr gf 3- -Q W 7 .1 ,h 4, ,, -4 1- V. .fi -,zu--4,.r. i - .. --my .' ',,,-' ,.,' , . 5 . , . r-V1.5 f--1: 'Q -'f '-i-4 P ia-cs' VV ' - Y4M.'2vvf'11-ffr.'g' -'-'4--rf.-.,f s fi ' f-L,-,. 'TQ i W . f 1' f N'-iffiffli' -F. ui: T y' 7 ' fi . .. A ' 3 - ' x 4 h M ' A h 4 ,rf flfff: ' ' ,5 . l ' s- . livin s ., - . s P- ff Z r , 5 . 1 u . 3 :P Q ,f . 4 4 . .: . L 52.2 in l ' uf- 1 I ii. .KCAQ Y - . . , ' - . FE' ,,' fy U, :Q . , ' . . ' ,, ' . ' 1' . ' s :fl 3 - . 1 . ' . '-W' , D . . 3 .. 1 -- 13,411 . I . l , A . - 53 If . I . . . . R 1 , -. . s ' . re D - . 1 ' I 1 1 .1- . ' . ' ' P A ' i 'u J 4. I . , . . . , . - f - . ' . ' -lc '. , . u . . ,. - . . ', .. V ' 1 . ,I 4 .l -' y ,if I , . , S Il . l . l . H4 , ,, .. iff- . - .' 5, .M .-. -. 1 . . . 1 Cn Y Y . .., , ' ., 1 - V 41? .gy T2 ' Qrisrfil - . , .. 4 , N QS 'rl :fff7il'ZNz7Ka'bf'26iS'2if9if3ff7492.f?.CZeQ'P 'if'7Jf5fNQ?f3X 5i ' M . , ' -Lustre-es.s1fsQ4,,,,,svf. .se se--egg: X-ssg.s,,Qxg .ps .s :X-.re-sg-e-S.be,fg ',sg1..4y,sga,5Q,:,f esgsxis l U, .-4 r K. 'J si 9:2 J 12 , 5,-if gh. .ff ' .155 0,5 51. :2 Ur .- ,,, JE. Lf' 'fi it 1:9 '23, Tif f U! iff' sf 1' ' . J . .,. . , i-4' -.1 MILNER CROCKER MADDREY .L Crooks, ' SEABOARD, N. C. ??.'?i-:e!i4a4 .,, . k, 5- f, . v, 11g43 Bachelor of Science , ' I ' V' ' E 'N 5 NVake Forest College A GKN, IDX, KBIII -L T .1 5f'1f?2g:zam WILLIAM JOSEPH McMARTlN p. - gi ,122-,p ' 4 , 4 .jga -.Q-,r',,Q'f ,:' 5:51 'Joe FROM the South again caiiirefjlg Eiilnpiigi. 1: ti ORIAHA, NEBIIASKA cavalier. to gain knowledge mediciiiegf, University of Chicago and University of ails Ehehwonti Ofl fog 'tzj giiifif Nebraska FH 1 Us Cmlfffs te, amfillfi 0 2fPf1?l?1.e?:'f: .'f nf l. filll' damsel. Crock l1asf,beex1gw1tliq'iigSf: K ., XXI KBT only to complete his medical traii1i,j1gqfT1p.tii5Q', 1 f Academy, Hare Societiesg Deans Com- what he lost in time he,-inracLe2m1ixg,iji3.F'i' .V mitteeg Rabelais Clujbp Associate Editor, actign. ,, J:g.f'?f-QQ, Q 1931 LIN1C rocku is af goodf'stLidentQ fonscienel ,. 'f i . :f 'na..5ff.'i.1:' 2. . 5 : ' tions workerfQdeepl5,':annTeresterlg Elklilihel. 3 .3 S - - - - . -c of medicine zf2tfi1'etSf1-ieifd1'-faiuilflia' MALL of stature serious in QXDPCSSIOII 'U 4 :ff 5,-,V. 5, . , 1 ,fl L --5 affable debonair ,grey-haired Joe Cpig: 3 moit fllwhxl QCl151f?f??'gi59ntE:f2I23fE.SQQWEZ - fij ment loss at fourteenj came to Jefferson liglevfflgnce from Nebraska first, for a Dcek at the edlgegeiolioisfzfg -if East, second, Jefferson. In spite of his Ofbmhe Line ,C inheritance Cfather is Charles, professor ' 5 ill a icirijj ga .j -H jj of Urology and Dermatology at Creigh- New York? Host? Qgqdggtej Q- ' tonl, he was determined to follow his QNew5j'gp31Ei'Gifl-WQEEN-'ff-3 S'-,Q own taste, but now feels father's was not P' V2 . L iff iifffflfi f 221-1fj'.fefT so bad. Conscientious, but no drudge, he 3 2 f -5,ggj'g'7 ggi has reaped a satisfactory medical back- 'iijizg 2551- fg i 5 lf? 'iii ground. Joe's greatest fault, probably jgguglg the least harmful, is taking himself , w I7 ' IQMQE'-5 '-,:EQ'.-v'fGfff2 seriously. Recent paradox-present apathy A is 1 I 1 I 51 I I towards interneship Cunexplainedj. His I , spare time is occupied in reading, con- . . gg,gfZ1iaii2YgIr+l'. g versation-there are few subjects he is A ,L 1 j Q 53 2 g E not ready to discuss. Favorite diversion If 1, . T1 Qliziff-g hfig . gig 3552 -not women, not drink, but sitting ll0IllQ.- pf 4 ,, Q-, li, if Fl? ! 1'- Q .ffi-'ll 1 ,5,ig'f?g'1,'gi33EJ , - - . . .:i,-'I'-926-'we-' 2 ' mgffii .5 P --H it Hobby-history, medical and othewilyi-ise..-H, 3 pl Q A J. 5.5,-al ig ,r .11 1 , A ' y L Magix, Ambition-to have Mcflrae ask -him about? V1-5',,.-,,.-.jigs-5' .7 'yfijujfb ff 'Q U .grip some figure in medicalitliistoryj'Corliigairg 'j j - l f' -V Mackenzie, 01--. ...ry t, if .wi -1-fl fr f fi j fiL'f ,-iff-Q:J3sfff Q 'QL . T1 g92'2.3f1l'4Ef'g5 ?:fJ ' .L ' : 12 2 t f:-f'.ee:ef1iz' - 1 'W in Elf.: 2. f . Q L ESQ? 3 '-'?'357Wf1f'f3'i'f it'-'vf:6f52'lv f'-fiff-fc'f'2-12 : jf ' ' 'Vi ' ,flzz- Sf 37 ' ,q.iKiF-- ' - W3 Q iv , -' , C ..Q1:..+f:it'.Tf.5, .. e 51fa-wfflw..-'f1,.. - '- F ' .- .1 1 H ez ' Q, ,F ' ff- 'ill One h1l'Wd7'Cll fzffy-fw0 'f'-' ' ' yziff'i' ' 4. 1 x. s ,1 1 A . V a -v f--,. X:--0 SHS . -1 s s- Q ww NR .rs A, X 1 Ns 2 - Q Y-' M. 4 - si . . is ess f. .,. 3.4 h'r-1 5' aw EJ ll!! I iw, if F 5 ij'-. 212 if 415 'S izfi :gg l Lf .4 . h' :z'2' -565 M .gi -v. V. ff: rf, ' nr. it Q. . 1511 til P- ug, . Hui. . W Nr? ,. sig: ' , .2,.. ' ,va ,. fl -' 5' ,.,, .. . 1 -1 ., V, , . Ulf T V-..:1.' 1 ' '3f11',Ti?f-:f':'F?:Fh-ff, ,,, .,,.g-v.f'J.i?s,3: 11,12-1-1: -'L-. .- 'u',.' narzi- f:f.'.- j.-..',:g2':T2-.'S1-1 fi at -. -- . ,ii Vi? JOSEPH MARKEL '- -- 1 HJOOII BRADDOCK, PA. . Bachelor of Science Q ' University of Pittsburgh - V KDAE ' ggff - , Vesalius Society .ff-f 25 l ,- S- eff: Q lfennsylvania again scores in .ff,-77.25 ,boasting-offJoe as one of the local boys. J-lei' 4, nifgfloe, algW21ySi2l hard worker and never 'Af'-f1faili'ng with 'correct solutions to clitlicult t .,,,jiQpr,oibleI1is, Was, however, not to be miss- fg 7'-gil-3ng1.1at the more lighter moments which --'fin-eyailfoccasionally during the medical v .E-studentisi 5-life! ,we '128lfl:IQIIlb81' Joe very A - Eiionclinlaimtly Qengaying' in: daily preoccu- uu, Z Vhiationsgflgesetting ..', :students and always 3 53, ,J Kvilligig gttiffimglriticipgiti ill, any of .the well- -ff 1' gpijeiiilxs-iqtliouglibt.fup by ingenious 'ge Zh F iliniiiils. Calrlisleg .Toe became very ji-i QM.. ., j, taiiiousgiivvell-liriQwn,i -and well-liked-his .iii A . 'ggoliftstziiitliiijgf posture' gvasf ithe admiration will gg A-0ef i131eny.2f1ixQgfheeri ef: . Q5-131 fr , 1 mn.aaelsH1-s P-isps 1. S :ff - afflh-'ji'-'. 6: 2' 5 . ee'i.'3E'l. ' . .... -. i U :isszf-'lf-1 2 1 fig' ' Pb . ill . e - . 2 all --.N li i 4 I ina 1' fl , W, 4 4+ 1- 3 :1 'Q 3 k - e . - P., 5535??ff.'-'i3f3i- - --'TF 71 -'F? r.EViii f?'?5?3Hiz:E5?' . ..... -V - RALPH H. MARKLEY Marlo NEW CASTLE, PA. Geneva College KDAE Thomas Society . RLALPH, as debonair a lad as ever entered the portals of Jefferson, is one of those who corroborates the old simile concern- ing deep water and quietude. An earn- est student-Ralph pursued the everlast- ing elusive search of knowledge and with an unassuming attitude remained to cap- ture much in this respect. Although Ralplfs countenance was never beset with wrinkles of worry and eXternally'his was one presenting the dyed - in - the - wool, happy-go-lucky type-few suspect that Ralph possessed a secret vice-an ambi- tion to attain that structure on the upper lip falniliarly known as a moustache However, after coming' to classes with and without Ralph Hnally decided in the negative and to this day no one has been able to find a misplaced eyebrow on his person. -erica ll . S+. Francis How-al ri V- V '- ' H- P 0 1 PrHsburgl1 P V' T4 ' 57 'T 'I ' 35:3 10 .v Us Y . . l...i ' .'Z,' IW 'Z' . , , 'Q a g'-C life, BP ,, 3' 3' :ab Q ,fs Azlixs' 'Xe if -Spanx. Rah? fl '32 M 'n-Q 23131 Q A 4 .- 1 - - - I '1.-I ' ., MFL: A-5.-'. 43.5.3 2 F' I i :f '?i.'. ' Q -.args-.'N,,. - . - 'f. -, - ..' '.1- ,- .3 . . ,V . -- cpx'-., :'--' J. 9355 1 2 ' 1 'i? '31'4--:Ji 'lL 'k1'r!I-1--.Q iz: ' 'r:37'.H3j--.L -. V if- G lf, : 7 V QIr2'f',' '.'fi?fg.5'.if5' fgf, i 15, 1 Q rt ttf.:.5'-e5:'l5'EQfig:,,' V2-Q 'mzitgiggg.35p.q.I--5-Qj5.z'i . 1 4 'I ' jg. . 1 1-. -X F' ,ffl ., - L' - if .gyjgg .,P. .- e,'.,a12j -'- 3 3'-AI ' , ,. - 37.-2.2 x - ' ,,..-i'3'K.gQ of-1'-rw. :.. . k - - . 1 . V, - as .-if - : r 1--.lgfgei,-eff-iff., . . .-. - 1 .-- - - . . us: . 1 -.., f- '4:f.4Q-s-- Q V ,F ,. .21 5,212 : I 'Q '24 EQ? . 5 9 J :. ,.ffa:?3Tb1ijf'-f:1'.'g' f .KV ., 'A . A '- ,Z V53 ' 1 a 1- 7..--L Y ,7 ' LSI I 5:34. It el,-'-.,,?1: 'Q aff , ' '1,.1'.' '- '. -. Q 1 Sl. --.E.i5igg..'42:f1T' C ' - -Y h --ll'll1lZll:gZ-D t7 -three f f fi rfsq,-:f5.::-1-13,-WNT,-Ltgg-jig ie- .I . J X! ff .l ' frffjw. 5 .' Llff.'3i,-,----1. ' 1 -., s s X s X . X sbs NX :-' X S v 'KE X s . it . E52 l .20 -sr 2, .. 1 351 TF. 5 5:31 23232 J Q ire S l '11 , S? ,he ,Y 2239 2- IE 5133? Air 51, 1, . , 'L s l ' -. .-'FI 1 Hsif. A , 4 . ,M 9 ,ni...: ..:.,.-, . ' f - ' 1 AMAR DASS MATTA l -iabfzuzf' j - PESI-IAYVER, N. W. F. P.. INDIA '-ni' .. , f e- - -- .'-v:.-.- ff.-. '. . .. F' Bachelor of Arts h vw Adv- f- a v-. x, , ,s.,x 1,-172. -V., Y V . A '+55:'- fj--fU ? .f- 3.12. ,. - Stanford Lniversity 15 --,T i rec :er Cocie y ..9i'i:33l2v.1, , ' St l S t ,b HWZLD MYER MARKS - 'G '- 1 . Fiiflf ..- 5 Y-f P llhltet P BORN in Afzalabad in tlmeg-nrgniii Qffil-ijttl. l'ULADEL1'1'uAy A' historic Khyber Pass, the Eg'a'tewayfj3tQv?, gk iifih ' Bf1C116l0l' of Aff? b ' India through which Alexaiidferithe Glfeagtjgi' .. .rf-?1 University of Wlest Yirglnia and Genghis Khan led their sQoil5,1fSfS?f 15' QAK reared in Peshawer, the ggufdeni spoirlfggljg ig, J Zi.: Academy the Eastg educated in the qiiaintf -' Q ' and admirable resugects of- the J ' 'I' i , I Matta is an encyldqiedia -OESQIQZQ-1'E5Til:l1'g: 4 Qg HOUG-H he is quiet. unobtrusive, and experiences, espgiigialifggsl-siiieeilylrig gfi-iegigdg' ,,, 1. easy-going, Myer has a number of worth- the 31a11atn,aE5 11g1Sw5,,beefy :aging Srialtj' ' while achievements to his credit: not the Coming half ixxiayfgiiijjiirid tgheitvoi-iq P' w xiil least of which was his recent cultivation ngquiye an ecifggzfgifglgejgqlghgg i-epfgg 5. of a growth to fill in that void 'above his sents Sl1D1'9m93iQU75l9iUf3!f? 511614536 jiihg siaeggzfyi upper lip. He never has let his studies that. after iof:,g5i'i1lQi1gggq'Q. pertnrb him sufficiently to interefere with dui-ing yvhichtif1fhiyif1I1ig1'Hty 'gin-, B 1 his sleepg and his grades uflldllyt seem .to the baclqgl-ounfhgliegigtjlk -. lf .-5, suffer thereby. In fact, his only worries idggls unscatlgedgihdi51i15h.tiQifQ11igjjg3?g3,I4 .. lbesides those ever-present financial ones? if -- I 555 1 if .. 1 V . were a beginning alopecia, a niarked itil' if 2 myopia, and an occasional attack of i:i5.jikgi3f3i-55 5' simple paroxysmal tachycardia. But ,il 1 1 Mike has been above letting even these - : i worry hiln to Illly great extent. ln fact, Qiggikj 11,395 t-fig he has used them as spurs to hiinself to I-5FQ.s?Qf.,'Z force him on to that pinnacle which we I ' are all hoping to attain some day. ,i V. Chester County Hospital P 2, fig' West Chester, Pa. 4 .fgf-f,'sf.Qnj? ,f..ft-tial if ff Q ' ' i 3 ' -fr--3-iw -Hg? .il f5t'l4'16'.S f ,hr ,. . uh, .3 1 A.. I 49 it - 5 1 4vvr. 1 1 ' . i'.-V174-'Q '.- --.UF tl 1.424-' I T 51' : mv- wwwemmwwt-wawwwqifiyswe +w-mwwwifrfQwmm.-'mfwnf 1?'15: :1.-Riff 'K l. . f 5 .-.' fl 1 S V ti' VW? f , .... -iw.-fafw ..: i.-2-, 'bf-r if'Af1Q5' Q ' f u. 1 ' T. -93:-?i':t7m'L-'V' if-iR?':v, T . .itll .fpvfi-If-:tile -i : -if n .2 ' ug 1-'.:.f.Le-A5'.':':2i?1iA'T'v'1l'.4:-4 -. ',.vff'Q'-15U:04i: 1' '? ff If . f .'-'V5,!?5'!zEf'N Q 51f 4.slf'i-Pillai-1 lf :' .. '?q'!f-Lf' lv. F fi 'Q' J ziaiff V. i '. wi2f.,-fza 1 a -' ' if --f -w rf -'iii-fb? fi5.iY1f.ff?7'?5M':',lQ g ' T f, 6, , T,-Tl 5.1 'A if I' -' 1 :,57nMg.eeiggegf,:gi.95tJS - .i95i,g:?f., ,dv ? X5 15. .,.., ,Z-can :P 'f 2':j'fTfE3Tf3 gi, fri 1 - 851.2-'5a'25 t . J 'Z ,T ,l.-.f,'- ,.,ff?,,5.,9?Ag-Ib..-i-j' f I -fin:-5 rf it-,L :I i f .- -- f-.. .---15., ,x-ui --1: ' A '- -' J 1' 1943? J 3. IT.. . N 4, w he I ei. , M x 5 N pf ig. S 14 - X Y x X in 2 Q 2? 4 v J' 1 -55 X . ...,,J,-. 1-,-vw I- 4 . . .5 ,... 'J :-1v.5e .'-U ..... , - ' - .- x -' .1 ., f One hundred fifty-Lfo-zcr rflar-1 siiit gf. a. . ,. X n 1 i. ,. ffw 82... ,J : lk .31 R. sy iii ,. 2-f 9. li lzlff 4-C. .A +A. 'Nj 4.0, 4. -A . H11 g, 1 EP? 'ni , frm B- 1,4-' .9-' i'-L:-- 12 . : '. ' 1 , Q8 . X fs . 1 lx ,,P.,,..:,,,. S.,-.,,,, Q' . I .. I. , .. ,.. . ,-. , .. :,,.c , np, 'mo 5 'G JOHN vElL MILLER Q. - K s s 21 Selle SCALP LEVEL, Pa. -' Bachelor of Science S M .. K . , .. ,,, ,-1 4 , ...f In p gli -H., 'arf' ., University of Pittsburgh .-. 1-. afQ2:ivf-?i-r1--.'.---. . ffff-'f P'9'1 '1-- om, QDBH, Kee l A M H 3.1153195181-, 1-me societies LESLIE EMANUEL MORGAN i Les gsolmany things about Johnny DICKSOB CQTTY PA 1-52521 5 ffE4E'tlials.magkehi1n an individual of interest Bachelor of Science ' ,. wgegiaregifcza loss dust xglierie to begin. Dickinson College ij, 1:-V ' -'Qgyven a, er 2'-snowing nm or our years 'A '- i:giye'.-..ii1ust confess that we can never pre- , l '?1,z '- 4-:j51tiet3l1i'sQ11eXt actiond This we do know, Schaeffer Anatomical. lhom'1S HUGE' Q 5 9, .Q flioftifeveii ihat it Billiard to break through qtfeckel' I-0'-IX fl'1CL'P1'9S-l SOCIGUGS v w ftliat olflgigobd-:.Q..ln11no1' 5that he always F I ' I .' ,. Qcglilff 2115033fl-.W1.fl1? .1lllU-.152 As for non- ' HIS native son- of Scranton, after lind- .Q .. ,QECIQHQHQHCQ,32II1djf15Q.Q5lQ15115f1'Q111 11 01'1Y 116 IS ing that coal mining required too much ff., gtgheg 1n9st.5gnv1ggl3gui'anQruge know. Always :Elf l'i1if1fl,!l5Y QU! TC0l2!?b21C1S f0I' OVGFY and take up the study of medicine. Armed 03611 H301 Olltl of with a degree from Dickinson, his Fresh- ,,5- 1 52 1 . - lgSO1':S5 2311322255 CD??Pi1'11yig- 591116 ily W 1011 man enrollment number and a determina- 'Q iE11g1H11Clv 100k tion to get his obstetrics off e-lrly, he set ij . 211111 I 21111 SUUFC about the stupendous task of '111l16XlI1g 1.125 Z 31911 'F?111e.iSf??' 1121119 1110111 Jolmme- -In 11-D- E A SQIQSSQHIQQ jig. YVe 'have learned to admire and respect fr - 5' 1 ,Nl1.gEgYl'HQ5QH.dlf one ot such an earnest and steadfast -1 JIT? E li Pifiggdigqpall V' nature as Les presents. hever once gg, x 55533: 15.31 gf ig did -1 Freshman blue book, a Sophomore jing. E 5 :fin . - qui? or .1 Tumor final 0X'1II1lI1'ltlOll cause I E l one whit of outward COI1C8l'I.l. Perhaps 5 'LQ E I those daily letters from friend wife have gggflflv ,fb helped and encouraged more than we 2 - i A ei . . lfllfgv- L..-g.5L'.l'i 3 . ' '92 Elly :Z,fj ,,f:lA.. -surely we predict a rosy future for V- f'iu.3,.4::-.v,.A-'- tl11S classmate who already I1-15 ingriti- 3' gli Z . Q fl' .,:-,-a. If UNL ff QQ. .1':..j1ted himself 1n the favor of the 'powers E 1 Q 1 lf i'1f3gQ!t '?-fy i l,-' fiiggefiifffu .I1..j..tHgft'j1,be 5-it Scranton bt-ite where he will Wifi 3 - 5.11-1-5211 7 V iillsiftris- - sf ' f L ' Hospifal ., '. ' .1 Cf 9535 ' f?5,3:3ff',,+i1f..,g-35: .Q'-.1b5crag+pn P . 1 1 Mit. I -N-1 -1 Y, . 1, 5.g.:gff2gg,Qxz gai t? -fha,-.-1 , N . -...X .xi .H 'fu ' , '?f'LMljwf'c -'One lzunolrecl- fiftv -five ' u l I W J , '- ' I-A.1--Q-z,1,A.',:-:.'.1.f 1 . ,pg QW , ,Z Q: tl- ' Q if '- ,Q .5 1221, sg ' L fi , 3. 1. 1 . ' ,az , N 1 ' iw ' . l L 1. l V. 'gal Hi ' 1 e ?w 4 77. 'Bc Y ' lf . X I 11 1 If g' L N .vga I, uf ' ' -- . . .-Y' .1 . , - ,-L.---,L 7 , 1.1 , -vz sv . s In HL 5.51.-1 5 3 I, n .14 . ,w ..f-- ' . .. 1' , ,Q c ll fl . , L 'f L f ' l 1 . M2 1 fs y Y '- v C Z 'Y 1 X 1 J physical eftort, decided to dust his bl'211Il Ui :AN 1: 1 1. H H T ',, l , L n w W if 5 r K, 3 9 lf. W 3, - Y In f r - 'Sk v If af Z r.ff.., V, I A 3 s jr i up 'f . 1. ,ff WU , -. -. .--llxvzhrl .,... .1 Ii E s af, nf y- .. if is ,La ,., l P F32 Q5 ii Y 'V :gif M. .im Us. L , 4' Shiv . 4222 57 it 'DF' - -1 4: N ' ' 4' ' ft. 1 I 'A -, JOHN THOMAS MURPHY X fIlu1'12h i' OLYPHANT, PA. 4- 1 , ua ,4, ,,,,:p 43 fx Bachelor of Science ' -- 1 2---1'fj:f5fs,-1.ff':,-ifFfa?-'O'f' , St. Thomas College ,gn ,- CIJPE GEORGE PAUL MOSER Panel-son, sehaeffei-, Pasfepi-AESoei5tiQzs: Mose1'l' Q 1 2 if .l 5 1- if r- E? fix MUIR, PA' In ONE found a skeleton inj-ones poolxetik- -55 :Zia Lebanon Valley College or drank ci-oton oil in tli.ei1f,gdolQEei5-aQE1i?-K-,T 1 AQA was directegl to a date QbilindlE.fvitli.,':,'vgf:,Q fi g h Thomas: Morse, SC1'f1effe1'f Blum if 5SfifQed,fi1'litf3S1f0f0S1l dtilliffiiiliallll gvgglgffzf ' V -f l Strecker Societiesg Deans Colnmitteeg ,S . 1 ,p i - gg, X' 4 'K Rabel-iis Club' Class Historian lm' hvelv wee Otfhlunog-'i'l'ld'.lsllkkwgfi ' 5 ' ' ' ' personality he kept hiss.-fraters an ga ' -5 'g HW stagit siate of 35 52-1 HY? ' That is always a question A H d011iS 3. j1f5:,'l5.i1'.QeVE1' ,IWISESQ 9139? ,ef . , in the background of Moser's mind. took aClV21I1f21gGT l. lvllgli g e- XVhether in school or out, history taking GVIUGDCGCI by hrs 151525Qftf9i1D!H1B9jQdfD4111f?7i5eg or star gazing, he W0l1d0l'S, GVQI' W0Ud91'S YVG do 11015 1f119lYllYl2?'tI3,QT ' is why we find us here. So it is not sur- Slglln Olfthe' prising to find him reading Spectroscopy, after this nallveg QQSQJIQIS ,h?,Qii15?1l?fl?1ff19Lff3?fi5' 1 Mythology, Relativity, or Philosophy be- 1'0gi011S, buff WW?f?1?9'QfllllffidlvCQQ5f1P1ll5ifQl5'?7t?5c-' Q, 5, tween classes. His pleasure is his work, many 1116510312 l3QL'IDSj9Y1lla D35 1 his religion kindnessg at nine he comes honor of John g in from the L with a cheery Ugoocl- 5 ,35g'S'Q51L T gggswfggi E-jff,gi51i'2Z'5 5 -jyffjf,,,fs?T morning for everybody. Those who have 55 i' visited him week-ends found him paint- 132. Lg vf 5 ing pictures to be hung on the walls of '5 V2 f,i'Q?gflg bfi-'g that little dream home. He is a fine MI disciple of Keats who said, 2 V gifs, I ' Bea1uty is truth, truth beauty-that is iijgg-if vi Sli a Ye knoiv on earth, and all ye need to f 35? xnowf .,,I'gg- Shi,-ff' ' ,H gl ljlldffri Geislnger Memorial Hospital ' ' ,L 't if Danville Pa ' y fit- ':399 f 'ff ' 'Isl r'?'F4l': X5 x I3 Q . 35-iz f f ' ' - - A. My 'QI 'HA 'A ' 'Wi I ' fig: ,4. -yi 4 -. :K-IV 1.3.1 . ' Q ' Z 5 ' ff -LQ-ur A ' 7' l lF1e'sfl lei: .g 'Q .y,,',-',xE.l75w.fi,'7'9::Xf,1,2f fglg t- g2'grgQl1f-ff 'ff 'V Q AZf?i3'523i2ft ?P' P3e, ,as 521 ll U 22 i . Refi , X g ft :TATA U'-gxfzlif vin- j'y if--fl, IVV 5 fr-f',:i.f:t'1.3':1-f1,.'1f mf ,gf -fi.-AEN : . F, 2 11'E,Y ,A 5 !t1'I,.-v4 fli?:5:W?2fS53F'i'-fiafffzfiiff-'25f'f'?a22J1' F F 'Effli Sf- gi 11 :1 5, One lrunrlrecl f'iff2f'-'85ifL'l-'- 1 :li-,j:A:,: :,., 1g,',.-.l.l,-,, .9 ' ' .ff ' H .L-I--01, -' ' -- f f-X 'BEWWW JOHN ALLEN MURRAY John Pixrrox PA Bfitheloi ot Science Sunt F1 'lllC1S Collebe QKI , some lss1stant Business Manager 'lhe 'L LIINLC 1901 Blind Hoon ll.LO1S8,'I'I3.f9' in ab Lcfrdemy Societies IIB avmtois m'1v dlead the Pennsyl- VRI118 mountalns but this young fellow ,loves them In successfully obtaminff iis Boctois degiee he continues to enlarge upon 1 long llllfxclgg of medical ancestry. Wliile one usullly feels that a true .Beau Blummelu 1S city bred vie find the 9Xf08'1JflO11 Ln John .His immaculate ap- Deu-mce and neatness are without fault. A As a student ue know him 'is one wio possesses the ability of delivery Cnot per- gfaining to obstzetuesl for Tohn can vansu ei up toia. question whether he knows we End him a carefullv plepaiecl student, 'one who possesses tfhat worthy attribute 'l of applicatlon Altoona Hosp: a Altoona P Wsmsu5FsQe?fS4t 1 5e4 QQQQEAFTQQQQT . . 5.1. ffl A . : L x ' 3 .L ' 1 ...J -..131r'3.' -' 11.7 321- ',,- :f:5i:1 1. . 5 -5 , i -. f f T!Q.n2i:i3.12- '1 .-w. f 2 x X X sw IZ ATL T ff' Wi . 4: 13, . I .lwgv-x Sw.,..a.. .fx-. .f, 51 ,,5,.:,-,5,l.i9ef,.,4 ..... 9' .. .... - .. ,355 ,,4,,f..,.,w.,.gf:l. .-ff, h .4 , .. . WILLIAM HARRIS NEWMAN, JR. l6BiZZ!7 CLARKS GREEN, PA. Bachelor of Science Pennsylvania State College 'IDX Hare, Patterson, Strecker Societies THREE years we labored before we man- aged to draw Bill into an argument and then one day he not only participated but, in truth, precipitated one. You can't- put his story into a nutshell, even if you grant that lle is tacituru and retiring. He won't argue, but he has a vituperative he is by far our favorite punster, In his last year Cardinal surprised us all by taking the first step toward that Utopia called marriage. We would like to be able to say of everyone, as We can of Bill that if he can't speak well he says nothing. As to his future, the most promin-ent View is a considerable abdominal adiposity all his own. Methodist Episcopal Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ' 1, QNX .' , -s .', - -1 X ., M ...Lew 1 ar., 2 1g 23115 law Q. pm ..-1 iv. -:r . '- . psf +-erm. M . .v,,f,..,fsv . . f V 1 , ,f,u.fz ' 'gory . 2 ' ,aegis n 4 E..-s -1 ' JT. uf .' 5 f W Q 31? if l if Q ' Z'i ij.- Q fi. -'P . Q '3 19.-f' 2- .. ,QQ fzx' . iii- ' ,L 445 fi 7,4 I jf, in ' 1' gy f' ' 1 . lx-5 , .1 go 3 , .. TS! 5 I ,RX - ..,.,, n-.. - HP K .t , .:'Y-. ,lif-f4ifF?i'-'-fig? :El-.-15:31 ,:+'..,v:1e.Qf'g.'r?5'Lg7 is r Ci , an W ef ,J V LT, . I . U C , . ' .' . 1' I .V 4 I ' .L l i' vi a. N 0' ' ', 1- xl - 4- .- if: .K '- ' ' 3 ' -fMfy,QmiQwe.:.r ,f- . .jisffff J nj if -f 1 f.'fe :f, 11 502 W -' 3 R Q Q .g.-r g 5. re.. . -- C- . 'L..: t 2. . . 'A I i ' . 3 ,gl J 9 I , 4 .. I . U I 1 ff' 2 2' . . , .fF't', . -- 5.5.15 .'1 f ,'5.1 fig 1 F Q- ei T-fl ': - ' 'Pr'-.eJ ,f!.?,.21.',j.,.., 1-fl i A f f ff 3 ' TT ' i It ' f l '-fr. sw 4-L 'ff 'f ' f' ' . . - 1-1 iff :i,:s.' 5, 11 si Q ' ' . ' . H5-:E 21,9-epgopey-yXQSQOIQSQIQI. not. AS 3 H110 gift ot the baekhanded compliment and ,L -1' j: '.: . fi, .-: jju. 1' in-5 : ff.. i ' 1-' if X. fi' f if? .1 pai ' i .-A31 l. 51 I -fi . ' - r.,,4,f.,,: .s2. 2...,.- FS ' v as .- 9 'ii ii M 1 ta .af fl ' .., ,. ., . . 1' I l' , ' ,.1:.9, . n Q u , 1 El ' v 3' . 51442315 ! 1 .l ' fi A Q ifully-f' ' 11 X +1 1 l U' 1 . x 2' fliilftl -31? H3113 l 'g 1 -i, lf ' t '. ' u QTHQJ1' ' ff- -fin v . . . I , m HJ 4 wi Q f 1? 2'f?-'git-llifil ' 1 ' lltel' In 4 U. 3 1 . . t , Q I, -. - 2. - 1 Sr- 'H 'l time W' , 1, I . 5 1 ,Jr ' J 1 Zo.. 1' F - .. f , ' 1 f H 3 1 f .L l 1 x H P . --PM 5 WI? 2 . V I . , . if, , E sua, ,, tw L .1 , - . - y y m 4 n -ua . . .L . ' ' 5 1 , Q r L 1551.4 0. 2,59 t ' q , 4 3 Y . ...R ,L ' 1 X S U if 3 .. 4 5 5 or . P ,. - I ,, ri si. V4 I 1 K -. 3 N Q y' '-1 f- ,I 5 .4 ., - I X- 14 ': all In Yqfv f ' if ,,.s. 0 'aff X 'v ,X wx y ' fl - ' 1, s ' E L- , ' Y 4 s ,. . -.., - v. -I ., ,X I - ' - 111- -,.- X! at lll. A ,.,,, .-.,...-Qne lumfl.,-eel fifty-seven fff Q 1. r v G:'i.- K' .,,,, W is -3 lc? 1 Q :it 1: 4:31. ,. -we, if 'QFIPI Eff' at if ff? 'f ii i. si. F-9' 4. xg if 7 L 'A li - . . .. ,. . ' - .. .,.,.,, '-'wx-4.0 ,,Y,,v,-- . 2: fm 'M i f ' ' i ' gy, 'if NATHAN MORTON NOBLE n4'A7atn f in Pieiitixnisiririn, PA. gag. J, h - :,.5,,,.' arf' -Q-C-. 1 , ,-up 3 , fm f' University of Chicago 'J + Eg7ib C'T f'i f'5A -'-A 'if ?f-- '. 3'1f 'F'i:if25-,f -':, fig:-Ifli 1- A1 University Of Pennsylvanaqifggpg Q 'IJAK VINCENT CLAYTON NIPPLE R?vffvgSg.ggX Vince F R031 across the river, Q, If I1ARRISBURG,PA. alcquaint Jegerson -Evithgritge 3155 Bachelor of Arts tlfffe ls ,a , mversi y Oli :.?mi?y Y- K-if g li, A only did he seem to get down egverybhliig ' ' Thomas Society the prof said, but-A his writing gvsfgsffsgriv legible that his nQ'Deisi'ia1SVaysQlddkedfiasrfi 5 :I gs 1' ,V :.:z fy : iii' THIS smiling, carefree student is another V' I ' , contribution from that great university fum rl 3 Ointeae llhiiz, aa -, ,, -. out in YVest Philadelphiaf Havinglhad OftlllglictiolfQclfliigfzffpggajgfgiarifbuiei, 3653: gf g four years start on his un ortunate c ass- Y, L I .: 35515 j 21655 3,4 us , UE mates from the sticks, he was well versed of Mime QQ Q-gf,-V31 .El in the ways of the big city and took great A+'-iffll? SEMI? Q 1 ' I delight in initiating his new found Ailqr3tiqgQifgSi.! ig . i. friends. Being an ardent sportsman and Izlf 3 5413.3 gf is 'U P.e'nn's most ardent supporter, he could 5 fe Q--5 'ii 3333 always be found on Saturdays cheering QE,j,,.- 3 the team of his Alma Mater. Although if QUT '-Eigfi giiffjffi 5 3h','jif :li? he often had manifold explanations to Q 3 make the following week, he never gave 2' 5 3 UD hone- ' fslliif i,!gJff?i4 L. Vince has also been an earnest student 1 5 .Q-igffxg jg YQQQ'-f' 'jFj.xW?9jQ and shows a good record besides being a iii! ' ' 1 good pal to lns many friends, .K A-i i YVe're sorry. Vince, that your Alma V -L: be za, g A if Mater didn't play football for you last -' Jig 2i,.2,E4 if' A3 T 5 in vear 1 fZ14L.f?i - 1.-1 :UAW-i-2--F' ii ,j 2 itlffffi-i ' ' , , .::'.r HQ'-. ,'?' ' I f.:..f1-'LTD' 1 i ,Q 1-' fm?-5' Crly Hosmial ' A ,--rf---1 - J., ,yflil-7. ,vi-44.11 I - L1-'l Ak oh' r - ff-xi A, waitin 3 fii2'M't'zffe i mn' 'O' ff.::Q75l Y4?3 TA j 1-3:.r'.if L,f-i-Q 'Y 1 3' A .-,'Ei5 -, -'1.- -7 A X- ' 1 si-Q--.Q 1- '- Q A ' 751 -' Wife - A- '9z':f z.5-lpn Eyfgfi -' ,fr.ff:'.'-F 7151- , , f - - fi' - . - --g. i2,P':l,F?32:ff.:1'--i .5 , 11 'f 'fs- ,i.,. 111f'ffgfQA?1fgF2f fri if 'A A- ri 5 - .iii 'l 'i if 4 ff 4' :iz--'i 1-if -f : ' 'I' 4' I if 5 -A-Tk44!P i?2YQl'+3Q1 '' ,gif t-f5'3sQ12f' , I ',g'.' '-- T 'Y' . , ''i. :rf-'fffz'rg7SiT2vL,d,..'T1gg:13i ' W'-lfiiizi . : L .4-2 ,4'-Vs 7 f1f':1A,z'..L 3 f.-zamfjfggwf:'faearf:if.,.. 3.1,-M, f 5-32 gf-9 i 13 :.f: g H: .:kly?.,LTf,f lvl, ..-. : ., --J L' A I . ..-, 1, .-ef A , H One hzmdred fifty-eight.. Q' Vlpl 'I:fjftff5518-.'jf:'2?3f5f?:iij,:- '-.' f'5 f ' - .- ' ,, Kc s s se X 1, e 'lea ss 2 as 4 as X WN ies f x r Y sf, 9 s 51- Y I 5 it v' K A- u-.ff Hr It fl 5 wa' 'ax 'e-feb THOMAS FRANCIS OLEARY XL1ooN x P x Bicheloi ot Science Duguf-sue University and Unixeisity ot X Pittsbui gh Hare, BU-161 Bl-ind, Pasteui Societies, G 108131883 Junior Llass HERE. aie' strll a fexx indiuduils left ,, he can see the humorous side of eveiv rgtlnng, and T? not only sees it, but is able Jto. present it so.st11ku1gly that you are convinced at the outset Dispelling gloom is Ins Jclnef 0CClIp'lt10l1 and his patients will not Heed as much of the ience of Medicine, fbecause he his its Et in the tsunkle of Ins eve He makes a zfit companion for any occasion and 1 betten man to 0211111 the tenoi of Sucet deluxe you cou-ld not find in these 'days of theltgieat thnst Undeineath it all thine ls that determination that xx as b n JH Old Erin Qltooha Hospital 'se . 1 is gait- f 1 F? X! P x 'E Sf. x-- wr' lk s. E Z ...lx xl .- 'GSC Y '? .11 . bit. vl' f x 422- .a' e 4 Q-,V 1 S P25 KS Rf. H. Ei : 1? ' : li Q. Ez 3, 3 -v 'x Ji' in Ci 4:- 5 s v T5 E S- N:-.: ,I ,, 3.---. li ff' 1' ff izfnlfnv f?f'.faf'72,i 5?f-.f I . 7Z'F1? ' . .. 1. 1 .55 , :' -- . .fr, -.-.. 1L'l33-5'? Lfi ff ?-' gr? :ff :il 1 'li- r, L' l 1- 1' - . 4 . .,,1-. .,, - -.-,-' , -- - . . - - ,- '-us-C ' -,- . J. -.va mfg, wnfs- V ,.,.., 13. ,.4, I vr s ' 'C',- ,- u f V 'X - ,. Q4 J J -1 , H 1.,. S ANDRES GILBERTO OLIV-ER And-res ARECIBO, PORTO R100 Bachelor of Science Pennsylvania State College CDP-X3 Hare, Pasteur fSec.D3 Bauer, Academy CVice-Pres.l Societiesg Rabelais Club PORTO RICO, noted for its historic back- ground, ancient legends and beautiful senoritas sent. Andres in the quest of il medical education. I-Ie brought the sun- shine of the tropics in his smile and dis- position, and the Wisdom of the Spanish conquistadores in his head. NVhile the seuoritas struggled to forget their loss, he began his career, and being painstaking in his work, and with good deal of cortex to work on, difficulties melted away. lVith an ability to make and keep friends, ou1' association has been most pleasant. His artistic ability has been a help to the class, and his drawings for tlle CLINIC bear testimony to the status of his work. Success seems assured to Andres, for he has all the qualities needed, character, Lability, and not least of all, good fellow- . 'Shar- jfl-lg 'f'f'gf . 1 ,SLI-Mary's Hospital f..3:-52.13 ' -g-.iifIfhii4ael.efp,hia, Pa. ,: . f.',w-.:.,:. .f- I .,, 'PN , . . ,lf J- .QI 'g 1,- 5-1.-'Lw,3ig,, -a fg fa ,-.543-A ' PJ' M.. ,-4 -.yuh .. -L.-. a- ..-, ' ..:'fi'f ' ' '3'x5r.d'f3 : . ,Jr gg-.'j-'w 1,-.1 - I, PW! J. '. ' sf L.- I, fx: . . .r.,:::'--,wow .A -- -.-- .,.-...+- NY -fir. ..' V ' - lvl-f -.s--- : --1. .'-' X , ' -f Q7-.5 -'gh 1.,,r- .gleiii- :JK - 5251463.15-z'D I -. 1,-i-4 X, yn. ., if '. - '-'t IQ 5,r,-mil .-Qt.-. xl fav'- 4r , 'A 'One h'zmfZ1'ecZ fifty-fiine Q ' Jia' Iii. +' ST: -...a x sf... Q15 ' T lx ze - I .. 7 so -.. ,,.- .,. , , L- .. ,. . nl 25 A ' l'lU5T3?f r5j:,.e H, , 139: Fjfji-J:,jf.,Q 3 .... .1 . .,,- . . , 1 1 H1171 1 ' A , 1 . i , . ' 5 .' , . 'PBIL BBQ 31' P 2 . ' f?1:f5Qig5.F' .. ,i - . N . ' 'Qi '-i..r.1.. Q if sfrg QQ - , .'.fJz:g' - 4 ' 5 1. 5 -. 3 . C., 5 5. v . . y. i x if-1 5, , ' 1.:.+ i - I H I . Xi ng. no sg.. e . v . . , ' ' .1 'R-. .: .-l' ' -':f - s . 5 Q. . '. 4 ' f-25. se..::,'j - ,r par . i I 1. g ri . - ' . ' ' . -- P 3 ' fi-if' . .. , . eidx!-it -xiii :Z ,:.i59 gg -12. 'L .mg 4, .I U . ' . - Hifi? 9? fly 4 351 : Q , -.saw 2 2 mfg. ' uns v. :HH-Jug. 1554 Aj ,1:. --74 1 rg,-. 4 - ' 1 if E ' :ai Altoona.: 'EB-: we ,, Aw , , . K 5 A. ...L :..:.,...x.,,l.4.,A,.V, 2 5 44.2.-.5 'na' ggafff-52.53 . .ff-rf 'Z F- ' '. 'Z 5 3 5-3 2 ff I will E ii? al 1 , + ' -,. 4 P '42 ' 9 - yi.-E E-1312211 ' Q'-13 'fi f - ' E Yi 5 fsjsfi .- ' 5 I l ' i E.-FF! '-' . is fi' 1'f..:1L. ','- 'l3 .i'.-ivgglr-w., - -. Elini-'-1. 21' 11' . -eifffid if ir- . J! A., 5 Hizsrgg ff-I JH A ...lg ' Etna S , , -49 1 ' 1 -. if-'J' ,- --..f -agdrli-'-it . 1 .t 2 1 4 . I ff- - - 4 172'f7.v'w 1 ,, . . I A . . . . ...R .. ,K -1--r 5 l f ug .:.-.,5., - , I 4 rbnivff E1 Fifa 3 - 1.1:-'w:I'ix F. 1 fy-fa . f 2.ifEjkf',. ' ' 1 , 1,92 'jp?l,5.,+ ,K 1 1 fl, .' X IH F- 3.3 : :-L- -' f..f..q, 1- ff '. + V' 5 ' if -: . - ' - ' init-' l '1- ff 1 . U '.'YQ 5 fi lb ' ,.-, . , 5 .I : 2 .1 ,- - 7- - '- Ki' - 1 N ' 92 T i I .QL l 1- . l 'gli' ,PKI - w 4 I - , .JA . h fy., . A . 1 1 f. hh., -A 1 ,4!:. Silly. - .Q Z . gig?-r '1Z yn,x? V 9. J . 4 - - ' :Q ' 'Z- -xx'-' 'I 2. 7 3 K Q 'rua F x ,I uf. - 1, nr.. .4 . -' fllgs- ug. X A ' -Y I ,.. 4'e .Z ' x -, I V , . .'.I.1,-A-:Ag225.22-1-A.,mf-.1-.'1g.,-:Lv-.. 5 - M 1 , ,p ' ixfjf:T1.:- f'f.'--s2:-Q- 1 1 . - -1--Quo:-.gl ' ,. .4 If ff: W if ,fy Z, .V 5' W z' el .2 Z X 'wsmfsass Y XXX :Ns x s. .. - - - - - XXX X - X Y so X X X es wsxs X sw Mswssssfxsssxs s '9 .11 1 . .F JE' .--I ': x Q -.'-X5-Ti? - N if iiigflx QE .214 za -11 .1 in .gif-C ' F' all 'ff 'ff' I .P 93'5f'3 . 1 ' .I FW' E5L7:..- , I , .iw p l 'Vi-:::.:f1:f' f -' 'V '- 'v ' :GEORGE WASHINGTON PASCHAL, JR. lnpasf! XVAKE FOREST, N. C. - n f ,ff ,V , i - A B.A., B.S. in BIQCllCiI1e ''l ! --WiELif-fliefg:,ew :?.. ..'ii5T? . f'2 l'-'25, gfpfriiflfjfcf YVake Forest College U: M f l 'Ll' QKXI' 1 1 5 ii-,'i.:'i'.2?z. HAROLD DARBY PARKS Moon, Bland, Knowles Seeietiesl' M., Tex 9 'F5...'ff'3i if ' 'll -.'Y:..'-f':T'L. LANCASTER, TEXAS ONE oflthe North Carolinians who has? ill ,aigj Bachelor of Arts filled .ii distinctive' place in. our .clz1ssL.igj.?,ji?g Trinity University Pass He must have worked' 'cliligentlgr-9' f av QAE, BKCI, his flrit two years of lnetliicine ibecausgi-5,5 aa. fgasr . , - t ii-.t 1. l ' 2 iff -' Schaeffer CVICG:-Presjg Morse., MOON: lllmseff toelillslsngxlg ri? l.ouX, gel-ecltell-5 Aciadeiny Csogietiesg XtS'ith an immovable-Qgjmuess igfaglil .Nik .U l 1Sf011J11l, - U11101 21-N tions, an unending gfileasure' in'help'i1igE others, and a genial.injierihefpossegisesg ' I. THE four years of medical school have 1mOuH0bti1'u:S1Ve'falld?id7lPE?bl0g?1??.P?0?151hFl9'-Q.. flown quickly by, but we do not believe mVy11ilpIci?1g?EilfgPgg that the rapidity of their tliffht has X -' - is g,Li25i.1.,:fl .E g1QIP,,fE..S31!1Q1 11?-'fi 'gl' saddened the heart of this I180Dll3't0 who the P93191 Of C0ll9g65f?f?1ilEl!gfi9,S9ESP?13lllUEe,iV gy is so anxious to begin the practice of 211191 011111031 flDP1???11729?1fgf-QD! the healing art. Perhaps that is not H115 0011165 to Qlle'l0iff5l2ll?lfXj2llH1'?fiSf5 5lPl?1?l2-'gg' if the only reason, there are rumors that EU-lfl, be Cff11fs5f'flllllFEtl95.5f some Bonnie's lie over the ocean, and flbtluftlon- gg 3 f :j Q,-ga jj ,igkf..:gjv'gi1i2l 5' 'QR others live over the mountains. Episcbpal 5'H'c3' 'i+d'l.Ef' E 3 F 2lf'.lf.'!f , Coming from the great southwest, J2liili1del'Pl1l'irllliB-ll? ij where men are men .and NVOIIlQll like ing j them that way, Tex discarded 111s newly ,ai-.g..f-5 2' .5 gg 2 55:5-,gg ,neg-jf. iaguggi .57 shined golf clubs and tennis racquet and ,fgg gl 59g:'jgQ5:.Qjg donned the habits of a medical man. He fig? in . 1 fy- had the makings before he even began. -' gi is 'f .-55,,'5',fQ for who can present a flock of hair so 1313? 'lil g'.f. 1 sparsely settled, vying for honors in this jjrjg 1 fbi ' ' S5 y I'g'43 line with such men as Dercum, Brubaker, Q l.:.gjf-..-g.',. Q5 131 ggi if f ,li Q Gibbon, Lewis, Ulrich, and Shallow. N .7-fy' Q, Q3-?.'.fLFj..3:.gi ' fail, Hfylllfg': '5l,5,'gL..4k During our years -together here, Te5Q3,..-gig .. 53135.-3.-593: .3553 A 2 has made hosts of friends with ll.1SAllLllQ'Qlf- l,'l-jf-'- 5 ik., ,gf '-X ' lf- :IQ 152-'li if and C11w'f111I22SS, and A and industrious workerlj 'inf A115Q:'SQllQQI.f,'fi.':'x ,QV .- ffrirlivhl ge, 5 S-4 'gi . 1 W0rli. le :.- '- L- 'Qi1-?Q.'.f.1-.12F':3 :51?ilix'7 Ii 4-M 53f4Qf?fi'ifl' if '- fil-? !f52lr113li1 S V- 'll ' .- . 'i 11f'1f-Ria.-.311rs'r2r:a -1 52- ..'5f-3:2235 1.: 51. H1-ail'R.f :-1fs.5. 1: if -1 lf- '-.aff United Sibfes ., ifQ5-fr'-t'1IeE9.'L :'it-'- A 5-'.-f'fw'.F?G6' ww? 1' H - :fi '- .' '14 A 31 'I'-fffyfvf' kf3 'v1f+il9rif.Tf5 1-fg!:: -'!. 1 ' I - w' 4- , .5. .'3 -4 .' .ii.'fr -'riiziffqavfgueegs' 1 , , .:'-5 . ' 5 .az-,4g..i ' fl Jil H' 1' 1 . ' one zmazfzi-ea Q N-A :.':f2,iiy45'.-3...eh.clggfjftjf.-.,,'.A-1-firi ' it 'n,,.'xv1. -.p.,'- ..r -s.--. '.-Hr L ef' W i 53 Iv 7, .- 1 Q .ff 2 X' Sis 'Q SNAP lf Q Y if 'lf -G . if: Q .W , Q, ffl . ff , 1,-I -f QS :Z llhv 33 A2 IIN. :Z -W xii -1 i 31. 2359 - ' I 'if 5 . S165 ' 5 - va rs... fi' Iffaf 'L :j .J 'Si 2 Ji me f... ..,,...-.- ,... .... , . ,, , -- . . 1 ' 5 7 - lf, 1 ..: V: X 2: EUGENE MICHAEL PATELLA 5 l U ,. H 'LE , Gene fl W BROOKLYN, N. Y. ,,, 1 5 Columbfzglfimsity f' A A 15,3575-,::, 1,4-.,:.l....l3:i..2:q-::- f::m:-1.5: .- 34 -' - . 1 ' A, VU,,ig5fScliaefferQ'Acaclemy, Bauer, Hare, Pasteur Q5 A wwszgzigyim It 2 Societies ARTHUR BIGlELOW PEACOCK f ' 'gg ffidj.. , .X N 3 1 3. caA,.t11 uf . ' 5- ig T 'Q , - is - bfi.. WAS fearlyjin our Freshman year that RALEIGH, N. C. F2 j 'jQ3the -i intellectual prowess of Gene was Bachelorof Al-ts A I' '- 154 'finoticed gby gthe entire class. His an- Wake Forest College A 3'-, if Yzftoinical descriptions were as perfect as Y ,sf ggg-ga.-Yinei's portraits. W7hen all were XT .b fig ed tinbrain anatomy oral quizzes it 5 li ?11,g'iWX'?S1'..G.611C' WIXOM-?11Kf1YSx Saved the CIHSS AT THE end of his second year of medi- 3111125 .thf5if,C0F?eCt,?DSW91'- 111 OU1' eine at Wake Forest College Peacock g'i'.fiJ?Q191l yea! 1?FS5f,1STYQW1edge of anatomy transferred into the third year class to Lil -samsu1fgegyywas.a.ggmbrquglw forth W1t11 complete the work for his M.D. degree. l Lili' QS?QE15Qgs':Q1SE211IgEEh3,C .fh6,SUYgG911f The Class of '31, while already having n 1Y9g? 53? fin?1:-113517355-of nmetyslx ' numerous excellent men, was glad to QL., 'Q' -'tg g1T9EfZP15QQ17aS?IllQ!!1?Qf1fQfhe Surgeon told have another enrolled in their number. 271 sf 'gf2'?I2eE 1l94Sf1911ld1 NPV? fecelved 0112 Peacock is a man in the true sense- of Q s:?5r'r'-., gigurggdredggfgrillgs evade! . . the word. I-ns friendliness has made mm, 54-P35119 g15f'Qul9Pi9f: manner, Smcere In in a short While, one of the class's best- Gig? 'XPl!1fPQSefg3!1d5-P'05if?ESeS..?1ug-Pf ,the graces liked men. His actions in his associa- ' X325 f:5T35,TfA 'Hlslsted were tions with his fellow students and other 3, fig , l5Q9?SS?1'Yf,fQ!', f5fEYQl?15ffz'5f9?i? friends shows him to possess a personality WTP? 2iii.5-5Ball4mbfb.iC2,ifQf.Hfispifalz which we easily be Called a VIEW- 5 ,E. BLliiirf5fQ2.M3j- f Again, he is the possessor of anhenviable record as a scholar. 'Peacoclivsglll benan ,I ,.g- 5 .4 5 asset to any community in W ic e ay ,tk 15 LQ ., ' choose to locate. I-Ie has the prerequi- 5 , sites of those who have the honor to be ,fi 3 '3 'l6 ill.: called great. , U 1 V ' Vi. ' if L If -H'-21'-:Q A , Pennsylvania Hospital i .5312 3 553313 ' '32'4ljlg11,,.lf:: i , Philadelphia, Pa. vs nf. ' S, '.-ee, , - - '2 'wr - .' ' 2.f -fg::1,,- ,jj -f if E it W ' . . . '- ' ., 5 il X T fgygili'-:j'iQ'-fJ.'f - lg -4-'f4ff7'4ii?fi:'gfg'2,gg L .. f gg .rf:r : 'x1'.lffV--f f .. 1 -15 M '4PQnv-zf4-+-'. 1 If 1 . - Y. 7 . 'f - ' ' ' if ' .1-1iif'.i:,'2zf-1' P Aff'- ' L, '- '. 1 ' fl: 'V it 'D' ' 5' liflfwtihlcd'f df2'nffy'2s'i'5455-eiLis.f- ' 'Q - -. 3 -. - A ti- ..-.g.-4,.Ng1'g'..'e-:fda .. 1.-. - si- ' W C 1 ' -xi ' rl Qu.: .:: fzgi,-M--ji '?v'5E x 4- ,Liv 5 ix-,mn A ui- .A-A gj.i.5f3x,,.,-jaw...,,,..0ne hundred szarty-one f ' fief E A , 4 ' fi. ' t' f ' ' . 1 ' - '- 1 X 'x I. v er ii, .2 Zi E Y 'z 4? . -55 if 2'-'ig .-f. 9, LL .,' 5 'if' V g Q' 1- ll Luo i '59 i 'FY 'ily -ii ' I 'fb' W g, rf' p D r i X '7?:..- .' ', -, 1-. 41 0 1 ,1 WH . L: ..5jg':f' 1Lf, . E3.sv7-5,y-- , ffl -l'fT :.E5 r,': ' -f-Y' N til f---' ' if LOUIS LLOYD PRAVER U Lou at CLEVELAND, OHIO ,i x m:?i 6 . i . Ohio Stacgelxigniversity, -NIM' MA?lPE5EPER Tins boy 'with the I11DSt3:IQi?1flg,? MIAMI FI ORIIDA grim, bristling hair and prodigious 25' B I 1 ' 'f'q , tlte, descended into tlns c1igf5o1f3b,1'0tl1eEiyj5 1 - :Q - -Liq- QCIG 91' 0 f-0101199 love in the fall of 1927. 'MinedQthe1if'XiI4a'?1,,4-5' L5 U111V91'S1tY of Florida have waited to see Jeifeiislinfiiiialieflfsiff if fsi' Q QAE, QBA, QDKQIJ impress upon him.. But nqQ-Lon sis,-Lstillfn 'SL ff, Thomas Societv his old carefree, 1'1Ot-1'?l1S1Il'g5l21l11QOStfg?Eiif' 4 K -I ' gantuan self, 1, gz. N3 , , , , , . Ivl' t .- .riia'ste' 'iejse if iii-liiiffifvf 2 P MAX has the unique distinction ot being ol.de5yIi3,t11 Qigilfld inotgggeggiif Big wfitg -- ' the Orily wmemybg- in 211511 Igoming ing can-only bief fthe Sg,gi?cg rom tie sunny . tate 0 D ouda. esplte Cabahsuc hw1,Qglylg,Emi.,:5f:Em?fqarkmigesi 1 . ., ul his prevmus 'inhaoitation of tropical Lou xvill alvivikyg?15eifiiQT1'iq:'1iibGf1?,eH-ids?the? 1-V 'i l climes, Max, with his hardy constitution, Dersonificationg P555 gL5g5'iEfe1.bifgig gWH61Q5.E 3,355 mana'-'ed to survive the four years of 1 . .t d It 3i1g,:1Q,5fvPif-gif I wintry weather spent in the cold north- xiieguxvtilli f i- 4 , lands. Pep with his congenial smile shouts and b555iSi1lg3I3lfl1Eli -f lg ihf and ruddy countenance had a friend in ' QC? Eiuiiiffi-i ' 4 every member of the class. Never noisy YQ 1 , Q 5523 and of the still waterl' type Max silently Q , Lift? and nobly completed his medical studies ,b iff: Qi if 3 Eff f Z, in :1 style befitting the reputation he lgggjfl? 'lf.g'Q1 ,lji- i attained in his previous college. Pep Q 2 not only confined his activities to the 'V55 f fgiijfj l' 'i' Jefferson district, but also was an im- , - portant member of the Columbus Hospital f l r 3 I i Staff. Here, Max, among other things, , .E if 5.55:-Lfgrj. became very adept in doing Blood lVasser- A - Q . j if li glrff, Q ' man's and even a close friend of his I- ,QT , f .2 sought him for his prowess with the 5'--7.1,-- -,-f., - - if g5lf2-j-1':Q,9l-iQ- ' LI needle. Needless to say his friend will,-: L.fgk.3rf,fij 'xflu fpflll ' flfgjnfh never forget his technique. Ma:-: svil,-l','4.. -Q1 X 2 jjqi f. is fi eventually become one of. the' I-S0,ii'th?s'f j J-I 13 -Q ' ' if ,QE-if famous sons. Q1-': gf! 5- g,,,j figf g1ifj,,i5'. fi, fg,,,,f.-,,.y 1 1 1 5 T' - -' - - .-' . mf.. .. ,a '.,-5-,'H?w ', 114. .. '.---1 Q 11, .- ,K l.: -4 ' 'f' -aj James M- Jaekseff 4Hf4SPL+-1211,--xg' , : ,v MiaEr1i:,Fla11f sig'-LerL .i 'Eai t ii-Lf ' .Z L L 12 1- -'I Ei 1 1 'IJ--':'i'E.'Mf-i'V'f?'5.' ' ' ' .. f 'Z 1' - 1, . 1 .1,.1'Qis4:fsYfFhitiLiii'h'm,i 5':-51 5 is 5. L T 5 -fd E' x -5 -1, P' .5 . I 2' . .f ff - If fl9':l,.r,,g il 4-S f 1 i'YE'g,?fl5'i-is in 'il All it ,.--f.-LZ,--,.-51' a-:Q-gif.-7':f, , ' E , 41 . ' One hundred simty-tivo ' rf' '. :'.g5l,:.rg,s .... U 'VT H .. If .M- 'sf A W Ms-we XXX X5 1 ff f Z W X 211'--'14 J ll 4 jf X Xxex nyx f 'FU df x A af wa- -A .1 '--'ff'- fl--'-s 1:-. .-F-14,fQt, FRANCIS CRANDALL PRUNTY gf' 'Chuc'k PA1zKERs13ERo. W. YA. lfiiivensifcy of Notre Danie and University of XVest Virgini-1 1--1 H, Pasteur Societies F' 3 r-51:4 'HEY sacv' that some of our associ-ites are -STH '51 '7'ml1i'us1 11p6n'fns'!a1icl some we can choose. A . . .175 31,2 . ,..., . ' ff N,. ., - digg.. A-1 ' x its we .uf ,. 4.12-glilitafl wasgthrust upon us, but we 1s11rel3' Snie offthe opinion that we would Q-Qliiife'-'tzliosen hiifh hadvtlie opportunity been ifiifiitefl. .5Vou,ld?fi3eg1ii1'e a good deal ,off iaeczillingQjfQ,.j53Le2-fygilted to think of 'someone 2xw2hQEwiigist'gis15xgeE1El3,f3 to enter into wiimest sei-gfjqfjgii-clseseimm-especially ,ini ufsern e1it5ig1sQ3li.e gisfg 36Hi.:TvEOll11Cl out that an jxlbesi 1iQt?2take773fegr3'j inpgcjlm application ,qIi31liiFs.+5pgnti to And we also lfotiiigdibiitigfaElotQ 6fQtlijhgs,j?3Ji1t it is only 121912 of i'65'S3fl1flS the telling Ti1'?5'flkf?1i1-ffkfl ihiiafli .6fiS5f1121t type Of -'ii1cl'iifidgi1z1lE fbi' written, 2 fellciv' Well -'inetf fliigigl fwfihfltg more need hbelsaidg -.3 5 I, 1 ' St Agnes. Hospital- ' fi-T' ,f'-2: g-s '.'-1? : . gg , . '4 i , ' ,,. ,gs pgs, g.. 51 mafkirl' I E i ' 1' 1- esfwf Q .gf fV21sl?h'1F4delphia. Q-1 se ,125 iz 7 :2 5.1.5 U- :: 511'-Ns: si: V- ss- .i f-5513? I , K: 1 . 4 3 .1 ge? 1.252 ' ' ix 1 A. .Jil .-4. ,, WJ. Lag .V A-ai' ic: s f 1 v f ,I .J 1. mis:-s:.1.,ez: nemsmsfita 7' desi... Z-1,,g:,g'.z-. ffzffgns, aaa'-1. , r' F' ---5-ic.: ' 3223: g2'sfu.',,gE5 L' . l f 4- -. If s-2442: - . , ' ' 1 U T7..f . 'T '. iii, CEL .' 'f' ' .'!. 1 4 : ,, . ,X -fi, . x li ' ' ' ig-Q'f,'5. 1 A ' - -' - . .'..,, .- , 1- -. - --b-.f. ' 3 , 'V' 33 1' . .I .5 ' f i , 5fT .l I ra- , ft A -1 mi..-V , , 4 ..., Z.-,. ,1,5,,7. V . . . .. . . . - . 1, N... F 4 ., ., , ,hh I vwntl ..s.v1h .J an L, '17' ' ,, 51555 JOHN LAWRENCE QUINN Incl Huxco Tuncuox Onio Bacheloi of Science lQl1l11gt0I1 ind Telfeison Qollege ATA NNN BBQ Banei Ixeen Home Societies LV1ce Pies J B icslnnan Class ACK cime to us 1 good old buclieve, but litely he his hid 1 flue toi the oiiental Ile has become pzutlculaily tond of wfilk ing One time he nas known to hive led the ti un into Tenknitown On some of these' hikes he h IS found it most con xenxent to iemun oxeinight uith some muiied fuends Jack has .1 D 1lf1CLll?l1 aveision to othei people s smoking, especilllw befoie chuieh on Sunday IHOIHIIIQS Pelhaps someone in Steubenville Ohio, has dueloped his aesthetic tendencies Jack efulv pioved himself '1 mastei mind in cl'1ss 'ind fmteinitw ictivities, inteiest in which he neiei iclinqnished VV1th his winning smile ind stelllng cliaiactei, coupled u ith h1s knowledffe of medicine his futuie success is inevitable St Francis Hospital Pittsburgh Pa we X Xfxi k 2 5 l.:':i'ff,'.:-:.i.:,It 4 Q, V-3. E5?m:gL.':l ,. . VY: 41 Kr w 'I I K f v r , Ar- a L.w'ff'-1 ' i AQ, .-. ,. .. X, .,,,. .. . . A., 4 -. ' 4,-.- , ,., . .- ...f . ,- ,, ii -,.. :, :A 5 ,I .,-.- .. ,X 1 'u,,-,. .I - - I-..4.:, .1 , J... -, - .- +, -f -- : 1 , 9 - -.N . iz . 49111-.K ff 'v . as 'FC-11 - M fy. . . .. s 1, - , - ., . ,,.-0 .. , .Y .K - L., .1. . K . 'f i ' . . QQ H.. - ,- -, 21, ijt -Lf. I i 3. Q'-.',., -.,..A jy .,',..f ' . , e - r- I' . - . ' If-.,'ff'. 1 1: 5.2. Q 1 '.Tfj.f,'-:- rfli. -,TT .' . . 1, , ' 1 ' . c , '5,l,5' '-,' , ., . I I ' .L.'.' 'SET' . - ,, , , . --,-s , V. ,wi - - f 4 fr Q 5:7-. '1' . .' .t' '- '- 'A ' '- - 2 4-,fe L.,.f1:i:?,+,Se-.-and.-,k,,.wy:wN: w -'na . . J . : J nq-A' 9. gil. ' 1-Q fwf- Ci ,:1,r.' f' .a fn e ' feb A-11. .9 ,.j,-2 Y 'tra' 1-1.1 4 .im f - . I 'fl' J 95' ' . ., . gs' X S3 ix xX N ' , D ,One hundred siazty-three .. .Wy , nv . , .I mfr-: -: ': '- -. , .1 . .- .-' .. . H . .:'---VH- V 1--. 5,13 f. ....-g,.y-'LL-4-:g,,.f.1 I ' -. - ,,,,e. 4.-,, ,. i. .1 , gf -'fm-rs M s 1 N s X xg V -its f' WWQQK -W --. .11 ...... .- Q 4-on - - in -mil nw - - A to ' ' midi A ' -rg., .. 50 -, u an H- . J , W... v. 4 A J-if - ..c. ...H-E 9 ,I WH' 3 -- '11T '7 ,T qw--1-l'-' .,. Wa wr ,, i 'lf , ,,.- .1-........ 'f'.. A . Q? W . M -rr 11---. X HM--pl? x 4, 1 ,Y , .3 Q-u-1 A.. 1 , td Q5 gg, 1- Q? - N ,M sf-:wow 'H A . fm 1 L 4 , , N A ,I -.. E 13: x J... r-1 ' f ' f J Y .5 , -L, o ' f -was 1' , - W A '1 ' f C' ' .sv ' 1 N' O - ' 'HQFSSL - '-+A J I 1 - .. - -. ww- E,-ogg . , . -'Si V .a..':a.....:W U2 ' 4' 9f'MX . - J r ,,. '-.. ,,-1.A.f.':l.-,-.-.-- v -.-no -'-'sl-4 H . K 5 -: ' ' ' A '- P 1 if ., ' 1, ,ml C4H'f?. 5'f' - 3 'l 1 . ' 'W T I , IK A2 5 l ,Q-ve All Wi .H K' ,S v ,4 V 1 A. 54? .C L we V gag:-9 J ff ,, +15 697: : - V 1 f i..,, gy N 2 -Y' J Q 4-'gn-fi mf,-I ' :'fa'L,hI33.Q--hir:-fs:.'f1wQ'Q': 'mist' :Q . . . v:, . 4' . , . v-,.- '- --..g.:,g-,xc ,:. .A,..r:g',1.n,'.:,.M'Q'--s-..j ,W,,,,,.,.-V l M. .M fr ,i-. -13.1.-, fair., -, - . T V A . .. ,. ,, . f 32' kr- 'r .,, 1 1 W7 mf z'ym f ' 5 A . F 'V - f. -,I .. 4 H., .J-I 15,1-'-,1,-p . ,N .1 Q L,wyL.-:, th.. -M.: - 1, . . f' .. -22,3 L -vi' YAJIFT 5-,i....'..Lif.'1-I-.'i' .5-ff-, N. . ., 1-Jkvff ffizf-.Lf-l xsvmlfl jf, 'A W -S--T '53 ' ' ' ' ' f- .. vga ' ' 1,4 c V . . - f . ' if , 1 . ' -'fi ve, - - ' - . . ,1 .-:ny ,.,,,,,.,. N P -. , -A - h ' . ' 1. 4 4 . . ' - A A .. S' ze . M ' I ' - ' ' , .I 1 . 'T T-l' .1 q::,.- e . - . . H, , -.:', ,aff f -. -' ' ' ' ,' . - , , 5,.,' fy, fe - - - N - .H . 1:2 -- . . . . - . s.-5 : v , , ' - J ' - - - A- f- .J . -f fat? . . ' . ' A' . ' W ' r. , ' -. . N 1 ,' ' D ',- ' , 'A f-.' ' . - - 1: ':: 5,3 . - . . . 1 ' . U A ,A 1, - . , , . . ' - . 1 ,- ' . R: , . 1 . .1 . T '. ' 'LA .: ,,. . - 1 . ' v - 4 ,,' ' . ei v V . 'I -. . . 12.1 ' 4 . Y, J f , ' A . . 11 -wf , . -. , , . - Ji - . . ' -.51 . . fl 1 . 1 f-1 - . . . ' , . , . . . . , lfelf Q4 3 xc XX Wisfj ' , 44-.. M . . l QQ X ci Q X s Nye, germ I V v. :se-f, :ew is A A -elf-s oft-.. Ms-,X ,S:AL?g's,.s'r -l ' 'lsiQpslw4f..Q 1 4 r .4 A H, l A5 fs Y X XSS I 5. 'xii 1 if sg, Q l 5-5 Qriigi- l ii 1 .iii N . I-fix l -x :. ,. if A pf - 31,29 I f Q. 5 fif if - 4 .' ic. It ii i - - , ,, ,., 1, , . - ...H .... ,,. ..w , fx- l -1f21, ,,cjQgr,..':: Q.-Lf 3S1v..'--Q '- - , '35 THOMAS KESSINGER RATHMELL fi Vi R ath' fl .1 PROSPECT PARK, PA. , :S-lv 1'--f-' sf 5 15. 1 - : fd'-il AV w g. , A ' Bachelor of Arts 5 M77 -'1 'I-'fl-'IGif'1i'E1if?f2F'. - rl ff4iil:!.fV 1- 3 Swarthmore College . QU, BBQ ', NATHAN RALPH Schaeffer Anatomic League g?Ra'tte1fsQug-,Q ' i f25-Sqgugx P Nat Strecker CPres.J, Stieieties ,,,-- Qfgjlgifi 12, HILADELPIIIA, PA. jf 5? 2353 University gsnnsylvunizl FROM his moments of poeticiilil it's concluded that had he-Eljeeniablie1'.'.1gQ1sQ xl if 1 find enough words to rhynieg. '.RathQ -f,, .'f f NAT has the distinction of being the lmw beg? a1?0et'1La?1i1Hg1f111S 11? iulEiE?f'ifiQ:Q?u youngest member of the class. At his fo mefllcme In W ufllifle 913195 jtileiie-125213 . g --f graduation he will be just twenty-two lihymfiforlS0I9gtEf9e.Sfefi59nEQBQZEHHQ- ff i f years of age. A true description of him AF It fnfuf t1Q59.f0f- 192 1n0?E'x:,u?IE f L would require too many syrupv details ll P11 haw fougd lilfimthia M2111 lflgnfdi' A R 4 of praise making the end pro-duct too GYM' lviuillg f02lglVl5igfBi'?lQh9ll3i95351191593 , Q P. ,, . - K . H- - 1? -L Q bit with those 2955 9-1ftg'iIrate.j-aregtli ,lQ1S5ifiglE- fi. f1cl1E1gg?l?1EI1UiElliJi?' iiiiligaliasi Himlili 511611685 of mind ilim?-t?:'7-Aqaupliifli lvillli-'hisix -'Thi 21 haiy idea of his studies. K uflquestioned -- t if iii b The humor of his phiglase Svporti-agecl i y is C10f1St'C 0'. W0 0' 1 U Q if 1:5-J., 32.-2252+ 4 2' whatlhe Swould do iveithla goof ideaii oi Philadelghiia'-Gehbilfi ' Q55-i'11 llisdsubfegfs- NM iwndefg wouggtfulli' PhiladeI.p.hg1a:ia+:ag.g2sif-15-Q sgiizizigfsi.. an grave y over eac 1 pro emg an once .I y Q , gf i fi 5-j2ijsEgg5'gfs ? ,AH-'f a conclusion is reached he is generally 2 z i' .lmfiii iii 5.3 -fl 1 1321-.iL'.g1:l'g': right. He has even had the tern-erity to f ' :U -' -E gf argue with Dr. Lucius Tuttleg and when ' -'gulf llfg-iffflgl 'ig' two such minds clash, there is always s gggfglig'V-'fFQ'.-'fslfiigg sure to be a mathematical uproar. I I ii Philadelphia General Hospital - .- 3 fag Philadelphia, Pa. ' 6 -.-1 .. ae--fu ,. ww , - gfgjw. i .Q'::J, 4 3.11. '-'- ' ill :L if - E .. 1 J fL ....4:fS'A ' ml. -,pill cf 'QF'-I' Ili --l'3iJz.fl5a-els i 2 , :P-9 'l Q-.gf ll ?l57ff:5:5,: ff - fzl'-S . 1 , 5 Vijiif . it f-'-2.-Rigs.-l ig 'H' 'ez .- . ..'-w,..1Jn .If - Ivaflelf..-11 -. 'iw J -V20 ' va- RJ, 'ai -71' ,Ili-fx - 1 4 XfCu :'1-'L -. ' ,: 7'.' lufifkw Li 1 4 1- 5 'E l . 'L , -' '1 if -av. QL. 5- gfrgl. L.: . , ri-.v.-l'E-- -ff, 4.- :. ff .1 '- Qi 1 '-l il 115' '7 'ix 1twig,7 ':.5'h-:,:'T.Z'-x1 7V5. 5 .. ' .L , P ' ' .F - ''fe-f'+.yr-:ff-9.r'5,fwi. 45'4 M' 1 Wi? ,- .-22:41 S - .3-.6 ..-1--srl, .1 :Vg ,s -vi P it v - -..'g..'-'gfu-, g.e1-fy'-4 ggyglfgf- Qwb' '3-' - : ' n.. : an K., ,Q Il-g:L':-,. !l -V1 . i f ' :51ja5s:tz1g':-'vs ' ' :, ' ' ' g ne hundo ed sixty-fain' . .wHt5'l,i:k.,4:A:i,. tg ,' 3,T:'.1:':'.''rv-i'F,H-.,,.fsxifw-'j..,.:,q... 'i ' D - ,. '.,r ',-lg.: .4 l., ,. I ' 1 .,. -'ny 1 ef s 'CE -X.. 95 XM I Q r-. I.. Q 'rw rx- 'NH fs A .-A y ri. 22. L. XT. .jf bl - iii' ,, E rf' ,,, 1, , M. F5 ,e X-911 Q 41.1 . gs- w Pl :.: 1 1 if 5 'u 2 ,jf 2? Vg... -.1 ,, .52 I. GEORGE JONATHAN RAVIT 4 Qnztge BRIGHTON, M Ass Bachelor of Kits II 11V211d Unlvexsity IDAE F 'A 7' 1' Xcademv . ,QW llemes to deai old Boston The home of the be in and the cod , E HAX E heie a young man who started ff Ins medical caieci by not belng thoroughly cbnsvelsant with an anatomic fact How- ever, he has managed to nulhfy th it euor lot omission Eoin yeais of Tefteison and hrladelphia have not been able to elimin- ate his broad a so that he st1l1 takes ins baath' ,on Saturdav night YVe often 1 fiwondei about George S vehement dislike of Phiiadelphli and Iie1 baibfuic customs. 'I gin his Lmind, Beacon Stleet and Common- vxxeailtlr Llvenpe xx 111 never be icplfxced by the mlm 1 ne and Rittenhouse Square. 'WSE 3 vi is ll ri fl 151 g U we Ss 1 -- ' ., -ea sie r,-- W PAUL BYRON REIS --Jam, Z -XDA - ,, -- ':': JZ is tug -,- -E. ,L fi, 2 :1 4' Q L . lejgij, J '..-.gi J' READING, PA. Bachelor of Science Pennsylvania State College QIPAZ, KBCIW, A2111 Schaeffer Anatomical, Morse, Loux, Strecker Societiesg Class President Q1-21 ll AKIEH led the Penn State boys into Jeiferson, and continued as leader during the Hrst two years in the capacity of class president. His training as a long- distance runner was of vast service dur- ing the years at Jeff-in a hurry call from the Mat he could out foot Mr. Mitten's transportationg or get back from a date while others waited for trolley- cars, and those occasions were not infre- quent. His early life in Reading iitted him for the conviviality of the various stag sessions-here or across the foaming Delaware. His amazing capacity to ac- complish many things was a revelation, for his scholastic achievements, social activities, and his work among the less fortunate elements of the city would over- whelm many another. lVithal he was Han .Ever present help in time of need, and .iiigitlie light of the past one can be -ajss?u1'ecL.of-,his-,ability and success. ' s Hospital A Pa. Tamer' '1 IE., F 5 . - ' , , . . 1 T125-'Q-3 Q- , ' AS. ..TQ.', Q rq'1.'. 1,jff ,ffn-' , . A , rizlg' an K 5? ,f5'aa1yE5EyiE-51z..5'jH- .,, ,- ef , - ,ggi V - ' ' .A ' ' 'K , .' of-r,,,. L,-.4-it -,,, xv, . q J .-a.a:,...f,f,, w . uw! 1. ,Q-yn gpg... . .1 -W. ., ..-., . ,JJ 1 '- Z I M., L i ' :mjbzze II-'lL'lZd1'6d sixty-five fl . 5-iii. aj 5 - -' ..f N M 9 ..-32 - 1.-, f A 333 1, fri' Vi! 31 -5512 ' 4' AQ:-f ,Eg s sec 'FQ xi Sf' i ..'-f.- Y- WQZQ . Any: ,,, c ,.,'gx.:,5 N ' FL. 332' ' .r'-xr' - . 1, -L., ., ' 3 1 A' l-,g' 9 ' 1 K - -f - A- ,. 5-'75 3: g-f,-..,,i-g-41--.,'qf9,-,-..-1-4.5: 1' , .W .. .. , ,R xx 1 :SZ r + 'I 4 v ,X 19 ,1 , ' 1' ,. 1 . I - 4 ' - - .L - . 4 ' . H . ' f- ii: ' 9 ,, 5 5:'i'. ' 1 2 5 i - 'T' J- . . ,. ' -f,'1I4 ' ::'553f.'.--5'51 Q if'-15 Q Y- . . 1?--1 ,f 7' f sz Qs-x' ' ' , H I '14-Lg: '- L . js J. tcfiqgzrnx' .. I -Q A bi-Z 5. Y '12 5,115 4 1.1 1:1 x F . - 7 -1 fm:-tg .. gg Q . , U D gg, .I 5 s. :nc -'1- 3 as 1 - - - ' 1 2 .. ci: -1. 4.1 ull 15.1 5 ,IH U 12-1. :-VIAQQEMQ : , if .' . - -A Q if .. iz i' ,T , ' .L . 1 -f ' 32-In . Q 5. 5 .1 .1 s ,gi 4 1 .Leif 51:5-.. .. ' y fn?-Q: ' . 5 2 zfig-5. rl' QQ .3 iff ii 5 ,, V 3, 55755 - 3-5, W -Ji. -Iv-gf 5 -, ,- 14 s X f i f-- ksif- MW A I'5'.'2Iffzvv'-li' EF ' - 1 - I if fs 2122!-1 fs is 1af1L,:f:.- ' ' 2 2 as use eafqfngi- is i I' 1- ? zss- i ,af-----. . -1- presse' 1 HEEL-fe: a,. - ,. lr'??,.':,'. 9 vga- ellis? QI 1- -A :Q V. . . --. . - , ik .l - t xo- 1 , ,. .1 E-5 -wah - -'., A :1,s.'P'- '. . E 2 . - 5: il -1 fl -f 71' f - ' - ,,-.aff-Q-fivii1911 ll '- ia I 1 . riilzfff' H - 5 ,f . Hi ' ' :Jw-iff' s A ihkil W- 1 , .39 - 1 ' . ' 'E 'g ' 'br ' : H ir Y P, I P ,,,-sky, 1 sl-f, 5 1 Hu iQ 3' 2 Www vf uf..-AH. -.-1 f .f f -1 , -1 1 i f HY Q V. . E' . . '-' '.' 1 3 Xlnigi- ', .ty 4 . E 3 I 603 4 .. Y . A ' -w f. s 53- ' r .: M' 4 - 'lffff Q., P , 1. -1 ff' '.. -' ,' J, fl . ,1 . , -', - , ' Ia, 1 1 5 I 4 1 , 'ly?6, qw sl .f 3, 1 4 ggi : J 'ggi 72- 7.- ' -'f u l 61 N Q .ofa-,,, . ci 1, 'ff 1 f5n,.' 5 4 .0 Hg 'Q an 1 'wax ,Z I- 4. gl. .A ig-jzilzlr il, f - 1, ,- y F I vm. J SN xx has 1- 1 1 X af J .2 ' W f V. l p ' ,xi I .f QS, fs' S' ' 'W' 1 Zi? - Fir, ., 1, I ' In -15 . f..'F'?'TffT2'ff-J -v-. ' - - -- ',,. -.2 of f 1 1 va 1 f a f ' f ' ' - imffff f f X M? f f Y i J V f 7 X y f 1 I I F 74 , 1 7 f f I 2 , I I fx Z if 2 1 1 a 7 I 7 f 2 'f fy? I ,mf ' f f f f f X 1' X. ,1 e X f. -a x . 11 1- 11.3 A 12 235 -n V1 if we fig li 1 if . ,912 R.. ,I . li- Quo . .Jw ' 4' ij. , -f'Ef'. . -1:1 ' ','., ' r - ' ' -,ii . N 1 NORMAN CHARLES RINTZ - K 7 l 1 i'Norm fi PH1L1mEi.PI1I,x PA we-fad ' . ' ' ,f,r?.5,S551z'1f. ,E HT -L in s ' -, 7 ' Bmfholnl. of Arts Jia ' ' -' -'- ' ' Lniversity of Peiiiisylvangia 3,-75QfT,,,x - E FREDERICK RAYMOND RILEY CDP 1 .. WEEE- ,, ,.Fred,, Hare, Pattei-soii Societies -Qsgj1..g2g:g'g 7 1.1 N' .FAT-,Q PROVIUENCE, Ii. I. A ,, ,, 3: 1' if QA-,Qi Ph B LTHOUGII Norm' has cdnge to 1is',fi1bmQA,.s- :fi , . ' the halls of a rival sclioolgilreQ.l1zis:1J1fgii6g115 1 11,- ,fi ,' I 1'0V1Cl01lCC College to be a lworthy Jeffersoniinj and ja Q-ggiciilf -Qi. QTQIJ one at tiat. PEE . 3 1, 2 4- Seliaeffer. Thomas, Knowles, Academy W Tilt lfya qllhit 11013 mul fakes Societiesg QSec.J, Senior Class 561191155 ll'1t,f0ul?1-fillftelmgg51919121fiigifgfii- : F stranhl His lllgtfiblgflgeid Size, gnotebuols U .1 5 Egg. is we -inown fd tlieielgfsssi ggi' 52 3 ' INTO each IUIIIIIS life there wanders only His l10Cfll1'112E1.QECQQESHZQ-ifs 1 11 once, a pe1'so11 possessed of virtue em- to niost of his IJQTQ-f1l7Qyg24j3APgf1SiSQgiifl'Q?SQ,il-EQ an bodying a spirit of gentleness, faithful- we belleve 119 :,j'i- j g ness and yet the highest degree of jovial- near the siibiigbsggtlflroilggill lifiicimlgi' ity. Four years ago we are proud to say 116 DIHYS bHSkQUQ2llf-ijQ?'1ff,5't1 .52-5 1.595 we were honored with just such an ac- .I-115 Ql1aractei'2Q1EQffS'DD!U Qll?ls9Q1li?f12lS1?12El5Q jfj. quaiutance. hnn a good filfeiidyaiidgi i la,ll'iXgfe'3visl1 , ' ju iz Character of the highest calibre .Was success in his :Eiit-uifefca -2252555-'i'ji , Qbjfg not the only assetg behind his smiling ww: countenance there lurks an ever-present lgelbgwgg 5355515115 , vigilant sense of judgment developed -to -:ff if 1 3 .jlglggfz-1 If g' .sI'..QLxi R-E-ffgf. such a degree as to enable a coping with ' 5 life's inost delicate and intricate prob- fs? llilfiif leins. He is undoubtedly one of natures 1 I E1 2. !.:5-QIQSLE chosen few who go through life enjoying ' f: . its most delicious fruit with the least j fgg,g: S::A possible bit of exertion. lVlith a disposi- 1.1: 5 ggi if wig .aft I tion ever calm Fred is known to all of us 3 jif' i fist ' 5,5 y 5' g Q - l - f ll ' tl UH t '- -b'l't' - -. -E535 il--' iff Q ' . as a iegu ai e on in 1 gica c.1p.1 1 1 ies L.. A ,. ,xg v .1 ,ijgllw ,I r il E .Syd and rare qualities of friendship. lVe :11'e-,L-f,-11 f -Ag'-f,1,Q55g5' 9 -A X Hglllfgg ' 'I' sure he will be held in high esteein-?l,1y'x1g 1 xgggf-i1E9f3:M5.!-'J' q his associates of the future asfhe -isq-1-ljy,.-'-Eg . N , ffifsi 'Qfg ' -. - 5 us, his associates of, tile.-liastif .Z-73? - gf: fqffjlgi Y.. ' TV,-.-..'. 'SEQ , 1 5 -if ' f 1 1-111-:fwf:.1. k.',s'2bf. '. .f-1 A -' '. .- ' .1 rw . Rhode 'Slend.f-HQSb'1fal'- 1- . 'X 1 pw P E? I X-e ' ---ff'-.1f.L'12 -'i.C'filFlf'F 1. 345237-,'L1i '-I 1' 5 ' 'fa 132 '7 ' In ' i 9 lf' , .I lag. - :. 1 4 pf1LN4ir5g'+'q5aTJe3+wg1qg?Qf'.qfyf-5 5-Q!,ll:?5fiL , - F . tr , 1!., --p -23 1 V wrf'f:'3:ygTS-ZTQULQL g',:' if 'E six-ea-15 Q 1 3'-Q - 5' UR, A .1 if-12-I2TiiJ4fiff35!F'i'.?i'Q4a??1'5i5-..... ,fm-M y .i F ji'-7 '.,ff't1: -fl: A -- .. .1 -:f fa --.::e5.fEs'fe'iE +,-1-1.-.1 -fir 1 ' - 1- . 1' ' 1:ffewaE5f'7g-- -zewf. ri1S.aZ5',1'lw'5?7lM,g' ' iii One hundred sixty-sw -'T2,q,1E,5,:-1-:,A.,,,.e:mg545,,.H.k.,l,5Ej,,g '- ' 1 ' . . H.. fy.,-. .ri 5 'Q -Q ,A Pasteur, Knowles Societies +'5:i'f' L3 5 5 - ,gn .1 L ' fl 'if I ' ll .Hag its J 5 1 A is V1 ef? if Rf' t 'Im ' sig: E' fl was il, wi 3 if :Q- :- -,P .2 L . P 1 LAWRENCE EDWIN SCH USTER E' ,fl Q1-1ggi,',,p'c'fdgXvzrs the name given this debonair Larry ji, Eyciuiijg of Aesculapius upon his XVHITE PLAINS, N. Y' ffigiln-tifecliictiorrq to the class for even the Bachelor of Arty 'iwel.l5t1'uii1ed5gllossnl muscles of our dis- ' ' , . If 'Q L fjiigjfessors were' taxed upon Coigpeilvlggsgeiisity ' ' '1 ' gieginjng to hispunanie. -Q, V ff?-.E35 fU'p0DSReviewing gr setl of bines Roc'i Morse, Moon, Bland Societies 'Z j fsetferftglqjuiijggto :wo.rkf? s,n rea y stoppec 3114154 xylfehe lli3EvQf?KI'ilT1ElvSt,Q1'6d the subject, L , . E 'fi f ..:1a5f:VgS bl1ffSz2 f ' 30113isieats2'fonTE:v9L1m6'. A- .fieuf 1511 aye ' 2 W . 1 . in 5ekUgfgfgiilQi71SXfiQC5iig9ientiousness, per- Nvell over on the right side. Alwaysythe .I t -1.,i'j3ggeveE?1i1Q6QH1g1d gijgfggigygtgwhicll allhthose gentl-einan, but evei ready to say what T' ,QA-gm1i16cliz1?P'3E55iC431f1iELQGi6Cl553513531 him will at' QQ ltgmksl ISV WF WHEEHQI real ,fueng I1 '- :tliff fiicflf ,5i'hC'di-blifiis correct reci- 0 9 you :no W ien y L 'e' vvron ', any what's more-when you're right, hbere is pf It 'e lifyfzef jftqnifa present basis the one you should Know. . ' .ggi 1. Q- -335' 'g5Qb5gff1feS5tggQ5W,45gpyjqfgdift the stars and This man dilters trorn the majority of A. 2231150-h7ZHQ51iQg3igQ us in that he has interests other than -fjjlf Hal Medicine and the fan' ones-and let no Q3e5'.?r'? one be deceived, the latter frequently re- ,,, -3. gf quire his lighter and weaker moments. ij- .jgflf F Eg'?:f If the discussion centers on hunting, the ' woods and streams, the better boolgs, n Cornell, or 'Westchester County, y0u'll Lf, find this young man in the midst of the ! f?- ' M151 fray and invariably on top. Q31 Q I9 With all this ns a background and 21 ig ' L7 f sincere interest in Medicine and all that 451151,-'zfffg- ggi ' L33-,IQHH .lf5,g,RL55.,1if:. I 5.1, 1-evolves about- it, one nnds it hard to 'I ag? is 53351 ,- 4:-32i':'.'3Ql'1l,.5Q5i1alize qnytlnng butler ffiitureawell-filled AEEEAS 3 i ff- i., eYgi9'.l i,-..-,.53,..,i.yy5t-lr,the, Joy 0 woiz an .ii in, Q I ' ' 96 Ilf3ffi5 tariffs 1'14-1'Qin- .-pfAA2-:fMie+hpd,2s1 H0SP'+a s 33.5, Till-gig ' -11:5 ,ff5Lg?i?'f3:r:g3,'g,'g, 31211.--1A.: T 5-lid' h- pa, .. fi J' 1 '4 H 'i.:' ff. S1 ,- Q -1 ,i-1': 'ff wa Q Ev., :'3:5i1Vff7-Zh?-5 mr. 4 555 .-Q?.'fi :'. if -E'-'.'j1 . - X 'ffl 1 .:-.gif A - '- -- -I ' J . u M f ff ' I :rf 5' '2 ' ip-:Z ' ' ' 1 S ' ,- -sg- ' -IQT: gk.: ' . -I ' ,Yf,,Q-. 'A'gLjr,gi,-g--P' ' 'Zi-lf' 'f.'if..A-One lmmllrecl sixty-seven .qs . . . rr ' ' .-285 , ., E .ini '. . 1' ' ' IP E E754 2 '- e ,mv g J: -2-'-fl: Q rl Z Silk' '-: F1 M -' 'zn- V 'E E 5 I 1.7-i: 1 ' F '1 5: e 2 ' u A U 'Z .4 J fs, ,... ., , ,,, 4 2 Q W H- 2 O Vg:-,' W . V. ,Z ff E - 555 ' E' gif, ,,,.,. Q 21 1 l f T11 hjfljx .. -' Alf!-1. A51 -- . .. .-. - 'W an 1 '-L' H'-' '.,- 5-. , . f .A ff iiiigf f 'k iff' ' 'J ! ' l ' '-'- W-Af'-4 - 1' 5 ' 1 1 'fl L '-.J 5 1-. ' ' ., 4 -. ,Sw I' LHP l w J ' I-, -,Y f Al,-.4f.:'1z. fi-945.5 YAZIJFAXQI 5 Jig 333 ' N 'I '- A 7 'W4'47WfWj '4' , -on 501, 53,9 lj-'fl ': .1 il' 553' .P 5, ,QE I W' Hifi 42' - JI- . 15 -Tift W vs? 21 , A 'X A A , ,A , ,,.,, XIX , f 4 f ff .Q -4 J .39 51,9 , mf f ,jr , HS , .uf xg. 4 t. -A lima' 'z, -:lil 5? ij? . ,ix , tl 4297 ii , ti. 15 Q.. 'lf ' 'E' SPURGEON THEODORE sl-we 1' Shuey,' SPRING GROVE, PA. 6.5 :wg-TMGQIQMI 'I G Mm34h,i0hLl:..' Bgvgmfgg Susquehugnlzg University . y F - - U-.N-L...1fif,.,,L,--,y 5:.-figs, - XI, ii.-5 Morse, Moon fT1'e:1s.J, Bla11gl2So'QfietieS5Q:I,,u JACK SHAPIRO H Jake Laskyn E CAME from Spring Grove. Ybtifglgmijl 5' PIIIIZADELPTIIA, PA. gifs: xgfhe1'e5t lis, 510iE11'iYffd9iXF'?f if 5:71 A A , I 1 'iii rom 16 'e Jus re ggszune. gi :few-s'fx Q5 3 5,51 , , B'1Fhe101 of A1155 l big-hearted, big-natured, goodlloqkiiiggg-f i? T11-l1Wf'1'S1t.Y Of Pem1Sy1v2111111 thut's Shuey. Possessedi-of ai bezgn1.i1ig'l x.- ff, personzility, sunshine is Wim-Q he? is. .P ,J WHO is that neatly clad quiet man Sqrpuslng the rich Elfcnehquse. 9? sitting in the clinic drinking in every- lalsdgmllhe, hfls 1. T thing? That is Joe, Joe who says with fdgatgcii Egllfgipd 9?'.f' Burns, Nas: man can tether time or Hut ll did :it dggikfy-geriiS1Q9f?5Sigfeag-L . . tide. And so he busily Works, dreznning dui-i yeh. 12911 Q -?92Egl?1?f ff? of the clay when he can hung out his F95 1ShS0I2.1f1:w-,lglfeiggi I little strip of roofing and begin to prac- reqpigllgencg 'Tir tice the nob art. H Q T4 Q, .2-JE - - 1 -s? His favorite hobby is the cinema. gbncfusxgflat E165 V' VV'henever 21 production manager is re- .te CEI dell -Ugeilfggilgif ails, 11llS'15j?5::,f '51 aj quired to carry the restless class through ge GS ,fmlf .oiqnfzi Clfglfgi GF, Exif a maze of scrambled slides with an ini- 'I emme' Qkj Q,-FQ 3 perfect lantern, Joe is the man of the ,:g,f9fe'iZ195Pi'fs?.j-gy' F 315251-.1515 hour. Through this ability in giving ' QYQIH , jf lantern demonstrations he was honored , gf, 1 5 5 13 with the fair name of Lasky for the past ' ff? -ff:-j, , i ggi! two years. V - E E-'gfilff 5- i -31 3 S+. Agnes Hospital ' --N: - Lt?-is I- 4 ' ! ' 'z f' if ' .'vlfiQI?a-1jf5il,f.- Q .I Z 4.3! gf?fs':5 'Q 0 f i Um ' ivswigi lifgifaii. Q . -:wikis 3 9433 -1:i.1'51i 1 vf 1 ,.,-.ips ', ' 'uf '7' 5 1- 1 38'---.1 ' : U ' I I, -r :win r A L:.5':,5.,3,- -e gg. 'f -1g,.1- ,-lf ' ,, , - - 5 ,-:,'- .. :'3.'4,w51fSf3i.':g,wFd. -- -gygiti'.?a-f1fi.:ig.-...L .' .gf i 1: 'fig Ll -45'-.3:C2?iLix'T'aif'l- 3 .iiif-',il5ff g.51 Yizfg 52 '- if if -.'ip11s:.q'1f'-QW PE1 si :js H-.fi 2 7' 'i-i '..-.ii j,-.51 JIQQHQ-52' rixgggf'f.f4',: 1 rj ff 5 'f :L-gi i 215' if r 1 -'1 Q! . . ':r ff'.-1:33 -,.,,,1 1 7 L T'-g 5- -- ' - se, P . ' jf -' -f -TEX iff? - 'l1?1'i':,J',J'-15i '.ff,1ff:-.r:-lf-- 'Tj 4' ' -M-5 'iw ,Eli ei: r One lzmzdrecl siwty-cig7zt f' .T..:,j-,Jr-,'-.:--,i ' ' L - . I. .ll ,Y .- 5 A' si it 1? .- was X -.W . I., 1--, J., H' 1 33 im. .QQ Zi 's 0. 11 .,- :gl Q 11.1 W, HE. -,-Y. S -'74, PAUL ANTHONY SICA Tony DNIONIOWN PA I..- S ax S -my NE X QA ug . 1, A . SN iii N . Q sd, w -.5 fs If . -,e 1342 s 1 .-. 1? .I ,A.. ,eg ..L 1 nf B1che1o1 of Sc1e11ce ,, , i L 5, Pen11sj,1v'1n1.1 Stflte College ' L ,.,,, AXP GIXXI' KB-211 2239? Assocmte Ed1to1, THE CLINIC if Blend CT1easJ Morse fT1eas J , Moon, is 3 w 'fc. A' i .Hale Socfietiles, R1be111s blub ix EARLY a.Vocat1on was that of mus1c, :and out ot that m-1e1st1o111 ot fox t1OtS and Wfiltaes was bo1n the desue to 131115118 the vocatmn of mechcme The routine of hand 110111 and many c-lasses was tp 111m gust 21HOt1lQ1 one ight: fsay, 1n1n01 obstacle to SLIIDJOIIINZ efme atta.1n111g 111s goal 'Wo1k to 111113 is hke a mqouhght in ht to -1 poet, It -fbnulgs out has potentl quf1l1t1es uluch io say the 1e'asl:a11eve1v D1 useu 0112115 ,F These notes might WeT1 not be Complete nf me11t1o11-were not made 01 tl11s 111111 s most cl1a1'm1ng pe1gso11h11tv 111 IS mo1e than well endowed. mth lt a f-1ct that will eontrzbgte g eaitly to 111s '1dv111t-Ige 111 the p1aC1:rce 0 If1Ed1Ci11Q S Francis Hospafal -n-sn- N -a ,..-.1 ,fu f'i'Yf CHARLES HENRY SIKES Chmlw G11EENs1:oRo, N C B-1che1o1 of SCIQIICC Un1ve1s1ty of bo1tl1 CdI.011I1r1 GIQXI' IIa1e fTI63SJ Bland, Moon Soc1et1es UARLLE comes to us at the beg1n111nt, of the Jun1o1 ye-11 and 15 .1 t5 p1c.11 e'i.1111p1e of Clhe B1g M111 hom the South Ile 1S tall and bemg 21 b1g man has 1lWf15S done thmgs 1n .1 blg wav IIXVAVS .1 most chhgent seeke1 of knowledge 1e1y con sclentlous about 111s wolk and IS qu1te 111 1ccomp11s11ed student, 0111-1b1e of ansu 61 mg the most chfhcult questmns IIoweve1, S1kes has powe1 OV81 ot11e1 thmgs than knowledge F01 example- he IS qlllte capable 111th the fan sex So much IS thls t1ue that such 1-1d1c11 t111e1tened so is to 'lttlact 1115. attentlon He makes up the otl1e1 hfllf of the H1111 of Ball and S1k6S By lJ1s hkelble m11111e1 he has acquued n11n3 fl1611dS Ind ue p1ed1ct success fO1 111111 111 uh-1teve1 b1111c11 of medlclne 11e mm' choosc Lankenau HOSPl+6I Philadelphia Pa -1-iff' 'ia 4. 1 11- Lf' y ev, va -Y 41 -1 13 S.J+fo.Ll r Ei' 1 r 1 x .,, L. NHL 5 23.5 an 1- we W9 151112253 X Alf 4 Q 'LP' A V: JK 'RPNJISN I ago -Lp X One 111117111611 szzfy nzne 't 2 , iz! Ei-2' fer A Qc? 1 .23-3 -ff ' 1, F. Q1- 5l'f P ix'-fi .-- th --g,.. ,. .1 .1 . - Ai-.13 75 i -Ysifxij-1-74-2:-gras Y----:A-44 . :. - -- 4' 23. ' .1 235 'L ' , Q7 11 H 7:1 - 1 V. A -'S f Z I ' ' 51' . , . , A , , ' 'QT' - VA g N .TA G-1.1. .1 V -A ' .31-,: .. I -I . +P- - Y: sj.,2 1 2, . . ' 123+ ' 1-.fit gf- , f 'F 1 PL- ' ' 1 1931 S -3: qi, A g . , . . . , A 111,15 Q, : , . cg Q ' - A , A - '-1 ' A f??f'3 ,Qi if 2 V ,F fi 1 1 , 1 , ' :EZ-ff, 21 -2 '-iwfi , ' ' -fi -L ,ZA , 1 . . ' Y ' - ' ' ' L3f: ' eg 1 S f ' . -' ' 1' A5113 in , li ' ' ' . 5 1 ' ' -' ' '-v-.1 .: .-Q' . jQ:g,.A'A'- 3 s A-5 sc ' 1' A ., . .. - ' . 1 2 ' -' ' -- -fzgf . .1-H - -gr:---F, . C U - -11'- --1:35.--.5'. . f . ' ' ' '-- - in gi ' ' 1 - 'f -1 Y '-1 . HX.. gggglwh Til- .4 -,-.::.. I E Y .- - C . . , 7 . I ' ' . C Y Qi - 1 9512? ' -N , . Y . ' - i '- ' .EEN-'f' 1- Q , Z - - -s . - - i gg.:-' me A f'x 5,1 f 'H - . 'I - '1'11I1,23g 4 5-2-kd. -E55 as ,sf 3: 1- V x . K i 5 ' 3 C Y '- ggi -11. ,Q . QQ. 31 ,.--gy.: f ' ' 'V ' A, ' ii -- 21315 -111V-L: I 53-T----Z-rf sf-: e'- L A ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' ,- ':A -.I .- 11- . ,Es f Liiifz :'.fEA ',f : '-'g' 1' - A f' -'2- -t --wifes., . - f :L- H 1 if-:-vi? I s iff .-- if 1. 2'-5 ifx ' ' Y' ' ' ' AA' I 1 Q 1'J::,' e-12:5 Izrsf 3' F. - ' '2 4.35 A A A ' ' 5 , 5 1 iff-.-s11s,1 1. . 3, A ,. :FE - - - -A -2 if if 52' - . .az sj 3 2.'i'2:f,11'r:g V - - - 5531, -4- 1. 1 4 P1'USbLITgh.51,F5gAA.-21.A means as tilklllg b1cl11or1de have been - 5-55f12f2f'.5-i1?- - 1 . L -- - '- - .' . ' 'if? ?1 I-'z-'Y' 7 fi 2 .. . - wi--.4 -, 5 a -ai! sfff. fi . f 1 13:1-1.11319 ss 1 rlf!:.eea1i?sP.,'2,-asme . - 1 ' 'A ' - .- 5 SH-5.15.2 'I 'fir .. i ' 2 f :ia 3 24? 'Rig rfig '. . 1 - ' -- - ' ' 1 . - ,ar-.111 E - , . ...E I N . 4 I: 1 :- his rig: Az: , ik . . A. I A 1. .1 s 5. - . . 15- -1 fri 1-1. - gif ' ,1 -A ' '51-Al ,sq 1. A 1: ' f2a3...,,f- -, -x , - -,ex-'W - .113 ft 5 if-'Ewa A .' A 1,44 A 1 fu ,A 133.-. x:9'I ,A 2'--W A 5 5243 -'E -s - 1 1- if '5' wh 1 P 5 f 'I':-1-i2'1 ' ' ' -13-' . -- . - ' 15, . 'v' .v --,Wi W-H. , I ' Q-EA: 3 I. 'N if F 1 . ' ffm-2.2.2-.h,,-I-.1--. F , -, WX 1-:ffl 1 .1 - - A 'l-Q:-.-.11 f- 1- gi, -4- .-fq?i,iQf,15 ': . A 1. 4.1. -1 A fr- ': - -, -. ,A AA ff: ,I .- 1- '.A. .A 5 if - J: 15 2153?-g?.gv-, . 5 -,fg:s,g92'f, 1'-,::a, .Ya 1, -. 1- 1 . 1 use 3' . .11 .. .. . ' 'E -. - 1+ -.iii 'fl - 1 3 55,.1.ssf-As - ' ' . I -E-13' . -5 , ' ' ' 4 ' 'zg hfif-.-?'i?ii.f-3?P:Lf-iz-E?,f:i?- E . I 1 4. 1 .1 . ref .,, . .c . .A , . . 1 A ., .A ,x ,, . . c . ., r .. A .,,, . , i'.ef.,..,'-.1,+4,,z.-.,.1 ggx -,, A 1 ,Y 15, 1 V -5, f Q 5-.55A5L --Q 1. , .K-i 5.111fggfz.-g'r+z-T1.1 -,.Ax' - 'rl 4- 1- 'V-12 S-L' - .rf ' -. 5. ' 9 : 1. Mau A 1A'J-'-I-A-'rfif-'Q'-Liv--Lu'-. f , - , vi 1 - 5-T-'-'J 1 'f ':-.- -2- '--'tag'-fl-ff.,,-.f. -vi-3 fl -- 5-. 1 - -' 'f' if- .wiv 1-. - 1.1. -5-111 MAA I ,,.. , A I A 1, .M A-P ,H 1 Hb. A., 1 W-,Y Am ,, .-A-sq -L . .gf A 1, Vg, p ,V I V-.-.-'44 X: - nfs- 13-'. ,z'--11 - 1 ffff I 1 -Jr! .. - . .-5'f52:132'fw.'f5.-1-1:--.:-- -' - ' - .W V 1 1 -l'ff:.ni...-,ln'fiffsir-?ff':3 ?.5L1....,pg,,j-'L'iLjei:f,j.2 .' ' f' ' . .1 ' ji --1.1--w-fm -'.I:,:T+:. f . --.:.-L 70:13, ' X A 5 .,. .l 5 ,, X s s s Ti le . gi! 1 I1 Q 234. -'C tint. dffzfl gf .112 1' 2 .t '-,, ': 'P . If? 'I ' -i A . ' 21' ' Pk :rival . 'f': ': -12:33 , F is 3 Hi' v w' '. . ,gg ' bg. .. Qin ' 'afl w- , V , 'aa f- 2-.5 -,iff-fcf w 'ter-'fam-:'! ' JL ,g.11:::.f'pt1s ---M f -' 1-'-. 1 ' -- 73 ROLLIN H. SMITH .1 . , Q -3 r- Hawkshaw f 11:2 Uizicu, MISSOURI E-K . - A ,,. 4. ,- ,. ,- - . 'if' K ,. A.B. Bachelor of science ff'-f!':ff,S5g'g-5-viii : -,ef :gn g j g ,i 1 l f1jgg3g5wj 3 lTni,versity of Missouri N,,.M A ' ' AKK DONALD CRAWFORD SMITH 2 Patterson Bland Keen S0.Cietie5 ?7'gggg:,-f.m .. 1 , sf .uv H 1 .3 1 -FLC? ,, ,Stump '- lcaball if .-5,.,-53.2 ' . v 991, ' IXINGSTON' 1Af SMITTY is one of our fiiiqst-Q-rdillgejfilg if '32- Iiaclmelor g H8135 workers. As his biographer-fitghs 1- Q-ig 4 In WFS 0 ee cult task to set down i11 sogsma a sf19aElQfE-'55 ' KIDKXJI, NEN, AQA his many admirable qualities. 2 j Bauer fPres.D 1 Bland, Hare, Keen F1'0IH MISSOUY1 129 0211115310-J9l?9f'SQEgi-Effl? - j g Societies complete hls medyical ec ucatioii., - summer at the lyhaggon itreeti -:U sary he showed riinseu to .Q angog 549324 .-if Q ,511- CRASH ll No, it's not an earthquake, cian of no ineaif abiliigyjf, Vlitlt hrs exkbgg. - I' it's only Stump, He has Just made the 1-ieuce in that.'1i1igi5xygg..5findil1i111 h A: first landing inl three hops and a slug. or ready and alike. iQQ1j3?Ll5,t.1lfgtiplassgngateg lil : a rg is seen noncha antly wa king away rom with their 0LltSiClQfCi1S'GS:5i ii Q. 12 5.-' Q an overturned iodine bottle or a gasping He also aclifaigiizefllitiuilof Eiipalqisgfilyffjh-ie- A Drinker respirator which he has so nimbly research, lending to . accosted with his delicate touch. Aside partment in Etsiyioizkigilttl1'eg,ktsfililgeng1g-5,- .Q from these attributes, he's the only man Zondek test, that we know who can 'occupy so llttle or Kansas ggehbtsl tip-gf:-Q , .f- so much space and still comfortable. Kaagag ag? !g,gf.5.5gggg-, lVe often wonder how '..tump can so orgy. -if -:QQ 'tgf , 11'-5QE'Z ,F easily forget where his pipe, noteslor D 'fl ,gjilfl .sig classes are and yet have such a remarca- ii,-gg gf sp-EL55.,iQf'Q',Q 5 i 1 j' 1.2522 ble memory for nifeclical facts and some lj gigf ,j-inj-j, ij .IT of those stories about good old Amherst. Egilgjsg 2 fy g5gfi.Q5.i He got off to Aa marvelous start in his ' Freshman year and kept up the pace b A 3 A't-55,3 remarkably well, making a name .for him- j 'lil gui, A self in new fields every clayg lns latest 'ill .5 531, H: 1' y 145' g attainment being unanimously elected .:..A3f..ff,'tJj3gm' '57 QI i XVO1-thy Grand Teaball of the newly4.,,-Q, ?3:.:f:j,4,g1 gA. .,QQI,Ef 113 --2'?!51,il1!gff formed Barge-tea Club, He's a good? , lm ,ani '-F27 glfiiti student, socially inclined, hyrtiiot, a,liQ1if'51,-'-gjg - -iF,.'sQJf. -n 'i L-X ' - 1 Couemly JOM meatgeut14Qm.fwaf.r's-sf v Y- t -1 i tif 121' JeFFersoif,HjoV6R.iial1i K 3 'Qi -. . .- tra.-r .. v-:x,...-A4,..A- J.-,L J -f'5'?'1'l .' 4-PW.: . 1 Ji- fe... gy 1 QQ- ,: .-.5 tif -L-' '- :si ,1g.gi r2'5-Lilglfslfby-SZ' : ' , x5iri3:,i-31,5 fi if 5 12? 'T fl --44 '11-Y F-: :1.wW1?0'5'i'w ' - 4F'3XEf:25f- - 1 .. A '- .. - ,-. .- ,.x..,v. -x-me---.1 . , ,gin 0,41-,, .. . . f., yt ,, . ,. .. ..f'a4i:'Lf'L'.'r,!'f'g:,4g'f x as - -1 .P:': !' . ' f, ' .- ff' -' - -. . ' :' -. v fsffggfjjlgfg -if - . 1-If, f ai, .,f.3 at it X .i?1E:3W?5'i3f'L7l'f5'f'Eif?for-1:-frvf?ff 3.'Jf.' 21425 3 '- A 'l51 f1.'i-'1?l2 f ...Ep J-3.iTF-Ega-pi.-F5115Exif, i54,,3L:T,,.,. ,-,.-:. : Alf it H to ,gag ra One lmmdo-eel seventil- ' 3 157' :arf-g:f1z,1-'.-pg '1 4, - - V. .i,'..'Y.- r X. . .. 1 2 f efitsiz- - . SN Ne Xt Q : 4. 2. 5-f if 4 Mi-r H,,?ge.S5 H s 44 y YY ID. Wf- .36 X.. x sf' R: I ax fc- JACK FLEMMING SMYTH 4' 'Jaicld Lrows, O1-uo Bachelor of Arts B-ittle Creek College .1 C X bocieties' Freslnnfin Cl-iss a1e,L,,-ileegei' - -. , if Historian 3515 GMA-iigjztciiPhiladelphia a true Jehier- 11'ian,2x1otQ5Q'lely because of his interest 2 1iJegdicine,F-but as fi result of expert iidaiicie by his father, fl loyal alumnus. 1612 brbuglit with the background of th- the Nortligrndg l5liex,South and with it QSM? fi1iflsl.Qr1hCi11ereQ1-lf'i'- Those bfgtisj-giililifliaye .lgnoxvn him best i6if0l3llCliI1fi1HD?i'6hZEl:'QTfl1II1BSS and jovial- yfxizheiiiftihie iib2:e:isiiQii'jb'e.s1Joke them and 6 r l af il' ff '4 3- this in . 1 , , 0 gseigigillshitilfield-.fnei2essa1'y. His asso- ltriiiisf with tlreijitajlrgsezgfliave led to the l321l5llSl1lTQT1fCf1lt-igfimah-W 'fifflldsi but DOUG, gi liiiejiflltgig aniaecornplishni-eiit achiex ed l1ifig'g,51j,ceessg Qwliether he casts Silbt ygfifgjtligefjkiflitary Miedicos or the A T, 11, , -,nu .fl -. . N Q fiwfz, . six 3 tsggsssdg, .sk Nx NYXR X - .. . R , A .V N z, 4 :N x N XX XY gg ., N ss ss P 2 X asf V-it ,X -1 ' L 3S G ., . 'ff 5.- ,. B: Va: 5. . Q, .11 - v . .5 , 3 HV 1- 'i -in ' ' ., .4, .3-..-., .- ., W. vhvp. 5. 1 1 . P: , .5 . . Y , I 'sv 1, e:.-- r . --,:-,..,,,,:.- -,ff-lg n il , - - -n fs V, ,- V. V . .,,,..,. ff- BIFH-ff-21?-2 --ff Tig.,-11 I'?'i l'3f iJffE?-4 .h F? ' 1 . . 3'-li' rf 'lffl--P 9 - H-4.TJ,,v , :Za-5-5 :rig-r-, '.H .. ,.. ,. ,I , --.. SJ? dk. -,GX Q-- VAUGHAN LeROY SPRENKEL ALLENTOYVN, PA. Bachelor of Science Muhlenberg College AQ, AKK, AGA Keen, Strecker, Loux, Hare, Ptolemy Societies CHARACTER of contrasts. Serious, sober and at times even verging on the solemn. On the other hand has he ever bounded into your room on the stroke of ten o'cl0ck for nine successive months seeking relaxa- tion from the books? Has he ever needled you in a crowd with an attitude of inno- cent int'e'rest'? Has he ever made a mu- seum of your room and its belongings each labeled with a more or less appro- priate title? - His ingenuity, his versatility and his ambition make a rare combination. Have you appreciated them. Not every one so successfully evaded the lead pipe squad, or had time to play the flute or the piano at all hours of the day or night, to run his club, to travel Nor' by East so fre- quently, to write so manv letters. to make the grades. And lastly to bull so fluently. A Allentown Hospital U' ' ' :.'All-9l:l-tOWf1, Pa. P fi 5' .an 1-Lg' ff ig I . -g 1: i' lu.,'.'5i if-'-s ..':': ' 'Q .gif f w 1i'f!'QI1i'fa',' ' , 3 Vg g .1 - S T .I L Q- M2715 ., I. .. ,ad I A ga . ' -. 3, .' 5 , ' '. ' . '. 1: v J ' - ' ' ' f ' - wwf- 'N f- 1 2 5 K L .W y. rx M ki , . f..f'I,,'l.1e . 9 - Qizffi- . if- r.+ff, -2:'5.51fv.,- L ia' 'll ' api!-f ' Tv:- ig ' gl' ,i 5,12 e e ' 5 SET.-E f Q5 If :IPX v its 5333 3.15 I ' 2:12 if 422,-1 l 1-ii, ff fifil - 'ff.f. N 4:-rt, 2. Y ggi? . ATI 7l Q':T19' 1:--- r- - 'Q ' --- '- - 't,'- 'I Lf'YT1 'f'1u?:'?.f, it slrlfhff' 9 I-E. i3'53EEi'.l5i?L 1' 4 'i 1 4 , .. , t , i IJ . ,,, -H .,.. I. N '-1,'.:7 '5 ff' - .fwfr 25 X 5 . . ,.'5,1'57, ff '1 2.-31, .. 32'-25 -' '-- 'PEEQL . - N 1.. Ai-31121 1 ., rig-gait. - - , 4 - -A -use -- 5--ge., -, nr A is-.75 . V ' -' e 4 X -- --g.. A ,fi .,. -. N E y L C , ,f-fn , jg. if ' 1' , , fi?-za -- .Y -- 1- 9. . is .- f.5 CP 0 ,L-I' .. '. 5395 -A 'f 1 2 l i 2 213371.12 . ' - - -DY H - --affix'-.i Q -fir.-rf,--5 . . - 2 '71 sr T iflge z l:i,,,n I:..,,'-h, '-5:3 . I U. , K -.ii . H: 24. 5-Q I , 1 . , .t,,.,,1,lAAv :,.,. ge'-,Lg .f r ' :if 1. S- vis In ' yn-ss s r l - r 1 lf i 22 ls' ti ft -1- -' 1 . WP- 3 2 - H' QQ 4 V g ij T.. .fl 1 1+ 1' li., rg N , iii! 1 -1 'A L lf, . -4 Y r ' . f ' 1 I I N' , I, 5 hr I . .g . , I ., e 1 it , l , -13, 3 l , , 1 'I eV! , . 1 yu is .. Q -, -ll. i no 5 ,l ls., f I 1 1 I 4 'p' s 2 if.- 'K fi '1 l ' 1 -l' 9 - N41 .gn 17 -. c '1 - 9' 4 , ru, emi ,X 4- ' L of . . ri' 1, I' ', ,' J 'nw-P ' ' ..- Q ., , v. N, , 3 . 1, f , it . . ,gl - gs- ,- . ev . , I Q E 3 , uf' . it - Q ' K' gjjfjg-'ff' 3.1 I ll Q l Q 'Z 8 , ' Y H fl- yY'xl 5 ' .. - 1 I - 5 N t 4 gin.-.-. ' ,. 'I -ga-j ' V- 4 1 tiff ' ' -x I 4' 1 4 5 -'Si -1 1 ' 'H q s J y ' h .- p . K . N ,. ' . .. ' ., . I: .-Ii.,-Q--el'j.:..:.:fl1,,-1.31..:.:,':1 i 'Y-011-6 hundq-ed seoenty-one 16 A iw A.. C W l f 1 fi 4 x v Q 4 2 My li , f f I W f -2 A EY . V E1 'a Hi Li L? .-2 1 5' wg n 3,512 fa, 1 ff? 11-4-2- ',, iii? 1. 1 :T Q I b' Q -if . f 1. Tiff' 'Hx V wgMmgE6??iLW?E4??WW , . L R.. .- .ki f DONALD DUDL,EY STONER ,,-:?L'.:-.J ,5'.3:,?4: h'.,.,,,':A. . ,Q H ,- ' Vg' : 1 . Q, ,F 3. 'A ,A , 1 -g jp.. ,jg .1 -g,f?.,:.-f.agff.g94e'.,45'uQgf3,1.,,. ,'.44.Q,,77-.5- - , L z.. y. ,. 2: ' ' 'vJ'..1',' ' .,-f4j',w.'...'.-S'f .. wtf! .ffiw ' ' ' , ..-1.2 - ...ia-arQqf'5,.. 4f'zf, Wig, ' , ' I Mg n tx MDOHH .. GLENVILLE, PA. J,e,a,7353h7 g A-,A .Mi A, - QM 4,3 ,., rf' University of Alberta. Alberta, Canada A' 5'iL7 .'fFM' ,. 23-'.'e'f7 -'V23315-.S.-f?t::'9.1i'EfflTi' ' ' 1IJAZ,KBf15 -figfiftm Schaeffer QPres.Jg Streckenj-?f.offii ik'fifQfg3:2f,5 SAUL STEINBERG societies t Sol -Ste'iny PHrLAnELr11rn, PA. QUIETLY he has passedfl Eljnoiiglifjtljei 235 :iff Bachelor of Science travails of the .years hereg Pennsylvania State College qulqtly. D1SCI'1U11l1at91Y has he j1TQn12i?21Q5f .Q , 5. ,gg lV1ne, Women, and Songffewithisgturiieszf, Q. 4- BZP KIJAE ASZA . . . -. ,. ,, , . ' ' . . His restraint in the Hrst and lastgofitlrgsr- i 1' Yesalius, Bland Societies tgumyyimte was 5,gg??1t1yg,,.appi.Qci45:5eiS,gly'1f' on has becomffqgiiite-Well.izicqdaii1t'e ' .. .x 3 9 ,- ll . 1',2U..5.,f-Qfa-f f 7,5 .11- Sorf' attained great prominence in the plfll 5uburgaI23f?4afnfr Flighlgapuwulg second year by means of the remarkable 'elzllnlni 3 4151593 ' e oratory used on the daily late arrival -of 11211115 0' E FQQIQE Katz at class, in an energetic yet fruit- W gn' al- alsllls-Qggfnlamlfeffgiit Eeivflflqgf Klaiggfki 1 , ,, - , . . perils of Jefferson 1andf.Ph1lad,elplua. ,ther , .g ' L, ess effort to correct this Ltteness. .After H d -1 t ian?-ff,-lmrithf V- 4- the arrival of Katz, about fifteen mlnutes want 91515 Q-'F 63512 'in g were spent in work following which Sol'l X? es ends' bln .FH .Paifsfqggi would collect the boys and start betting Ufsiran Wifi - .' on football, baseball, or what have you. Tfnb one ' Iofignlidv H222 'AS01 then led the group to Dormaus' tor glfimola 315235 Q ,-ijFj'.?3i553 codee and a few chances. Hen S up' fi: V251 3 f One never sees Sol bored or sleepy. Rob-LVQBQ QQreeg1gMempfr3aIjQQ-foppjftglfi'Q A party, dance or date the night before eS5.hgiAi,tqEi5i3g'lfgg3g5f'?Q.-1.2 -5 2 never phases this wavy-haired boy, but Efgfizfgiggf only seems to accentuate his ready smile' 1 Twig-iii r 5-iii'-f and augment the daily quota of wise I Q I In Saul s time here he has attalned the qi, I1 1 gig 5 fgggfi ali? rgl. 3 ' Jag: acme of popularity. He is a real pal and Q,g,3iT-tilt ,ii Y - E : 2: his many attributes have won for him a 4,e.QT ' D QgiiQ-fyg, ' ni host of friends. .A ,nq,z:.5:5Qi AL if gl ! ' Il Jefferson Hos Hal . t':'j-fg:::?5f75 i 'f 1. fi .S 1 ? P , Y Q, f 1 Philadelphia. Pa. f V- - gs' '- Q''-ze'-3'g3f.iig:-41.1.53:lf , . - fig 1 qffw fnweaaaaw1lannaownfr,v as l '5 , , 1 -Q-Q1'vQjQIQ3f1f .3 ifE,.4,'fvJ23'f1E.f.' T. ff?-P1 -5 if i '-- -fi ' . v. ' 2,-:Li V ,Jw-., r:1,..9t?v1MbEzLfq ,PTQQEUEAH qyxagvl 'Q z 1 .5 in ry- . :lit yr - :PM -if 1' ,f A X 8, 3 r ' 1' f f r e ' ua 1 ' ' il l r- 1' Y. 1 One llf1L71.fIl'9fI sezfe11.ty-two-1-1.,-:r-:jgQ'7+f5i, -. ., - if,1:i,.L2'.':,,.,.... 'f.,1-g5f-e:a1-h.,,.g,fg,-. . , ,,, . I- X -,.,'..'-J I-,.-,,,-V.. .,- , .. S 5 t JN 5. al' 'lie Z.: XE su: sAs..s:i F. , 3 xi- T! 1, . XX' 1 Q1 if 4,55 V IT 'elf if 7 ' It 9 -i 'iii an ii 5 .if ' 1 ' f' I ':'T ?'?, ' ' ':-jg ', ffi'-e -ffl'-Fi? .514-I L? nr , 1' fe ' 5 1 e . -Z 1 +' rf , I 'x A--2.52-vggzgzr ...WE-1-5-h. , z, - - J , Y Q -5 ' : : Z, ' H... .-. V., ,,,.1,,.J,.g,3q. ...,g,,5,5I.c1L. k 4 f .N DANIEL B. suFFoLE1TA 'Q i'Dan-ny llLlIDLAND, PA. University of Pittsburgh and Grove City ..,ff..ff- '5 College ,,,-fi.f5i':-'-ff Lf, Eff XZX ,Moi-se,Q'Sclia'e,lfc1', Moon, Pasteur, Bauer, QT fy. '.Qfgg1.:.gBlahd,,- Strecker, Hare Societies M '45 'ik e VA -T '. 'rgfa ii,-,Z A-lFrQShlD3DTDil1lHy established K, if ggiiimself iisoiie offthe conspicuous mein- -I5 3 if iflieysfof his class when he explained the gi, t Q-ieiiejx gnfechanism that produced pain in 555 'Q .lQ75fQD1iT03ifhi?1SiS3 ASf9f'S0Ph0m01'e-he was 4' Aqfuite a studentin pathology and lest we ' -A -L - forget he abquiglfegll alot diknowledge per- ! Y. taining to more a.iid vaified2 reflexes. As a , ,. 5. N Iilunicirfliei fbiiiidehiriiself pnssessed of the igg jil lf, ,tfiigiiityi anx1gpo,i,sei5W1npu ,lends assurance f 7. 4 Faint goneg isgifeailyjjjsrf nf the institution. ig ' ' jSen50i'yfjgtl1fQugl1Q:his inquisitive , -anannersgalielgattaineldggaqlot of knowledge Fifi Q ' 'gpeigtaiiiingfitcg theggeneral studies of medi- V . ,c.ine.'Vli R . 2meanersviieiereeefieu we write: if aneifrniarrrlrereapveeance ffeeat dresser' ,Q,Qg,ggfj.3-'fr A atjcongenialegaokiugliritegiice, amiga careful it .55 s .-1 fs ' 15, Npgrgj. Mrs 1.43 -'I if .2-I s fa1..f, 2 aa 4.39 4.3 rr 'I 5 Qi ,S .,. 5 1:1 35: A? . Q 2? 517 .Sn , -i- 4-1' ..2' x . g. t, jf, 11' Y V N . ' H . ,,,,-1 .. . ,,,- K, U- 3.-7:9 ' HARRY FRANKLIN SUTER Afitch RUFFSDALE, PA. Bachelor of Science Pennsylvania State College GJT9, A H M, fIJB H Schaeffer, Morse, Moon, Bauer, Bland Societies THERE must be something about atmos- phere or environment of State College that equips its men-maybe its Women, too-with confidence such as Harry brought with him. You could see it pro- truding four years ago and even though it was extensively used during his course at Jeff, there is still enough left to carry him as far as he wants to go in his struggle with this thing, called life. Harry works hard and We know that he is proud of it, and there is no doubt that he is envied by many. Not only in his medical work, but everything he puts his mind to, for instance, well-she is an awfully good singer. There is no use I going into details about I-Iarry's future, fj,1f',A,.f':Q45 g I9 :ij but We are surely going to search a long 1. 1 i'j.Mj5g,'-Qiggjf .,lL time before We find someone who is .as 1 ' .'5ff,lllQU li T 91,1 capable and as ready to settleany point ggi- ,gf le E V - ,1 igff' f sl'-L, 1??eSEi':',jQqQl 4 We are hazy about, which is just one ,E 2 f ' 1' -'Q sri? EC'3H fg35,1,.,. I V i ijnoreireason why he is going to be missed. 'l l 4, 1 - f af iff i ,-9?J5tEQTZ1'f'-' ' '+ I :fig-fe is ' '- hgvi-J-1' 'A+ .2 ,.tvf,fizfr21:r:g1zf,'q .j.'Q-f'53'4lf'f-'tif' Hosp' 'B' , 1 ff- ga,:nnQi,n-:i.La'-.- '..'-.Wash1n,9+en. Pa- - ' - if w 5, -'T -5 '.3'if-Q2 .2,Zi:- 5-31:5 . , - - X g .1 -- - A - 4 . ....-I if-fs , A - lg A -1. f -:swf -53 - -1 'Q a 'fff-'qffqifwsi'-geqgffT12-,':ffkfs,'i't2. v - 'Q' W' S gg 'J' 'Q 21 g'i.f3jf-3553 ' P 3 n V . , ,N , .- 5- , , v -,,.,, jg,-,,'1f-sg ,,,e.f.- ,,-, PQ... .,- ,- ,A ,:. Q: .e,,,' '- ' - ' . f fi ':'i-'Wi-i., 4: !:sf..5-- 1.g':.'v,,L,j,6g. -Y' ,:,s'f'-1 ' , P 'V t r '-1, ' 'P' 5 1 W' X' S F ' ' O h d d t th 'if ,h':l4 I 1, A. :jf'3'!iflQf,f5fY'ff: y'-. we 'lin T6 seven y' ree M X'TFdiaf.,.-'Ff2 :I7'5i':S14-we2'-'i1:f'f5-it ' ' - ' '- '- 4 ' ff- i - .w3,r,1.,.g .'-' J ,K-IM.: , ,.-9.1 ' ' 1,1--.-.. '- ' f Z X V fs W ff 9 i X W 9 0 74 X 7 1 4 W 4 V je X 1 1 f ? I e f f f I I f w 1 f f W Z f f ff! f fy! 4 Z i 1-1i:1lf.f. .. , ., .Fix Q .1-.1 'in .' U, 73-, ., . . 51,2 .. U., Eg. ff 5 -Y 221, .5 . ' Z. i. 725' 1 . 'IB 'V' 1 -. -- - A A -. .,.. --w.,s-rw 1X T7 -'11 g xiliii-iZ5i?.i5i i? '. 5' may jp 'ii ROBERT CARL TISHERMAN uB0b1r PHTSBURGH, PA. .. .I ,V :-:,.- .,L' - :'r..:: , '4g- l l ,A mi ,-'. C' Bachelor of Science . I ' 'qfF3fb'f'.'3MT5-,-'-A 91-2'1-'1'71'2'?i??Q1E-,f. -rl frfgzffi' ni 5' University of Pittsbu1'gl1,f'gfg.-L lL,. RAYMOND ABBOTT TAYLOR Academy, Thomas, Vesalius.gSMietieA5i5i-JL''5Ff?:'g2'Yg9i?M Ray - Rafz', Rabelais LAKEWOOD, N. J. Y . . Ph.G. . . l WHEN Tish came to Ifliiladelpl1fa,5ij3QQfK-X 3 Dniversityrot Pennsylvania. Philadelphia was not the proverbial coultitry lacf'sjijlilifs3f5 f'5 I-v ig College of P1121l'11111CY tiatiou into the ways of the big f f TEQ, QTQD for Bob was worldly, wisefaird Av' 1 U. 1, v' I' . Q. .M a truly cosmopolitzin-a1gannQ1fL V. gi - TlOlI1'1S, Pto tgxlyietirloxxles KI-lies? hrst year, Bob 5,QEggd,?:dlhgfptli flqgliig .N ' earnestly absorbed - . 4 R a more sincere stguflenigqfcoiilili ingot lieg .- 2 , I -3 AY. from Lakewood, New Jersey, a found, At thegeiid :gbgqgdg img-,ir . D g s graduate pharmacist and cheinist crossed Bob, being A Q51-Qlitgfjjiigg' Q the Delaware to secure a further knowl- al-my C01-ps, ca5j'L2.3T?fkf'fGT5:lE1iS1d?Zi1-id Sgaiiggiiffpigf j edge in medicine. Matriculated at Jeffer- to become one iff 155i,Q1EaEg'bbjf5-QQ '-H ,Q son and has shown himself to be a con- at Camp. iff .5355 scientious, persistent, reliable and valu- All in all, afmoi'-eszlik7lilgleii?Q11'Qnf Etfgjgfgg n j' 'Z' ,fi able medicaltman. Together with these Iigbeyt Cfurl! j'lflof-efE151-giSE1y'Qi-glfly-llgfialjdiD- 5' hereditary gifts, he also possesses that and sincere sfuglglftjpgiggzligicl-QQQ-fillfiqii5 tot 3 ingenious power over women and a social find. J: Liga? 1'Fg7'1:'i T - tiki, .y , standine' which will prove an asset in the Eirf W4 if 5 31- 3: 241' future. TA quick thinker and good judge 3 of men are qualities possessed by this fair 5'3,,:E? :ffgiff i 5 .5 and square student of medicine and pro- Vfjgjgii j 'jfffg tege of Hoyle. He has the integrity that . 1 -:N will pull him through life and has shown E -E -i that he will not be put asunder. His ii! girls: social activities are outstanding factors 5 j f y f! g' g of his school life, but he also leaves a ,- 55 fi Q 'Q scholastic record to be looked upon with ,Vt A ..,-,Pf.4,-g3 - ffgt 1 I ,lfgggmsfjg envy by all who follow in his footsle1JS....'f5.-f,Qf QQH !'E.,.f.e '-1 ,, . Q The weather may change, but Ravwill' 3,132.3 .ZQAQQZS3-2if,fg'5 Ir -'- 'ffl' I H Y . always be the salne- A'.m.ane gzirliongstffjf -1.-1,52-g i ' g5j'i-if-kvlfy Q Q EEL?-f men. ,. ,573- lg lfl' 2 If, ffiff-'J 22 ,.rfF'.'i,ig3g' . ' V' fgi A' C0OPe'1H?2P,'f4'? 7 :ffH.'rg:f1vie'f3fSX3T'9 if L. T- f1il.ifif?i5f'.'f2 if :S ' - ' ' ' .go ' ':'.'.f, ', 'Sifj, kj ,-9, li. , 'f E2'5.E-1 lj 5 :'--Q' ,-.-'fgfxa .1 'P 'H -H x ,,4-. Camdehf 5- I-.'f25?2.LN'Qi'i'if'ii1-filfhjii' 7gii':g1f1itF 'fi 1 '-1 1 '- 3,1 .ftsxg y.3'gjggg4'fvq?0+f5e3gl G. . - - -5, gm A gl .4 fi' ju . l V ::,.g,asg4fgf.1fu1s4+1T?f'?ff,Ag-ns T 5. , A 1 , af. 1-.- e. .P ' '--:'f.--sv-'.:'J1nv-w1.'?gX v- n my ' ,'v:f1-- , .S V f'-A --- ' . as .gf - 7 1, ''-.'iL, f:5'3,'fL2'2f3'r' 'fff4 . 'Q:e5' +? '3' 1 : ' '-- 3 in bu' ' Y: :.1::1.Ai'.' - .'r 'K f1i'f5'f?-:e'r- ffe?fPHP.G-' '1f'Er1 Ai -1 --fi S. ' -- -4- -- -sfmv. -F H l 4 A mul 0? , ., .,.. .. W . , , . . -fare'-vggl' 5'E.1f'i' .', 4-3..'q'fv-a'.2gg1E EHQQ 5 ' 4 '- I f 'N 1 ' 3 sf ' '---'1- .. z . -1 I,- -l Y . 'ug , V One htmdfred sefuentfl--ouo-1.1-z-'sf1125?-'Effieit . f. .. 1 4522.3 T J If ' T-l-92.11-sci'--g..,4f..,...cf.51-ijii-af?-7-.AgX-3-'agisfw hi 1,-.f 'N T 1,'::,jjv,.r3.R:'y- ,,:j.-- 1:2 'ft ' 4, ' , ..,.4 .,.,,. 'SBS 1 3 W 5: ,Ah.W 255' Morse ..k,x s-:ssmsxi 1 .1 . .-fx an 1 MYRON ANDREW TODD llzlc kL'10o1xA P1 B1d1elo1 of Suence D1ClxlIlSOI1 College COKE GJKXI Hoon, Bl1nd flheasj -leads-111y flleasl Soc1et1es AIL to M1ke w11o comes f1om God s co1111t13, made famous bg J 1 i1l101fl, Z1 speedway, and contmuous haze of smoke 9111 6the1 YVOICIQ, f1on1 Altoona Nhlxe Hl111m1ed all to tollowx tl11S g1eat Sclence, and ughily so, fO1 few have fined so Xl ell du1111g then SOJOIIIH l1e1e1 4 'llhe Hlst veau he W101liFCl '1nd XVOIII-eil, the second he TVO1lxPa some and wo111ed, ytlle tlmgl lie WOIIIQCI Some, the foulth M ell he g1ld11at6d In the n1eanf1n1e ho found 1t adve111tageou,s to spend mam of ElllS 1101115 111 Wiest P111l1y and ce1t11n of ,thu subuabs, 11 he1e lt qs sind mfmv of the 1 tanfsex resmled and yeawed fm tlus Uav, fl I hght I1e.11ted.kn1ght 1 Mercy Hospd-al Alioopa 1Pa 4 , 5 i .1 1 x Q l 8 l ,ri Q: .1 5 ll? ll 1511 11 1 A- 1 fi: fa- al ' 51 355 5551 55. 1:31 . Q' xii ,. 1: :f 'SCT S gs 11 1 YN ssvqe , , sub rf F 1 . xg. ,gg 1 -4,- -1 . 332 fi . :tg df x 1:1-' Er we JIQN - ' iv? l 621,14-Yi my w X E041 K' in ,., f'-'v .L 3-,v.s.L -r' i5if a' DONALD ROY TOMPKINS Tommy BIIN01 'NI D L111wo1s1tx ot NO1lZl1 Dakota Bl111cl 11119 SOCIGUCS 110111 N01tl1 Dal1ot1, the land of beautx, lllggefl men, lJl1ll'11flS ete, 1d nfirutum, c1n1e NI1 and B118 1011111116 lhev came to Pl11ladelph1a whe1e the XXO1St half was to p1ep111e fOI lus. hfes 110111, and p1epa1e he his to 111 excf-zpt1on1l deg1ee POIIIIIIIGQ NY o111ed look 1S only 11 Cl1Sgll1b6 1111de1 Wluch plays a cl1y h11111o1 1nd 1 seues of Ollglllill lcleas Tudgn1e11t and TOITIIIIIG :ue sguomous though l1e IS nex 61 Cochey 111 t1ue West 6111 style 11e loads h1s guns l1621V1lV and shoots qu1ck1y In the face of COI1fllN10Y1 he n1a1nta1ns il cool head lVe p1ed1ct bull s eve Ihs .1b1l1t5 to form DLIIIIQIOUS, li1Sl1111g f11LDClSl11DS speaks well f01 the dfllllllilble pe1so11al1tv NXl11Cl1 Cl13.lRCt611ZEb tlllb loyal son of Tcffelson Umfed Siafes Navy I K , 1 1 1 E ? 1 c wfs-Eldziik Ny Y ' vw if Q -ag. 1-.fr A- ff 'Elf' N 'Ci' .iff 5-fig: S ii: 4 .fi 1. ' .:f' l H525 1' 5' 72 Tlfff: fi- -!-at 'gi - 51.1 , 1. ..'f.- if '- - :iff 3:2 ,, I .1'2.'.-f-,'.9:,' ' ,',-12.511:.5,-,':'f.'Y-:,'Z','1? fIf:Q1?f3kT,3fQ53, - .32 , . . ,. ,, .EW ,Eh 32? . r ' , Q, 1. ,- , 1, Ei , 'L 'HI 7 A . 1 . gf I I- t - . . . .- , 'T-.-- - ..-:U . eight ,-f:1+-' ': 'b '- n, '-,---I N, - ' 4. 'kzigfffv '- ,- 1 ' . D' frfifav .-?'1g:.J.: :?ff:'- iff? ,, '- A , 1 all ,,--1,1 W'--'J' , 1 ,L f . 1 f . . . . . F3 '11, ffjgj. . P , 1-, L ' A ' .. I H je. .P 51' N25 1, LY ..! L. . 1 1 . - ' -V 1 -Q EAE 2' VN- 1:1 Us f f 1 'I .I Tlf- A b v F I v .2 41 y -, - 113: 34.-5-fs. 1 .Y I k , , ' I 1 . 1 'El ,Qi K . .. ll 1 . ,. 1 ' V1 wi Ez, :, , : ,E :QL U 1 ' . I . .A tu , ggi ,g 5,v,.'lfl:3'f5 T . - - . 1 ' 1 - . ' -4,,,-.-:Z VL:--3.s,.::E.1Egj Y , ., I H. 7. . .X if fsf152 z., . .. -E L nf' r' fix j ': . ' . ' . , ' 7 M2 5- 2 ' ' ' , V ' I- I . h F' ti 2. 1 . ., ',.,,': 51'A5'l l'tllW G .571. flS 5'1 f elif' 51 E ff I if - ' ' 5 53' 555523 1,1 5 V It E2-il. 'i that he w1l1 l11t old 1112111 Future tor il 'r-5.4- I 1 1. . , sw. -- 1 - ' Def.. ii Iss s:.1sf:'?:i nfl 1- F as 1- - vif,--14le::..f' --fu.-1 -law ,-:4f,1'.. -. . - - T?-'ff' 1 sr f 2 flua' , 25'E'51fv2 -. ' ' ' ' -' -. ' ., -.1 1,-'::, 2 9 , JF' 5 1 g,,1!',,1 - -,A 55-rfgfjgiif, :LU . ' . . T- lfljl 3 I at 'S EIU l l5?:-,gf-if-1'-E,-: ' l In :, 5 - . ..A2s-,zyidj - I .t, YEL.. pg, :,.- 1 I Q V M111 11-kj, gf-5Tf,1.,'f l l 13 Q f u, ' -1 IP22 A ,NVQ 5'5 -',.1g2', 3 '11-'Q 1 1 - ,' fi. lQ..1f flfl - ra 4-qi 1- SP1 3 . 1 4 1' :f-- . ? ':4:I,-H.:'A-'- V' f '.-E , 1 . , ' - I ' fqfilfl-V .' 3211 '--.':..,l1g . SQ.- ' .- -' ',f-figflgl'-'f 1 1 A 21 Q ' 1- 1 -1 Q -3' , -. - -- Iv - f,f1f-,M 4, A31-13-'fu' 1 .7-15. 7.13-ffgg 1. ff 'Z Aw. 1335-:3 ff1'IH::,.-1'-: . - ,Tf.3'g2-QQ, Q, 1'.A-'5gg,I1E gw'.- ,'-7.-41 A iz- - 1. I Q+q53gQ'5 f--.-'1g9qgJf:,'-,R:g, . .. -' I 3 1 O' 4 'f:f 'l -75.f171PffTi'Q.i:'2 H,--lil-,LQ:., 5. '- '. 1 ' ,!: 7 ' Q ffl? -9' ' f- 16:f1y2ai3'Q':gi.e-,. - v ,51,..u..,,2li i into . 4 ll rx-Eff:3224951-:1'fY'wf 1ik li , ' '. ' . ' '63 '-. E' -7' '11,-. 'f ff .gp L L ,1- al' 'g'l f 1'f-1 Q51 1 'Y , H -1 .. 1 ,, 8 . Q -1 - :-, ww, w:,v,-- .ln .-.v T -1. - fry-PL. , ws. ,f 1 UQ . '- I'-. 'f' 115' -,,-. .,..L-:'.:gy13'gif-Q2-Q.ij,, .ni'.'M?:Q5-.1-gig-. .viffc ' -Y ' tif. xi Q Alla' El-Wt -31 - ' 417' 1- 'a -:ff .1--ff ,,.. -- .' . . iggzfifw'-LUN.AVA:-.-2-21,lffD.,,-ff. ,. 1 One hm1d1 ed sementy-Jive in , . vi X X Al, 2 N 1,v,, .l I is . E:- Q5 gi -.Zi fins' 3 :A -jj 'P vi Q 51.11 if' fl. aiiiz. P- ' L 'e : - f-55 Q: 1-Av Pi QQ? if' 5353 F , 3 FF' If. 417' 9' l 'QF r '55, 4 1 A- .:'Lfif:: :-',-ri- K---- f 1' 1 'X' ' WAYNE EDWARD TURNER t'Stretcl1, W 5' BLOOMSBURG, PA. Begggelggnifgjty - '. -, , A' H Strecker, Hare Patterson Sodievtiiisfui:?Ei:p.m ANTHONY STEPHEN TORNAY R lfQi 'i53'.l1 :5ii-ifiivtwsgbx 1 'Q 'Beadlel' ' ANOTHER Benedict, altliough'QlreQkept.7lfisg. ,B 55 PHILADELPHIA, PA- secret most successfully. 2ii1q'?qn:ly .jifj Bachelor of Science we had safely passed the gigeissitudesf Lr g Pennsylvania State College a11?60I11Y did hi FSVCH1 It- ' tg L Ptolemy Society 1 ayne as een. an 6395? en 55. T-'gE?Q.i. 1- b f as is attested by his election -to O.'i1+9ger.,' fi ' ' - S-purred on no doubt, by fthel W1-ionvnn has not seen the silhouette of h1S friend Harry- Qiwatched gwfltli lfiilgliif' Q Our Hero-Tornayn Boating, Wraith-like, est the F309 tl1G.Sg?! 'l?W5EEiazgfedqfezfgli Year' F05-. g 1- clown the far fefncl of tl1e hallway near the QUSd0deE1Ql1 gflfglfl QZEQQQQE!:lf2110'.?'1YQ1Eyg- YVQSQ , I lounge, is missing something. It is char- 111C 09 flee iiis .ig ir? 5 E ' I. I,- Q acteristically and absolutely so. Being 01106 22if:ElT1Q1iIl:3i!C311eSQi5?iW?iy ,Hifi . 9155, f.' For it he has been called Beadle, E1'i0I1ddWit111 fi? because like a beaclle, his Gait is a bit QIVOYG W19 H' HIL OTE. ,1F24?Qf',QS? ,jf 13 wobbly but there is a cnrioiis element of C11'C10 of SDXFIQ Zlllgi.-2Ql.l1fil?'1t19q sturdiness in it that must have come 8te1'11211-H HE g2fbQ23QQsit?f3lq11g3toflqegegegle if gl from lifting 300 pound cakes of ice. Y US fi - of 159691151 gg-1J05Ye1'g,1,.ij?3I2H'f .. R' Everyone knows that during his four Frghkfofd? ilglhgjiif,-ilijf' ffiif i' 'fn years at Jefferson he has spent the AphilsaelgmgiTpaigiiij preciouihours if 5 lg? dAi rrilaktnig :ig 35.5.5 i A : prepara IOHS 0 eep 11 a e p ia s u er - gg ig as-.5 -4 jf! 2 ' Q 'g,5, ,ft and milk cool. ' F555 zfsyfjif p ' lg, ' Eh- . His sturdy industry from the wee srna' Q52-V' hours o' the mornin' until late at night glifisf Eg' 'ffif 'f leads urs to believe that he is preparing to 2 gf V U Qi be a disciple of Dr. Bland's. 225.51 I l givlgi 'Episcopal Hospital xiii? Y ii-'fl ,S Philadelphia. P.. I -' ml 5 t - iii? 1 W-ff,...::g,-' '11, V 1 ' .rf ' .i'i?Q4'.ff' ' 'B' 1 , ,L ,I 02223.55 'J' fl' if ,A '-5' V? rf? 5-.lv u l, a w.t.:l if u - K .p ,.5i-,gxp gxqgngig .T .,- no lf,-K+. ga -Q - - p .1 A SLELF ,.,. M1-?ixNf':lxf,s.. G,l5iW'2.lw -,-- - I, I.--gf,-g'fl.'gvf? 5: f-,If - 'gf' -43 ir- 2 '-'-gfl '.'Q'5 .5fliff':: v 'H 71 .97'i'9i:l.'i57'if5 E.'ff. iff 'il J 'wiifs if'-1.1 iff? 5 1' ' .fire gl 7 fi M? 2. 5- 2' -. --af it 215, .pl if Jigig-5f5:Qf,? 1 , 2 . 'E gig' ' 5 g.1,,LJ,f,,z1'4 'ill-4' , ,,if-212'-2'f512f2?'fl'.ti'gs5ff2,iq,fA I FT? Fi 1. j-fr 5. will I I I 5 1 ' One h'lL11fdt':6d 'sevfiniyisiar--1.--1..,-EYis:3:Qgf7fv'g 'rLil .L X fx, '.'I.Ffi:4efLE'A-:,,ga,,...r5qQ?j'jif'if- i'.,5,--Q-j,EL7-as ' ' 'i- 1'f 5 '- Af ' f'g-5.1'.ffl,'1Q'- 3- sl, f. It ..-,. , X Xxx X r X s N.,x . , X Ns X :E 3535 i ' W .i.su.,ts 92? is 1 ss: Q X Vi Qi YE X ., N E X I I 1- if 2. 'Q is N' aff GEORGE KAN FONG TYAU Czuuqc IIOAOLULL llfxu XII BlCll6l0l ot Nience Un1ve1s1t5 of llau 111 Stiecllei Societs FX? -1221254 if EORGE ll2l1lS f1on1 the 11nd of Iliwaii. it lie soon became lcclnn lted and because fu 1 11 1. r 'li nh I ,N if v i Yo, AW of 111s cheeifulness and C0lIlI'dCl6SlllD soon mmade many fuends Although he was fre- quently p lssed up 111 cliss duimg his dust yieal, George took lt 111 111 :food pirlt and many the time Joined the rest in the game llis love toi nature winch plenteously abounds in his tio-p1cal holneland, lS so keen .indl riishuetive that he spent the last tuo suinmeis ix cainp doctoi at the Ger- mantown Boys Club Qamp 111 Oce-111 Yfrty llis pleasing pelsonallty his excellent ryquclgn1e11t' mtli Qiactual mind, uid zeal .1901 medncmel assuie llsllll pleasuie 111 his chosen profession. Phmladelnlua P ? E 9- G-e 's'. 51 .. -1 af M, xl. ,1-. '-T L QE A 1.2 .1 111' - f e -f , 'I.,'-21: iw-,:,,1, -'K1..4:.'1j'-'Cl - ..,.- ' f. -2. - ' f f. ' 1 .. ,. ...- I . -- - ,-3 ,,.5 . N . 1'-' ' if:-if-gf1'bi 't ' 'X -. im -P.-1, ' Q, n N' 3,511 f-1. --..EP'?-if-Ci7 ' ,- l LAWRENCE GWIJN. VAN LOON Tami IUBADING, PA. Bachelor of Science University of Pennsylvania BAE Cr UAS been said that doctors know only of medicine and are ignorant in regards to other matters going on i11 the world. But l1ere is a man who is an exception to that adage. His medical career was preceded by diverse occupations and ex- tensive tours to many foreign ports. Through these adventures he has acquired the ability to write and speak many la11- guages which make him feel at home in centers about the windmills and tulips of I-lollanrl where he spent the past summer, living the life of a true Dutclnnan. I-Ie is tl1e only member of our class who has incessantly smoked cigars during his four years and enjoyed them without waiting till the Senior year to do so. As a clinical cartoonist and a st11dent he I4 Q U possesses natural ability. His name and M i -.J li' fp, many qualities are prophetic of great - , 'N ...Lf-' 15 ' --'tm' doings in the future of medicine. . I f 'TY' ,- -A .fLHf:3f1'1:7- Til . '- , 1 . ' 1. 'P'L.T Ffa! 'tra 52151 .I 1' Liv, 1 H .. l 1 f 23 ii - 1. '!-'Q' f 1, ,'.1-1.'- ilk - ' 'if 2 'l 3.1 -'. E-'-..1?.'4 .af if-H it-z, Q if Q,: .f..1'v5fLM, .fE7 r ,.5 .Zgg,,f::,-,Q:7'f1l1L-- I' .V . E . ffl 1 3- QL- . u .ig , I gig.:-. :111 fi , 1 if 1 f ., M, -- ,,., Sf?-.::f'.if '-'T-if -0 'Q It Z cl -e111-ser: f ' nc izuuze seo 1 1 en .551 1 .- .. 5 1 il? i if gc '. 1 2,2 .- 72 .iw if :iii 1 JT ' ' ' '+L mf. 1' J. A . aff 11' 'ei 'PQ- :22 1 ' i W 1.21 S1 ,- If I rg. 'X -1 -fx , Y :J f ' fi f ,,. . . . . K , ,gif-FC.-' if: . v ? .S3.? 13 i??Ez IH , 2 . D .. N ..-f-1-1.T,5.,--I-5.5. 1 A ff ,, Q, Y 5' N 7,3 sr v I , -v RL Q 1 ' '. - 1, . . - 1 Y - V. ' , 'V Q. . A 'I 4 1 2 , . j3 . Y 5 ,e . L , I' . . , . . , Y 1 . .f:i',, ' - . ' Q' 'ru 5 5 I ' z ' z 1 1 ,.-eq-,sy I., gi- g- V 1 f' . .Q .' A. 1 S2 ii, 3 ff, - . -V . - . - Wi. -' - ' 111. M5 -: 1 . . .' 32 s-J 39 I 1-Ng '- ' 1 - , 4 . I s.zoi :'1 . A -1 ' ' .-' ffr' 4 -f 1 olvf' E1 .:. f . . I . . Q., r, 1- 5 J- 2 -2.1.13 .ao J, r A h . . - ' - ' , . c 1 1 1 . s L:-. ' . - . v I h ll 1 F 2 A .7 :xiii 5.17.3-71:1-E nf' K I ,Lg B ' . 1. Q 25?-, 911 .35 ' I i r'UbA'5i-E 51- 7 ' A - 5531 1 13 1 5524? iii' 1511: :iff i iifffi 1 U if 5,5-, H- .- .-5. 14 if is LT,-st '1-,stair ? . I I .Qian ,Q -'K 1 5 5 E ' 3,1 f ji ,Q .1 1 :viii A 1 y la ll may b II' a' ite est Q 1 :- 2 1 gf?-if 1 . -n nc ie -.3 e. -1s m- in 11' r 1' 1 3145 fd! .t E! 11? 1 ff 2-NISE: -lOSl5xnl'1iS.E lTl.osDrlal 1 L ai ,.--,.1 . 1. -. 3' -, .2 :mir-I 1.1 :pu , ,. 513.1 -, 1 : -T'?l,'E i 2 f ff aff' 4 1 , Q' EZ--' 1-, ' .:,S,? I 2 2. 1' L' : Rl: ..,. 2 ' 'Q ': 7' l 537 W 2 55' l E51 1 1 .-if-'?f.-1-f - 5 1 1 si f ' -NG' 1. 5 5 , sg-: sxgsfin' 5: 1 I 5-,f ss' a i 5. f41.1,1 f' 3' ag e 2 Fi. f vfgss 2 iff. ', tow:-.. . --e'1T's1e- gf -V - Visa-2, 21 7 -.asa.,f. f..-. .- .1 -V f . -- . .M - f w ' E l ' 5 'al '51 l 7 35151555 1, g I' -. , fm jg fig, ' , 15' W3-of' fr' 13 X ' 1 ' 7 .. x 1 -1e,t,g j ,Q , l N 11 1 X y- .J YJ '-.3 1 - '.4 5 A ff 3 1 er , 1 f Ir, - 4 f ,fl 3' . U '-51: 1 1 f . 1 if 4 'X ' 2?'5e:'45-?'1 2 f f ' 1 I f N taxa , , - tl 4 1 or 2 . 1 55 P T? f-. 3 4- lil-1 9 - 72, 4 11 ' ' hiv' .2 ' . rv y ' 'v J., .sl WJ' 1 in I If 's r f 1 1 ' 4 . . . f +P , I J ,Quilt k .- ,giar L , it nk ,, 3 y. H, .Q Q 5 W A, xv ., 1 A 4. L gl' ' A I 2 42 '11q',A -'rnfvfe ,V-. 1 1 e . ,, . ,, M, vs xt ,, 1 , ' , 1 Y ...lr ' Q5 ' R1 3 ' f ' 5 ' 7 ,A I .' f I E ' ' 4. ' sem 1 I - 1 Y- f ' 1 Y 14 iz f 2 ? W 7 7 X if 5 K J W f ,f fl X f Z f ff 4 4 W 7 V , if Y f 7 7 4 f f f -if 4, f fa M ,WX f fff 'X f I C 'L N . l .s bf? -4. Q .2 gr. ., , . il' 9 1.- --Q -rl 1 l 'ii if af. it 1334. arg. if .Lv .2 . If Vi if 1:75 ' i' ,310 . .293 2 .1.12? 1 Hifi' '-C xii ' ' 5 'f3:..- p 25 ll 51 i e..-fig s . 'sa ff' ' imp . .,.. . 'ft IRA GARFIELD WAGNER, JR. srrvagu fl LANCASTER, PA. -. Y Fmkhn XTADIEIETII College .. . ..,- ,, , f -:Z Morse fSec.Jg Thomas, Moon. Pre's:'f'fi -A i 1 ,-3.5-14-,Q LEONARD GEORGE VATTER, JR. Bland Societies if K .n.3kS12'SdN Pl Ie: . . T' fi 3.37 .:r ',.f '- CHIZTIUO an Soma men are born with the,al51l1ty,.'-Epi, 1 ,Q 1 G fl do what others, less forturiateg strive..-. 31 3555 f..0FlN?U U111V61'S1ty for, but never attain. And-.Soi some:ff21'1:efl,QQ K :? Q ' Bxlf, Qlfxlk set apart. stand out. YVell, 1i?H1f1.t'S a XVg1'g.JQIEfg'f 1i ' Hare, Moon, Morse, Bland Societies goiongffxlcfllliflcgvsa igiiilnsiie?1iE?11?g2g2ig.gi. ov ., A . ' 1 's L '-.'f --021-21. K' lettinff ti1ill S pile up-..,is a5g1'e,a.ticj11alitSSiiF'i' L. -1' CDF .' WE ATTEMPTED-T0 breaklthe formality he coculd bciist ofJb1it'a,n1oclest 1f1a,firi15Lg'- of our first IICCIUUIIIFHIICC F131 fills .NOUHS and a level l1eads'fo1'hids Such' self iaitda-fi iz i, - Chicagoan by calling hnn Leaf but tion. . Ag gggfjgi . Q uf .' immediately we were corrected and told Ljke,1b1e. imgapsphgglfmgxhgmysfjatiill5550? ' ' J' .ji that to us he would be Charley. That Wonder he has 5111,jSgodffffiQuC1SggQA.gjE,1.ii5?4wi .Q was decisive so we never disputed his Vesidency at p5unjiHi.3t.f,gm.e him mtlgjglljjngt.-.i.e ..':35i' WIS ICS- I the way of ex1Jefient5e ?ii'r1t1'i ioregtb irefleeti - 1 -is That was only an instance, hut it was upon. 5 5Qf,:,Q. ,PETE Q characteristic. Yve can recall many A tl-ue ..ent1'em'mi?.'ni1i15-i 5395.1 ffignif-.1 -155 'E similar ones w11icl1 merely emphasize that no wondef g11,jy.'vvg1j1iQ jaigqfgfi-fit' ' jj- most dominant C1121F21CfC1'1StlC-'l1lC-i1Vldllili- those flllulitieshyiel-9 fogtgfgd-it j 95.6. I ':f,Q f ' ity' 5 ,aj .., 3.112552 zivlfft , 5519: in Leonard came to Jefferson after spend- Laqffgfri ing three years in preliminary study at t1.infff35E 5fli.g QQVQEEQQ 13 that Nstudents' haven -Cornell. .NVhat L. : J 5 jiri 13,515 j Z Q35 E a contrast it must have been to give up ' ' ' 1 2 55:53 2:4 that beautful campus far above Cayugas Q It V 3 '5 i-f'1.'?.:5l: waters for the environs of Tenth and . Q.: . I .f Qigqfg NValuut Streets. - i As a student. C01-nell's standards have ,. ip - 5 Dairy zlreg. Q been amply upheld. XVe all have had to .' .135 all , . ish?-'Q lie if i ! - ff: . . . . . .. ' ,.f- Lg-1-. . 1,1 , Mr --- .. Q i.!,'?l'2fg admire the abillty YV1ti1 which he can .,,. A -nys .::1'g Q, :Q iii? ,lui concentrate upon and abso1'b the work at.-,q..f ',T,g2f.5,5QjQ-.33Q,jU !7f,,,.,.g'7'1 ' , 1 Q , gwyiig, hand-even under the ll1OSt,C.ilSt1'11C1Qi1Qig.-'c.'f'f, 'fiji' 5i 1?1 tg X -li 3, lj circumstances. A I. I -riilif ,- gig.1...--:,,j.,'3j . 'v .lfQ5L'f5 4 i Q-qfii. Passavan't 'HosD'H'ai-5 ' L 1 T: f 5 Qf P'ffi'2:iflt5QI::'!'i'f f.1J ii . : A ' iii '. Tiff - ' .- -- .- - ' wi ' .Q grff. . .f,g,..1.,ee1-. ,it.. 1 - - 3 1 Chica o lIl.w -' sf 'Afl.'iT3Ti'-Yi-'Hip .. nf?-4' Q1 .- ' f '57 if 9 .',- ' - , - -'vw' '--'.s'.3 Pa. '51,-'Y--f'-' -- .r.-- I-Wx.--':.r :.- ' . Q: -I . - g ' ' e - ' V '7'1 'rYS7ff'fi92EaTElfQ5F. Q ' 3-Ls' -.ff . If I4 s X . 'jusktkfgcgg'-1'NP5q+s?f?T112, arf f ...jg gf-.5'i'slrQ'g11.f fl ,-11 5 Q.'iff5f '- ' fy i ' '. 1 'A 7 , . pq.. -,- One lmndred seventy-eight 'i' '., .r' -1 :Jn .Yv- I C. 17 'fzfiff-7 s s is se. s s so Nr ess. s. X at X 555. .gg if. 'if 2? 431 H bfi si if .Fil -I ' -T32 1. , i wa.: - - f Z: ,Q 'lijfw 'fi :fir fa x . . 5, fl . - 5.5. -ESY. V' 7 :fs:g::qeg:v- we---,rm . .,,- .. if 9'gg5jfg1if33g35jpypg. 11? Lie , - - -- '4-.K-..,--.. L HILARY FRANCIS WHITE E5 239 9 H-ill''- lVlm'ey gg FALL RIVER, MASS. K . PILB' -- 5 4 x 5.3 1 Providence College '-L .,-ejfj,1.,eg-5:34-gf-. ,1f..5:515:ffa:g-3 .'Igl51,.m,.13-S'2-s'1!?yE-'13--'- f 57. QW Y ii HERMAN ERNEST WIANT V,-91,2553-',,Scl1a,etfei-,.:Qlfhomas, Pasteur, Ixnowles, HP U 'si 'gif f9 Efi-Til! Pi- ' ' - 01' 1..1'i1gSF'fg1911l5' Socletleb IEADYJONFIELD, N. J. 1jAi'Q .p2 jf: lt aeielor of Science 'rlsf- f hju'?5gjgiQ LrfhRXEiS.519ff9St known for his modest BuCk'l91LUl'lV0FSiEY Hifi if ?,11jHf1'S51l15'1ls'l1g lXfEti'S. As a product of Fall S .I ff QA-y AXA 'Q-f,- -' . ' .sfiivef Elie becomes automatically asso- C1216 Gr 1,beu.j 3 Acadexny, Moon, 4 ff- LA iivifth that most famous of proverbs St1'9Cke1'f LOUX fTP9HS-l SOCLPUQS + V' uxgaterfrrins:-5.deep. He is the H w. utliofri o ifitwo --'famous stateniients- W1 v A- - . - - , 4, V 3, -, .I K: bg, L . . . I M5 attained the lnehest position ,fi ftife i. GL-...Hunk It 15 3 that the life of a Pedagogueboifered, Pop fr, :Al QA..- . , ' ' , A - 5QEeeseieiaeiueisez. 10112 .Of the OM- 21129E-iehfjiikllehfilgiiigiulifisi5?S5?.Ef 51.ff.l. fd: D f 1' An. H' iv- dl . ' ' 'auf-also us HHIIDT--J0f'4.Uh9S9iS00d dances at 2.151-i ami? 315325221-31331231153 ii? iff Q Szefiv 'M' he 05iU!1il?lii house-'ancli his other social ' 5 Q .- 5 ,ge year task. Possessed of a knowledge of ' f11S'1f'.i1 355 tl- l '1 bl Q 2 ll ' 1 x - ' f1ff'1i1Y1l32Qf111tH11l?1 Wltllflhi Same stead' alayc Idleiifeliglecl ?hc1'o1iiliHci11tag's lvitiili fi 1 'fzgtjegg1in.2g11i?pos'e'Efthat' he has main- . . D . ' '. ,fy .5 .1 .din-. inen of high intellectual attainments, he is .gjg-.f 4, 'i 'E P .51 Jijj never lost among those who value authori- Q if-if S fue if Q tative opinions. You have to come under afggj ij the scrutiny of his clear, blue eyes but f :?.: 'i:r if ?5fa??..i , -52' if Egfw EQ once to realize that he is a keen observer lr .2 3.1: 1 .- :, . 5 ,V--T. I . . 1.5 I 5.25 and an alert student. vIq1Sf111611dS reflect al 33,551.1 ,, 5 3 5 , his good taste. Many a little fellow A will echo his'praise.doWn through the Egfjkgif fzjl- -I E years for Pediatrics is to be his chosen 3 3 1' 'Y . XE, '. field. That quiet and resourcetul nature 1 ' ii 'f 51?-:ig-,'2.--3.-'N which enabled him to quickly scale the - I P 'weffli '.'1'J. 2 .N- -'--1:-.451 -:L'1 we - 1 f -- ' ther endeavors is M I., .y. lain, - H, pu, , ,yladdei o success .in o l ' 5 gi tiff? ggfi?-ff:x'5'1i'.Q,-151.13itf1f?g1ei1tgg.in to carry hun on to the glories of if KI 3 :rfb 5 -'lj s sm Qgf.3,.Q-i ,-Ll,..-.rj5.3-5g'4'.g13WQ1g.thy -practitioner of the healing art. Q ' Ai Ff 5 ' . ' A--iz...-Pub U' at .5.1i73lf'E:3f1'i1A f'fJ' i'-.335 er-'Hos Hal ' a 1 lm P P , ff .1 ,5-le . ,g 132 , --r agfoamoiqm, N. J. kg.. L 5- gj .cl g. 'l'i,Q,jg : f.5'Alj.f:-.1'?ff ,Q 1,: jlffvggb, , ,ffl r.2,?54'i13g..ff,-:'.'5:f.f,.g.i 1-,:,'.'.1: ,Z,T f-I l ' 1 N ' .gfg : Q 1-' Ai gp ' '- 4, 25?,yj.y,3ig-.slgtf-Iv 1.' -A - - . - ' . '1 1' ' - ' A .f?J:.f ? X ' mf' fF '-s.!f':.: f'5-'J ' - ' -fi fit 5 3 .2 1: .' R 1- '.,:1Qf7.girf , 'H 2' 4 2 R ' it' ,, ' y:::,1 -T jf, I' , -..f- -1,7:':E:'?.?-,:'z !f- ' 1 '72 'W' L' 'ff' ,' luggmffavb- .... V . 52,5 L' 41'Yffi,: -nine . -Y . '- K - nf-'. ,z --.1 g'..'T!,. . .A '.':.+-.f- ' -Mmdred sezient sA 'i'7'5'- -'--'f45'!fTtI-IFJ'- vA-: il:f?iff-77 Hone L y .s ' 15. .,-ff:3-1,1--ff.---',:-15.7, fgg., .- .MVQ-L ., . K y .z.V,. e I iq.. W -4 Q.. 2 ,- l iz 75 'Zio . Zi. li be fi f f f f P ,Q X f X 1 1 M ff 7 K Z Q , 3 f 2 Q f if W f 9 . v 2 4 Z ,. f? . 4 VK f J 7 if l f A f v f 4 l X, , ' f 1, 1 1 ff 7 72 if Zyl' ' ff M f x N x X X N I. An 72 if l l I urvnaf ' . . vi.. 'J .,-' -.4 , - , ' . ' Q. ,-:zz ' ' if'5i V KI -if M 5. .L -'- ,, '3'ig??.fu'f 3, . , :: E- I- N s X , x Q we :Z Fi . 11:2 Qiffrz 'S 14 .. -5-11 M, 5 I -56 42-7 2' Eg: 3: 'il -4, - .. fig 55- i-iff is 1. 'g .ff QTL f A . 1-4 'W ,GH , . G L 19' . VMI. . A:- QP' ,. - Mc, uf. , 1. 'Q 'I e. . L-. - 'J.. 3:2 - - ,,'1- 1:5-.g,,f1'.S -,-L .2,g,Qf?5'1,-q.,.. ,L An s 5 x 41 ' 1 TTI!-'11 ' 'Tz.. I..-5 . 4 1,., . li' 11, 4 GILES WOLVERTON t'B'iIl 1 X GREENv1I.LE, O1-110 V. -T' Bachelor of Arts imp' ' Ohio State University AK K ' ' iiffv. u JAMES THOMAS WILLIAMS lic-911, Loux societies.. .s T0'H1lII1fu G ij' g ' 'f jj if XVILKES-BAIQRE. PA. t1EESlS0i111g HE :fig Bachelor of Science nv, 0 Ni mc 21 no -fiiLie'l feseillte sri? 'rif t Pennsylvania State College lim .fguou Stfltesmeil..audifgiuolied 'i. Q. WYE Aezn in the Lluss ot '51, .lher best 11m:Xi'g,?, 7153. .NL fl X ' ot it is thut no one, not even l11mself,ifhaiSer,Q', i' A il. regretted it. Since Qginingjvto the ' IN THE full of 1927 Tom left 'iState and 11215 raieqted it figlibifiifflflfelif, ,. YVilkes-Barre to become u member of our ill? Qolttgff ' Q class. Altl1ough'quiIet. unassuming and dcwroe tl? '1?1f?3ef'15?fs5Eij2fifafI.:q1j'JZ' 4495 -3'- I clemure for the first two years XViiiiiHll1S qilfcjiiit v 0 ju fiiiiimiillgfffyg a 1-5-1, has crashed through the gates of men- the Eutixrguf in ii?e2pni??E2IL,i j 51 15 tal, physical and social lmzurds in the . 0 ' 1. Junior and Senior years. Phlladeipghgq :C-2e'n'eIj3iI 'Hpsbgtalfgg i. It is-said that Hfilliums has music-al Pi'fii5gi3aiQh'i45fQ iii -gg tendencies und is Il muster of the piano. if 3 II iii,-V! 4 f5g'?iSf Q 1 Those who have been so unfortunate as Q . 4 Zjj ? iigfl .lv - ' 55:5 not to hear him cast his vents in music ' jf 3 5-ggi! do know of his touch for the fairer i EA2i E il 5,5555-gg, sex., i ' .iI'..x?-feffigifeid His friends lmve noted this blond, -gftfgg iff , dapper young gentleman disappear on 'S-If week ends only to turn up at Norris- 511, i,:gfA5j-g5:r, toufn, Frankford and points North. It is f - -fir :I sa1d'tl1at he prefers blondes and this is ,W in I: 3- I figs-5:1 manifest by the hurry up calls from the Q iii gjwpl I Pennsylvania. -I j ' It .5 ae, v .' g .E Friends are his specialty. He goes out .off gil, 'ff 'Ili ,Y if 'f , i g llgfggggtg from here un :isset to Jeiferson. , l ,Z-D.-.:f-jkgfigflt l H Q94 'J ' ffQw'5 MH, 1552-2123 I .,g.,j2 :CHQ fv'4r . -,Ig ,i'sm'i '-: Jeifm Hosp-+61 I I Il - fig I. Philadelphia Pat- ' ' 7 I L 5 3 -!7iQ- , K ,I-: swjjf Q,-gig-I Y. fim,-.,l. ik . 1 ,E E 5-I Q if-,g-gzizpgzfisa wifsfz- .- A'j,!A!f nezifini-,-', 5 '51 A--:S - 1 ,. A. .- 4.7 -. 1 ,qw-1,1 , .I.,A:.:i-.'-- ny-., V.. x I I' n i, ,. I-3,.'-giiif-3541,-'+,i'T'f.:Xf,gF'7 fgggijgeg ,Q , - .' 5,..QL -,I A711164 gs 1 , 1 'Q rg I ffij.:',','i1t?:13,bf3 T e,f,5X4?L-giET:'1,: 14 :'I-4Ql'57 : iii? Ii 'L J' '-553 .. fR1, 13.f-- Sfl'fifL'filfgg2Z,q.' 5 i 1' ' '-wg f 3' A 5- ' I, 5 5, 55, Z, 5 '-fi-'.'ffz:t.11::v.1e'ifl'3fii?f.-'f-Jr may .1sf+.r - -L fs -' r 1 - :I , . Gr 'ff',Q'7'i.qI3f'f':L-fLf15' f Q' ,N1.n'5'r1E 1 : 1 f 'E 14 -IZ. f -fliar-g'. 'Q . -1-ff?-frffv-7f2',if' 7 iff? ff' 'lj 21,7-fi f. Q I, ff' 11f3vf'-dlniw:-,A-.f-ws'-.Q,r5141.11---A' -11 ' 1 p f fi A I of ,I il If 2 ne 1,Im,ze ez!! il . ,Ii Xgsg:-I S - I- .-'-'F Lf -3 tv 1-2. L ', .21 1 jQ I. '- ,al--ff. sz' H SS 3 W 4.51 '-.1 ,QQ jf f 3 ls a- X , iii sxxbssr .. z. K' ft I-. Q4 . 51 F w. Q, iv sy' Dt is. e- P+ l Q -2 ,Q I-'Y .:s,.ct, n f, ALFRED ANGELO ZANGRILLI Army Prrrsist Ron I lx. Bachelor of bcience lniveisity of Pittsburgh K CIJPP. KBQ 'A ff' Schaeiiei, Pasteur, 11.116 Bauer Societies oon ole Pop always congenial, fl- W ws helping and '1 heait sn full of kind- ness thftt it seems it cannot be equaled. X peisoiiality V ves, and then someg the man who can nexei say Noi Friends, what ho' an army of them. Yevei d1d he have an unfair word for any one Scholflstimlly always 031 the up and p N0 :matter what the question popped it him he.. had an answer, riglt ' It'EX,l011g BV no means an intellectual giant his scientific Hnagina io11 and curiosity OYEILOIHGS this 'Pittsburgh Hospital lttsbu gh Pa -i , 'Q wzase - I x -sp t 31. 'A -I-.-I. J: 'mm : 'if X les fa-.gating Az I A' : 4 P..- . 9'- 1T,vf,:5.'j .'g,.-get 'P L A Q E ' , ... v -1. . - W -. v5 '. : .. 5' , gb. - 2' 1 . '71 'Z 's ' .,, . Y 5:i,A..yqi'?-fr - 2'f2C??E:?'w , .E-i:,!sEe.!-'fag'1-R ET: Eg!-g pm: tcftl - P343 I' ' ' COLER ZIMMERMAN i'ZiHl1ILf6U Elxsr ORANGE, N. J. lfniversity of Pennsylvania CIJAE Vesalius Society IMMY,U a New Jersey lad who spends most of his time between Philadelphia and York, will go down as one of the best- liked fellows of the Class of 1931. His premedical work at the University of Pennsylvania made him an ardent Penn man and even during his four years at to the limit. K'Zimmy, being very jovial and of a fun-loving nature, was behind many of the more humorous happenings in the serious daily routine of medical school. After the second year-Coler took Carlisle by storm and was one of the most popular soldiers at the Carlisle Barracks. His ability to have himself put on Hfatiguel' duty was nothing less than miraculous and the topic of many -1 nightly session. Zimmy', also showed his athletic ability at that time and his fielding and batting did much to win the i3aseball championship for the Jefferson Lnit. fl-lf'ff'y' .jKings ,County Hospital ..2.,.fr. e - . l. git:-'if 1 .Q 3 ifi .512 .1 ': 'i -1 Q :f aftgjbjitrik- H 'ttf' '-i 4 ' ' - W r .wa f- flu rr ez--f -Eff-B'rB9'ltly'n, N. Y. . Q , . . 1 . . A-, .1.fN.-., I , 5,-..,15,9n V.-psi -i.,.- -f 1 H .fl-dvr-,, xg' 'A-A f 3.- +-1, V 1 ,,' : ,g, 2f3'5Q'j'i'Q A - - C,:.,v,fy. .,, Q grub-1 tc .. 1 r- uf L ,-. . .l 2-3, J, . .:f3.:2g' L- - :J 1' tv'-gf' -- v. l .- pn, 1. . .. l , L .l...A...Olzie hlfn drecl ' eizglz ty-on e f .5 X xx- 5 I iff' K5 Q 'Qi as 'f'-7? -lfif' ' Q2 721. ff cf: . :Wil 5,5 .. .5375 '9- igi 'l 1117- l ' .1555 -'Z 3571 4? A -7' ' ' iff- .' 'f f in, ,.,..g1.- K ' 1 1- 1fTii?5?Qf5'TT,., :gjfg'3:,efgj g l , . . ,F in Y L nr V , rs ,, I 5 V 5 .P PI . . 1 ' ,- ,. Y . . . ' :ni .A-3 1 1 Q - 1- FF 1 is ' 'V A 3.Q 1-g?,:.- . V. .. . l - 111' 1.2.4.1 Q W, ,, L, . . 1 asf' -4. V. I -..'A:.,,- if .Q , .- i g - 5' - ' ' ff . - ' ' ' v . - - 1 .. .. -Af .1 'equi . ' ' 'gg' . 1 rf3':-::.-fl.-. 1 if l ' 'fz '4Y.1H?'. - ' . ' II a. 1 Ei f -.fs . ,- . ti 5-f Q -KJQQ 12 1 r :.- ' 1 ' Ai I .1 ST, ge.,-Y.---, K f.--5 1 1 -. g:'f,a 1?--'3f:.e.:'3t,'..'g-1 ' , 1 01 . 39:11 H-'BJ Wi: 11.3 Hifi 111,-' ff,-'EEG I Jefferson UZIIIIIUY, always backed Penn ' 4 me - e f pf-uf TJLQ , ' ' 1 ' .' -2' ,L .T. 1 fl f-.5 , LSP' kafgfl f fsf- 'I g:1i.4sfgs . , 2' 1 , tk-rf, sq Q 1 i gf,-5 5 if fi' I 5159+ l 11 Y g l. ,' l 1 Y X ' .11 3 ,ti Qlilipq, 1 -pf , ., , i ly S 1 :LH 5 .-Q1 5, ef 5. 3' I ' 'Lf-1 qi'-' T 1 Q .'. M x 3175- 'Z - I X5 ws-:QL 1 'll 4 1- ,K ' . ' 7 ,'-Mft? Z, til-443 Y W -4 f .?f ' -W , ' -.ESQ f 3 ' 1 5 qt f '59 X K' Zh, 55515,-11, I 4 I 5 - :. . 1 , 1 4 ,al 5 I 362.33-,, ..-15. i , Y. . . - tim., . 1 I 1 4 3 Q. gg no '. 4. ld .C pi it '1 'J , If f ' . -if f-.f J, ll wt ls - i R -.I rf 5 ,I L Q I J v P 5 gl P 4 ., mit: 'f if: ,i -' ' . ' 3 .pf ' - J- . - Q -1 -- 2' ' , l' 4 . ifewf J Q , 1 1 2 f i IZ F gg, .gf 1a,if7,1, 'X' 4x I 3 K 2 Bu' 1 -s ' 3 Y . W? gg 'sg Q , 4 ,- 1 4, fi-v . 2 . 5 X . ' c eil 5,1 'I - . ' Q32 ilu- ,W f 1 -.J ,N 1 sv . - , , , 4 f 4 f , gi 2 N A 4 , V .W if li? J W :L U? ,M 2, ,fa'QT,25 l, 21243 , 'YZ ff V4 his X , wi S 7 4 rel: :5 ' ' fi-lk g, ,M,:,3. , . X X es 55? if '54 1. 'Q 'lr Af is -P? 01 V lx I s 9' . 5 . 4.3 f IZ: x. .gn 5. . 5. 'ii U Y 'li I M 'T 1 1 , 0 M ' 'V 2?6'f':.5A.:,.-5,9-1:Q-gf-.1121 . ISADO RE ZUGERMAN HZ'ug PHILADELP1-IIA, PA. Bachelor of Science Uulverslty of Pennsylvania KX 1 . ,-l?fQilji3-nl 51-:,.1 . L 'fQ,,.4'- 4-. v'E3' c - - ' ' 9. .lf - 0,,::.r PE -. 1, .ff-. X ! 'ff' .uf 1 -'-nl 5 H ' ', . 151 .. .- E:-:ff e' - ' . - an I: K 1 .. V n .H ss QAK 25115 E 41- b s- ., z IIZ H i l . .. l UG 1S an 0lltSf2U1d1I1g exceptlon to f' , ,- 1 . jf the rule that good bundles come in Slllilllgj , I 1 packages. Hls 210 pounds of muscle wer-egg K in ' V f, if much in demand when the class was try-gi .5 js., ' ' f jjj . il2n ,mijl. ing to pass upw some struggling fellowil- f i 3-Q., classmate. Needless to Say he hnnseliit . 'H , 3, was not often molested. 3 , . Ts 1' ,Ja k Zug besldes bexng a very capabley 'I U Qi- asfig H student, was also a very conscientiousj' , 3 -fe' -'hid Ir- 1 Q 732 wg one. He had one of the best attendunceg 13 records of the entxre class. He was oftegag, it a frlend in need when nussed lecture notesf - QQQZQ li 3, had to be copxed. Hls specia1t1es.gi'is?ere'e ' 1 Uv. gli-5 'H e 4 G-U and D6I'H13t0l0gY' his E-lvorite ' f Y f 1 ' 5 ' 1 eff - ' N ' .' 19195, 2- I , ff '-'I so i3i, ' -9 75.5,-3.1.3 McCrz1e, Stellwagen and Schaeffer. 5 .Per--.Aj qrsjtgff ,Q 5 sg--'!Q55,i'Q sonally always square-deahng, C0l1S1ClG'1EEif6 2' 'S 4 und sensltive, he has every quulifi,cz1tlog15-- q J -5 for a successful future career. ' l TSE: ., gf '51 . ' f :fs .figigi 1' ff --.Q fi Umled Slales NQYV ' Erik ' ishiff' 1 Y T5 -ff - 11,- ' VA ' fel ti !:in2'51'4, -5- ' '--I 3 5gl?f9Z5ISf:E .-rj-3 ml .fffif- -...::5'-'S' -v - gp! cf ' ji? -3' f1Yfl5Q'f.?5 'ff-f.f.5 Q-.-Qi ., 11 :iff . '- px f If gm ' - V 5. , -,rf e -, --fy -.lgg-T 1 --..-.M it -e 5 litany -r 'f r Z 323- 'ggfvafi aj ,. .nj-WJ: fgL.K:'5 -Syl'--517 5 ,Q I I ifx.. .Q ':- '-N, ix If .yr LQ53, r'f': -'51 f..:.'L-:Wt-W d' JT-'ff- ' ':v-- FI' - f ' ' ' 1 ,Y ll.-' ' ffm: ' +,,1 ,.,..,-,fn-,.. ,M,,,,f. ., .-wg m.5:-.Ffh . .e K I . V P., -.M -.. - 1 sfyaqtifb- N-H51'.'f. 4- Q, . .:iu1'.g.,-LA.--X 215' 7 3- A Ng ,, . 1 is -Ar'.f':iT1.ix: if Je- fii:5.?1is.1 .- '- r 4-f, -.1zw,4- :e ' 55- -.'.:g1.g'QQe-51.1 Fa. 4 SWQS-AS'-T. 1- I ,.'I4,.1 fl-15,7-, ff:-3 -'l 1' 1: ,gl i., ' ,rg '- 1 Q., -Jflfa'.41-jl1f.iG,i'I--,.9fQ9?'4f ..fE'j55f:7if: . ,. 6, .'I,f- ,' H . M f-TP-if'5Z4'5f:'3Qa:ssLf gL'3f1G - '5?1?5- - if 7. me 5 ' '!' 1 5' 5 V '.'.'L 'frffffi:'fg?i?r3b2453 ?5f'4gfaf - K-26-25-121 3 P f -H ,ff-ff? P fga .P :iff '1fffm.egV,E i -lg 3 y 23,7 A is. ,se W AQUL 1-if ' - 4411 'v-'l'5ht1:'- ,.5'ji'5i'1: Eslyrf fl.'.f 4'.'-- fl 'lt' H 5 ' ' fm. '-' H T 'N' -M f A' 11 1-31 .- 1 , . CP , F' we .QF 1 eMs.g,'1,.N X X one hundred ...,:f.Q.yT1j.l :.2-a:-:,f-.-fA.G-1'- -3 1f1':i:H' 'r ' ' , I. 1. uv., 'g.:':,,L, 1- -'U ' es: A. Qs s s X rg sf img 2 .NN X ss vs N SN X GMX N Q: N 2 'ss N,-f-9 xi: s xi QNSNSWXY 3 eiwisx X ENE' mw- NENEXX XX X s i XX N Ns Q has Seniors ND here we end-with a few new faces present, and all too many old ones lnissingg survivors of that aspiring band of enthusiastic freshmen of four years ago. To those absent after our arduous- journey only VVE can bid a heartfelt and understanding farewell. Perusal of the counte- nances, considering our short stay here, proves them to be all oldg particularly when we compare them with the alniost boyish faces of four years ago. The Moving Finger writes: and having writ Moves on: Nor all your Piety nor Wil' Shall lure it back to cancel half a line, Nor all your 'rears wash out a worcl of it. Cmar Khayyam Q S N W.. MMT w NY. ' 1 si E vu X, -'rss 1 s- . -s ,XXV F S X s ,av ' ' ' ' ' - ,.,, 141013173 If 1 1 --p, ' A +4 -.. fagz.. A ' A-. g.zt' e1' V: : fy x .. . Q-e-411,-rw.-..' f f . .ts 1 -1... ee -1, A . - - . f ul, gf ,. L-,.,- , .- f H ' 1 -XA '- 1 , Mg' gi. ply, 4 4 , 35.71. ..,.'.51,.,.' if 4155.5 re Q, ' 5 ' , - ' aff: 4 -,pam at , gag . . -,ag,,.4'- at -:Q 1.1. 'f :ag r- X 3 ' vm.: e M,-:f , - as '- '- wig x . r -Shrub .Y , ,V ag , gg Ji. 4 :P .M , ,, 3 H: ,- ' :TfFi'-fQ- E ' X ,,.f1.,-,.:..'-'.1, -:si 'za , . h..-. Q 'KY-v - 151' -. . , 1-I as iv -2, ' ua. K . .ff .Yr F .1 .3 - 3514 H 1-.1 . fe -fra, , 'sg-f.f,,,. X -. -' '-Af ' YW .,. 2113- 1-Q. ' Y 'isa-I-v-: . fa .K f - -at -421 ' :eff-. f' -V .aa- a,,.ff:,-3 ,M -,, 4- ' I ,. 1 7 Q ft f.:-sf ' x ,s if H1 ,iw ' w.',:Q,. jpff -as -fs . isilfsw . is ,, ' we 't:n,.t- , :.?' .. '-is. ,f -f 1 X -L ,ra aw, '-if .ser ft. 4- .e, , ', T 4 :- fri- . 1 e- -i pq . .I if in a. at ,. ,-, 1 , f 22,5 J! 'V Q . Ve E, ,L .Ry ,,5-ctw.. 4 -:pg 1 omni-f 31- A . 55: Ara-fc , ,- Nm. 1, 'Q - .- Z -11:-55 ,Q .,t - Q I. ,9. - , If ,E - ,, I , .5 .v.,,,i,. , ,Nl -A..:.:-A-c,-,,,:,:,4 . ,:..i'1 , ',,.'s':1ff-1:12 :ni-,,wQiw Ya- ,,.,fQ,.,:'f N' . fi- .. 1...' is ,.:.:1. - i 'g2,,..'i-'., i?M15 -5 14. ft:-:LX , ss. , Wegri ,Q .-z.':,,f13:a3Lgg eggs- 1 :,g 'y','i12f - jf,.,,w .q:1gsg?e':ta,,,15:Ms:,g,-'esg1.- -,tgqw 2- 1, as t wukfzi- ..-i '--X-eel- '1 fwwg4a+.,,aQ,l'4 .. .,..vws:.rf, .t o.eAg:..A... A, ., .. ,. ...stare . 'sw .Qs , Q . ,AV ..-U Aw,,..,..,,.. , .e,..4,.,y. NSQ3, 4.:,.gvq, , ' ' -, Piiw, T'-X55w55'k1t.1siiiftfiwggf-ICiaiili'-'Q'-ki: 5 -' ' Urs s N lg Y- , 5 -y '--1, ' f' V eserve Qtficers Training Corps ll OMPANY A-Sound Ott. Does that stir any memories within you? Remem- ber that June of 1929, when we assembled at Carlisle Barracks for our Army Training? Jeiferson men exceeded in numbers any other college representedg that is one of the reasons why we practically dominated our company- A Company-that illustrious company which captured every worthy event during the encampment-except the Honor banner. XN'e had the reputation of being the most energetic group, and also to the Officers' dismay, the most independent and carefree delegation in the Camp. Let us talk about ourselves. The lirst week we tried spiritedly to be the Honor Company, standing in latrine formation, but when we learned their system of awards, the Honor had lost its glamour. WVe carried off the Battalion Baseball Championship, being undefeated in our campaign. As a. further tribute to our prowess, the Track Meet was added to our list. of victories, and last but not least, may we inquire-who held the record for pitching the tents in hospital company? There a.re things which should be left to the individual mind, to recall or forget, as it desires. But who can forget those hot days when we trudged up and down the drill field. 'with packs and riflesf-rifles for which we had no ammunition and, candidly, not the slightest use. Have you forgotten Murphy and his flower-bedsg Hager and his whistleg Major Van Kirk's snappy salute and his inseparable cigarg K. P. detailg the famous Fighting Third Platoon, and the t'Sloppy Second Platoon g the two-day hikeg and finally those lurid, complimentary remarks passed between Companies A and B in the dark of the night after 'tLights Out ! At the end of the six weeks' training we left the camp, tanned and hardened, and proud of our record. Up to the very end we could still hold our heads high and sing that popular song- S+ick the banner in the grass, We want butter. One 7l1l1l!ll'6!1 9if1lIf,U'fO1lI' f f 5 1 E51 K ' Q ZMFKZY few ' ,WW , I 6 ' qv N ff V Q SNS , ENBQ iNi'X ,NAA MR. WILSON Llbrarlan of 'Phe College X iff: N- 15- : 5 get ' -N23 if M- :W S Ms N .. l xr-ff 2 s 5 ww 3 Us Q NRSX 'L s Q15 2 5 iz, fx ,X EXW- 3 we Q 47. 2 Q sssQ,'SN - '-S i -'YF Miss GLASS Secrefary fo fhe Dean X ii One lzmzdred eighty-five 11-Y S YK 9 :XJ - e ,A N. -5a ff: -,ii Q NK we Y 4 N5-W QW I Juniors R W ,wi- A 3 Fi., JUNIOR CLASS w M4 953 f , . , I X 4, Q f ,X 2 xi , V i I! I g f ,fe wi' u 2' 5 W! V- 4 ? 2 if S if 'Q 2 ? 's V 1 6 Y ,X 3? gm J X 4, af M' 7 Y K f Vis ff 2 7 'XYQ gf! 5 ff V ex, Q. g 1 s, i s s Q XX if X -xl? EN' ' i For the Juniors HHN our right revered Editor, on a windy November night, suffering from hallucinations and what-not, gave us the ambitious assignment of diagnosing, prognosing and treating the college career of the illustrious Class of 1932 seeundum artem, we were disgruntled as well as thrilled. The latter sensation was inspired by the dream of vengeance upon our enemies- the former tempered by the realization that since we hoped to return next year, we could ill afford to jeopardize our scholastic and political ambitions by any unseemly journalism, justified or not. Therefore let it be distinctly understood that we are being nice to everybody, even t.o the O. U. Guys, in the probable, yet foolish hope that they will appreciate our saintly forbearance. This is to be neither history nor mythology. It is a brief introspective glance into our past, or rather, into that small but supremely important niche which dates from a memorable evening when Dean Patterson told us collectively how brainy we wereg it is to include a meagre burden of the proof, that, although his deductions were entirely accurate, one requires a great deal more than brains to live through the full tenure of a Jefferson apprenticeship. A full complement of endurance is essential as well-endurance, plus a strange ver- satility of temperament peculiar to the medical student and acquired as a protective mechanism against constant exposure to Jefferson Punch fpes- simismj, highly questionable associates Coptimismj, lues fobsessionj, and tuber- culosis fNIcCraej. Wle have come through-not unscathed. Here and there a second-hand copy of Gray's Anatomy, tattered and torn, an almost for- gotten name scrib-bled on the fly-leaf, bears mute testimony to the memory of one who was once with us but is no longer. Shades of the Freshman Year! Through a dimming mist we see a box full of gruesome bones whereon most of the landmarks so fluently described in the text were conspicuously absent, and whereupon well-meaning but ill-advised predecessors scribbled illegible names, and if legible, highly incorrect ones. How baffling was the attempt to fit a left humerus retrieved from a gigantic steve- doret into the right scapula of a premature infanttttt ,Tis said that even Thorner couldn't identify, much less understand, his fibula. fShame on him lj Time rolled on its endless course, as Time is wont to do, and there were other apparently ceaseless courses. Dr. Decker gave us some lectures for were they LECTURESJ in Immunology. Through an intricate maze of hapto- phores, toxophores, horses, asses and guinea-pigs, one pun stands out unparal- lelled in its stark atrocity. t'No matter how thin you slice it, it's still lVIaloney. God forgive him, for we never can. Volumes could be written of our experiences in D.B.I.g of how Baver so lucidly explained the terms CAUDAL and CEPHALAD by advising us to think of the body as 'flying down standing up like a dog once g of VVetzel describing heartbloc as a very serious condition , how Dr. Schaeffer made his famous, Oh, by the wayn announcement of the midyear. Such things need no flowery historical reiteration. Most of us have a favorite experience written fDeceased. tHeAlso deceased. One fl'llHlfI'Cfl eiglzfy-nine , i 2 I 1 f f I ,, f l' Y ' AMW' we -,Vi uf l f ff Q ,f f 7 f , f, , 4 If 1 , , l ,Q , 1 i , 1 f 6 Q 10- X , f f f fi 4 ef P 94 2 A f V Q I fffc f yfzgf, www indelibly upon the tablets of memory, some even have them in note books. To others, these mean less than nothing. None of us can ever forget those days at Clinton Street, where we were tried before a tribunal terrible in its gruel- ing thoroughness, yet impregnable in its impartial justice. Various and strange adjectives were used to describe the course in anatomy. However, uunfairv is one that we never could apply. Even Dave Hoffman's partiality to onions did not count against him in the final averages. And there was Dr. Rosenberger and his wonderful facility for remember- ing names. Perish the thought that he accomplished this by long hours of por- ing over our applications for admittance. He made us feel like personalities instead of registration numbers. During his hour it was that VVright's immortal blush blazed its brightest, that Murphy's inimitable nonchalance glowed to best advantage. One morning we awoke to find ourselves sophomores. fSee life of Lord Byronj. Wlhat a year! How utterly hopeless it is, in these few rambling paragraphs, to render it any measure of justice! VVQ cannot even hope to sean superncially the high lights here. Yet we became experts in physical diagnosis in nine weeks-and what experts! Should any of us ever forget that practical, when Jim Grace, ever suspicious of catch questions, said that the strawberry tonguea' was so called because of its fancied resemblance to a raspberry. Or when Gene Wfolfe had the second heart sound caused by the fcsnapping shut of the ileocoecal valves. Those were the days of real sport! Wle recall how Dr. Kalteyer's gestures were dramatic, even when his words were drowned out by Runkle's whispered complaints, or the droning of an insomniac fly about the room. Dr. Shallowis utombstonesn stand up in our memory, stark and awesome, as do the phlegmatic lectures of Dr. Klopp, who was always exactly six and one-half sentences ahead of the fastest note taker. Our laughter at his jests was always belated for that reason, not because they were lacking in humor nor we in appreciation. Dr. Thomas gave us ample physiology to worry over, yet Dr. Tuttle made life sweeter with his frog-charming skill on the harmonica. How completely his music soothed the amphibian breast! Frogs frisked in 1'hyth1natic unison to his soft strains, whilst iron tea1's trickled down Durante's cheek. Dear old Daddy Thornton! It is almost sacrilege to become sentimental in an article such as this, and yet we cannot sincerely do otherwise. He is the kindliest teacher and the most typical example of the Good Old Doctor it has been our fortune to meet. He shall carry with him always, the very best wishes of every man who sat in his lectures. Of these, not a few have become truly great-none greater than their delightful teacher of materia medica. And so we have come to be Juniors. For the history of this year of years we refer you to the CLINIC of 1932, whe1'ein it is to be hoped a more able recorder will compensate for the many shortcomings of this one. Now let us be content to view the past with pride, the future with hope, and the present with a grain of salt-or possibly two to four Q2-Qsj drachms of mag sulphate. Selah. One Yzfimdred ninety ' V . ik 's is x N X Hx wi iff , .V i 3 A 42 'Q x? sf af 1 5' f 3' 2 4 s ff X f W w if a x 5 A X i 4 X W f lf . Fi Q , s sf ,f 'f V, W if Q, i sa x fp? A2 f ' Qc, Q, f ,ef afy Y 6 B i sire as s S is L xx X .e...,.,X L sw A ss SX Xxx sis 1 sez Junior Class OFFICERS Prcsidcnt Sacrciury GEORGE A. Poinmcix lJoN,xi.n S'r1i.1.ER Vi!-0-I'1'csifIeiit Trr'as11'i'w' l.I.oYu E. Sixvlnii Sixxiriar. Ii. IQMIFMAN Il isloriu n. JOHN J. LADDEN Clinic Business C'0l7H71iffUC' XVXLLIAM T. RICE ll'i1,1.1AM M. llowEi.L Fimxcls ll. .ROLAND Clinic Ediiorial Comniiticc EUGENE F. Woi.rE CLASS ROLL Aldin, Albert .,............ . .Pennsylvania Fortin, Francis Frederick ..,.... Massachusetts Albrecht, Conrad Earl. , . ,... .Minnesota Gelfand, David ..,,......... . . .Pennsylvania Allen, Homer Richard ..... ..Pennsylvania Gerber, Morris Jean .,,.... ...Pennsylvania Allen, Reginald Anthony .... . .Rhode Island Gillespie, Patrick Joseph . . . . .Pennsylvania Ashley, Claude Vlfilber .....,......,. Missouri Gillis, Alfred George ....... ...Pennsylvania Averbach, Bertram Frederick. .... ,, .... ..Ohio Goodman, Francis, Eugene ..,,., Pennsylvania Ayres, James S .....,........,. North Carolina Grace, James, Jr. .....,... ...Pennsylvania Bair, Charles Vvilliam ..... Bakunin, Maurice Irving, . . . Barthold, Joseph Leo ..... Bayer, George Arlen ,......... Benson, Kenneth Haworth ..... Berrettini, Achilles Alfred .... Bittrich, Norbert Martin. . . Boland, Francis Patrick .... . .Pennsylvania .. .Connecticut . . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania ......Indianna ..Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania Brandwan, Samuel, Jr ,..,..,..... Pennsylvania Bronk, Henry N ........,........ Pennsylvania Brown, Agustus Webster Hendrix ,.,..,. Ohio Breen, Louis Emmett, Jr .....,.......,... Ohio Buonato, Sebastian James ,...... Pennsylvania Cacia, John Joseph ......... ..Pennsylvania Chapnick, Morton Herman... .. Connecticut Cheleden, John Joseph ...., ,.Pennsylvania Claftey, John Bernard .... ..Pennsylvania Costello, Thomas Joseph .,..,.. Curtis, Morris Williams .,...... . .Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania Darnall, Carl Robert .,.,. District of Columbia Deardorff, Frederick XVellington.Pennsylvania Deich, Samuel .... .,...,......,. . Deitz, Aaron ................... Dodson, Claude Cordray .... Doyle, VVilliam Joseph ..... Durante Raphael Henry ..,. Fales, Robt. M. . ............. . Feissner, Hermon Herbert, Jr Ferguson, George Burton .... Fine, Barnet .,......,...,,. Finkelstein, Herman ..,. Flaig, Julian Vincent .... . . .New Jersey . . . . , .Maryland . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania . Pennsylvania South Carolina Endres, Vifarren Harris . . . . . Ezell, Stiles, Dean ...,....,..... .North Carolina . .Pennsylvania ...........Ohi0 ...Connecticut . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania One himclred Grim, Earl Hen ry ...,..... .... .Pennsylvania Haar, Frederick Behrend ...... North Carolina Haimowitz, Solomon Manuel .... Hegarty, Francis Arnd ..... Hershey, Joseph Ivan Hinkson, VVilliam James... Hoffman, David . ,..... .... Hoffman, Joseph Francis. .. Hohm an, George Charles Horn, Leonard ............. Horvitz, Morris ....,..... Horton, Park Martin ....,,. Howell, Xvilliam Murdock, .. Hudson, Floyd Isaac ....... Hughes, VVilliam Lloyd .... James, Alfred Elmore .... Karr, Howard Harris... Katz, Gabriel Henry ........ Kaufman, Samuel Russel. .. Kehres, Henry Nathan ...,. Keys, Nathaniel Thomas .... Klempner, Paul .,.........,. Kredel, Thomas WVatkins. .. La Clair, Charles Huston, Ladden, John Joseph ........... . Lashinsky, Charles Vlfilliam ..... Layton, Robert Reese, Jr .,.... .. Lechman, Joseph Francis. .. ... Leopold, Howard Charles. . . . . . .Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania .New Jersey Pennsylvania Pennsylvania . . ,New York Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania . . .Tennessee Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania . New Jersey Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania . , . .Delaware Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Lesh, Vincent Orlando ......, ...New Jersey Liberace, Ettore Valentino .,.... Lichstein, Jacob ............ . . . Lomax, Joseph ..,. Lyons, Ralph .. . ninety-one Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania s ' f A if 1 f 4 f f f 7 5 if W 7 f V J if i 7 1 ll W! A K X l W 7 f X 4 I4 if W 6 af 7 2 Q 1 1 4 41 7 4 QQ! dy., 01 ff, 4? C Lytle, Carl Samuel .....,... McClintock, Walter Lowrie. . . . . McGlade, Thomas Henry. . . . . . McLaughlin, Thomas Finley.. Maloney, Francis Dunn ....., . Manges, Lewis Clarence, Jr.. .........Florida Massachusetts . . .New Jersey . . .Pennsylvania ...Connecticut .Pennsylvania Martin, John Thomas .......... South Carolina Meckstroth, Herman Franklin Megowan, Robert ..,.,..,...., Meranze, Theodore .........,.. Moore, Thomas Scott .....,... .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania ..........Ohi0 Morrison, Donald Allen Robert. ........ Hawaii Moscarella, Alfred Savino ..... Murphy, Myles Joseph ..,..... Murray, XVillia1n Joseph ....... . . . . . .New York .Pennsylvania . . .Rhode Island Nightingale, Arthur Bernard, New Hampshire Neff, Vifalter Scott ..,......... Northrop, Robert Arthur .... .. Pearson, Julius Ralph. .. Pentz, Clarence Rolland... . Perrine, Cornelius C. Phelps, John M ...,.... Pious, TVillia1n Leon ...,. Podboy, August John ........ Porreca, George Alexander. .. Pratt, Arthur Gomersall. . . Provisor, Benjamin .......... Ricchiuti, Amerigo George .... Rice, YVilliam Thomas ......, Rogers- Herman C. . . .Pennsylvania ...Connecticut Pace, Samuel E ......,.... . . . . . .New Jersey .Pennsylvania . . . .New Jersey ...Connecticut . .Pennsylvania , . .Pennsylvania . . .New Jersey . .New Jersey . . .Pennsylvania ..........Ohio . . .Pennsylvania xy S, Rosenberry, Benjamin Franklin Pennsylvania Rosenbluth, Sidney Benjamin ,..,... New York Rothermel, John Keim.. ........ Pennsylvania Runkle, Stuart Calvin, Jr. ....... Pennsylvania Saylor, Lloyd Elwood ............ Pennsylvania Schlezinger, Nathan Stanley ............. Ohio Schreiner, Herman Michael. .. Schwebel, Samuel ....,...... Scott, Michael Milton. . . Serino, Gilardo Samuel ...... Shoun, Alexander Nelson .... Silver, Morris ..,..,......... Spalletta, Camillus Henry. . . Stahl, Lloyd Alva. .. ,..,.. Stiller, David ..,.......,....,. . . .Pennsylvania ...........Ohio New Jersey . . . .Pennsylvania . . . , .Tennessee . . . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania . . . . .New York Thorner, Melvin W'ilfred ......... New Jersey Tomaseski, Vvilliam Henry ..... Pennsylvania Ullery, Jack Calvin .........,.. Ungar, John, Jr. ....... , Vastine, John Robert .... Viener, Bernard ................ 'Wade, James Lowrance ........ . XVeintraub, Sydney Edward .... Tiferes, James .................. . XVest, iVilliam Brady... Vifetzel, Roy James ....... ..........Ohio .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania VVest Virginia .Pennsylvania ..New Jersey .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania Vifeymouth, Raymond E. .............. Nlaine Vfindley, Wfilliam Hays. . . ... Wolfe, Eugene Fink ........ Vvright, Burchard Eakin .... . . . Young, Herbert K. ..... . One lzilnflred ninety-two North Carolina .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania 43 za s if A 1 2 I 1 W f ff f if is 5 2 'S i 1 3. X Sn X es 1 L W x l L fam ' f T f 4 fl QW 476 4241 X sophomores Q X X X N xv SS LA C RE MO O PH SO U w -Q -XXX! 131255 XX Nm f ,ss - s -:- X ANP Ns .f X X4 -'I' X Class ol 1933 N THE evening of September 23, 1929, at the open-ing of tl1e one hundred and fifth 21111111211 session of the Jefterson Medical College, there assembled in the Clinical A1'11ph'itheatre a group of o11e hundred and sixty-one young men with tl1e numerals 1933 branded indelibly on their countenances. Tl1e group l1ad Hl1SWC1'Cd eagerly the sunnnons of Dean Patter- so11 to be present at tl1is most inemorable of occasions. Dr. J. E. Thomas, Professor of Physiology, with his talk O11 '4The Development of Nledical Teaching Laboratories, introduced tllClI1 i11to the mysteries of a Jefferson lecture. Dean Patterson, with the confidence imparted to llllll by lists of' neatly compiled records, a1111ounced that of all classes to enter the august halls, that of 1933 was far and above all others in every respect. As soon as hir. Cyrus H. K. Curtis l1CEll'd of Dean Patterson's plan to expose at least one good class to the ravages of the Jefifersonian Faculty, he, together with tl1e Board of Trustees, gladly and very generously supplied a sufliciently large endowment to build and equip tl1e IICWV clinic tl1at is to bear his name. He specified, of course, tl1at this building is to be completed in 1511116 for tl1e Class of ,33 to use it. Many other l101lO1'S were immediately showered on this, our class, the most outstanding medical undergraduates of all times. The new college build- ing had been very hur1'iedly finished to receive us. 1Ve were privileged to be tl1e first green class to work there. Along with this privilege came that of climbing six flights of stai1's daily to l1C?L1' Drs. Rosenberger and Decker deliver their elevated', and so1neti111es enlightening lectures in Bacteriology. In order to give us so1netl1ing of tl1e spirit of uoldv Jefferson, our class was invited to attend lectures during tl1e first two weeks of its sojourn in Philadelphia in the old building. The glory of the past was thus implanted in us, along with a greater appreciation of the comforts and grandeur of the new building when we finally started classes there. The uintensiven system of study was practiced for the last time on our sec- tions. Four minds guided us into the mystery surrounding anatomy, chem- istry, and loacteriology. VVe were obliged to take off' our invisible dinks to 'cRad, Rosie, Jake,,' and t'VVithrow,' for guiding us through rough nine weeks, stands. And lest we forget, we were thevlast class to- use in an ojficial capacity, Radasch's Practical Histology. VVe pity and extend our sym- pathy to all future classes who will not be able to buy, borrow or steal copies of this splendid work! Speaking of Rad -there's a young feller who is going to make a name for himself some day, probably as the spokesman on the air for so1ne news weekly. How, gentle reader, would you like to hear a ten-minute debate, with thirty seconds of rebuttal between uRad and Floyd Gibbons on the subject of 'tThe Inherent Properties of Protoplasmf, The Class of 1933 will Qsend out into the world more practically perfect bandagers than any other class. Vile may well challenge all comers to do OIIG 7111111111361 ninety-fi 1:6 7 f ,. .Q if? 4. if g, 1 X Y Q? 1 6 V ' 'fn aw w ,rf f A f Q7 5191 battle with us for our title. been ours-extended into and covering the whole sophomore year. An extended course in freshman bandaging has One hundred and forty of our members attained sophomore standing with the passage of time-thirty-two weeks of it. VVe were introduced into our second year at the convocation, September 22, 1930. A large percentage of white hairs among our members was obtained during the fourteen weeks spent with Jake in the realms of brain anatomy. The smoothly functioning anatomy sections of our first year were indeed things of the past on entering second year's work. The first ten weeks were spent in aimless contemplation of brains and the ceiling, and discussing the lVorld Series, Bobby Jones, the football games, and Dinty's stories. The last four weeks were enhanced with worry, work, and wondering how many would be at the convocation in 1981. A 1'ed letter day was marked on our sophomore calendar, January 17th. Dr. DaCosta for t.he first time in years delivered a lecture to a second year class. He spoke on Surgical Giants of Jeffersonv with true DaCosta fire and a command of our mother tongue that was truly marvelous. At five o'clock on the afternoon of February 7th, one hundred and forty members of the Class of 1933 were casting about for the uwhite man,s Hre water with which to drown all sorrows. By that time, all our troubles insti- gated by brain anatomy were sto1'ed away in 1DCI'IlO1'y,S folds. Only Chem- istry, Symptomatology, Physical Diagnosis, Physiology, Pathology, llflateria hfledica, Pharmacology, and Surgery remained to be our constant companions. These subjects, however, were enlivened by such occasions as the following: Che-mistry: Dr. Looncy's vivid description of the physical properties of chemically pure indol and skatol. Physical Dia-gn-0sis.' Dr. Kalteyer keeping his lectures strictly confi- dential by talking only to those lucky enough to get front row seats. Symptomatology: Dr. Kalteyer,s description of one of his visits to the witness-stand. . . . and I says, 'Judge, do I have to answer that question? 7' Physiology .' Dr. Thomas illustrating the physiology of the lungs in the pleural sac as a little rubber balloon in a bottle. Pathlology: Dr. hIoon's taking issue with the doubting Thomases of Physiology. llfateria ilIed'ica.' One could write volumes here, but the lecture on anaesthetics was paramount. Here, Daddy?' described how the voracity of one patient corrected the defects of some hasty surgery. Pharmacy: VVill Dr. Appleman ever get to remember that CoXe's Hive Syrup is a syrup that is not for hives, and not a syrup invented by Dr. Hive for roostersg or that the oil of anise is a vegetable preparation and not a secretion of the lower enteron? Surgery: Dr. Seelaus was the best lecturer of the year. He could make even Chemistry interesting, and that's that. Physiology: Dr. Tuttle's lecture on electrocardiography. One hzmdred ninety-six Sf Y vs fi f ik?-SY? 'Z' , if 2 'B is X s K 6 Q 5 f :sa 2 2 'Mi EQ 23 4 . . . ...,. New York OFFICERS President Secretary JAMES FRANCIS LYBIAN CnAR1.1:s A. Gusnon, JR. Vice-PresizICn.t Treasurer RAYMOND F. SMITII Jonn L. BARNER Ilistorian IsAAo E. TIARRIS, JR. J 01-iN R. BONX'ER Alexander, Gilbert Henry. Baker, Daniel Clifton, Jr. Baker, Theodore, Jr. ..... . Barner, John Lemuel... Barnett, Thomas .......... Barstow, Richard Iddings. Bell, Dudley Philip ...... Bobes, Solomon Subere ,... Boland, Francis Bernard. .. Bond, Jesse Homer ........ EDWARD MIURRAY Clinic Business Uoniluittee BIACLEAN B. LEATH, JR. Clinic Eclitorial ConrmiHec O. B. FELDSFER J. STANLEY SMITII ANTHONY RUPPERSBURG, JR. . . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania ...,..,....1owa . . .Pennsylvania Massachusetts . . . . . . . .California VVest Virginia . . . .Pennsylvania . . . ..,...,.,.. Ohio Borthwick, Malcolm James. ..... Pennsylvania Bower, John R. ........,. . Britt, Edward Charles... Burn, John Frederick .... Cantor, Max ........,..,... Carr, James Stephenson.. Carter, Mark Lee .......... Cassone, Vincent James... Chodoff, Richard Joseph. .. Clark, Ralph Elden .....l.. Cleaver, 'Clarence Perry.. Collins, Arthur Dunnicliffe. Cook, Norman' Lyle ........ Copleman, Benjamin ...... Crandall, Noble Franklin. . . Crow- Morton Jay ...... Cuden, Nathan Joseph ...,. Custer, Edward Williain. .. Dacus, Robert Mabry, Jr. . Davis, John Evan, Jr. Deibert, Glenn Aneas .... Denbo, Elie Alexander ..... Denny, Michael Richard.. Detar. David Dewey ....... Dye, Franklin Foster .... Eddy, Lester Rodgers... Elkin, Morris ........... Ellin, Victor Blewett ..., Elliott, Frazier Jackson .... Evans, Thomas Russell ,... Feldser, Oscar Benjamin.. Fennell, Ralph Elmer ...., ..,. P ennsylvania Fescina, Joseph Vincent ..,. Finlayson, Bliss L. ...... . Flaherty, James Aloysius. ,. Frick, XVillis Gilbert .,... Fuerst, Harold Theodore ..,.. Gadomski, Casimir Francis.. Gannon, Paul Aloysius ....... Gartman, Edward ..,....,,... Geibel, Frank Baum ......... . . . .Pennsylvania , . .,......, Utah . . . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania . . . . . . .Florida . . . . .New .Jersey . . . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania Gibbons, Charles Aloysius, Jr. .,Pennsylvania K . l . . . . . ,Pennsylvania Glocker, Rudolph Karl. . . . . . . . . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Goldberg, Philip Darrell. . . .... Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Goldberger, Arnold .,..... ..,. P ennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Gordon, Jacob ........... .... P ennsylvania . .. .Pennsylvania Guidotti, Frank Peter .,.. .. .New Jersey . . .Pennsylvania Hahel, Karl ....... , ......... .... P ennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania Haines, VV.illits Parker, Jr. . .. ,... New Jersey . , . .Pennsylvania Hamilton, Francis Joseph ...... Pennsylvania ...YVashington Harris, Harold Byron ............ Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania Harris, Isaac Emeron, Jr. . . .North Carolina , .....,....,... Ohio Ialaxvkins, Vyilbur James, Jr. . .Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania Hersohn, Xxfilliain Ylnolf ......... ,New Jersey ...New Jersey Hippie, Percy Lamprey, Jr. .... Pennsylvania . . . . . . . , .Ohio Holmes, Arthur E. ... .. . .. .. . ...Pennsylvania . . . . . . . . . . .Ohio Hoyt, Ralph Charles. . . . . . . . . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Irwin, George Middleton. . , .... Pennsylvania . ...Pennsylvania Jenkins, Edward John ........... Pennsylvania . . . .South Carolina Johnson, Fred Gordon, Jr. . . . . . .Wiscoiisin ...Pennsylvania Kavanaugh, Myles Thomas ....,. Pennsylvania ...Pennsylvania Kelley, Francis Hugh ............ Pennsylvania , , ,New Jersey Kemble, John Williaiii. . . .... Pennsylvania . ...Pennsylvania Kemble, Robert Penn .... .... P ennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Kieffer, Jesse .......,... .... P ennsylvania . . . . . . . . .Ohio Kirshner, Jacob Joseph. . . , . . .Pennsylvania . . . . . . . . .Ohio Kniseley, Joseph Harry. , . . . . .Pennsylvania . . . . . .New York Koretsky, Leo. . . . . . . . . . . Massachusetts . . ,Pennsylvania Kotanchik, 1lValter ...... . . ,... Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania Leach, John Edward .........,... New Jersey . . .Pennsylvania Leath, MacLean Bacon, Jr .... North Carolina . . . .Pennsylvania Leiby, Lewis James ..... . . . . . .Pennsylvania One hmzzlrecl ninety-seven, Of7f 'f . 1 J ti . .. M UZ. 1,55 vfw? 'L - lil . ,iff ' fzi 2' ' . '2.2-gif '.,,.'51,? YN .V+ if vs. ,Q N f we N X s Leichner, Thomas Joseph ....... Pennsylvania Levick, Alfred David ...,.,..... .Massachusetts LOdel', Earl Samuel ............,. Pennsylvania Lyman, James Francis ...,...... Pennsylvania McCorkle, 'William Pyles, Jr. . . .Pennsylvania McKnight, Williani Patton ...... Pennsylvania Mackowski, Herbert Vvilliam ....,., New York Matys, Edmund Vincent .,....,.. Pennsylvania Mermon, Michael Stephen 4...... Pennsylvania Miller, Connell Hutchison .,.,..,. Pennsylvania Morgan, Richard VVilliam .,...... Pennsylvania Morris- Ludson Delroy ...... Murphy, Thomas Francis ..., Murray, Edwin Nelson ...... Myers, Norman V. .... . Padula, Louis Joseph ..... Pandolfo, Harry ,........... ........Indiana . . . .Connecticut . . . . .Delaware ...New Jersey . . . .New Jersey ...,Pennsylvania Patton, Howard Rand, Jr. ..... Pennsylvania Pellicane, Anthony Joseph ........ New Jersey Pewterbaugh, David Chester .... Pennsylvania Pezzuti, Hamil Ralph ............ Pennsylvania Phillips, Clarence Eugene ........ Pennsylvania Raymond, Eugene Edward .... .. .Pennsylvania Reedy, XValter Joseph ...., Reynolds, Kenneth Earl.. . Ricker, Charles Thorne .... Ridgway, Eli Chester, Jr. . Ruppersberg, Anthony, Jr. . . . . .Pennsylvania . ...Pennsylvania . . . .New Jersey . . . .New Jersey ..........Ohi0 Sabatino, Nathan Andrew ......... New York Schaub, John Jerome ....... .... P ennsylvania TQ S sss Q N S Schaum, Clyde Franklin. .. Schlossbach, Theodore ..... Schwartz, Charles Edward. Schwartz, Geo. J. ........ . Seidelman, Sidney Elias.. Sellitto, Anthony Michael... ... Semisch, Charles William. Sharp, William Thomas... Shellenberger, Lewis C. .. Shields, Marshall Francis.. Shivelhood, David Kalbach .... .. Smith, J., Stanley .......... Smith, Raymond Francis.. Stapinski, Stanley Michael. Steele, James McLeod ..... Steele, Robert ........... Stein, Samuel Harry ....... Sutula, John Vincent ...... Taggart, 'William Graham. Thompson, Thomas Ewing, Jr. .. Troup, Harold Eugene ..... Urban, Joseph Thomas ..... Walte1'- Henry, Jr. .... , . . . Wa1'Held, Robert Breckinridge. Pennsylvania .New Jersey Pennsylvania Pennsylvania .New Jersey .New Jersey Pennsylvania .........Ohio Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania . . .New York Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania .........Ohio Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania 'Wilson, George Brinton McClellan, Jr., Pennsylvania WVong, James Sin Fook... ........... Hawaii Young, Richard Wallace ,...... VVest Virginia Zakrzewski, Matthew Joseph. . .Pennsylvania One l111ndre1l ninety-eight D35 AX . . . ' ' h 4 ' Wi.. az: s..f+':f:zf'if4of-,j.5fi:1gfm,.mgrae .W ' - Lv' t .i.iw'q.s..t ir,7igy,.'rw' -fag 'f:'1f.-Q13 j . is -1: .. ffl. 'W .Q 'Q N Xff' N ,X NX. ff X 7454 di Qx J S s 1 9 2-QS. N as mi? 57 ' gs, if 'fr XZ s fi? F l s Q D N 3' 6 1 a f . ,V N 23 42 K! ,ss fl if? 52 fs ,Q . fy we xl tg I Z K W N Fl'2SI'IITlCl'l N x E X v 7 355 zz ... , .16 sssstzss 2 FRESHMAN CLASS sh W X X2 1 X 1 M95 4 .A 4 '94 A 4 N l 4 4 , by f M ai f f EA! . . . if K X 1. f Vs sb fab - . gs Q ' t . x X me is Q -s .. 2 1 ei -. X- X av- vs 2 Q 2 , News 'i ' as Xt 5 Nt .Qs A i r. XXX Freshmen impressions FTER a kaleidoscope of changing, astounding vistas, we found our- selves transferred abruptly into a new environment with a suddenness which was breath-taking, an environment which was different from anything that we had ever encountered before. The very atmosphere was charged with new ideas, new customs and new outlooks. In short, we had discovered a new world. After we had been bustled through the o1'dinary prosaic registration routine, we were initiated into the even mo1'e prosaic rushing tactics of the medical fraternities. This was the first time since our arrival at Jefferson that we felt that we were meeting these superior beings, known as the upperclass- men, on common and equal grounds. It served to restore our equanimity to some extent. But our placidity was almost momentary because it was abruptly dis- carded after classes began. VVe were subjected to the grind of the Institute at Eleventh and Clinton Streets. Hard benches, difficult assignments and harsh-tongued instructors combined to fo1'1n a veritable Juggernaut seeking to crush us. VVith this came long hours of work with scarcely time to perform the ablutions at noon or to eat properlyg in the anatomy-laboratory all of the afternoonsg to our dingy rooms at 6.00 P. NL5 dog-tired, dirty, sweaty, and with the effluvium of the dissection room permeating our beings 3 and nothing to which we might look forward save a general overhauling and a Hve-minute recess with a soothing pipe before being driven to four or five hours of study by an indomitable will and by a smarting conscience both of which continually forced us to evade any extracurricular diversion. All of this is truly a repetition of the horrors depicted in de Quincey's Dreams of an Opium Eater. But because of all of this we sincerely feel that we are learning much of value to us. VVe are being trained to think quickly and logically, to develop our memories to a fine degree, to live to purpose, and lastly to realize that many wonderful things have been done in our new-found field, but there still remains unlimited possibilities for us in every branch of medicine that we have studied this year. i VVe are now in the rapid process of advancing from the dark realm of ignorance to the light of medical learning. Three years hence we shall be able to look back, individually and collectively, over the rocky road which the faculty has, as our interpreter, patiently led us and to thank them in the terms of John Bunyan's Christian : . Here l have seen things rare and profitable, Things pleasant, dreadful, things to make me stable ln what l have begun to take in- hand: Then let me think on them, and understand Wheretore they showed me were, and let me be Thanlctul, O good Interpreter, to thee. Two lziuzdred one fy! Ti J. Agre. E. XV. . Andrews Angle .. Bar. S. ..... . Bigotti. R. T. . Bloom. C. H. .. Bower, H. B. .. Bowie, G. XV. , Braun. XV. ..... . Brindle. H. ll. .. Carbonetta, R. ll. Carey, J. L. .... . Carlina, J. T, .. Cassono. XV, T. .. Cinberg. L. A. .. Cole. R. ,... . Coley, R. S. .. N S .5 N L1 'Q Freshman Class OFFICERS President Secretary D. Horfr S. A. J oNAs cc'-1'resi1lenff T1'easm'er R. Fonsrrr-nz J. P. ROBINSON, Jn. Historian V. R. Mownnlxr Clinic 1fflL.S'l7l68S Represem'a1ives SAMUEL M. XVOLFE. Jn., R. A. HAREQ E. J. Clinic Ecliforial Rep1'esenIa1i've O. T. YVDOD, JR. CLASS ROLL ...Pennsylvania ...Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania .... ...California ...Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania .........Maine ...New Jersey ...Pennsylvania ...Pennsylvania . . .Pl-FllllSj'lV3lll1l ...Pennsylvania . . . . .New Jersey ...Pennsylvania ...Pennsylvania Collins, L. K. ..... . Conahan, T. J., Jr Conole, F. D. Cooch. J. W. .. Cook, A. ..... . Dawe, G. G. .... . Desantes, F. A. .. de Diego. D. C. . Dantini, D. C. .. Emery, C., Jr. Eshleman, C. B. . Failnietzger, T. It Falcone. N. A. Ferer, VV. C. .. Fiorella, J. R. .. Forsythe, J. R. .. Frank, D. ..... . Friedman, J. T. . Fronduti. L. J. .. Funke, A. N. Gallagher, J. P. . . . . , .Oklahoma . . .New Jersey . . . . .Pennsylvania ...New York . . .Delaware . .... . . .Maine .. ... ...Arizona ...Pennsylvania . ..... Porto Rico ...Pennsylvania ...........Maine .. ...Pennsylvania . . . . .Pennsylvania ...Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania . . ,New Jersey ...Pennsylvania . . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsylvania . . .Pennsyvlavnia .. .Pennsylvania Gallo, F. ..... . Gidmling. S. Gillespie. H. .... . Glenn. J. A., Jr. .. Goodfellow. J. G. . Grady. H. C. .... . Gricco. J. L. .. Grini. M. D. Grunt. L. ...... . Goldcainp. J. S. .. Halpern. G. M. .. Hanks, XV. H. .. Hare, R. A. ..... . Harrer. YV. J., Jr. Hart. A. W., Jr. .. Hawk. M. H. Helmble. H. M. .. Hescll, J. A. Hibbard. H. ll. . Hoberlnan. E. . Hofer, W. R. Horovitz. J. J. Houser. B. P. .. Hoyt, D. ..... . Hunter, F. D. .. Hyman, J. G. .. Ingham, J. L. Isenberg, C. L. Ishii, C. H. Israel, H. L. .. Jonas, S. A. Kandle, R. P. . Keever, K. VV. Kenworthy, W. P. Kerstein, L. N. Koclxenderfer, T. T. .. .. Kosanovic, F. .... Keithan. J. F. .. Moons . . . .Connecticut . .New Jersey . .. .Connecticut .. . .New York ....WVisconsin .Pennsylvania . .New Jersey .Pennsylvania . . New Jersey .........O11io . . . . .Hawaii . . . .Delaware . .New Jersey .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .........Ohi0 ...........Oll1KJ .Pennsylvania ..........Ol1io .Pennsylvania ,. . .New Jersey ...... .Florida .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania . . . . . . .Hawaii Massachusetts .Pennsylvania . . . . .New Jersey West Virginia .Pennsylvania .. . .New York .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania .Pennsylvania Two 71-'zmdred two f ' f . 1 if 4 ff 7 2 3 f S ge 7 . f 5 N fi 3 . Q 'u y 2 5 X as V? s ,ff Ns s A la V 5 V Z is ' 3 l f my A as ,Z 4 . YW 91 5 l V f fgxkf Q ff-V X A A ' X Z X N A, A42 My fx 4 3.6. 7 Z A we . N a 'E i EX? is s. r P S as s 1. fr Q4 Z. .. V 5233 l A. .... . .W re Nf S 'Q 5 X5 Q 3 5- , . S f Size QL Y 1 V2 M :fi Aw Lohnes, J. T.. Jr. Larkin, F. L. Lerner. J. .... .. Lohuiun. J. NV. .. McConnell, T. NV. McC0ol. S. G. BICFIIIJGCII, J. F. McMullen. J. T. . Mc1Stn-en, A. S. Mucl-zo, H. A. Mansker, J. S. Mansniunn, J. A. Marsh, L. E. .... . Mattis, P. A. .. Metzger, C. Z. .. Miller, C. J. Miller, L. E. .. Moore, E. J. Moore, E. J. Jr. . Meiliug. R. Newmark. A. A. . Philips. W. C. .. Phippen, H. D. . Place, E. R. Pomerlnu, O. F. Powers, B. R. Pumphrey. G. H. Putney, F. J. Quinlan. J. W. .. Rabinowitz, I. .. Ramsey, R. W. . Redfield, R. L. .. Reiss, A. J. .... .. Li . ff tic ' lf? fi y5:'g.35FS4 1 Qgkfl ,jf . BIHCCOIIIQGX, H. H. Mowbray, V. R. . Robinson, P. J., J Kessler. NV. I . .. Locklitner, M. D. Lim, J. P. .... .. Liu, A. T. ....... . l'... . ...New York ...POIIIISXIVIIIIJH ....Califorui:1 ... .... I-Inwzlii .....Ne-W York . ..L'l 1l11SXlVil1li2l ...P0llllSYlVfll1i2l . ..Pennsylv:1ni:1 ...Now Jersey .. .New .Tm-1'su3' .. .PPllllHylV:llli:l .. . Pl-'llIlSj'lVill1i2l . . .Pl'Illl'SYlVilllii1 ..........O11io . . . I'0Ill1sj'lV:1l1i:l .....New York ...Peniisylvuniax .. .L's-rinsylvalxin ..Pennsylvuniu . .Pc-nnsylvuxlizx . .PC-'l1llS1'1V21llii1 ...... .Missouri . .Pennsylvunizi . .l?e11nsylv:1uia ...xV2IShillgf0ll ...........Ol1io ..1'PIlllSj'lVHlli2l ..I'ennsylv:1niu .........M:1ine . . P0l1llSY1Vill1l,21 .........B1i1iI10 . . .'l'v1u1essec ..........,.O11io South Carolina .....New Jersey . . P0lll1SYlVzll1iil ..Pennsylv:mia . .PGllIlSj'1V1l11ii1 . .Pennsylvania ..PClll1SYlV21l1i21 SSN Q llosoxilln-1'g. E. F. .. l-lush. I. A. ..... . Sulesky. 1'. M. .. Santoro. T. A. .. Snpiro, IC. M. .. Suxe. IC. 1. Svhultz. S. Ii. .. Scllwurtz. E. .. Shanks, H. J. .. Shields, XV. P. .. Shovliu. J. P. Singh, G. .... Silver, I. O. .. Slatniske, A. .. Smith, I-I. C. Sollenberger, F. . Stubnick. J. S. .. Stuby. A. J. .. Steele. F. H. ...... .. Stewart. H. L.. Jr. . .. Slltlllil. S. J. ,.... Swanker. W. A. .. Swearingen. R. . Strong, P. T. Ifrbaitis. P. W. .. Vnccaro. M. AV3gIlt'I', C. A. .. Wulluve. C. M. .. VV:1ll011, A. D. .. AVZLISII, J. J. ...... .. VVeggenmann. Ifl. IC Westcott, W. I. Yvllifkill. A. I. .. Willianxs, C. F. .. NVirts. C. W., II .. XVOod, O. T., Jr. . lvoods, W. S. Nvolfe, F. M.. Jr. . Yow. D. E. ..... . Zielinski, J. B. .. T160 hu-ndred three ........Deh1ware- .. ..Penusylvnni:1 ....Pennsylvani:l . . .Ne-w Jersey . . , . .Maine ....Pennsylv:1ni:1 . .Pennsylvaulizr .. . . . . . . .A'I2llLlt' ... . .C2llif0l'lliiil .Rhode Island . .Pennsylvania ..........Iudi:1 ..1'9IlllSy1Vil1liil . .......... Ohm . .PL-1111sylv:111i:l . . Pennsylvania ......Michigun . .I 0ll11SylV1lI1iil . .Pennsylvzulia ..Pennsylv:lni:1 ..Pe11I1sylvu11ia .....New York .... ...Texas ....New Jersey ..1'k'llllSXlVi111iil .lfenusylvainia ...........Ohio ..P13llIlSYlV21Iliil . .Pennsylvania . .Pennsylvania .....Deluware ...New Jersey ......New Jersey North Carolina ..Pennsylv:1ui:'1 . .Pennsylvania ..Pennsylvz1nia ..I. QIlI1SyIV2lI1i2l North Carolina .Massachusetts Z f f 6 75 7 ,. A? .r.. Z ? My Z f N2 , , I . Q lx , SV 5 X V V . Q4 J. . , f 5 'iz - IL Z !! u v Fmwnas X3 N W. s I Sxs'X wx .t .. .lf XX XX . X. , . A t. . Samuel D. Gross By JOHN CHALMERS DA COSTA N FULFILLMENT of the cli- rections of the Gross Foundation I am here today to deliver the Annual Address. You have enough lectures, good- ness knows, and must grow thor- oughly tired of all professional speeches. But, surely you must learn something of the greatest man who ever graduated from the Jefferson College, the greatest man who ever was a professor in this Institution and the greatest man ever in the ranks of the Ameri- can lVIedical Profession. I am attempting no consecutive study of his life and character. Ive must all remember to start with, that he was the undisputed leader of surgical opinion and of concerted medical action, the law giver of his profession in the. United States. His voice rang from our arena 'in tones so authoritative as to be heard through- out our land and to echo beyond the sea. He was always the best example of professional propriety as well as of professional excellence. He was the friend of every worthy medical man but the implacable foe of the shady practitioner, the gallery actor, the impostor, the liar and the criminal. H was chief of a brilliant constellation of American surgeons, namely, Agnew, Joseph Pancoast, Mussey, VVillard Parker, Valentine Mott, Van Buren, James R. VVOod, Ma1'ion Sims, Mo'ses Gunn, Henry J. Bigelow, Sayre, Chiever, Yandell, the elder Ashhurst, Warren, Parks and a number of others. The words of such a man are of the highest interest and importance. His un- studied sentences came straight from the heart, swung the hinges, the doors of which so often hide character and showed us the real man. SAMUEL D. GROSS My purpose is to set forth and discuss a few of his sayings and some of his views and comment upon them. When I first came to see Gross and to hear him, he wore with dignity the noble crown of age and to those of us who looked upon him he seemed what he was, the beau ideal of a great surgeon. I think he was probably the last man, except Richard Vaux, whom all Philadelphians knew by sight. Q2 I D f 2 f f f e Q Z Z f f W f Y v ZZ!!! . , f Two lmuzdrefl fire A X X ff seg? mme-v-.... r-3 2:70 E356 v-IUQQID sw gg. f 'SDm 5 rn Qfbacrgg ,J . 2558 SUITE sv,-150 5-19,4 23:4 seem? 2 Urn H3919 sis? P325 sgaj. Amr-010 1-o-om F'!5ro,... 0!'Dr'f'U2 Us fi 'D rf' ill E Us S rs H 9? 9 3 5. 5? s showed not only force and intellect but kindliness and it inspired confidence. His eyes now had the fire of command, and now the light of tenderness. Every one of us felt that fifty years of American surgery were speaking through his lips. During a lecture he would now and then tell a story or relate an anecdote to empha- size a point. He was accustomed to say he could Nnail a lesson on a student's mindv as tight as seemed possible but an apt story or a definite experience clinched the nail on the other side of the board and held the fact SAMUEL W. GROSS in place. His stories always fitted and were never vulgar. He was accustomed to discourage the telling of vulgar stories to students. He used to say There is one thing worse than a foul mouthed youth and that is a foul mouthed old manf, Experience , he said, His a name not only for successes, but for many ghastly errors and dreadful mistakesf, He spoke of a surgical teacher who in his lectures only used part of his experience, forgetting the ghastly errors and the dreadful mistakes. Alfred Dehlusset makes the mistake of defininv' all experience as 'fthe name men give to their follies or their sorrows? H forgot successes. Each of us has in his memory experiences which he eherishes. All of us has had some experience he is a ashamed to look upon face to face. Yet at times we have to face even the worst ones, so that we may learn their lineaments and avoid embracing other members of the family. Such. experiences hurt but as DeFinod said, Experience is the keen knife that hurts while it cuts away the cataract that blinds. Gross was born in Easton, Pa., in 1805 and he died in Philadelphia in 18844, at the age of 79. VVhat a wonderful life span! In the year 1805, the great Napoleon won his mightiest fight-the victory on which the sun of Austerlitz shed its Golden rays. Nelson attained the great triumph of Trafalgar. George III, stupid and arrorrant, who had lost the American Colonies some 20 odd years before still reigned over England. Richard Brinsley Sheridan was gambling and drinking with the Prince Regent, Beau Brummel and other distinguished Corinthians. Wlilliam Pitt the states- man, received his death blow with the news of Ulm and Austerlitz. England was building with wonderful speed the greatest monument which exists to Napoleon, the English National Debt fConan Doylej. Southey was doing literary work at Greta Hall. Byron was a student at Cambridge. VVords- wo1'th, Bard of the Lakes was in Grassmere. Coleridge was Secretary to Jeff, X t gg 3? N ts sa gas x y X A fs ,S U E Q xl bl o 5 0 2 We S. U O' , Q Cf . Q in X X9 MN s X asf ff f QM New ww 'ww ovfawwsaewwe X 3 mxs., as WNY N. 't 'vlJ . 553 STX? . F02 . X ,. 'W 'YNY ss- s ss, ,es ,,c, ry ,ss s X l -Q RS X- glgx Es ' ss Sf Ps ns: uf.: -. . -. :si 1. QM 1 the Governor of Malta, a clear instance of Apollo tending the sheep of Admetes. Sir Wlalter Scott completed The Lay of the ' Last Minstrel. John Abernethy was assist- ant surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital. Astley Cooper, not yet Sir Astley, was sur- geon to Guy's Hospital. Antonio Scarpa was Professor of Anatomy in Padua, and was writing his great work on Hernia. Thomas Jefferson was President of the Ilnited States and George Clinton was Vice- President. James Madison was Secretary of State and Albert Gallatin was Secretary of the Treasury. The population of the United States was less than seven million. Louisiana had been purchased from France in 1803 but Florida was still owned by Spain. J- MEPJON SIMS Then, as only a few years ago, our commerce was crippled by the wars of continental nations. Fenimore Cooper was a student at Yale. Wlashington Irving was traveling abroad. Ralph lValdo Emerson was two years old. Daniel Wlebster had just begun to practice law. Noah Wfebster was in New Haven completing his great dictionary. Henry Clay was for the Hrst time a candidate for lI,'nited States Senator. IVinfield Scott was a student at VVilliam and Mary College. John C. Calhoun was studying law in Litchfield, Conn. Philip Syng Physick! of Philadelphia was the leading American Surgeon. Benjamin Rush of Philadelphia, t.he leading teacher of the Practice of Biedicine in the country, was Director of the United States lVIint. Fitch and Rumsey had both moved boats by steam. Fulton was experimenting with steam power, but two years had to pass before the Claremont was to make the historic trip from New York to Albany. Roads were inconceivably bad and stages were uncomfortable and slow. Very few traveled unless obliged to by imperative necessity. Gross was born on a farm near Easton, Pa. His great grandparents came from the Lower or Rhenish Palatinate in one of the emigrations of the late 17th or ther early 18th century. They had come from the Palatinate, that is to say, the country which was the garden spot of Germany. It was a land of almond trees and vine clad hills, of cultivated fields and comfortable homesteads, of prosperous hamlets and thriving towns, of wooded slopes and romantic streams. Its people for centuries had been farmers and were regarded as the best farmers in the world. They were brave, hardy, 'intelli- gent, industrious, well educated for those days, tenacious of opinion, loyal, gay, thrifty, vice hating and home loving. They were a peaceful race and were possessed of native dignity and strength of character. Naturally such a people made a land highly prosperous. A During the 17th Century this fair land was brought to the most bloody and terrifying desolation of savage armies, lustful of spoil and territory and urged on by religious intolerance and hate. In it were enacted some of the O f, Two lzwnndred seven ,QA X most hideous atrocities of the thirty years war. In it the soldiers of Louis XIV literally obeyed the orders which the Sun King gave to Louvois-burned up the country, killing three-fourths of the people and destroying four-fifths of the property. In it Wallenstein and Gustavus Adolphus, Tilley and Spinola, Conde and Turenne enacted some of their most sanguinary deeds. The Palatinate was once a beautiful country, a populous and prosperous land but it became a gory wilderness, dotted with the blackened ruins of homesteads, villages and towns and ranged by great flocks of ravenous wolves. Harvests were destroyed, dwellings were leveled to the ground, crops were plowed up, orchards were cut down, vines were up-rooted, streams were contaminated by put1'id corpses and once prosperous farmers and merchants were beggars and outcasts. Pallid famine stalked abroad, pestilence walked at noon or in the midnight. VVhere once there had been plenty, all were so hungry that the conquerors were forced to guard the gibbets and the graveyards from starving persons. All of these things were done in the name of religion. VVas there ever hypocrisy so colossal, was there ever blasphemy so infamous? For years the inhabitants of this stricken region fought and struggled for the things they believed to be true: finally, the utter hopelessness of their condition became plainly evident and these patriotic, homeloving, excellent, generous people were forced to leave their country and some off them came to Pennsylvania. At first, they were few but every year the tide swelled and Hnally great groups crossed the sea. At the time of the American Revolution, half the population of Pennsylvania was German immediately or by descent. In Pennsylvania they took up and cultivated farms and founded a new Palatinate, industrious, prosperous and happy as of old, one on which the black blight of religious persecution has never fallen and may it never touch them. They constituted a large part of t.he Army under VVashington and yet fools refer to them stupidly, ignorantly, scornfully and with insulting inten- tion as the 'cPennsylvania Dutch. Gross attended the country school which was about one mile from his house, a most dreary and unhappy place which was presided over by a human threshing machine whose one method of 'imparting knowledge was to beat it in with a stick. The school was only in session during the winter months. The text books were few and unsatisfactory, there were no maps or globes and there was a preponderance of VVatts' hymns and of the most ominous and grievous chapters of the Bible. Gross started school when seven years old and he says in his autobiog- raphy that no boy ever detested it,' more than he did. The school house was a log cabin, the road was bad and in stormy weather almost impassable, and a rainy day meant sitting in school with wet feet, although the room was Well warmed. 'The exercises were opened with prayer and then a hymn. Every boy who had been for a time at the spelling book was obliged to 14ise in the Two himflv-ed eight 5 S v if 'a AQ ,mx wx if 4 las 'Z 'X 1 4 1 K is he iv! M gs. fs Q Q-f ,x -f r - sw Vi f E 512 tis. vs s. . X. S- -xx. Xs P Aki Qt S .-s-ex, i me mg N5 morning and read a verse from the Bible. After that the ogre in charge licked everybody all a1'ound most impartially. The favorite punishments were three in number, two of them carried mental humiliation and a. sense of degradation and one of them also physical pain. One punishment was to make a boy wear a pair of large leather spectacles, another was to place upon him the red cap of a fool, another was to beat him fiercely with a rod of hazel- wood. Any boy who spoke aloud, whispered or committed the awful outrage of laughing, was instantly thrashed to the limit. The children reciting in common produced, as Gross says, A jarring, buzzing noise which fell harshly on the ear so that in every way obtainable as tending to cause confusion? Such was the district school of those days. Comparatively few Americans got more schooling than could be obtained in a place of this sort. Very few went from the school to an academy as did Gross. Fewer still went to college. The school idea was a perfectly brutal system from which all hands emerged more or less scarred and bruised, and not one got from it more than the most slender benefit. There has been no improvement during the last hundred years more pronounced than that which has taken place in schools and in school teachers. The schools were absolutely dominated by the old puritan spirit. Teachers proposed to make the pupils humble and loving followers of the meek and lowly prophet who preached in Glallilee, if they had to beat them to a. pulp to accomplish it. Gross was fond of all sports and plays, particularly, pitching the quoits and horseshoes, playing ball, snaring rabbits, shooting with a bow gun or a shot gun, fishing, fighting bees and wasps, locating and protecting bird nests in the orchards, and woe to the rivfid hypocrite who snuftles out horrible warn- ings and I bid you close your ears-pitching pennies. He never attended church and he pitched pennies even during church hours and yet, austere preacher, he was clean, pure, honest and noble all his days and it was said at his death that his deeds were crowned by the milk white flower of a stainless life? He says pitching for keeps was very exciting and seldom failed to be attended with advantage. He continued thus aeven now at the distance of half a century I can most vividly recall many of the very spots which served as the dramas of this agreeable pastime. One hundred and fifty to two hundred pennies were not infrequently clustered around the meg at a time, and formed too great a bulk to be removed in one handful. 'To pick up the heads was most exciting sport not unlike that which a lucky sportsman experiences in bagging his game. At the present time we arrest boys for pitching pennies in an alley and a lad for snaring rabbits on a farm. Gross declared this exercise often helped in after life in the practice of his profession. He says, that it served to impart precision to the eye and hand, compelling them to move in concert, with that precision necessary ' handling a knife in performing surgical operations. Pitching quoits is partic- ularly useful in this respect and should be diligently cultivated by any man destined for a profession in which manual dexterity and great accuracy of W o v I 11'l f 22 T150 I1 unrlred -nine , 7 A 7 gg we x eye are essential elements. He thought the games beneficial. He would have done so irrespective of the most narrow, ignorant and bigoted people. At the present day most amusements are being forbidden by law and Lord Haughton's view is certainly correct, that is, that everything really agree- able and desirable is either unworthy, expensive or immoralf' Gross of course worked much upon his father's farm, although some strange condition enveloped him when he was twelve years of age which filled him with superstitious fears. He believed firmly, as did every boy he knew, in ghosts, witches, hobgoblins, devils, evil spirits, and in short, everything that was weird or supernatural. Finally, by native strength of intellect and force of will, he shook off such impressions. He says these beliefs were not derived from parental superstition and he places the sole blame upon a system of education, which even in these modern days finds a myriad of advocates. He says such superstitious beliefs elicited from an education designed to make him good by inducing him to believe that all his acts were watched and that these acts would be awarded or punished according as they were good or bad? Children are emphatically the creatures of circumstances, the prejudice in which they are reared are sure to induence them, if not during their whole lives, at any rate for a long time or until they are counteracted by other reasons or by riper reasoning power. All of which goes to show that the training of youth is a task too important to be entrusted to ignorance, and entirely too delicate for bigotry without setting even a step on the sill of the schoolhouse. VVhen 17 years of age Gross began the study of medicine in a physician,s office as was the universal custom, the physician giving no aid whatever and simply turning him loose at intervals on a small libra1'y of entirely obsolete books. Gross then, so to speak, took stock of himself and he made the dis- covery, which was the turning point of his life, of his own ignorance and decided that he did not have suflicient education, particularly in Latin and Greek, to understand technicalities and to study medicine as he wanted to study it, as he felt it should be studied. During the next two years he studied in the VVilkes Barre Academy and in a school in New York City, and then in the famous school at Lawrenceville, N. J. At the age of 19 he again began the study of medicineg this time in the oflice of Doctor Swift of Easton. X., QS bs X 'ti QS' E S we ne, R31 M, M, A N W After a year's really hard study his healt.h broke down and he developed what we would now call neurasthenia. He says, I became very weak, my appetite gave away and my nervous system was thoroughly wreckedg sleep forsook my pillow and I was harassed by horrid dreams. I kept a light burning all night in my room lest I should die in the dark? He had most harassing dreams and one night awoke, dreadfully shaken, having dreamed that his grave was being dug. Any unexpected noise greatly alarmed me. The ringing of a town bell for a funeral was most fearful to mef' He read his own condition and prescribed for himself. The prescription was a horse- back ride to Niagara Falls, a distance of 350 miles, which was to be traveled 5 x A 1 fro 71 IIIIKIVCII ten. ffl? X iv 1 .N . Q, cw Y Qt-12.53 7... sg,-Qilirfs, .cf f 4. .W f-qi. ee.. ,,.. ,, - -- - .X is-. . - Vazlwxs-,. -1' . , . ., . . .i X st-1+ - -- A . I ,...s,.,,,ww. . ZWS.,?kg,W, ,g,,,x,,, .. . ,, ,wc-5,71 ,Q ,MW.i,,:i. N, x .,. . -. Nix Q . f r. e Q 5 2 5 E 5 s Q fb N Q 5 U 0 so X X X dsx x X X is I Q wx at the rate of 25 1niles a day. Most of his way was through dense forests and wide prairies. Rochester was a small hamlet but recently begun. In Buffalo he met some of the Indians of Red Jacket, the celebrated and eloquent Chief of the Wfolf Tribe of the Seneeas. Red Jacket was the Indian Rienzi who followed Brant as the Chief Dian of the Six Nations and fought for the English during the VVar of the Revolution and for the 'United States in the VVar of 1812. Red Jacket was the inexorable foe of missionaries and of all whites. His Indians as seen by Gross were not yet degraded by alcohol, infected by tuberculosis or syphilis, ruined by exclusion from their natural nomadic life and by associating with degraded and often infamous Indian Agents, missionaries or representatives of Eastern societies and of Congressional committees. A few miles from Niagara Falls he fell in with the Tuscaroras. Civiliza- tion was then rotting them to pieces. They were not comparable to the warriors of Red Jacket and they were diseased, dirty, squalid, ugly and drunk on every possible occasion. Gross was gone six weeks upon t.he trip and reached home completely cured. This experience naturally influenced his opinions all his life. He believed that nervous cases did not need drugs, rather rest and open air. H used to quote all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy and, athere is a time for idleness as well as work. He held the view that if you donlt let a little grass now and then grow under your feet before lono' a great deal of it may grow over your head. He says in his autobiography, I had simply been overworked and over-druggedfl and, HI regard exercise on horseback as the most salutary exercise an invalid can take. He quotes with great approval the story of Thomas Sydenham, the English Hippocrates, which is as follows: KA patient who nobody had been able to cure came for advice and Sydenham told the sufferer' that Dr. Roberts of Inverness, Scotland, was the man to cure his dyspepsia and nervousness. It was true that the distance from London was conside1'able but he could accomplish it on horseback. The patient rode throughout the wonderful days, feeling better' daily, but on reaching Inverness found that no Dr. Roberts lived there. In a towering rage he rode back to London, stood before Sydenham and demanded an explanation. 'How is your health P7 said Sydenham, cmuch better' said the patient, 'but you told me an untruth and I want an explanation? Sydenham replied, CI knew there was no such physician as Dr. Roberts of Inverness but I also knew that buoyed up with hope the journey at this genial season of the year, would cure most of your maladies' lVIost of the alleged triumphs of the imbecility of Christian science fwhich by the way is not Christian and is not sciencej are due to deviating from habit and to stopping over-drugging. If Christian scientists really believed their own theories, not one of them should cough when his bronchi are irritated, treat hiccough, should scratch when he itches, should not be seasick, 3 F. fl ii 'SA -r H O' CD 'F' FZ Q se W M W oxkggx X s N XXX . , X N . st Wear eye glasses or warm clothing, get teeth pulled or filled, have wax taken out of the ear, the nails pared or the scalp washed. In 1826, Dr. Gross came down to Philadelphia in order to study medicine in the Jefferson lVIedical College. He Was a real country boy and he had come to love Nature. He studied Nature and loved her through all his long life: birds, animals and flowers were to him always a source of the purest delight. He loved the sunrise with its glory of color and the sunset with its splendor of flame. He loved the blue depths of the Hrmament, the wind, the sea, the starlight and the stream, the moon and the majesty of the storm. He always kept Howers 'in his office and about his house and he liked to see lthem in hospital wards. One day in the hospital he lifted tenderly a flower from' a vase, commenting upon how soon it would fade so, it has but one spring and we mortals go almost as quickly for we have but a few brief springs? He would touch a flower almost reverently. He had within him a good deal of the VVordsworlth. faith, It is 1ny faith that every flower enjoys the air it breathes? In his biography, expressing his predilection for cremation as a. means of disposing of the dead, he said, If I am obliged to be buried as other people are, I wish to lie in some spot where birds may sing over my grave and where kindly hands may deposit a flower as a memento of respect and devotion to my memory, an immortelle is worth all the chiseled marble that was ever erected over a man's tomb. He drew from the great heart of Nature refresh- ment, instruction and happiness. He not only observed Nature but studied natural laws and was impressed profoundly with the conviction that the laws of Nature are the real thoughts of' Godf' His early wandering through woods and fields and meadows helped to make him keener observer in the hospital and the sick room. He always studied the individual as well as the disease. The demands of his calling forced him to live in the city but he always loved the country and to almost the last day of his life Nature spoke to him a various language. He was very fond of animals, like dogs, and regarded vivisection as a lamentable but an unescapable necessity. Once in Louisville he was summoned in haste and on reaching the house found that it was not a person who- required his services but a pet dog. The dog had been in a fight with a great mastiff and its eye hung out of the socket held only by the optic nerve. He sympa- thized with the grief of the mistress, made no protest at having been summoned and treated the dog as he would a man the victim of a similar accident. On another occasion he treated the broken leo' of a chicken but the result was very poor and he thinks that his case lost him. his reputation as a veterinary surgeon. If this had happened to a human being today some unscrupulous lawyer would have seen to it that he was sued for damages. Rah and his Friends, by Dr. John Brown was one of his favorite books. He was very fond of horses and says he was never so happy as when sitting in a buggy 'fwith reins in hand behind a respectable, well-broken, t1'ustworthy horse. He was deeply attached to a little canary and was g1'eatly grieved when his yellow friend was lost by the bottom falling off the cage. ,V XX , ...res xiii s - sw- if' Everything in his life shows his affection and sympathy for living things but he was greatly opposed to dog idolatry. He says, '60f all the disgusting sights that meet the eye, there is to me none more revolting than that of a refined woman kissing and fondling a dog, taking it to bed with her, holding it in her lap while eating her dinner and taking it out in her earriagef' It is interesting to know why a man distinguished in surgery came to enter the calling. Some men become surgeons for the same reason that Eugene VVraybur'n became a barrister. You will remember that was because a barrister was wanted in the familyf' Some are irresistibly impelled to the career, but it is certain that a large number of men eminent in surgery took up the profession having exhibited in boyhood no signs of special leaning toward it. Nevertheless, I believe other things being equal, that the man who enters a. profession because he loves the work, if he is not disenchanted through his student days and early days of practice, will make a better surgeon than one who loafed into the fold or was dragged in by the family halter. An early bent for any calling may be the aspiration of genius. Gross when very young wished to be a surgeon. He never could tell how he obtained the desire before it became the strongest desire of his life in early boyhood. In 1826 he became a student in the Jefferson hiedical College, also an office student of that great man and founder of the School, George NIcClellan. From that moment, in medicine lay his life's work and his lifeis love. In it he found happiness, satisfied ambitions and the gratification of natural pride. He took his degree in lliedicine in lliarch of 1828. He not only worked but he loved work and as Yandell put it his life was an, unbroken process of laborious years. He disbelieved strongly in a man knocking off' work as long as he was competent to perform it properly. He said he would prefer at wear out than to rust outf' It is true that many men stay too lonfr and become dangerous to patients and clogs to the school or hospital with which they are connected. Gross used to say, No man is necessary to any school, and this is undoubtedly true. The moment a man becomes imbued with the idea that he is necessary he is about as useful as a Sundial in' a rainstorm, an ulster on the Guinea Coast, a calendar of last year or a canceled postage stamp. VVhen a man reaches this condition and will not withdraw Trustees hardly know how to deal with him. VVere he a preacher they would give him a colleague, were he a lawyer, just fit to be put on tl1e shelf, they would put him on the Bench. Gross had no faintest trace of the snob or the tuft hunter and he had the most hearty contempt for the man who would buy his way. In making a medical appointment he was not influenced in the smallest degree by family religious or political influence. VVhen a doctor tried to use one of these sources of power he would say, 'che seems like a pretty good man to beat. A man who seized or made opportunity, who reached with brilliancy, brain and muscle, who came from small beginnings to distinction and power commanded his greatest respect. In speaking of a certain man he said, He is a self-made man and all the better for thatf' Of course he meant the best type of self- madel man not the type of the arrogant, perfidious and blatant Bounderby l 0 D 33 I , W7 f ff 1 7 X ' P , X 1 . f 0 2 9 , , , if f ff f f 4 fi M 8 ff? , 1 . 'Qf f X ' T wo hfumlreai thirteen Mfg? 57 N fHard Times, by Dickensb. I don't mean to say that Gross scorned society. He approved of cultivated society and moved in the best circles of this city and he particularly enjoyed the society of cultured ladies. Some of those rigid old-time gentlemen and ladies? interested and amused him greatly. He thought the women of the present day f1'ivolous, insipid and stupid, although he qualified the statement by saying the men are no better. X' I don't think any man ever hated quacks more, whether the individual held a diploma or not, than did Gross. He hated all humbugs and all liars and he says it is a sad thing that medical boasters 'ctake better with the common herd of mankind than do the honest and retiring people. He showed how the newspapers make the prominent quack possible. VVithout newspapers the Vogue of any quack would be extremely temporary. He hated a regular doctor smirched with quackery more than the blatant, advertising quack. He points out that the real surgeon must be far broader' than the public conceives. The public admires most highly the pure operatorg the real surgeon is far above and beyond a mere operator, for' the man who can only operate is simply a skilled handicraftsman. Gross spoke German when he studied medicine and he studied French while a student. I believe he was one of the greatest teachers that ever lived. His personality as a teacher has been set forth, in articles of mine and other sur- geons. As an operator he was calm, careful, painstaking, rapid and never hurried, and always proceeded so that the students might see and understand what he was doing all the time he operated. He could never' tolerate slap dash methods and never in his life had he the faintest notion of playing to the galleries. He became the most celebrated surgical writer this country had ever pro- duced. He wrote four pioneer books. Immediately after his graduation when he had a small office on Library Street below Fifth, he began to write. In a little over a half year after his graduation, he had translated from the French The General Anatomy, by Bayle and Hollard and HI-Iattan's Nlanual of Obstetrics. He next translated from the German, Hildenbrand on Typhoid Fever. And then from the French, Tavernier's Operative Surgery. This little book was the first treatise on operative surgery published in America and had a large sale. In the Autumn of 1830 he wrote an original treatise on Diseases and Injuries of the Bones and Joints. Although this book was very well received, he did not 1'eceive a single cent in compensation. I-Ie failed utterly to obtain practice in Philadelphia and went to Easton and while in Easton made many experiments upon dogs to determine the nature and the treatment of gunshot wounds of the abdomen. These experiments to a great extent laid the foundation of our present-day treatment ofi wounds and injuries of the abdomen. He was soon after appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy in the Medical College of Ohio and in 1839 he published his great treatise on Path- ological Anatomyf' the first in the English language. For the first edition he was not paid a single cent but the book was an enormous success and made him known not only in this country but in Eu1'ope and remained a popular text book for more than a quarter of a century. He was at this time Professor A, 3? ga 43 Na Q K K. X' J x 5 si 0 ' km? msg - 19 rv . V . W ', . 'ul 0 55. 111.0 hzmdrerl Toznfeen f if Nc, . s- e ,:,,j ZW ,W f C as Ye iii ss a f , Q5 A94 fz e ' 5 iss Qs X is N N vo f f f f 1 I? :Z Zz X ,, , 7 X . . ,sr .r , .1 1. .1 tw. Q- -- ., . ..u. f Q- sg egg X N X of Pathological Anatomy at the Medical College of Ohio. From Cincinnati he was called to Louisville Professor of Surgery and in Louisville his name as surgeon became celebrated far and wide. In 1851 Gross published a com- prehensive treatise on 'gDiseases of the Urinary Organs? Up to this time there had been no satisfactory treatise in the English language. This book, edited by the younger Gross, was still a popular text book at the end of the 80,s of the last century. In 1854: he published his noted treatise on Foreign Bodies in the Air Passages? He was the very first. one to present the subject in systematized form. I-Ie was called from Louisville to New York City but remained but a year. In 1856 he was called to his old school, the Jefferson hledical College, and succeeded Thomas D. Nltitter, who had been broken to pieces by rheumatic gout. In 1859 he issued the first edition of his magnificent text book of surgery, the first system, of surgery published in America and the greatest surgical treatise of its day. Its comprehensive nature is observed in his title, A System of Surgery, Pathological, Diagnostic, Therapeutic and Operative. It had an immense success, the sixth edition was issued in 1882, a 2300-page work containing 1600 illustrations and every word of it was written by his own hand. It had a stupendous influence on the surgical thought of his day. I could say a great deal more but there is not time. At the outbreak of the Civil Wlar, and at the G'0VG1'I'1IHCUt,S request, he wrote a lVIanual of lVIilitary Surgery which was translated into Japanese. In 1861, he edited a large book, entitled 'cLives of Eminent American Physicians and Surgeons of the 19th Century. He wrote several of the biographies himself. He was constantly making addresses to societies, participating in debates and reviewing books, at times when he was 'immersed in teaching, oper- ating and the cares of a large practice. He also took part in editing a medical journal. He founded the American Surgical Association, he was the most induential member of the American 1VIedical Association and once its President. He was President of the Inte1'national Congress of Surgery in 1876. He received high public honors in Germany, ob-tained the D.C.L. of Oxford: the LL.D. of Cambridge and the LL.D. of the University of Edinburgh and now on his death bed, the LL.D. of the University of Pennsylvania. Gross had one of the most comprehensive and luminous intellects ever devoted to the arts and science of surgery. VVQ may look to his memory not only with admiration for the surgeon and teacher but with respect and affection for the man. Tivo huzzdred fifteen ly, 4 Q M2 aff .M if lo iw az W l Q ,J f li I 6 bl S. :S Q vs N. 53' f C5 Z cm U 3 Q, is Q as -Y Q X Q Xxx I V53 X bww 4 .W xr, was: X X Q W WC , , I Y Y To the Class of 1931 H APIENTIA primi est stultitia caruissev fthe first step toward wisdom is to avoid follyj. And I might add that the second and all subsequent steps should be made with the same precaution. This old Latin adage is the best advice I, who am terminating an epoch in my professional career, can give to you who are beginning one in yours. The pursuit of fads and follies is too often seen in the practice of medicine and must be avoided. The best protection against this error is a broad knowledge of general medicine. Today, nearly every man who graduates in medicine wants to be a spe- cialist and many start in at once to follow some limited line of work. Specialists are a blessing and a necessity, but good specialists are those who know most about general medicine. In many States this fact is acknowledged in a law which requires, after graduation, a rotating internship which will give the beginner a better foundation for the development of his particular abilitiesg and it is a very wise law. The sad feature of it is that the law does not apply to irregular practitioners, like osteopaths, chiropractors, neuropaths, and many others, who practice medicine without such a foundation, with the sad result that the people are the easy victims of these folly followers. It is much easier to know one treatment for all diseases than to know the cause and manifestations of only a few. It is easier to treat than to know what you are treating. c No specialist can be truly successful who knows only his own specialty. I-Ie must know something of other diseases than those he treats and be able to recognize them. A good specialist is a man of broad medical knowledge, a keen diagnostician and he must employ choice and discretion in the applica- tion of treatment. A very important quality which every practitioner of medicine must cultivate is the understanding of the mental attitude of the patient toward his illness. The word psychology has been so much abused that I dislike to use it, but it is the psychology of the sick which the doctor must know. Each individual reacts differently to real and to imaginary ills, and in the practice of any branch of medicine, you will see nearly as many people who imagine or exaggerate their 'ills as those who neglect or minimize them. This mental attitude can be played upon to the patientls good or to his hurt. The successful quack and, I am sorry to say, some physicians thrive on the psychology of sick people. It is so easy to feed them on your favorite folly. After nearly thirty-five years of teaching, I have felt it wise to give up this exacting side of my work, but I shall miss my students and the inspiration which they have always given me. lVIy parting words to the Class of 1931 the last I shall teach, are to seek knowledge, to study the causes of disease and its manifestations and then its treatmentg to develop wisdom and avoid follies. 8 I PROFESSOR JOHN H. GiBBON Emeri+us Professor of Surgery Porfraif By Sfoddarcl Reprocludion of 'I'he Porfraii Presen'recl 'r-o +he college - By The CLASS OF NINETEEN THIRTY-ONE rw- : ff? I 16:3 ' YW z X I ' X so x P if l 1 5-si E ' i N' ,Q - 1 5 .S 1' ' 3 s fs 1 ii X 3, i Consecratio Medicii By I-Liuvizr CUSHLNG, M.D. HERE is an old saying that interest does not bind men together: inter- est separates men, there is only one thing that can effectively bind people, and that is a common devotion. This, a common devotion, more than any other possible influence, serves to overcome the self-depravities and con- ceits inherent in us which, uncontrolled, represent the chief defect in our natures. Our loyalties, to be sure-loyalty to nation, to a cause, to community, to school, to family, to friend-are somewhat akin, yet there may be something of per- sonal interest, prejudice, or defense in these particular reactions which make them not wholly unselfish. ' So let us believe, for our present purposes at least, that devotion not only implies a higher standard of self-etfacement, but still carries something of its quondam religious significance, And it is of the doctor,s consecration to his task that I wish to speak, the kind of unselfish relation to suffering humanity that made Saint Luke the beloved physician no more nor less than it makes many another doctor of name unheard and unsung today. It is this common devotion to their life,s work that serves to bind those of the profession into which you are entering with ties more close and enduring than those which hold any other group of people engaged in a common purpose. Nor should it make any difference where or how you may come to be engaged. The lives of countless Vveelum NIacLures, in the obscurity of their respective Drumtochtys, have been no less consecrated, could we but know them, than those of the Pares, the Listers, and the Pasteurs on whom the light of history has been turned. Devotion is an attribute one cannot estimate and record by ordinary standards. How much the practicing doctor cares about his patients as indi- viduals apart from their being the source of his livelihood, how much the medi- cal scientist may be interested in promoting science rather than in securing his own promotion, how much the teacher inHuences his pupils to their best efforts, unmindful of what the curriculum brieHy requires of him, how much the student engages in the work for the work9s sake, regardless of his marks and rating-all these things depend on a devotion which places spiritual above material rewards. This may sound, my young friends, like sermonizing. And valedictory addresses to medical students are prone to be commonplace, 'cplatitudinous with the platitudes of a thousand pulpitsf' as Sterne said was true of most ser- mons. But there are certain things which concern the code of the doctor, handed down to us from ancient times, which, though commonplace, deserve reiteration on occasions as this. They are things often lost sight of in these days When the Hippocratic Oath, as supposedly too antiquated for present-day purposes, is rarely read to graduating classes. I rejoice that Jefferson main- tains this custom, for there is nothing that expresses so Well, as does this :tGraduation Address, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, June 5, 1926. Two huvzdrerl seventeen 1 X v f o justly famous credo, the ideals which from the first have actuated the doctor and have lead to the solidarity of the profession you are entering. No guild has a sounder code of ethics, no lVIasonic group strongen ties of brotherhood. For no insufficient reason do we as a profession hark back to the fifth century before the Christian Era when the man we venerate as the Father of lVIedicine,, first cast superstition aside, dissociated his calling from priestcraft, and based 'it on the principle of inductive philosophy. So, tempering them to our modern period we may well hold fast to those hallowed rules of professional conduct which he promulgated and which have stood the test of usage as long as the canons of the Old Testament, which likewise in these fallen days are become somewhat unfashionable. . My object in making professional devotion a text on your graduating day is to emphasize the doctor-and-patient relaticnship. However many of you may come to be diverted into other channels of professional activity, I take it that the school whose diploma you have gained still holds the practice of medicine as the primary object of your four years and more of training, and consequently that the prospective patient has from the first been kept in view even if distantly. P In these days when science is clearly in the saddle and when our knowl- edge of disease is consequently advancing at a breathless pace, we are apt to forget that not all can ride and that he also serves who waits and who applies what the horseman discovers. In some of our schools so great an emphasis has come to be laid on the science courses, with the patient long hidden from sight, that the better students, under the 'infiuence of teachers who have never had clinical experience, naturally come to feel that somehow the practice of medicine among the people is an inferior calling compared to the secluded life of the investigator, and that to justify themselves in the eyes of the faculty they must manage to do a piece of researchf, Indeed, when the students in some of these schools reach their clinical years their senior teachers are often men whose perspective is largely insti- tutional, and consequently it has become, for lack of time, interest, 01' experi- ence, no one's business to give instruction in those aspects of medicine which will be so important to the greater number of you in the future: the relation of doctor to docto1', of doctor to patient and patientis family, of doctor to community, and of our p1'ofession to the others, particularly to the priesthood from which medicine took -'its origin. Dr. 'Thomas Percival thought these matters of sufficient importance to write a book about them for the benefit of his son on hfis entry into medicine: but for the most of you who have never heard of Percival and his code-if they are left to be learned in the bitter school of personal experienceg and many a promising career may come a cropper from misunderstandings of p1'ofes- :tThe basis of the code of ethics generally adhered to by English-speaking doctors was formulated in 1803 by Percival, who, besides being a practicing physician in Mancliester. England, was a mathematician and a natural philosopher, one of the first biometricians, one of the Hrst to urge the isolation of contagious diseases. one of the first to 'emphasize public sanitation and the importance of what we now call industrial medicine. Two lfunflred eiylifeen. 75 2 J X 2 4 Y K 5 f J X iq Z ff! if 9 fsf Z i V l A ps slag , -a S grassy N',,.e:s' 5 .t ,x.. . .. sbs XXXE Rss. . sional ethics, the chief tenet of which, after all, is proper observance of the Golden Rule, not only in our dealings with our patients and our professional brethren, but with society in general. In our present day when so great emphasis is being laid on keeping people well by periodic health examinations and preventive medicine, all this about medical practice may sound very old-fashioned. But say what one will, the time inevitably comes to each and every one, now in the best of health, when he must needs cry out for some experienced and sensible doctor who can alle- viate if not cure his particular ailments, be they physical or mentalg and the kind of sagacity and resourcefulness he will expect and need 'is less laboratory- born than bred of long and sympathetic familiarity with the anxieties and complaints of ailing, damaged, and worn-out human beings. These things were perhaps best learned in the days of student apprenticeshipsg and our present efforts under the guise of a tutorial arrangement recall something of the old-time elbow-t.o-elbow familiarity of teacher and pupil and show a grow- ing appreciation of the advantages of a long-abandoned system. VVe have gained much for science but have lost much for practice by the course we are following, and I look forward to a time when the pendulum will swing back, not to a day when the spirit of research will be any less active, but to a day when suitable representatives of the clinical departments will be dele- gated to correlate the teaching in the science courses so that their bearing on what is to come may be constantly kept in mind. A course in pure science unrelated to the patient belongs rather in the college than in the medical school. It is a common complaint that, in their exercises, clinical teachers fail to draw the lessons they should from the laboratory courses. It is doubtless true that they lag in their familiarity with and the adaptation of the newest dis- closures of scienceg and it is perhaps a lame excuse that science as yet has no obvious bearing on the greater portion of the doctor's daily problems. But in rejoinder the clinician might well aslc whether it could possibly harm a teacher of the pneclinical sciences to have served a house-officershipg or dampen his investigative ardor should he spend even an occasional hour or two in contact with patients in the wards or ambulatory clinic. Both parties to this mild family disagreement among the faculty must endeavor to see the matter clearly and without prejudice. Through the con- centrated application of the scientific method in the fifty years past, medical progress has been nigh incredible. VVe must therefore make every effort to support and encourage the scientific spirit, for who can foretell what pro- digious strides may be taken in another half century? But the capacity for productive research. is a rare quality akin to genius, and the future investi- gator among you will doubtless be found, or find himself, irrespective of this or that curricular arrangement. Whetliei' it is necessary or worth while for the majority, who are destined to put to practical purposes the knowledge already gained from the laboratory, to be given such an exclusive preliminary science drill as they are now given in many schools, is a matter of doubt, and a happy solution of this puzzling question will someday perhaps be reached. You who are graduating he1'e today, wherever you land, in laboratory, in l f X f , V f , 7 f 0 f Tivo ll-1II1dI'f'1l uinefeeiz , ZW, se if X BHK hospital clinic, in practice-will have occasion to lament the insufliciencies of your preparation. This has been so from the beginning and will be so to the end of time. However secure the foundation may appear to have been laid, you will come to build on it an individual kind of superstructure which could not possibly have been anticipated. Could I only have had a better ground- ing in biophysics 'instead of wasting my time in the clinic V, groans the young laboratory worker who endeavors to solve some bafliing problem. Could I only have had a little more dissection, I should not have mist.aken a median nerve for a tendon when I sewed up that cut wrist P' groans the youthful sur- geon. HI-Iad I only learned to puncture a bulging eardrum instead of electing that useless laboratory coursc, I might have saved this poor child from a meningitis P, groans the young practitioner. If we could only have fore- seen this, that, or the other, we would not have spent our time as we did, we groan in unison. From vain regrets good Lord deliver us. Experience has to teach us many things we have never learned from the schools. You will remember Pare's account of an episode in the little hamlet of Suze sometime in 1537. See how I learned to treat wounds made by gunshot: not out of booksf' p ltlost of you, I take it, will-as Jefferson graduates have done before- come to recruit the ranks of the practicing doctor in this great state. Per- sonally I have been too 1nuch astride the fence to take sides strongly in regard to the relative satisfactions 'of a life so devoted or one dedicated to teaching and investigation. IVith a background of family practitioners, I have, by the fall of the dice, come to lead a life different from theirs, not so sequestered as that of some, but sufficiently so to let me estimate the recompenses and weigh the satisfactions which come from an existence of the two kinds. Certainly the self-sacrificing career of the practicing physician, respected and beloved of his community, is no less, perhaps even more, character making and ennobling than the secluded life of a pure laboratory worker, whatever be the importance of his researches and discoveries. In either case, success dwells in the silences though fame be in the song. VVe live in an era of specialization, but specialization can be overdone and there is no inherent reason why the qualities of investigator, teacher, and practitioner should not go hand in hand, be represented in a single individual, and he be none the worse for the mixture. So it was, for example, in the case of the incomparable I-Iunterg so it was, to come nearer home, in the case of two of the great peripatetic teachers, Nathan R. Smith and Daniel Drake., who were associated with the birth of this school of whose diploma you may be justly proud. And should you in your awaiting time, when patients seem few and your outlook uncertain, wish to gain courage and receive stimulus, read the lives of these men and learn what perseverance may accomplish. Contrast your opportunities and training with those of Drake, brought up in a log cabin at Mayis Lick, over the mountains in what was then the wilder- ness of Transylvania, and who in the midst of teaching, of founding medical schools, of practice, came to be recognized as the leading climatologist and epidemiologist of his day. All this you will find in the volumes of medical biography, which deserve a place on your library shelves alongside your journals and textbooks. Two lwznzlred twenty ff? V 1 f 'N sity-25 , f y Q 1 l 3 A 5 ta 2 'Q I I I I I Iaftf V5 K ft ag fy, .f' , I ,.--miss W1 we A , - -s ZZ, W ff? P0 , , WS A egs..,, A iss f i X - X X x A mix-if YtQSWtEY -5 lik? 'X - ,s. -srsetsv ,. . . syslog Excellent courage our fathers bore- Excellent heart had our fathers of old: None too learned, but nobly bold Into the tight went our fathers of old. , But, even better than this, stouten your hearts by reading of the doctor in fiction, and emulate Lydgate, at least up to the point which will warn you against marrying the wrong woman. Familiarize yourselves with the writings of healthy-minded doctors like Oliver 1Vendell Holmes and John Brown, of Rah and His Friendsf, If you need an antidote for the cynicism of Arrow- smithf' buy or borrow Sarah Orne Jewett's nigh-forgotten story depicting her own father as A Country Doctorvg for there are still John Leslies in the country districts and room for many more-plenty of room, too, for Nang and if she is really serious about it she's worth to the world a thousand Leoras. Perhaps best of all, if you would learn what unalloyed professional devotion may be and what rewards it may bring, read or reread the last chap- ters of Ian lVIarlaren,s '6Beside the Bonnie Briar Bushv and let the example of Vifeelum lNLIacLure, to whom I have already alluded, become a part of you. Still, you need not resort to biography or fiction to learn something of the spirit of devotion that is the mainspring of our profession. You have plenty of examples, living and dead, here in your own school. Being a surgeon and more familiar with Jefferson's century-long story of surgery than with her story of physic, let us look there for illustrations, the more fittingly since a talented and enterprising surgeon was your founder, and it took no less a person than a fighting h1cClellan to succeed in such a venture under the very shadow of, and with no little opposition from, the oldest and most cele- brated school in the country, his own Alma Nlater. She it was who provided his successor in the chair of surgery on the reorganization of your school in 1841, and the name of Thomas Dent lVIiitter, who, alas, from overwork died all too young, is held in thankful remembrance through the museum he founded and the lectureship he established-a lectureship which has been of help to many young men, as I, who had the privilege of holding it just twenty-five years ago, can testify. On Miitte1 s enforced retirement in 1856, the school for the first time reached out for an example of its own product, and chose a man who had graduated with its second class and who, meanwhile, had gathered as a teacher experience almost as rich and varied as that of Daniel Drake himself, under whose influence he had come in Cincinnati. Young men in those days were less fearful of transplantation than we, and the twenty-eight years during which Samuel David Gross subsequently served here in his fourth chair of surgery saw him rise to the top of his profession. VVe may well believe that the increasing flood of students, who during those years went out into the world as Jefferson graduates, were deeply influenced by his scholarly example and teaching. But ifthe elder Gross and his contemporaries may seem somewhat shadowy figures to you, the mantle he wore as doyen of American surgery has now for as , SL ia, , fe W 4? ' Two llzmdred frrenfy-one sg Q Q f f fe, I QX xjsxsp XX long rested on the shoulders of his successor, a man endowed with perennial youth, who seems likely to hold that emeritus position among us for time untold. And as Dr. Keen's spirit dominates time, so the unquenchable spirit of your beloved teacher, JackH Da Costa, dominates a disability which would long since have driven a lesser man to retirement and inactivity. It is, fur- thermore, this same spirit of 'fnever give inn that keeps the star of a frail gentleman shining brilliantly in a galaxy of Philadelphia surgeons, a man whose personal dexterity enables him to save more lives, and those the precious lives of children, each day, week, and month, than may be given t.o others to save in a year or in a lifetime. If the Recording Angel keeps score of the numbers any one of us as individuals may possibly have snatched from the very .jaws of death, certainly Chevalier .Iackson's name tops the list. Favored is the school that may carry the tradition of men who have shown such professional devotion as these, and whose spirit has conquered time, age, ill-health, and circumstance. A wise doctor who knew his .patients well once said that in his experience the best work in the world was often done by people suffering from some bodily affliction, and this is a heartening idea you may well pass on in your turn to some of those who may in future years consult you and for whom you may have little to give but encouragement and comfort. You indeed will have to mix many of your prescriptions with a basis of hope, and too little stress is laid, in most courses in therapeutics, on the beneficial effect of optimism and cheer in combating disease. Vile are tending to become a standardized country, and it is perhaps on standardization that industrial progress is founded. But standardization of our educational systems is apt to stamp out individualism and defeat the very ends of education by leveling the product down rather than up. The qualities that really count in this world are quite beyond pigeonholing, quite beyond measurement by scales, tape, or mental tests, quite beyond rating by any known system of examination, all of which fail in giving us an estimate of that most precious of all qualities, personality. The capacity of the man himself is only revealed when, under st1'ess and responsibility, he breaks through his educational shell, and he may then be a splendid surprise to himself no less than to his teachers. There is no pro- fession in which such surp1'ises are more likely to happen than in that you are entering, no profession which offers greater opportunities! for the devel- opment' of character, provided you will consecrate your lives unselfishly to your tasks as others you would wish to emulate have done before you. In so doing you will meet responsibilities as they come, with intelligence and courage, you will play fair with your fellow men, remembering that the practical religion of the physician is not the promising of bliss in the future but the giving of health and happiness on earth, and, above all, you will hold fast to that noble phrase of Hippocrates: VVhere there is love of humanity th ' will be love of the profession. I am going to read to you, in closing, a paragraph from a book which I can warmly recommend for its philosophy and humor. You will observe from ,ln , f ,e gap We A. '- X S 2, ki s X, 7? sf NVQ D S05 ,. gi? gf f ya ? S. f if 2 31 , l K I 7 O16 Ei Q aa ik 5 f 3 X ia C WN -.Q fi - V - I- r 1, .4 Cluio launrlied tn,en2'y-treo mi B., :A Ax vs ii, 5 Qki s vie- F9 ' 's sf fi: QR YY. , its title that I may have had it in mind in choosing the text of this, in com- parison, most feeble address. It is Stephen Pagetis Confessio Medici? He says therein: Every year, young men enter the medical profession who neither are born doctors, nor have any great love ot science, nor are helped by name or influence. Without a welcome, without money, without prospects, they fight their way into practice, and in practice: they tind it hard work, ill-thanked, ill-paid, there are times when they say What call had l to be a doctor? l should have done better 'For myselt and my wite and the children in some other calling. But they stick to it, and that not only trom necessity, but trom pride, honor, conviction, and Heaven, sooner or later, lets them know what it thinks ot them. The intormation comes quite as a surprise to them, being the tirst received trom any source, that they were indeed called to be doctors: and they hesitate to give the name ot divine vocation to work paid by the iob, and shametully underpaid at that. Calls, they imagine, should master men, beating down on them: surely a diploma, obtained by hard examination and hard cash, and signed and sealed by earthly examiners, cannot be a summons trom Heaven. But it may be. For, it a doctor's lite may not be a divine vocation, then no lite is a vocation, and nothing is divine. Two h undrecl t zcenty-Hz ree f f f f f 1 , if l f , , ff f XX X fffffi A Parting Word J. PARSONS SCHAEFFER. O HAVE your work and conduct as students approved by those in authority and to be publicly acclaimed at graduation are laudable and worthy goals, the achievements of which portend greater things. Soon you will join the fraternity of the learned profession of medicine and share in its responsibilities and opportunities for service. You have deeply ventured: But all must do' so who would greatly win. Hamerton in his essay on The Intellectual Lifen says: The profession of medicine is, of the fairly lucrative professions, the one best suited to the development of the intellectual life. Osler in the preface to the second edition of Aequarrinritas',' aptly writes: Hard though the conditions may be, approached in the right spirit-the spirit which has animated us from the days of Hippocrates-the practice of medicine affords scope for the exercise of the best faculties of the mind and heart. You must always be in consonance with the best traditions of medicine and be alive to the present needs if you would experience the best possible in practiceg fo1', as has been observed, medical men when they have not any special enthusiasm and love for their work, seem peculiarly liable to the dead- ening influences of routine and soon fall badly behind the times. As lVIinot puts it, a practitioner must remain all his life a quick, diligent, alert, receptive learner. Never may he let himself feel a senescent apathy to new ideas. The ideal physician possesses a lifelong intellectual endurance. The great principle of Galton, of not looking forward eagerly to the end of your journey, but interesting yourself chiefly in the progress of it, should be your aim. The practice of medicine at its best has to do with scienceg with artg with human beings of varied station, type, temperament, prejudices, and idio- syncrasiesg and to a lesser degree with every human interest, endeavor, and achievement. Truly, the problems of medicine are those of the intellect and those of the heart. Scholarship and science ever must be your beacon lights in the practice of medicine. The great advances during the past half century have in a large measure brought medicine to the high plane of a science. Science is the leaven of medicine. Empiiiic medicine is gradually giving way to more precise methods. Empiricism is the doctrine that all knowledge is derived from experi- ence through the senses. VVhile we regret that the laboratory method and the instruments of precision have more or less dulled the senses of many medical men, the fact remains that greater accuracy has resulted. It is well, h.owever, to remember that even with the laboratory method there is abundant oppor- tunity to develop and train the senses in the practice of medicine. Indeed, it is almost impossible for a practitioner of medicine to make any real progress unless his senses are keenly developed. , T-11:0 hmzdred tzoenty-foifr F E l 5 .,, 4. N at f 4 4 X , Z 2' lx l f lf f 'D . 1 Z X ff I K D lx X J . l 'Nff Q W P? is We ay 43 f ? ff 4? 00941 ,M QQ I . l ffff f W 2 Qffff XXX N xxx xX 'N Xou w1ll l1Cfl1 111ucl1 about the lD1J.L11!.cl.l 1111111 111 the p1ac,t1cL ot 111ed1c111e a11d I would CElLlt1011 vou not to be nnsled bv the tltle 'lou 111ll CHCOLIHICCI those who 11 ould extol tl1e p1d.LlZlCcIl man and dec1V tl1e sc1e11t1f1c and well t1a1ned doctcn of lllLCl1Cl11C, desp1te tl1e fact that the so called p1act1cal man, lf 1111110111 a sclentlhc bas1s and an adequate COUCCPIIOD of the llLIlTl2ll1 bodv 1S a 111e1e slnbboleth and a menace 111 1116 1310116551011 It IS also well to 1e111e1n bc1 111 thls ave of spec1al11at1o11 and OVL1 SpCC12llllrLl,10H that uthe spcclal 131011 l 1 18 11cl11OXV, tl1e lxnonledwe necessfxu to 1ts ':0lLlt10H IS b1oacl PEl121.ClOX1Cr1l as It 111av seem aftu st1ess1nv tl1e sc1ent1flc needs thue 'ue l11111tat1o11s 111 the tleatment of llkllllclll belnvs as lH21C.ll1l1CS and 111 the appllcatwn ot lHCd1Cl11C as an exact sucnce apa1t 110111 the patlent Tlns con cept1o11 IH 110 sense behttles the p1act1Le of 111ed1c1ne as a sclenee, It calls fo1 0109.101 111sdo111 and V1blOll IH applvlng the sclentlflc plll1L1PlCS mvolved ln the pa1t1cula1 case As has bee11 so often bcllfl, the labo1ato1v must be the adqunct and not the 1naste1 of the wa1d and beds1de Let no one benulle Vou as Vou bC0'111 the p1act1ce of 111ed1c111e 111 the behet that 11 xou a1e an mtellectual and sc1ent1fic doctol vou cannot 1t tl1e sfune tune be M11 l1Ul1lELl1 and 1 below ed pl'lVS1C13.11 S11 Cllffold Allbutt savs The sc1ent1st has much to lealn f1o111 the a1t1st Of 1n1ddle111en wl1o shall Jom the dlSCOVL11Cb of tl1e sc1ent1sts to tl1e p1act1ce of D16d1C1l1C, ue ale lamentablv 1n need flhe pe1s0nal bond betn een docto1 and pat1ent must 1en1a111 1nw1olate Nh fathe1 was tl1e best p 1 s1c1an I eve1 lxnen, savs D1 S VVL11 M1tchell of l11s tatl1e1, D1 John K WI1tchell One cannot help but feel that the Wood, old 11o1d, pl1vs1c1an l1e1e used not onlv 111 1efe1ence to a dOCt01 ve1 sed 111 heal1n0' bodllv d1sease bw the ad1n1n1st1at1on of 1e111ed1es, but f1gL11ElJC1VClV to a man of lnfrh 1no1al sense keenlv app1ec1at1ve of l11s oblwatwns of dutv to lns pat1ents 111 va11ec1 H21Xb D1 lV1ll1am I-I VVeleh 1efe1s to D1 S VV611 hlltehell as pl1VSIC10.I1 and man of sclence Nothlng less than thls w1ll make an acceptable doct01 todav I have lea1ned to know pel sonallv each 111e111be1 of tl e Class of 1931 a1d a la10'e nu1nbe1 VCIV lntnnatelv I have an ab1d1ng fa1th that the class IS sen s1t1ve to the 1espons1b1l1t1es of tl1e p1act1ce of 1ned1c1ne a11d IS aw alle to the oppo1tu111t1es fo1 SSIVICG 1n the advancement ot knowledge and the conquest of pam and d1seasc I bel1eve that 1ts 1nd1v1dual 1nen1be1s w1ll sco1n success bS base means and Wlll not engage 1n unwo1thy methods Xour Alma 1VIate1 and vou1 teacl1e1s w1ll follow Vou 111to VOLU SCV61 al fields of labo1 and 11111 1eJ OICG w1th you 111 V1l13,JCQVG1 success and happmess n1aX come to Vou And Hnallv, I would Lllgli Vo 1 to let VOUI lwht Sl11l1G fo1 Full many a flower IS born to blush unseen And waste :ts sweetness on the desert air The DHHIGI Baugh I11st1tute of Anatomv January 12 1931 f 1 fvs it 5 ff 1. 1,1 ,gI,,-II. ' 31 fu, . is ss X- X s vs 1 xx Nas XR NE f XS .1 xv as - ss N N1 . A . A Xxxsx V as , Sy ss 2 s 52 his., was X av 1 as ssgys A. , . - . . -. -. V 1. f r . -. . X . . 1 . . 1 X . 7 Y. I A i Z ' f A . . '. ' - ' ' ,' 1 ' , ' ' N' . , . . . , . .V ' I It M ' -I N ' I A ' . sw' D li- . K v! . I I- . . I . I . , .I . . , f V b .' ' . A , . I . . . . . . . I 22, -4 . v f , 1 , A A . -. . -. . W 1 1 1 - 1 - m ,fy I3 , 1 . N . . 0 , , . , W Q. ' 1 . . . ' . I ' K V I 1. V' I , 1 I . J I' C ' . , on 1 1 . X f I I ' ,1 -l ' , 1 S r H '-5-1 1 1 A- 1 -1 I. If - I' I , . . . ,nt . . . . . . . , . . . . 1 I . . I I . , . 1. , - , I , . . .. . . - , Z3 ' . ' ' - jx o . . - I . Y v . 3 I . . . . . V. . y 1 i J . XI an ' . ' ' ' A' . 1 2 W I K-f s . 1 v 1 - y . 5 44 r fy ' ' 35 I' ' ' ' ' .'Z H' ' ' .' .U ' ' ' 1 , .. ' ' ' ,I , . I ' an 1 I .1 , I - - I - L - 1 1 I ' K V . V I hx - ' ' . , , 77 L . ,' . , ' '. ' , . 3 . ' ' V H . .. ,, . 1 . ' . V ' D ' v , IS , . ' 1 I . I. . I 1 ' ' ' ' v ' ' ' . ' an .1 ' '. V. . . . , . , . ' ' . za . 0 ' ., ' .7 ' 1 1 ' ' I . I 1. . I ' s 0 ' I w ' .' . 4 l I X H v r I V 1 L . I . I , , I . '. . 1 I 3 1 I X . . . . . . 1, 5 I ' , I 1 ' , ... - D .1 . ' ' -I-1? 3 . . 1 I . . . . K 1 . I . . . V Y V A IZ I , 'fill ' l M lf ' it T I I wir 1 I . . . . I . II, I .1 c .. j A , 1 Y. 4 . . . . 7 v I V . Y V 17 .f . . .- Z3 ' 1 , 1 .. . ,, I A , IIVV . . . ., 35 5 Q . 'I I .' L ' . 2 ' . I .a 1 ss..-so , may gt' fjciw.. ff V , f'ZL70 71 und:-ed fwezzty-fifzre f ,I I 3, .,,s4Z,fI N x s we XXX s Nl ' XS' piss Q X XX - SS if? XXX XX XXX XX gff X S XXXNXWSN X XX QXXXS5 X. -XXXX5 XXXX- XXSSS XXX X X X X X XX X X X fX X ww W X ' LQXXQE X XS S X-X XX X .Q X XXX' X Ax XNNPN KX X A x x -LSXW, X - Wx .QXXSA S QQ XXX XX .X -X . ew :iw . XX X fx. XXX: wr :wt Swiw XXX , Q xw X Y S X il X3 S Xqswi XXXXSXXSS - NN? X f X. XXN5 X-NN X S XXNXVX SKS wt XXXXX . XX, X X, 5: X X: 1 W SL X 1 X N SIX 'X - XX - X 1 XX XX -Xiwxigg ' XXX S is S XS sxi S N S S Q S CYR . K C . URT IS X Nt I-X: NX It T . xg , W Q Q n i' E X 3 x X X s-. . Ts f 5 C Xe-ff . .,.. 1 sw f.. . vs., . T The Curtis Clinic HE Curtis Clinic which will be completed early in 19251, is an eight story, modernly constructed building with four additional tower tloors. The architecture conforms to that of the completed college building, the interior being designed to meet the needs of modern out-patient service. The building is planned so as to group the various medical, surgical and specialty divisions, thereby facilitating the service to the patients by the physicians and other hospital personnel. Each department has its waiting room for patients, history- taking booths, examining rooms, an otlice for the physicians, and social service worker, classroom and special service rooms. The Hrst Hoor, iValnut Street front, is occupied by the admission desks, caring for new and old patients, the drug store, waiting room space for new patients and special examining rooms. On the Tenth Street side is located the emergency or receiving ward, consisting of three LL-bed wards for men, women and children, respectively, two operating and treatment rooms, which will be open day and night for receiving emergencies, with a separate entrance for patients coming by ambulance or police patrol. The second floor has seven offices for the social service department and ample space for an enlarged X-ray department, equipped with the most modern apparatus for in-patients and out-patients. An overhead passageway at the rear of the second floor connects the Curtis Clinic with the General hospital building. The remaining Hoors will be occupied by other departments as follows: third, obstetric and pediatric, fourth, ear, nose and throat and ophthalmologicj fifth, general surgery, tumor clinic and gynecologicg sixth, orthopedic and neurologic, sevent.h, G-U, dermatologic and syphilitic clinic, eighth, medicine and clinical laboratory for the entire buildingg ninth, dentistryg tenth, eleventh, twelfth, training school for nurses. In the basement will be the department of physical therapy. The plan of operating the out-patient department consists. of first determining that the patients are entitled to the services of the clinic by an interview, or if necessary, by further investigation. Their entire history, social and medical, will be kept in a central record room to be located in the general hospital building. VVhen the patient applies fO1' treatment, either as an eme1'gency or by appointment, his out-patient history is requested by the admission desk from the record room, which transmits it by pneumatic tube to the department to which the patient is assigned. With these increased facilities, laboratory and special studies can be com- pleted in the clinic before the patient enters the hospital. The latter need be only if the condition of the patient or the character of the treatment requires admission to the beds of the hospital. This will release hospital beds which are now utilized because of the lack of adequate out-patient facilities. M :Zi ,aff 1 f sp gag A N 14, f cw i X f C tr Q K ' f f f 3 f ,f ly Y if , 1 f QM ' if Q 1? X t -fax f X , ff? Tzro hzuzd-rerl tu:-eil-ty-sefven 15 , W f Y Pathology in Relation to Human Lifet VIRGIL H. Moon Professor of Pathology HIS is the first annual session of Jefferson lVIedical College to be opened in this splendid new structure. It is therefore a singular and peculiar honor which has fallen to my lot-that of addressing you on an occasion which initiates a new epoch in the history of Jefferson. This hour would be utilized appropriately in tracing the development of this institution through previous chapters of her history. lVIention should be made of those whose genius and whose labors have brought renown to the name of Jefferson. Tribute should be paid to the benefactors who gave and who still give unself- ishly of their substance and of themselves to benefit humanity through the agency of Jefferson hledical College and Hospitalg a summary should be presented of all the factors and developments which have made possible the present moment. There are eminent men among my colleagues who posses the historical ability to perform that task adequately. I humbly admit my own inability. And perhaps an alternate line of thought is equally appro- priate to this occasion. The events which lie behind should be interpreted as preliminary and preparatory to the epoch which lies ahead, and to which the present moment is the opening. If we are more concerned with our history than with our future, then that future will not be brilliant when it becomes history. VVe shall attempt to trace the strong currents and counter currents which have brought medicine to its existing status, and to discover their present drift. This done, the relationship of Jefferson lwedical College to those currents of p1'ogress will become clear. hiembers of the Board of Trustees and of the Faculty, it is ours to inalve the history of this new epoch, let others write it. A wise man said: 'cOut of the abundance of the heart the mouth speakethf' You will expect then that a pathologist's message shall emanate from his field of interest. Some of you may question: YVhat is pathology, how is it related to medicine, and at what point does it make contact with the interests of humanity? 'The term pathology is capable of several definitions, each one of which is peculiarly appropriate to a period or epoch in the history of medicine. Pathology may be understood to mean a study of, or a consideration of disease. The men whose writings constitute the early history of medicine are so1net.imes termed pathologists. Their consideration of disease consisted in making remarkably accurate descriptions of its outward manifestations and remarkably fantastic theories of its nature and origin. The humoral theory proposed by Hippocrates and perpetuated in the writings of Galen was held :i:Add1'ess Given at the Opening of the One Hunclre'd and Sixth Annual Session of Jefferson Medical College, September 22, 1930. Two lrlmrlrerl fzrenfy-eight S y 1 ge. gi HN 525 Q 1 as N3 . s h gs - ' is - .,iT.T,,.. sg- UW, W , , , ,, . s N.-W was My A i ' ' - TW? f f 1 a,s.,,r' fem ., ui. ., Mans flew.: -t v'wcww 't rg 'gfw.s'.af . , , 575. w v A i,,VsTii?.W.e MN, . mm ., 1 ,ax aww., f fy x if gs 2 X s unquestioned through the centuries until the Renaissance. No accurate knowl- edge of the human body, its structure, its functions, nor the nature of its diseases was possessed by the early men of medicine nor developed in the twenty centuries 'during which their theories were undisputed. Scirrhus was said to be caused by drinking bad cold water at an unfavorable time and ucancers were formed by black bile overheatedf, The brain was regarded as a sort of refrigerator whose chief function was to keep the heart and lungs cool. Even so 'important a structure and function as the heart and the circulation was correctly interpreted only barely 300 years ago. Throughout the ages f1'OlH earliest civilization to the close of the 16th century pathology at its best was merely a consideration of disease. Finally came a time when human intelligence showed evidence of a quick- ening premonitory to bursting the shell of tradition and theory. Age-old traditions and the dicta of the fathers were questioned. A German monk led a revolt against an ecclesiastic dictatorship which forbade men to think An English philosopher insisted that experimental proof was a more reliable basis for knowledge than was argument or tradition. He rang the bell which called the wits togetherfa An Italian astronomer built a telescope and dared to deny that the earth is flat. An Enrflish mathematician saw an apple fall and was moved to think. Exponents of the new spirit appeared in medicine Vesalius taught anatomy as he found it in the human bodv, not as he found it in the works of Galen, and the studv of anatomv became a science. Harvey proved the function of the heart and the mechanism of the circulation, and physiology was given a rational foundation-the science of medicine was on its way. Do you suppose these innovations of thought were cordially received? Luther was excommunicated and his writings were burned in public. H escaped dire punishment by retirement under a false name. Only the sup pression of his writings saved Bacon from persecution to the Inquisition for his heretical views on astronomy in disgrace from the 5Universitv of Padua for teaching anatomy contiaiv to Galenic tradition. He died in exile. 'Thus the world iewaids its thinkers' How the guardians of tradition wince with pain at the impact of a new idea How they punish the hapless thinker who launched the shaft! Apparently a hostile reaction toward innovations is a racial rather than an individual character. Civilization has not eradicated it. At one time Pasteur had to flee to escape mob violence. Oliver VVendell Holmes was scorned, ridiculed and discredited even by Philadelphian physicians for his observations on puei peral fever. Some physicians now living are held in disgrace and disfavor by their tradition-loving colleagues. Yet their only offense was to report accu rately the results of experiments honestly performed Galileo was subyeetec Vesalius was driven I I In the 15th century, Benivieni secured permission t.o perform post disease-a new idea in the practice of medicine. He described gall st.ones, carcinoma of the stomach, venous thrombosis and other organic pathology but interpreted them according to orthodox Galenic traditions. New ideas and methods developed slowly in those days. Some knowledge of pathology was X 1 1 ff b , E ' e ' . - mortem examinations to learn, if possible, the cause of death in cases of obscure i I 'F 1 I I' . 7. f - ' 111.0 :um vcd 111011 y nine . . . l W . f 4 , 7 7 W af V4 Z if 1 X 7 2 . W F bf C I 0 . . wi l ,Y N ,xx my ,sn 1 Rst so lxkgxyv N acquired from dissections for the study of anatomy, but postmortem exam- inations were rarely made to learn the nature of disease or the cause of death until the 18th century. Then lvlorgagni summarized all the prior postmortem records, and added seven hundred of his own. His records describe tubercu- losis of the kidney and of the lungs, gummata of the brain, aneurysms, atrophy of the liver, pneumonic consolidation of the lungs and many other conditions. He co-related the clinical features with the postmortem findings, and made organic pathology a science. The demonstration of visible organic lesions gradually produced a revolutionary change. Nlen began to think of disease in anatomical terms. Symptoms, the manifestations of disease, were interpreted on the basis of organic lesions and of the resulting disturbances of physiological function. During the 18th century the microscope Bichat, Ia young French physician, used it to organs and created the science of histology or to this both anatomy and pathology had been became a tool of scientists. study the finer st1'ucture of microscopic anatomy. Prior matters of organs and gross divisions. Bichat described the microscopic changes seen in diseased organs and revealed for the first time abnormalities of tissues. His work and that of Henle formed the connecting link between the organ pathology of Morgagni and cellular pathology which developed under the leadership of Virchow and which dominated medical thought during the middle portion of the 19th cen- tury. Pathology, during this epoch, became a study of the gross and miscro- scopic changes incident to disease. It was purely morphological, but when interpreted in terms of functional disturbance-pathological physiology-it became the greatest single factor in the development of rational medicine, for it enabled physicians correctly to interpret the symptoms which characterize various diseases. Even when morphological pathology had reached its highest development ft failed to answer the question of etiology. VVithout an understanding of causation how could treatment be appropriate or prevention be effective? Devastating epidemics were of common occurrence and their contagious char- acter was evident, but dense ignorance shrouded the origin and means of spread of even the commonest diseases. VVhat were the causes and how could they be prevented ? - The year 1857 is made memorable by Pasteur's discoveries on the nature of fermentation. He proved the existence of microscopic living forms, yeasts and bacteria, and demonstrated their activities in producing fermentation and putrefaction. Almost immediately Devaine discovered miscroscopic, rod-like bodies in the blood of healthy sheep. He found that the injection, into healthy sheep, of blood containing these rods caused anthrax in those sheep. Thus the conception of infection was demonstrated and bacteria were first shown to be the cause of disease. This discovery roused the curiosity of Koch. It led him to abandon his practice and to spend months of study on the bacillus of anthrax. He learned to grow it artificially 'in test tubes, he used analine dyes to render the bacilli visible, he devised animal inoculations by which to determine virulence, he discovered bacterial spores and proved their significance Two humlrerl fhiriy ls gba l ' y 4 s f 1 f W 7' 1 lv i l 3 1 I 7X fi y 5 24 Nj, if Wk A , wx fe 4 'A' fi 4 1 s l ,. Qq.,A. -t .X.i X5 X by experiments on animals, he perfected methods of sterilization. In short, he laid a foundation of technique which is still the basis for bacteriological procedures. I-Ie showed the causes of wound infections and in 1882 the world was electrified by his discovery of thc bacillus of tuberculosis. BIean- while Pasteur had extended his researches to immunity and had discovered experimental methods for protecting animals against infections. Practical application was immediate. For the first time in history the life of a child, infected with hydrophobia by the bite of a rabid dog, was saved. These dis- coveries caused medical science to turn a corner. Infectious disease, an enemy hitherto unseen and mysterious, was umnasked, its means of attack were made plain, and effective weapons of defense were devised. Lord Lister was quick to apply the explanation of wound infections, and modern aseptic surgery was made possible. The decadle which followed was a glorious one for the Hlliicrobe Huntersf' One discovery followed another with startling rapidity. The etiology of a score of diseases was established, their means of spread was shown, bacteriology and preventive medicine sprang into existence. In this latest epoch of medical history pathology came to have a broader meaning. No longer was it merely a consideration of disease as in the centuries before the Renaissance. No longer a description of morphological changes associated with disease, as during the period of development which culminated with Virchow. Now pathology has come to be the science of disease. In this broader conception 'it includes all knowledge of the causative agent.s and their methods of operation: it includes the morphological effects, the gross and microscopic changes produced in the organs and tissues, it includes the altered physiology-the disturbances in function which constitute the symptomatology of disease, it includes the various defensive forces by which the body seeks to hold in check the injurious agent and to repair the damaged tissue, it includes the interaction of cause and effect which leads to the final result, whether that result be death or recovery, it goes beyond the recovery and explains the subtle phenomena of immunity. The development of modern medicine had to await accurate knowledge of the pathology of disease. This knowledge was furnished laboriously bit by bit by a small group of obscu1'e investigators to whom civilization owes a debt whose magnitude it does not comprehend. They braved the unseen and mys- terious dangers of disease with as high a courage as man can sunnnon. No fewer than sixteen of these intrepid spirits became infected and died of the disease they were studying. No reward nor fame awaited them, no acclaim of shouting multitudes greeted their success. VVhen, as often happened, they suc- cumbed to the very disease they sought to conquer, no marble shaft marked their resting place and no bronze tablet recorded the story of their sacrifice. Yet as they passed they left to 'humanity a heritage which will live while civilization lasts. A thousand years hence a generation which knows not the name of VonBehring will protect its children from death by diphtheria, and those who never heard of the sacrifices of Lazear or Noguchi will live umnenaced by yellow fever. Men are capable of no more lofty idealism and unselfishness than that of those who renounced the hope of worldly gain or fame, who espoused poverty and chose to labor to emancipate humanity from its ills. Two hmzdrefl tl1.i'rty-one f lf l 1, 1 Q X 1 f xg. ,eff .. N X TI' u-3 9-5 : Cf' 0 1 E. Ui 53 r-3 U2 G EI. T6 14 oe , V E H : 5 ff E. F 3 FD ill 5-5 FD 97 5 Q1 5' S5 4 FD H . rf' E O S 0 . X abundantly. Many accounts of achievement in this field read like fascinating stories of adventure. I wish to refer very brieflly to one event in the conquest of yellow fever. This disease has a peculiar 'interest for Philadelphians because of the succession of devastating epidemics which swept this city four times in one decade. During one of these visitations 4000 deaths occurred in a population of 40,000-102: mortality within three months! In Bermuda a few decades ago the mortality from this disease was 80 per 1000 each year. In Jamaica it took an annual toll of 185 per 1000. Yellow fever had been a similar plague in Cuba for centuries when the U. S. Army took possession in 1898. Soon the terrific mortality among the troops called for investigation. A commission of medical officers consisting of Doctors Reed, Carroll, Agramonte, and Lazear began to seek means for comb-ating yellow fever. After months of fruitless investigation they came to suspect the disease might be spread by the bite of mosquitoes. Since animals are not subject to yellow fever, experiments on human beings became necessary. Accordingly Doctors Carroll and Lazear instituted an expe1'iment by allowing mosquitoes which had fed on yellow fever victims to bite them. Three days later Dr. Carroll suffered a violent infection which, though not fatal, resulted in permanent impairment of health. Dr. Lazear did not contract the disease in this first experiment. Shortly afterward while working in the yellow fever ward he noticed a mosquito settle upon his hand, and deliberately allowed the insect to bite and to drink its fill. He immediately contracted yellow fever and died a week later. The remaining three now established a camp for continuing the experiments. This they named Camp Lazear in honor of their dead comrade. They called for volunteers, explaining fully dangers entailed. lvfore men and officers came forward than could be used. In his published report Major Reed stated: In my opinion this exhibition of moral courage has never been surpassed in the annals of the Army of the U. Sf' In one experiment six men were bitten by infected mosquitoes and Hve immediately contracted yellow fever. A tightly screened room was then divided into two compartments by a mosquito-proof screen. On one side of this were liberated a number of infected mosquitoes. Soldiers entering this room were bitten by them. On the other side of the screen lived soldiers under identical conditions of camp sanitation but protected from mosquitoes. The soldiers bitten by infected mosquitoes contracted yellow fever. The soldiers p1'otected from mosquitoes remained well. Altogether twenty-two cases of yellow fever were produced experimentally. These proved that the bite of the stegomyia mosquito carried yellow fever. It now remained to show whether the disease could be spread by other means. A building consisting of a single room was doubly screened against mosquitoes. It was furnished with beds and clothing which had been used by yellow fever patients. A group of volunteers occupied this room for twenty days. Daily they ate from dishes and utensils used by yellow fever patients. They used towels and blankets soiled with the vomitus and excreta. They slept in soiled clothing in which victims of yellow fever had died. Yet in these unwholesome and revolt- ing surroundings they remained in perfect health. This experiment proved that yellow fever was not spread by filth nor by contagion. V Wife T.: 7. 1'dtl. f-1: no :Hume zu y 110 ff! l 2 .. tg., ,s K4 X Q si ree ss f a , Q52 'f 2 'J ls 2 7 1-2 ps LA 4 he l by rf lf L12 ,gs lu? ' 11-5 lit ' fl . W :QQ i 1 sr? seg - rs f Exif' . ' if' . .. .MM I 1 lf, ,l f ,, , J ,W 12, si, is- x Nix.. X , e fits 1 5 Immediately this knowledge was put into practice. Yellow fever patients were kept under screens and a campaign of extermination was waged against mosquitoes. Wlithin ninety days the disease which had seourged Havana for 150 years was no longer found within its borders. This success 1nade possible the building of the Panama Canal. Had yellow fever been uncontrolled our attempt to build the canal would have failed as dismally did the attempt of the French twenty years before. But a far greater achievement was the emancipation, not only of American cities but of the earth's population, from the dread of the yellow plague. Naturally a grateful nation would fittingly reward such distinguished service and would give tangible evidence of its grati- tude to those whose intrepid courage had won this victory. A hospital was named in honor of Major VValter Recd, while his family remained in narrow circumstances. Of the little group of volunteers who served as experimental animals, only one, J. J. Moran, still lives. He is semi-invalid from the per- manent effects of those experiments which proved how yellow fever is spread. The appreciation of a grateful nation finds eloquent expression in an annual pension to Moran and his family of SL500! hlany delight to contemplate the material progress of the past fifty years. Mountainous buildings of steel rise to the very clouds. The power of steam and electricity has freed human hands from toil. 1Vaterfalls are harnessed to drive the wheels of industry and of commerce. Light, power and heat flow or cease at the snap of a switch. The same energy either cooks the food or preserves it at the freezing point. Over the earth's surface man out-flies the swiftest bird: music or human voices come to us through empty space from the earth's remotest regions. VVhat. things has 1nedieal science done to com- pare with all these benefits? A brief answer to that question is difficult. There is no unit by which to measure human suffering relieved nor to estimate its total sum. No summary can be 1nade of the sick, the maimed and the afflicted in a given generation, nor can their condition accurately be compared with their suppositious condition before the development of modern medicine. If tomorrow the yellow plague should again, as in former years, invade Phila- delphia, what price would we pay to escape its horrors? Wlhat is it worth that neither this city or any civilized population shall again be menaced by that nor by similar plagues? Do you still ask for a definite and measurable result? VVell here it is. Medical science has given to each person of our popu- lation sixteen additional years of life in which to enjoy those mode1'n com- forts of which we p1'oudly boast. That figure does not represent an idle guess. It is taken from mortality tables on which basis insurance companies pay death claims to their policyholders-and dividends to their stockholders. Figures furnished by the ltletropolitan Life Insurance Company and by the U. S. Bureau of the Census show that the life expectancy at birth, in other words, the average duration of life, at this time is sixteen years higher than it was in 1880. This means that infants born at this time will live, on the average, sixteen years longer than did those born fifty years ago. Do you realize what this means in added years of human life P-that to this population of 120,000,- 000 a total of 1,920,000,000 additional years of life have been given? Iwo 71 unrlrerl 171 iffy-three 1 5 K f X f pf f f l if I Q A Q 5 f M 7 ,f 7 ' 2 l 1 ,f f f ! f f ffl! ff! ,Ze , W1 , M? 147 ,ag ,954 X There exists a group of well-meaning reformers who would take from medical science the privilege of using animals for research purposes. They are entirely uninformed as to how or why experimental animals are used. They do not realize that, in the study of disease, a living animal is to the pathologist what a test tube is to the chemist. It supplies the only conditions under which the interaction of cause and effect may be studied. All progress in the knowl- edge of infectious diseases has been conditioned upon this. The stupendous aggregate saving of human life just cited had been impossible but for animal experimentation. Is the use of animals to prolong human life less justifiable than their use as food or clothing? Is an additional year of life for a person equal in value to the life of a dog, a rabbit or a rat? If one added year of human life is an adequate return for the life of an experimental animal then medical science should be credited with 1,920,000,000 animals bought and paid for. Such a tot.al would not be used by the worldts pathologists in a thou- sand years. The reformers referred to, propagate the misconception that animals are subjected .to torture at the hands of doctors. No greater injustice could be done than is contained in such an accusation. There is a code of humanitarian ethics among pathologists which is more effective than legislative enactments. It requires that an anesthetic shall always be used except when the experiment is of such nature as to cause less discomfort to the animal than would be caused by the anesthesia. Physicians are guided by the same criterion when their manipulations may be painful to a patient. In twenty years of active service in' laboratories of pathology, I have never once seen that principle violated. One summer I spent three joyous weeks canoeing and fishing on western lakes and streams. lVIy guide was a trapper by trade. At one of our camps he strolled along the shore looking for a trap which had been buried and lost in a heavy snow several months before. He found the trap with its steel jaws still holding bits of the skeleton of an animal which had died a P1'lSOH61'. He told me something of the trapping business. He had several trails or lines of traps, each being a circuit which could be traveled in a day. He tried to visit each trap every two or three days unless weather conditions prevented. Nlost of the trapped animals were still alive after two days unless the cold was severe. Otherwise they perished slowly without anesthesia. I tried to picture what this meant to the animal. First the smashing pain as the steel jaws snapped and locked shut upon broken bones, crushed Hesh and lacerated nervesg then the hours of agony intensified by indammation and by struggles to escape. After perhaps fifty hours of torture, death slowly brought its merciful relief. 1WIy guide,s annual catch ranged from 800 to 1000 hides. The Bureau of Commerce Bulletin No. 590 shows that in the year 1927 the American Fur Dyers Association handled over 32,000,000 hides. Think of it, annually 32,000,000 animals sacrificed by torture to the Goddess of Fashion! There is no criticism of the purposes and ideals of those societies which seek to prevent cruelty to animals, what might be wished is intelligence of direction. T zzro 11 'lm dred flzirty-fozn' ff' 5 X 4 4 fi X S 5 X I 8 3 J 1 1 5 ,J V f f V 4 if Kffgff Z ?j 'Vik 225 ,,.f'4 ' r V Q, f . f:.'f. V, , My . . eg 't ' iii' Q 1. ' 'LX , ' fn ' Agent ig A A K X M as -X .A NE lif is Q X 'N s Brief allusion has been made to the origin of the fundamental sciences which constitute modern medicine. Development of those sciences has prog- ressed with accelerated rapidity. Recent Ame1'ican contributions such as those of Cannon, Howell, Carlson and lVIann in physiology, of Folin, VanSlyke and Dakin in physiological chemistry, of Abel, Richards and McNider in phar- macology, of Kendall, Collip and Banting on disorders of glandular secre- tion, of Blarine on goitre, of Benedict, Lusk, DuBois and others on metabolism, of lNIcCollum, Davis, Mendel and others on vitamine deficiencies, of Goldberger on pellagra, of IVelch, Smith, Wfinternitz, Wlohlbach on etiology, of Hess, Steenbock and their co-workers on rickets and the effects of sunlight, of ltiinot, ltiurphy and Koessler on anemia, of Dick on scarlet fever, of Noguchi on syphilis, yellow fever, jaundice and other infections, of Slye, Rous, Ewing and others on malignancy, of Carrel, Sabin and Maximow on cytology, of a score of others equally worthy of mention--the remarkable contributions, I say, of these American investigators have caused a shift in leadership from the universities of Europe to the medical colleges of America. They have placed us as foremost leaders in the entire field of medical scientific progress. That progress is destined to continue until every detail of the human body, its structure, its functions, its chemistry and its metabolism which man is able to discover shall have been discoveredg until the cause and character of every disease to which flesh is heir is understood as completely as man shall ever understand it, until ability in the prevention, the diagnosis and the management of disease shall have reached its ultimate possible limits of refinement. I short, that progress is destined to continue until research has made of medicine a complete and finished science, and that time is far in the future. The position of leadership in scientific lines which American medical col- leges have attained resulted from the fact that investigative work-resear'ch- is provided with every facility and encouragement. Faculty appointments, advancement and preferment are conditioned largely upon productive ability. The relative prestige and ranking of institutions is determined not by age, size, history nor physical equipment, but by the merits of the contributions to human knowledge which are made by their various departments. The new epoch upon which Jefferson lVIedical College is entering places a grave responsibility upon us, her Faculty and her administrative officers. If We shall feel that the goal has been attained and shall lose ourselves in contem- plation of the glories of the past, the coming generation will find no cause for pride in us. It is our obligation to gird for present and future accomplish- ments, to place this institution on an equal footing with her sister schools by making worthy contributions to the advancement of medical sciences. Other- wise her prestige among medical colleges and the high esteem of her own alumni will suffer. I do not sound a note of pessimism but rather one of hope and of resolution. By the acquisition of this magnificent building, splendidly designed and equipped for its purpose, Jefferson has achieved literally a new birth. That there has been a renaissance of spirit as well is already mani- fested. In the planning and the equipment of this building provision has been 'S S 2' E. 6 2. '5- Z' :L Q 'Ss IS I3 - fx x X X made for the two-fold function of a medical college, that of teaching and that of research. The Faculty are imbued with the spirit of investigation: they maintain that a lamp which gives forth light of itself is superior to a reHector. They have organized for the co-ordinated encouragement and supervision of research. I have faith they will not be disappointed in their expectation of the added support necessary to make effective these facilities. I quote a sen- tence which expresses ably the spirit of modern medical institutions: Greater even than the greatest discovery is to keep open the way to future discoveries. A word to you whose feet are now upon the threshold of this institution and whose eyes are upon the future: You who will Hll our places when we shall pass: I would have you consecrate your lives, even as I would dedicate this larger institution of Jefferson, to the Search for, and to the application of, knowledge which will relieve suffering or prolong life. , we , is 55: 1 342 0 V V 4 S . ' A- ' ff 1 Q 5 ia 4 A SZ J ,Q 4 f ss 2 X s Q F X , ft V it 3 5 'S fs Of l I? X? 4 12 X, X X K 1 6 if 5 f 4 W fygk , f A I Q Q f . . -L., ., . 44, Tiro lmurlred fhzrty-snr it JEFFERSON FROM THE AIR ,V fx rn I ,.1. 6 M 1 --X5 gl 2.15, A 5 ' ' EWS' :NS fr 192: xi:1!.LA:lu:,5'l:-21 E ' , I .1 .lsrhlfrn 'IW I - f 4L . A --1? ,E-5553: 5. : s - .- H- . :Ima-f gsxuaaifisz-:'5f fi. z - rin-, znzzn.-,min .,.... .M . ....... ,,-,, Y: 1:-2!:TL:'5E:g1l ' 1 :--r:e::-:.---. :.:,ns11-!f:-m- -1 4,-1: mae we-,s:z'... f 'fE1'f5'E'fi?I' I :l1'I7 3-EV' ','Z1.-'...5 W , , .- I iggiggl5,gg,.3ggi55gg:55ef5r L' nf--:m..:---M.-2-.--....1--M -1 .mm -.mm.21H-,gfsa-a--z..ez-z z-zQssamsaszz, .messes s.1wfassw'rH':svaf'seszs'1fA'wsff:: ::: 21. M- rfaesefa - - .:f3'fease-fssezs':f 'sfa' 1s5ass:s2z1:s ::szsa4z-5-322421 1252, :.-:-szefz-:15215212113355252521ig'H2ffflfiffgfifwfzv255111:Effie'ffJ''zlgv-521fffi'55f5i531L55543ifP!13355225IY?553iii55Q?5i95555E55ffi3ff5:'f5 ,..x:f:r'::z:':fa:: ::g:.:g:t:::::::: :.:1.:z'::'::n:-.'rss's :sa:ez -3-,mersfa1:ass1zs'f--suv' 1f::1:a:ew --sarasw.---2--2ax-as'-m:1:ae'--221.1sF2a-22-111215229212 1252-1-1 V1 1--W --V: .fg:-3f:s?l:.- 1qgggggggggg353555ggi-1--g,'g5-922:55-gszsggzzgse-azz-s:sze1fsssa5as5ssfsnisszmssxlfiszzsfzz-zzsneezssfrzazv.s:azaew'i- zazziiieiiiilifsriiiiezsnE'i5'5iE-h-25315321 , , , n .. A , .1 .,.xl.L .1 .- ..--- .. 1 - ,. ..,,.,...-,.,-,...f.Q-.-M-..M--m-fn-.1..mx.-.gm-Eg.-3-..m.1.-,.s--Ly.:-fra.:rmf:-A-L.nm-mg-miazmewg -JEL V, , 315' 331,5935155,3-aasifaaaa---..n use ----1''tzfzeusase:es1efssisrszs:ass!s?es!x1:1-!1:-:simeme?esman55Q1?SIfiif3!?2'555EJSig5i2fffiffiii5Q5E?!?5fEfiiffi-THQ-gig , --ng,-5, -.:---.- ff,-iss-eassis fv - A..w-5f2::-:1.-es1azz2:-fssessseszr'Imraessezem'msza eszvrs:'r ' 1 3----::A..,1,x:-- . ' 4,31-ff-'II' -.:-- 5-.-1,1113 za-si:Q-g!s,-12155255253lzaalggsefflfafzgfxmsngs!15555522!z5xis3:?Z2f5?nie 'I '55,lueijxfszkiigfzzEeafftaealfill-5525 ,:::.- Q..-: . - -:,:. A ..::.::'.'::::,- :-'::':2:.'l :'E::'1:::!:Ei.. :EL 551131. 25. J- 521 ' E' ' ' --! -S5553'EE.E3EEiF52EE'1?.'f:?' H' 535:51---4333 - ' - Egqzgg-:fu-H .. 1145511 f-5:1551 QL.:.QggieeisesglfgQing!55555925Qsizesisspaiifi:fQi5iazgssi:fEaifgE!fZ?g 3-'gil :Wage-'lf'fgikff-g3H:f2i'E3?if - -'-- xr- ,:. . ,..,, -'-rwzn.5:-.:f1e:a.ase'szsz.sz-sam'z..z----'.sf-f.-1 sn- H- - -:::--1:-1-r 1 uw - 2 -- , 1' f fg 5 -'51 i- H.,-E5,5z,,5L5!g:. 1- I . 115, ,,IH-Jszgz,fgg:.:f5gx1.-355. '5:2a2:.a:2,:::55z:z:,:nfi:s:'::::::55:22:53:a:zQfz:::: zxisiffiazf ,i -Kiwi .,... ... r. .,r... V V , ,....-,. - Y .., . . I .,.. ,. .....,:.., .... 1. .... .. .... . V. .,,x I ..:f-.-:,:--- .,-,----.., ,,5,-if V,.,1-,uwezelk:-s5s-z:m.,--,z:-:-1-f-egszsmnEifnfs:-:i,1--1-1-g--:Wnufgazzmzsspkfsen Q5PiIE!55EE5Ei'13EEEE12f:iEE:'EE'E Z 4 4 fa:as-H-.--s'f-21-a-f-srsemessssaggigagsgggggggggggggggggggzggsgxgglggggggggsgsgiggzsgzi-we 3341 ,sdsqmszzmalizssseeeaaszsssfsixi? 2.7 rxgzgg ' ' ' 112- -Izzffu-2as1222212225512?Hesseaaazzsssfsazffsssaafiesssz2zEs2:e:a5e?s2fEs5sif?5fU51 - ,. f ff:es-sfs.1:fm- 1-asaseeeasferase'e'1z'rfrzf:v :'r:'-111+4' sb N- 42:2 Fw?-f -GERM- glglggy--5- 1 I 5. ,,,. 1,4 '.:1,:z::. :ggi-5 .: . H,.:5g5.fgf:5,5E55E:::5::'.::3i43f-.:'g:5Nag, . :: limi? :gn :::' 'EEE'i'E2'5'l:'3 3EE!!!EiE'I'Z'5ElE55 ?H'5EZLE'5E!52'! -wi 51,3-'1-EE::E5E ?Ii':5EE5:7Ei'ESi.5'1 ' ::g::::L.::..:: E-:-Lge!-:r :pi-5:5 L.-55.3-5,5 -?mQf:ii:es:e5a5ffsiigiriiezaiegggiz:f::afi12:zfxE3 f1ff::s:zs:::,fIiiesegisif:e15s:ae:f:1:e.1fa. .ifrziig asgE,Eyg!ig:,Z5-gf:Eai:x:!5::5g:glii J: - ------5 --,--:-1-...--1,12-w --2, ff' '':E?::i.A:JE..Q.E',Eii': -.:.ezz' aim.ss,ez1:essa'n:f e-1s'szs' ?..E!'F: 3EmE '1 ?f'I:.l ' , w:..:: '.:.::1':. , ' Zz 1f:!H2f1:11'?-'Q-Illfzwf-I - 'WH W.f'wafavxsszw:Qa.::f-azsmeee'FEEL Ewiffn-55552222':E2iE is:z225 mg:-,,,: 'Q2 V ' 1 ' .1:5gggQ23:g2355:1355-,gggzzrsgrssszzsgagggssaresizesa5gas2Zs:5?1eaQ2?!h'S5E2z:Esasfigssiigiiiifsa 55l3ff'- 5? 252291555913214152-if-ffrfa ..., . - ..,, -.....,Jug.-.-,,g1.---.,.::m,-r-::1:::::f:nm' f -..mr fefffs?f:ez43fff--'1f1- , :fl,,f,,,w , .-1 2zzsseaezszmz-I-siwezrazhassssnv-559255:asseszeeesrssias-:nfesn-lei 'zu'1g!l?fEF:fs2f--2-'ff-5?B?2ffF - 2 'E'i?i:!I5'IZE!E.::EEfffi?'EFE!!IElE !EiE!'!'EE'I'!?!E'::.E!!'E!5E:E5li?EE:E 1451 -1' imfilgiiifiiflfffiiff 1,35gEig.,..L, I E mf:if-ajggugaazsizizelaegfsfsifnsgxisiesffigisllzlfrfffeafgiszQfgssk EE?sEixlx55?52E5iZe!E-EiiiikQQ? -....-.:::::. 1 : 1.21,-1 :4,e:::1-:m:m.'::: --1 : s5'.:,.z:wz'e ur ,nas 22 . -4: - 1m1'v'121'-111- 11 wwf-2. 22 1-f-1-:zff-sz: e fe 355ggffgnfggmgz--55,523-nxkii-5-Qu!-1WE--Lim.5m?is55ml--,5 ., If55:EE?Ef1t . if '::::vxE:x::'--I-rjfcshiz'?fi1EEi5:Fi555i?'!i7:EL5!iFEEijEf!EiEii7E5f' WFTF1' 5- - 'Z5:i:755737:5:f1::l7-mfg! -.5522-1:11 1 1- - ,gggggqrzssaemy:ana555555asainaneisa!5zia3le::,age51:fss:2? ' , f . 3 Z. Q ' 'fffifi' Z, Va . , U - '.. w :g 1 ---- -- --- f -' - - - 4- f -. ,:.-:x2:fff12f1-'-'2-u.--2effea.125La2122552-fe .4 m. gulf- ::'2'fE'1'7i':frf:' ,A . 1 ,Ji . f,1-.1.-mg.--x2,1Us-:-,:1..---Humm-:fret x.if.,:,,-Q lug.-,,.,fn.n...n...1-H. - . 4 .1 .inf-1-zsaiezmr -'rzz:1ssssi21'Q2r:?11:62:21-:5sx1::r:e .'-4:-in llz.mlE'2!1gk153,9EeeeEs5sgsLae- 1 ' ' .S .Ui :Q.:..::::51:!:: ., ,.1: ,.f. vu,:2.wL ::2f!1' ::E:1uQ.. 'FY -- sv:-2-s'1e ssdvsz-sess -,'z:2zs'zs:'f':'f'--guyz:,fp -- . s 2 5313-fiiflfsiii-531555fsQ55?:5'?ff22e15iE5Sgiifxwfil f .LSQTQQQEIQZEgfizfffgzilliiliyig: . - -'-in 1: 1 ,mee -' 'E-:Lim :1 G:-P ':,:.:-'as 1':-:2f1::'n2f12mr L- -- ' A - 3 'Mia lqgf2i!?iiif?F?2iHf!HHE2i21H1l . , :mai 3 , fgnsibggfgg:newrfgagnugzysSazgggssEazzssiasgisziiiif' 255913. n L ' 5vl: 'l-Wizi,-1555212714i5 551- 5-WWE' ' 1 WEEE----. - .-- -- nl Has? mumku1I:fEi!smuss1zl!s,huiuu!!11iiw,1 !'- fri, ?k,gm,1j,A,.,gi:jgg.'g,,gg:g, ::-ima. . .-A.. ng -1...... 4. .-- - va :., f-5 1- - 1 H 'L 1: ..-,- ,. -g..-: :zu ::A3:1'.54f 1255iigiifseifieifisilifiimii533123-?31:.fEfsfa?2E---- ' E-,fbi-135 'n hfiiiafesgaeiif--122--,: f ff':5E3i ' EEQHIE? :12nsim'ffe i1Igi!!E::lEUi!fUl! sz1!1aJ'?5 W! 1HlgrfhiaeziE5as:riirE'E 12: . ,1 ,. ,... ,,..p,...........x.-...,. .5.. .QVQ ul. Hi. -' 51.21 I - new JL-21!!sL1..sasssa-14155251152221154.55-fluEE ,I-rv-Qs ,:::,,,Zg.3ghiglgigggiigggigggg 1-fm.-:: Q I - M , . .1 was A - . :fm gg:--.:f,1. , I Zfmgggfqiiglfiii!!f!35'fi!3Qpi532?li55f:?25fE21f55'H. 'fiiiifiilfiizfzwiizige-sisaszzebezazs ' - f'5f.:3rgfE f1 I vfzevxzra:-Eii2!sfL.a4iEEaiiifseiiiiii 'fi x g'1'i :f'ffifF?i5f1'i5'iF2iFf'HHS . ::.: 1:--nznuazcl: 'mi :::i: :?g,5.i.l 551.2 :E -E,1,'E '.. :.,-, . . -N:--:1-a3151:3-,:r35 ::5:1:1 f ua. 4 :!EiifE?E??Eifi:::!:. if fglimllfigligilffgfli7151155555351 . nu: 51:-5m::1ngf-.-33.n11Lg- ---ni-.L rmvizz--25,1-1-55 51,55 : .ELQQ fr:3Q:.!'155f2 1'g'35-5 : I - Q f:g:zmn::g.qn::5E1.-55.ig., .-in-,Q -:,:y-,-pa-...xy '- lvnlnvsyifsnnn.m1f.z11-5525155591 . . .,.. .... . ....- -.-.... ..-..X1--T , .. ,. ' I 5 c:LZs3Qg.E3Q3gH:..i.-.2-.ffigggg-4:15:52iv?-.' ,:ifm'qef,Qssagag,.eg:Q1g-125,211 -M'- -Q' h uf-'-- -- --'f-Mm -W 'A'z-mzpmsrszss sim- Agri-sis!-sf' rm-ff 35--if ggi?-ages-a1nsss..ff , L 5 LW-21'2gQE,SiQxlzsaflhxiliiitiiiiggh 1ffg,ff.,5 , 2 gem-swsg-agifwzjlrtnfggllsazsusuixg::wsu 1z2s2:gz2.-7'1 ?'!: i izfzaiiff425855611555--2 ,lmlinl , x 1ur:n:4!:g::x:nfb2 :MF g::xu:m,:.::x:zu-:::1:x.wul: - 'yyqyfut - i1,,im51g,,,,,,, ,:,.a-5Gg :4- -E 5 gyms .flq,:.zf-315595352ggggiifzgggqggg, '1'?1'fF Q ifEa1g:-iipuivilgxiixzifkqxgfi gzfagaaiz- 1 Zim IH 5i6Q!EE?iiEHi2Zi'Ei5EZF?!iiigfiiii ti- - , 1 -5:4223P711-112152,Tefrestsrf'-5'51 E'1'IE'? 1 - ..zf ' -if-+ - f fs? +4 --ig ----- .- umlam - -:L ,wgfp ,,u-3u3,5i:v,..--------1,.,,. I , UK I ,.-,. ., K 1 .- 'vu .lil ' 4. 1. 1 1 ' 1 yv 7- .1 r L IJ, I I f' v.. 2 lv I 1 1 ln 1 i 1 Q.: 1 rr v v. 1 r 1 ' f 7EZE2?EEZ,l5iEE3i? 3562651 :5!f?.?.EZ-23555355555 'f: E7L'3EEf?Ei: N-- -- Fifi- 32.21-.11 - ..-uf.-..-' 52i1:'3'i:233fff5 w u 'T' mjffi AEM' N N ,, ,Uh , .ms--fm--,ig-fl-an -2 : iw:-,s-,-Q .iziiiiiiiia2555225555425nisglgiggm.:.!2IWff5S5!iS2i5i, : . uni. .5141-ii. --mul? ii! 'I --.mm.-1-mg..-ms-ffze-1.,---:.-s1-.--.,,--1-- - ---- y . .. .gulkskazzsss ' .. .. 512152352 12-55554 5:6 ?H?'ifi '42 'rihsqqfi 5'i:552???9 Ei5'5::55' -- .. Hee--.-Qmemasssazisfsffief-sssiaszizasssi:e5!25seu5zsEEeaEriewasaisiisaageazlgffiizwfmgfaggm Him!! if-55:1-1-P 'fi 'Iff-W! affggs-15.2.5-saas!:g1s.ggsese3gggg: 1 .225 ., -iw-2ggesag.ngQggwfafegggeigs-'wwwesefagggeffarfifaffw52141553 ifzfgieqfwq-ff' FP f'2!!Y3.f!1f 1Q4W5!Q12E9iPQiffiff 13 WA :I M22-Hifi -fliii--412i---1-2 --51-sf:-gzszfazzga--fzgisssss:-:seizeefsssfsmas-f!:esisfseg5s2sazgzsf12?eznZgqi!szH58--ai:-.U.9kgf5jfs!!EAE 3,.iiiEi:Y1 fJ:liQl2iS!f?f?F!5Ff11ijHU9Ef'HY!1 .. VEIFSIZEHEI ,, , :.-1:r:5:::::::fg:3ff,1.:p::x,c-::::,f::s Jr:s.:7-'-:',-1.5.-var: .. sg:,,,,,:5- png gm 57.,,, .,,.5a...5 ,,r-55555.-... - -,n.-.,,j-4jgq:'-g:15g:,:::'5.f:5:5:n' liEE:.3 -5 1511- ' , -1 111--:sf-anszsafsafseaefswam-sfzszzfiess5gft2s1e1:f3'!!kitk5eses652555-sizssxzeiz5559359533331EEE-is-fH315!Q?Kfi2g5i555R 14552253 5f5MIff3?5?1kiEwfz:fF1f+f51w'2 - Gassfefir's1:z's-fs--efsff92f'1e2'2:-amaze?Uissfis,-ffgelee vi-fw!Qfsff'f.vFf81zr-1 111221 ,?e.e f1!si3 F535 'H -'g'sZfQesL- -'yn , '11 if-eng-12:-11.,a:as1zaa:asa1-as,:w- -'safe fgfifff-1 'if-2 if-323:52 2.::'?g,.,:?sesggsie:aze?ege:sza4a.eg,egaV511519155515lfffwaw:Siu-25g:4E2fQ45H1fH?if,P??9Ein-wiquwfin.55 ,fykuikli - me -2-25:31,-1:g::: :L---i-.-.wi-,-H.:.-M-.un--.-1:f..1f:.:L-i:mu-.:1.:.1.z:':.:'f' sw- ' -1. v . ,. 'fi f ' - -- af .1 1 - lff --:-:-mmz-Hz-1.-2-1-iz-yu--Amesgfbsrzfv--zzz!---1121211fffswfflraiw '4':fax1-rylgqqlgfkfeuxlp nf--5 -,sem-13!st..f a:f'if3l 1:31511 .--.--L s S-in-:521:--2525-21--,,5,iuw fiesfshfieifgiii -533 hi' ,fi -3-gp - vi-'f'i-ff'ViHff1s1 'T5'?'5if3'ij?i' f- . 5E55Fi3E57iiFQ3?5?'f??Fiiuifiiifffif !:EE5Ei?5 '?EE::E: IH-Qi 13523 4: ,gg sr fgnhfsreiaa.aisles-aszelzx 9.52255 555355552 .fi.iL?'5siiizx-,. Til-,r, all:mamafa-aafssaekfsasaig55,55 , 5 , -iq -1 - mg-es 5 iiisia '- aff - 1 sfrgfii sglfuiiiki- -5- zxsazfmizizelsazzsfazzsazfssezeisiasE55-zisieiiiii5iEisE.iiiSQ ggi i H, lliillf, M 'Ui'klifiliifimfgEaiiiiiiiiiifiiififli2 4 23 4 52 , 539. Ma 23' .. :r:.::r:.:::::::::::?SiZEEEE:EiE5EE5E1:,EE5EE:EE::5E!E12f'f ' '. - r- Hr :- -ff, 1. 'fl W' . 151: :m f TW 1 r::Jix1??5-::55:..nzxfzy-:fmegmi 1-,535W-:,-,-,-1,zf-m----1--1-L---Hww Assn: ' .,, '1ess z1-.':- --19 M Ma' -, , Kewl:-1- - -mms if35:--1--.1s::a5,,giw, - ,, L 1f:eL,. W1H- .Zh L Mg. -41 'ggfiif fi-i2'?5 '2'!r1'l'..7',1?1gi?f?5'iQf Eggieisgiitaanssissenneszssssssesezszs -f-:-.w--------.- 11-11-12:14:--:mfmy-1-::::::: . M Q a 'ff - .I::E'. mi? J - -nf -.-'zissaalmssaf-, ' - ''1s2a':ff:sfsssf1s11sfI1f11n1f1sffHss. ,,-.?4m,--.-- f ... mm- 112:--aaweazreff- fb, if .-:sesaszsszeazsnassssassessan1se.asasasussaaafiuszassssizseaszsas-.szz5,-:au 25121111 ix' J1lSf1?5ili335ff575E, 1553EEEEEEIEQSESYZESEMEEFIE5521392535595114EEEPEWEZEEQESE555'1f1'E3!E:Ei.,S15L1 :.ss2sz2m::sa:g:.4,:3:qe1L' zz-.-11:1-1212312rzswfffstigtzcgz .' -1? a .I-if' -3-771,14 wmv! , Eva .-zum:-1-:25E2:::rziimziiih-Hin555-:m-E:-1--m:-:Qugh--Emu--5:--gy:- mmwm:-::.m.::.,mf.n:,:v:..,:---1.,.m:f:m:-----:--H 'J r' f , '-Q--I--I' Fi-fiiil' 'fiflgr' fir'::--u4:5:::::!:::f::::::::::: 55 '--if-If51i9!i:::f 1x::::5'!:1:::3L.!i..1. isssasegiszasiagsamgamsassfazftzwsgal2'sze2fF'assszsaiai325525555 -'T ' Q - ,, fig35555252555555353555EESRESE5E2fi5iEEEE4.EEE:EEEEiEE:ffEEEiEEi5iQ55EZi?iiEEEiS mzegszzazssszz55551221335 :sa5s.22susss!:szssssssssnz:ta2zzgsE53!ksE'.ESLT sf-Q -'w1.55if.-1 '5gf'f: 1-' . , '-Ziff21555795355555555522555555?55555535555-55535555555i5555i5iii?5P5??'52z- Ei::.5ii3EiEEi3.?iffEE1 ':::5AE5E2f2:Eiiifii-FE!25'E:ZE:?7ESEF:9E'fEET 'Vf F - , . . . .::Z'5 , 7 iii: , . i '. EEE:EEESEEEEEEEFEE...EEFEEEEESEESE355555::3iE??P5iSi':5EE3EE!3'E5i:zz HEEEFEQ' sszqesgssasszzisaaisss Fay- 1 'if 'avi-! n '?f1 :Q '.:figsssszssvzsaesseaaaaasia-K.--:ggeeessaessaagisafsgssgsiasggsasgieaeaaefsissffzif ,-,---....-------Q-5...-1-4,1.1.1:LY.-1 .. U -I 1 A . -: -.-. r v- 'E72.,'.ii?:EEiii:E::i5555552ESEE?2EE5EI'..'EE?E EEEEiEE-'EFEE-225:52-'.EE?:5:E3E-3257925-6 .f1ffaiiEf?5???5Pff?'is2?fCif53gsgaag,gr 1.5i-253533 Jimi. A 3 455 - - eiiigsissassss 1 mf--mm -:-'.-srgsfssasna A' assassin'5e 4s:zzz'asz2s:sfsa-sa:1a22.ss1ezssssf '-I 22125 ,Hue ' -.'.-ww - 11. 'ERVEEEEEEE sa:sszfs u5s:e,s2sa4sesszssnessirsasfs1s2aassasa?ss'E':: 1 'f f'5Y5513f1f35f:'1 -fFuEi22iH ' : ?23 k' ?5?1?ii5532:5lE21E 1 'Eii7iigx ' E gf x?i i? Q: ,'.q!?5g'iitigiiafa'sfE3i3fEsa21-1-igzmfm-35 'zsreiaiixeei222553-szzssififiiff? j c 5ANlzm N i V ' m QQ EW St ec . s X ,453 XA? X X t , SNNQ s -we-www :1'sSSQ- sr-est. . A- -www X S. ss Q' X '-ANN Si: 'Nils s - N Y ' sl X ,Q Grganizations AN a race is gregariousg man as a healer is neces- sarily a social being. In the medical profession where introspective, anti-social or misanthropic attitudes not only defeat the fundamental purpose of the Art but hamper its successful application, a neophyte cannot overcome such mental incumbranccs, or practice their antithescs too early in his career. Bleclical education, is as unlike the teaching of the Humani- ties and the Arts as a medical school is from a college. YVhen one enters the study of physic his acquaintance and probably satiety of traditional college amenities is precluded. The medical curricula being so budgeted as to turn every available minute to account, leave no surfeit of time for social intercourse. Hence fraternities are a necessity. The opportunity and the responsibility to form those stimulating personal contacts with fellow student, which encourage exchange of ideas, temper judgments and develop priceless life-long friendships rests with fraternities. Fraternities are not boarding houses, nor should such aHiliations offer excuse only for the display of a certain jeweled emblem or the boast of a formidable, imposing list of Nbrother alumni. It should offer a bond with that world which will soo-n be the young medico's oyster, and mellow many a memory of an otherwise dogmatic, mechanical ritual of medical schooling. VVhile it is true that one group may ostensibly cater to those students who affect the more sartorially minded members of the medical profession, another those of a scholarly trend, and yet another composed of the 'csalt of the earth type who become as the 'GAlabama Student'l-representatives of each of these groups find their places, unwittingly perhaps, in ea-ch fraternity and leaven the whole to a representative plane of the youth of America today, or a cross-section of a typical County Biedical Society meeting of tomorrow. T 1170 ll zmdrefl thirty-11 in e Q .N Z . . X N, Ns . Xxs S f -N sis ' A - fl X - Qs Eiixiffg ss! at-4-.X A so Q mg wg sv fs ss sg M X X 9 S S A if N3 ,Q X NW gm ? Q X 1 f 5 . ff, A QM Q ,J 2 Z' , Y 1 f Q 2 f 2 Q! fe: if x X X , is xf lf if K ts 5 2 , 5 E , . N V 7? -X Sf , ' Q , K , 7 X E1 f X 5 2 xv, Q F 9 V ' Sf f ? 4 W , 5135 , Y? fy QS 7 X' f . . R X. , V X ,X . X 21 'A 1. W K s NV: 5 .X im 5 X SSX X- K - 5 YQ X. W' X lg -X xg M, gg X. ,X x ' , 'S Ni,....g.3 R C TISHERMAN X ADVERTISING MANAGER, THE cl.iNlc l unNEff BoARn AX XM .. . X X fic K3 f Q J X V . f fx Ax 5 , wx ' af f X ' I J Of! W IK, 1231 jfi? 4 Z-L - fn? Acknowledgment HIS book is a composite of the ideas and stren- uous labors of not only the Board but the entire class of 1931. Expression, individually, of the niany obligations incurred in its making, is an impossible undertaking. Keen appreciation is given for the invaluable aid and spirit of co-operation rendered by both the faculty and the student body. Cordial thanks are due to the contributing faculty niernbersg the very energetic Board, particularly Dir. McClaing to Dr. Harvey Cushing of Boston for his contribution to the Feature Sectiong to Dir. Oliver of the Senior Class for his art creationsg to Dir. Cooke and Mr. Firth, representing the printer and engraver respectively, who guided us through a morass of technical details that otherwise might have been our undoing. 747 Fraternit I ww S X A X S X Q r Phi Alpha Sigma i X ig! Fozmzled 1886 ACTIVE CHAPTERS ' Bellevue Hospital Medical College University of Texas 1 - University of Pennsylvania Nortliwestern University ' V, Cornell University Tulane University ' I 1' Jefferson Medical College Baylor University ,J ig iff , ' ' v-f , Z Am , Q , 0' 'U 5. N ' -ww ,N zz WL 537 1' QE? 9 X l lf ff X ,WM ,J .4 Qi ff 2? f',ii Two7z1111rl2'edfo1't'y-four .esssrl P as -:N ,asa :Hg .k '- e i if! K 5 1 . A 'FD . Q . K0 'i N X J ' Phi Alpha Sigma DELTA CHAPTER . Y, ., Active' I Iiapters 5 Founded 1886 Fstnlmlisllerl at Jllilil-'l'SfJ1l 1880 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE E. J. Gr. Beardesly, BLD. Hobayf A, H511-Q, BLD, James F. Carrell, BLD. J. Leslie Davis, BLD. lVarren B. Davis, BLD. Calvin C. Fox, BLD. Claude H. Butler Reginald C. Edson Eli J. Keller P Charles VV. Bair George A. Baver F. Frederick Fortin John L. Barner Edward C. Britt Glenn A. Deibert Franklin F. Dye Carl B. Eshelman Benj. E. Hauser Stephen A. Jonas C. R. Heed, BLD. Roy VV. Blohler, BLD. C. E. Shannon, BLD. C. D. Stull, M.D. VVilliam B. Swartly, M.D Ross V. Patterson, BLD. R. A. Tomassene, BLD. H. S. Rambo, BLD. Stanley O. lvest, BLD. James L. Richards, M.D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One Leslie E. Morgan Harold D. Parks Thomas K. Rathmell Nineteen Thirty-Two Vincent O. Lesh Thomas F. BfIcLaughlin Robert Biegowan Nineteen Thirty-Three T. Russell Evans Paul A. Gannon Harold B. Harris Lewis J. Leiby Earl S. Loder Nineteen Thirty-Four Frank L. Larkin lVIyron D. Lechlitner Two lz zznrlrerl forfy-five Paul B. Reis Donald D. Stoner Herman E. VViant Donald A. R. Bflorrison Cornelius C. Perrine B. Frank Rosenberry Biichael S. .lVI61'lT1Ol1 Howard R. Patton, Jr. C. Thorne Ricker Stanley M. Stapinski Carl Z. Metzger VVarren B. Phillips Ronald L. Redfield Alpha Kappa Kappa Dartmouth Medical College Tufts Medical College University of Vermont Jefferson Medical College Foznzdecl 1889 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Long Island College Hospital Medical School University of Illinois University of Syracuse Marquette University Cornell University University of Pennsylvania Rush Medical College Northwestern University University of Cincinnati Ohio University of California of Oregon University of Minnesota of Tennessee University University Vanderbilt University University Tulane University University of Georgia McGill University George Washington Univers ity Yale Medical School University of Texas University of Michig St. Louis University University of Louisville W6SfQ1'11 Reserve University Harvard Medic-11 School Emory University Johns Hopkins University of Missouri of Oklahoma of Iona of Nebraska of Virginia University University Unix ersit5 University University Boston University University of Wisconsin University of Maryland WVashington University University of North Caroli University of YVestern Ontario 1ls Columbia University University of Toronto Georgetown University Ha ' YN' 'ri el I K lm fx sc s SH, A ir, as X X X X: X X 2 Mr s A f , L, , I an 1 x f . 1 f V X ' 4 I V X Y I P U , i X , i, , Li 5 , f j Y , 1 7 5 Y v rgfiilff fi OW sd ' Q S ' MVA X Tzro lzundred forty-sir , if ' QfM0f,g2 W I W f-Q es: 'X Nw t 5 rv h .5 xy i' .ji ig N .. xg. ' . N' fxxxv . ie. if A Qxiliiif Alpha Kappa Kappa EPSILON CHAPTER Active Chapters 45 Founded lSSS Iilstuhlislied at Jeiferson 1900 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE 'W. IV. Keen, BLD., l.I..D., F.R.C.S. F. O. Lewis, BLD. J. C. DaCosta, BLD., LL.D. P. B. Bland, BLD. E. P. Davis, BLD. Joseph Head, D.D.S., F. Dercum, BLD. Blarion Hearn, BLD. J. Gibbon, BLD. E. A. Streeker, BLD. C. Stimson, BLD. F.. E. Graham, BLD. BKI Vaux, lVI.D. J. Fisher, BLD. F. Kalteyer, BLD. E. Thornton, BLD. I. H. B'Iendel, BLD. G. A. Ulrich, BLD. VV. H. Kinney, NLD. IV. S. BIanges, BLD. I-I. K. Blohler, BLD. E. J. Klopp, lVI.D. J. T. Rugh, BLD. J. S. Fritch, BLD. F. C. Knowles, BLD. J. C. Keeler, BLD. H. IV. Jones, M.D. IV. E. Christie, BLD. R. BI. Tyson, BLD. B. L. Fleming, BLD. Louis Clerf, BLD. A. E. Billings, BLD. BLD. George Vvillauer, BLD. Charles Lintgen, IVLD. Herbert Wliding, BLD. Harold J. Cokely Paul BI. Corman Kenneth E. Fry Alfred VV. Dubbs Morris VV. Curtis George B. Ferguson J. Ivan Hershey Noble F. Crandall John E. Davis, Jr. David D. Detar Lester R. Eddy Frazier J. Elliott - James N. Flaherty John G. Goodfellow VVilliam J. Harrer, Jr. Bflalcolm H. Hawk Howard M. Hebble FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One Othello S. Kough Rife Gingrich Clark G. Grazier Ivilliam BKI. BIcCormick Nineteen Thirty-Two Henry N. Kehres Samuel E. Pace Stuart C. Runkle Nineteen Thirty-Three Isaac E. Harris, Jr. Fred G. Johnson, Jr. John VV. Kemble Richard VV. M01'g3H Anthony Ruppersberg, John J. Schaub Nineteen Thirty-Four VVilliam R. Hofer Floyd D. Hunter Richard L. Bfleiling Lawson E. Bfliller, Jr. ' Two hzmdrezl forty-seven Jr. Rollin H. Smith Vaughan Sprenkel Giles VVolverton Jack C. Ullery James L. VVade Charles E. Schwartz George J. Schwartz Charles VV. Semisch David K. Shivelhood Nicholas F. Vincent Richard W. Young Franklin S. Sollenberger I-Iarry L. Stewart, Jr. Robert G. Swearingen Clarence BKI. VVallace ,M f M, W, Z . . .fl J fag. e ff s. X . x . s ,. . . sa Nu Sigma Nu Unix ersity ' 'llicliigan Unix ersity ' Detroit- Unix ersity f Pittsburgh University 'Minnesota NO1'lIl'lXl'6StL1'I1 Unix ersity University of Illinois Universitv of Cinciniriti Columbia. University Rush Medical Colleff University of Pennsylvania University of Syracuse Bellevue Medical College University of Albany IVasliington University Jelferson Medical College WVestern Reserve Unix ersity Cornell University University of Colorado Founded 186 9 ACTIVE CHAPTE RS Stanford University University of California Toronto University Unix ersity of Virginia Unix ersity of Maryland Johns Hopkins University Buffalo Medical Colleff University of Ioxva University of Nebraska Xfile Unixersity University of Indiana University of Ixansas Tulane Unix ersity Harvard University University of Tex-is McGill Unixersity University of Orev' vs of 5 5 QS m is S 4 Q 'E Q 3 5'0- W.. P- r 4 C 1 1 .. o O c C , r-+1 Hs r-vs '- P- 5 4 U , no A . . ' o , 1, . P - ' N4 . . A 4 . M . L. 4 4 .. X , U A o I3 U VD X vs rr , N... so p. -K .. .xx N. l N S : 1 ss..x.5 was ' 5 X y , Randle C. Rosenbergcr, BLD. Henry E. Radasch, B I.D. Edward L. Bauer, lVI.D. Thomas C. Stellwagon, BfI.D. Thomas A. Shallow, BLD. Elmer H. Funk, BLD. James R. Blartin, BfI.D. Thad L. Bflontgomery, BLD. Adolph A. VValk'ing, M.D. Harvey BfI. Righter, BLD. Blain F. Bartho VVilliam N. Crellin W7ebb H. Brown L. Emmitt Brown Thomas J. Costello C. Robert Darnall Richard D. Barstow Dudley P. Bell Frank B. Gribel VVilliam Angle Richard C. Cole James Glenn Robert Hare QQVTEFIAIV Ame' ' . 5, k--. Nl F- fi 3, f '11 , fffgk 1, QW. h.,U,f.e, 4w,. i'f ,.., if ,gr .1 'Mhfsff NCB ' I Nu Sigma Nu RHO CHAPTER Active fflmpl'e1's EIT Established at J'eI'ferson 15300 FRATRES IN FACULTATE FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One Raymond C. Davis Howard A. Johnson Nineteen Thirty-Two Claude C. Dodson Stile D. Ezell Charles H. LaCla'ir, Jr. Robert R. Layton Nineteen Thirty-Three Robert B. Kembol VVilliam P. BfIcKnight Clarence E. Phillips Nineteen Thirty-Four Dorsay Hoyt John Lohman James Blannsman Ervin McConi1ell Eugene Yow Two 71 vzzmlred forfy-n ine Robert P. Regester, BLD. Wfilliam J. Thudium, BLD. Jolm T. Eads, BLD. John T. Farrell, BLD. Emmet L. Jones, BLD. Paul H. Roeder, BLD. Blahlon C. Hinebaugh, lVI.D. Clyde Bfl. Spangler, BLD. John U. Ellson, BLD. Richard BKI. Smith, M.D. John L. Quinn Donald C. Smith Lewis C. Blanges, J L. Scott lVIoore August J. Podboy Roy J. VVetzel E. Chester Ridgway Raymond F. Smith Arthur B1cSteen Harold Smith Charles VVagner J ohn VValsh. University of Pittsburgh University of Maryland Jefferson Medical College Medical College of Virginia Georgetown University University of Virginia Harvard University Johns Hopkins University University of Pennsylvania West Virginia, Univesity University of Utah University of California Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Tulane University University of Texas University of Oklahoma University of Louisville Baylor University Phu Beta Pl Fozmdecl 1891 ACTIVE 'CHAPTERS Emory University Unix ersity of Michigan Rush Medical College Northwestern University Medical School University of Illinois Detroit College of Medicine -ind Surverx' D D v Indiana Uniyersity M-irquette University Unix ersity of IVisc0nsin Loyola Unix ersity St. Louis University IVasl1ington University University of lviinncsota University of Ioxxa University of Missouri John A. Creighton University University of Kansas University of Colorado Unix ersity of Nebraska I O 7 T , C . 7 l V 7 K 7 , Y , , 7 T Y i I f v af! f Sy ' rf I - . it ff fuo lmncloefl fifty L. F. Appleman, NLD. B. L. Crawford, NLD VV. C. Alvilson, M.D. L. S. Carey, NLD. John N. Borbonus Carl L. Danielson Edward J. Fisher Homer R. Allen Joseph L. Barthold Kenneth H. Benson John F. Burn Ralph F.. Clark Robert M. Dacus, Jr. Bliss L. Finlayson Harry R. Brindle Joe H. Coley Louis K. Collins Mark D. Grim Qs SS 'Sz 293: N9 bf SA N --M tw .. X 6 :QXA ' msn V, pis s- ,F - 2 , ,.,' A R if ,L , ,' - I irirka -1' if S BT E i is u.1s1f .H iii.. . Tzu W ifi if ,li-ll WIN - ,, -1 .2 Phi Beta Pi ETA CHAPTER Ac-tive Clmpters 41 Founded 1S91 Established at Jei'l'erson 190 FRATRES IN FACULTATE F. H. Husted, M.D. J. L. Roarke, BLD. H. F. Haines, NLD. J. F. Lownes, NLD. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One D. Ryan Gillen John V. Miller Thomas F. O'Leary Nineteen Thirty-Two Herman H. Feissner Francis A. Hegarty VVilliam J. Hinkson Nineteen Thirty-Three Arthur E. Holmes John E. Leach Herbert VV. Nlackowski Connell H. Miller Kenneth E. Reynolds Nineteen Thirty-Four Gilbert NI. Halpern Kenneth VV. Keever Vernon R. Mowbray Bruce R. Powers Two hundred fifty-one A. J. Wlagers, M.D. P. A. McCarthy, NLD. G. J. Nluellerschoen, NLD. Francis C. Prunty Harry F. Suter Carl S. Lytle Robert A. Northrop VVilliam T. Rice VVilliam T. Sharp Lewis Shellenberger James M. Steele VVilliam G. Taggart Gordon H. Pumphrey F. Jolmson Putney Andor J. Staby C. VVilmer VVirts, Jr. f fkfjaqiwg ff 71214 1 iii, X xv is is QF: SQ University of Vermont University of Louisville University of Tennessee VVestern Reserve University University of Oregon University of Maryland McGill University Boston University University of Colorado Ohio State University Yale University Tufts College University of Utah Detroit Medical College VVashington University Marquette University University of Texas Harvard University Medical School of Virginia Temple University University of Alabama Georgetown University Johns Hopkins University Northwestern University University of Kansas University of Minnesota University of Arkansas ' Phi Chi Fozmzlecl 1889 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Indiana University University of Iowa Baylor Medical College Tulane University University of Oklahoma Vanderbilt University University of California University of Virginia Rush Medical College Cornell University Emory U1 University University Leland St University University University University University University Columbia. iiversity of South Dakota of North Carolina anford University of TVisconsin of Toronto of Cincinnati of Illinois of Nebraska of Pennsylvania University George VVashington University St. Louis University Loyola. University Jefferson Medical College Creighton University T Luo 71 mzrlrerl Jiffy-t wo University of Michigan rw, 2 fx Msg s 4 f f :if Z Aff SQ iz! , ' lift Elf ' if l . X S 1. X. X . 1, ..: I Nga' .. - Quiz J. . BQA .i l' .F WV Phi Chi Medical Fraternity C. Becker, B-LD. S. F. Gilpin, BI.D. L. Bfl. Rankin, BLD. BI. E. Rehfuss, M.D. M. A. Burns, BI.D. E. Byron Glenn Harry G. Hager Stuart P. Hemphill Richard J. Ho1'well Earl P. Knox Frederick YV. Deardorff Earl H. Grim Fred B. Haar VVilliam L. Hughes John R. Bower Bflark L. Carter VVilbur J. Hawkins Raymond VV. Andrews Stanley G. McC0ol Joseph YV. Cooch John R. Forsythe FRATRES IN FACU LTATE A. S. Kauiinian, M.D. L. B. Reed, BLD. J. A. Clark, BLD. YV. H. Deardortt, BLD. F. S. Mills, BLD. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One Forrest E. Lowry James M. Lyerly Blilner C. Biaddrev Harold C. BIeDowell YVilliam K. BfIcDowell Nineteen Thirty-Two Alfred E. James Thomas VV. Kredel Clarence C. Pentz Arthur G. Pratt Alexander N. Shoun Nineteen Thirty-Three Peter L. Hipple BfIacLean B. Leath VVilliam P. BIeCorkle Nineteen Thirty-Four Thomas T. Kochenderfer James T. Lohnes, Jr. VVilliam H. Hanks Charles H. Bloom Two li-midred fifty-fliree B. L. Gordon, BLD. V. H. Bloon, BLD. J. E. Thomas, BLD. Gabriel Tucker, BLD. Starling' Yinger, BLD. Harry C. McClain lVilliam H. Newman Jack F. Smyth Wlayne E. Turner Jolm R. Vastine lvilliam C. lvest James S. Ayres John BI. Phelps Edwin N. Bflurray George N. B. VVilson Clyde F. Schaum Russell YV. Ramsey Edward E. VVeggenma Charles F. VVilliams Wlilliam S. VVoods H11 54 W f . 4 ? 9 , 3 5 f 2 if Y 1 if? if J f f f f , 7 iw if 4, AW x f YS si Phi Rho Sigma Northwestern University University of Illinois University of Chicago Foundecl 1890 ACTIVE CHAPTERS University of Southern California Detroit College of Medicine and Surgery University of Niiehigan Creighton University Hamline Medieal College University of Nebraska VV'estern Reserve University University of Pennsylvania University of Iowa Harvard University Johns Hopkins University Marquette University Indiana University University of Georgia Eniory University University of Maryland Jefferson Medical College University of Virginia University of Minnesota Medical College of Virginia University of South Carolina University of Tennessee University of Arkansas St. Louis University Yale University University of Pittsburgh University of Colorado University of Buialo Ohio State University Columbia University McGill University Tulane University Washington University University of Toronto Stanford University Walze Forest Medical School Dalhousie University University of Cincinnati Unive1'sity of Manitoba 7' fro 7: n ll fired fifty-fo ur v ' wfsifi fl sl by irf' vi I Q , y it 'fe s X X. N W7 534 .fx .X 7 f , ff ,Q sxsg. rr- 5. 3 A X X x X x be C. B. Lull, M.D. N. M. MacNeill, M.D. J. F. B1cCahey, BI.D. E . G. YVilliamson, BLD. John DeCarlo, BLD. Rolland VV. Banks Albert VV. Brown Austin F. Brunner VVilliam R. Collett F. Patrick Boland John J. Cacia Alfred G. Gillis NI. Richard Denny R. K. Glocker Karl Habel George VV. R. Bowie Frank D. Conole Francis Gallo Mraz... X 1. - ..x .... ti. ' f Q W -A. A... X is N ... X -verge m.. HMV Q 'T an-'B 9. T wice? -Lg, R ily ' ex ,-fi w 'irl0 I Phi Rho Sigma RHO CHAPTER Active Chapters 43 Established at JelTei'son 1904 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE T. H. Atkinson, M.D. C. B. Turner, BLD. J. F. Coppolino, M.D. C. Pryor, NLD. R. T. Heffner, BLD. FRATRES IN COLLAEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One James A. Conlan John F. Giering John Latzo John T. Blurphy Nineteen Thirty-Two Joseph F. Hoffman Herman C. Rogers John K. Rothermel Nineteen Thirty-Three Edward J. Jenkins Frank H. Kelly Louis J. Padula Nineteen Thirty-Four Edward J. Bloore F. J. Place VVilliam Quinlan f f MQ y f fd Q V4 f. A-was H. K. Seelaus, M.D. C. Thomas, BLD. J. M. Wleber, M.D. L. J. Roderer, M.D. Thomas Aceto, BKLD. Edward T. Lynch Andres G. Oliver Norman C. Rintz Alfred A. Zangrilli Herman BT. Schreiner VVilliam H. Tornaseski Eugene F.. Raymond VValter J. Reedy Anthony Lucius Selletto 5 Joseph P. Robinson John Shevlin Blichael Vacarro Two h audi-ed fifty-gfifve 'awff A Y xx sg ,x I3 Omega Upsilon Phi University of Buffalo University of Cincinnati Albany Medical College University of Colorado Bellevue Medical College University of Toronto Cornell University Stanford University Columbia University Northwestern University Fozmcled 1897 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Medical College of Virginia Jeferson Medical College Temple University University of Minnesota Vanderbilt University University of Maryland University of California V University of St. Louis ' V f f X I Two lmmdo-ed fifty-star Az, - - .Ei :X 1? is 'fi 155523, 'AQ W fa, -X QQ if 53, N Q5 N if 7 is at Qi 4 Q University of North Carolina 1 University of Pennsylvania if Nineteen Thirty-One I y V B ,V LVN .5 5 f,t..4, 52 ,I 4. X s NR. xx f ff A is sa G- Cmega Upsilon Phi J. Parson Schaeffer, M.D. 'William P. Hearn, BLD. Arthur J. Davidson, BLD. J. Allen Bertolet, BLD. VVilliam A. Clark, BLD. Thomas S. Sheer, BLD. F. F. Borzell, lVI.D. F. J. BfIcCullough, BLD. Abram Straus, BLD. Founded 1897 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE T W illiam T. Lemmon, BLD. John B. Blontgomery, M.D. Francis BL Schilling, M.D. Edward VVeiss, BLD. Carl J. Bucher, BLD. Lewis C. Scheffey, BLD. James C. Harding, BLD. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Charles D. Driscoll Robert F.. Hobbs Reginald A. Allen John B. Claffey William J. Doyle Warren H. Endres Vincent J. Cassone Norman L. Cook Ralph F.. Fennell Joseph V. Fescina J. L. Carey T. J. Conahan, Jr. G. G. Dawes A. N. Funk Peter A. Jushinski Frederick J. Riley Nineteen Thirty-Two Patrick J. Gillespie George C. Hohman Frank D. Maloney Herman F. Blleckstroth Nineteen Thirty-Three Myles T. Kavanaugh James F. Lyman Edmund V. Matys Thomas F. Murphy Nineteen Thirty-Four T. R. Failmetzger C. L. Isenberg J. J. Ryan L. E. Marsh John B. Haines, M.D. Raymond A. Taylor Hiliary F. TVhite VValter L. lVIcClintock VVilliam J. Bflurray A. George Ricchiuti Gilardo S. Serino Joseph H. Kniseley Robert Steele Joseph T. Urban VV. P. Shields S. K. Schultz F. H. Steele J. B. Zielinski O 'S S Q B' 2 S. S? Q- E N- '? Cla cs 33 3 .QNX .fs Y X - X X1 X X W 1 X X xx' ss ' Phi Delia Epsilon Foimded 1903 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Cornell University Medical College Bellevue Hospital Medical College Columbia. University Long Island Medical College N. Y. Homeopathic Medical College Yale University University of Syracuse University of Toronto Harvard Medical College Tufts Medical College Boston University University of Pennsylvania Jefferson Medical College Temple University University of Maryland Johns Hopkins Medical School George VVashington University University of Virginia University of Illinois Nortliwestern University Rush Medical College lliasliington University St. Louis University Marquette University University of Minnesota Indiana University Creighton School of Medicine University of Pittsburgh University of Louisville Ohio State University Detroit College of Medicine and Surgery Vllestern Reserve Medical School University of Michigan Medical School Tulane University School of Medicine University of Texas Medical School University of California Medical School V 3 Q Tlro lI'llHdI'C'fl fifty-eight , X Q 4 Max A. Antis Morley Berger Milton Cohen Irving' S. Dichter Edward Gipstein Joel Goldman Bertram Averback Riaurice Bakunin Henry Bronk Herman Finkelstein Sol Haimowicz Morton J. Crow Richard Chodotf Benjamin Copleman Samuel Barr Joseph Friedman Louis Grunt Harold Israel x X . ...Hal X sem Phi Delta Epsilon MU CHAPTER Fmlnfled lilllil lfsl':1lmlislu-'il 15104 Clm1:t'e1-s 36 Nineteen Thirty-O ne Maurice Grossman Samuel Halpern Louis C. Jacobs Martin E. Katz ltlaurice D. Krauss Joseph Markel Nineteen Thirty-Two Leonard Horn Howard Karr Samuel Kaufman Arthur Nightingale Julius Pearson Nineteen Thirty-Three O. B. Feldser Harold Fueret Gilbert H. Alexander Nineteen Thirty-Four A. J. Reiss Irving Rush Howard Shapiro Phoenix Selesliy Two him fired Hfty-win e Ralph hlarkley Max Pepper George J. Ravit Saul S. Steinberg Robert C. Tiseherman Color Zimmerman Benjamin Provisor Sidney Rosenbluth S. Schlesinger Samuel Schwebel ltlorris Elkin Philip Goldberg Albert Levick Albert VVallen Albert VVhitken Pledges Scott 'f f f f 1 W I X f X P' f af W 1 I 4 i v 2 4 f f Q! if '2 4v'f a 'V 422 f ff K QTX s X x 'Theta Kappa Psi Founded 1878 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Medical College of Virginia University of Maryland Albany Medical College Georgetown University University of Alabama Medical College of South Carolina West Virginia University Tulane University Emory University University of North Carolina Baylor University Jefferson Medical College University of Tennessee George lfVashington University McGill University University of Louisville Long Island Hospital Medical College University of Texas College of Physicians and Surgeons University of Toronto Tufts Medical College University of Georgia University of Oregon Harvard University Wake Forest Medical College University of Arkansas New York University University of Manitoba Indiana University University of Michigan University of Mississippi Duke University 0 Two hundred sixty , tg. bf' 5 A 5 X5 f 3 s 2 K Ri 1 7 f X f fs ' AVG ? f ' 91 If x V K X 5 Q X XA- ,gi 5 V 5 .4 FXL xb- X Ni N K ff - . fa A .x ,- Q Theta Kappa Psi BETA ETA CHAPTER Ar-tive Cllapters 47 Founded 1ST!J Estzmblisllerl at JelTe1'son in 1912 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE J. O. Crider, BLD. F. Keeler, M.D. J. Blechsclnnidt, BLD. L. F. Mulford, B-I.D. Henry B. Decker, BLD. Arthur R. Vaughn, lVI.D. John B. Ludy, BLD. C. TV. Nissler, M.D. David R. Bflorgan, BLD. J. S. BIcLaughlin, BKLD. Ralph L. Engle, B-I.D. BI. G. Mackmull, BLD. R. S. Griffith, BLD. T. R. Fetter M.D. Charles L. Ball, Jr. James VV. Emery Southgate J. Green Wlarne L. Haight Richard B. Hauver TV. Royce Hodges, Jr. John J. Cheleden Francis E. Goodman James J. Grace, Jr. Park BI. Horton James Bfl. Borthwick Theodore Baker, Jr. Edward VV. Custer Harry Bower Clarence Emery, Jr. J. S. Goldcamp H. B. Hibbard FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Thirty-One Michael J. Hurley, Jr. Harold L. Ishler Richard P. Jahniv' Alfred A. Kent John A. Bflurray Georffe VV. Paschall Lawrence E. Schuster Nineteen Thirty-Two VVilliam BT. Howell Lloyd E. Saylor John Unger, Jr. Raymond D. VVeymouth Nineteen Thirty-Three Perry Cleaver Harry Paudolpho Marshall E. Shields Nineteen Thirty-Four Rosco P. Kandle John F. Keithen Harold D. Phippen Jacob J. Stabnick Paul A. Sica Spurgeon T. Shue Charles H. Sikes Bly ron A. Todd Leonard G. Vatter Jr. 'ef 3 Ira G. VVfwner, J '. Eu0'ene E. Tvolfe Robert BI. I'-mles Herbert K. Xoung J. Stanley Smith Thomas E. lhompson, Jr. Samuel BI. VVolfe, Tr. Oscar T. VVood Peter TV. Urbaitis 1 QW X . Q X W X42 X 'Q on J li 5 U' Q 2' E U S Q T5 N 'S 5 g 0 S E6 P- A U X . A A . A 1 X U' J 4 AJ 4 H U MMM- y Aggy M 4 'exif-XvQ A XX Q XX ye X Neem Xa K X s s Nssxei i Phi Lambda Kappa Fozmrlecl 1907 CHAPTER ROLL University of Pennsylvania University of Illinois Jefferson Medical College Loyola Medical College Rush Medical College Northwestern University Medical College Columbia University College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons University and Bellevue Medical College Long Island College Hospital University of Buffalo Tufts University Medical College University of Pittsburgh Boston University University of Maryland Detroit College of Medicine University .of Michigan St. Louis University University of Virginia Georgetown University Albany Medical College Tulane University University of Tennessee Yale University Hahneniann Medical College W'estern Reserve University Harvard University University of Kansas South Carolina State University Ohio State University Cornell University Temple University New York Homeopathic and Flower Hospital Virginia Medical College ' University of Louisville George Vilashington University Medical College Tico lm n fired si.:-ty-f ll.'0 i My 4 i I M 5? if i Of' as of Q. 'aw vj at iv , 46 25 f , 1 J 7 , x s it Wil ITL? 31 . . gif za :Sf 5 as - X .. .f, vt X,,. :ff , a vii A 5.2 ai'-fr - T? ag Qi f an A,:4M,. f ' y gm! Nl, ' J, .ka-' . ...YI H' A gn- Qisii UL X ig . A. Samuel A. Loewenberg, BLD. Bloses Behrend, BLD. Bflitehell Bernstein, BLD. Charles H. Lefcoe, BLD. Bflartin J. Sokolotf, M.D. Gottlieb Leventlial, BLD. Henry H. Perlman, BLD. Samuel J. Bisliko Philip Henstell Leo Kahn Abraham J. Kaufman Albrt Adlin Bflorton H. Chapnick Samuel Brandwan, Jr Samuel Deich Thomas Barnett Elic Denbo Edward Gartman Leonard Cinberg Samuel Gidding Harry Gillespie Edward Hoberman JB-X315 ff?-36 gs XX Phi Lambda Kappa BETA CHAPTER Iistziblisllc-cl 1912 Founded 1907 Cliziptei-s -L3 FRATRES IN FACU LTATE ACTIVE MEMBERS Nineteen Thirty-One Harry T. Kessler Jack M. Lesnow Meyer Blarks Nathan Noble Nineteen Thirty-Two Barnet Fine David Gelfand Bflorris J. Gerber Morris Horovitz Howard Leopold Nineteen Thirty-Three Arnold Goldberger Jack Gordon Blax Cantor Nineteen Thir+y-Four Jules J. Horovitz Louis Kerstein Joseph Bliller Abraham A. Newmar Morris Segal, BLD. Abraham L Bubenstone, BLD. David M. Sidlick, BLD. Abraham Cantaraow, BLD. Blorris Kleinbart, BLD. Harry A. Bogaev, BLD. Jacob Cahan, BLD. k Two hamdrecl siarty-three Nathan Ralph Lloyd L. Prayer Isadore Zugerman Blorris Silver David Stiller Bernard Viener Sidney VVeintraub Jack Kirshner Sidney Seidelman Isadore Silver' Edward Schwartz George X. Agre i i i i f X f ' ffm' A W-194 f if 45 , W, W. ff s N N NY X iefsf X S Alpha Omega Alpha H omorary Fra-termty Founded af the College of Medicine of the University of Illinois, Chicago, August 25+l1, I902 The Alpha Chapter of Pennsylvania was established at Jefferson Medical College in i903 CHAPTERS University of Illinois University of Cincinnati University of Chicago University of Pittsburgh Northwestern University Indiana University VVestern Reserve University University of Virginia Jefferson Medical College State University of' Iowa University of Pennsylvania University of Texas Vtlashington University Yale University Harvard University Vanderbilt University University of California New York University Johns Hopkins University University of Oregon University of Toronto St. Louis University Columbia University University of Buffalo University of Michigan University of Louisville University of Minnesota University of Colorado Cornell University University of Wiscoiisiii Syracuse University University of Georgia. McGill University Stanford University University of Nebraska University of Rochester Tulane University Alumni Group, Mayo Foundation V M ' ff Two lvfumlred sixty-four .W ,XX F X .K - X xx xx N ,X X A M A -. ,Q . .sf sx ..,.... e NTQN-F Ks -'ws K.'k' lf. : 5 - o ' x PI: NS! xr . X Alpha Cmega Alpha HONORARY FRATERNITY J OFFICERS C0lL'l'lC6IZ07', J. 1 Aiisoxs ScH.xic1a'14'1211, BLD. Prcsirlent, XV1L1.1.m R. CoI.I..1c'r'r Vice-Presiffevzf, K1sNN.E'1'H E. Far Sec1'ctcz.1'y-Tre11s21.1'c1', DONALD C. SMIT1-I FRATRES IN FACU LTATE Wlilliam lV. Keen, BLD. James C. lVilson, BLD. Edward P. Davis, BLD. Francis X. Dercum, BLD. Hobart A. Hare, BLD. J. Chalmers DaCosta, BLD. John H. Gibbon, BLD. Thomas BIcCrae, BLD. J. Parsons Schaeffer, BLD. Edward J. Klopp, M.D. Ross V. Patterson, BLD. ACT Blaine F. Bartho Albert YV. Brown VVilliam R. Collett Kenneth E. Fry I-Ienry G. Hager, Jr. Richard V. Hauver Peter A. Jushinskie lllaurice D. Krauss Fielding O. Lewis, BID. P. Brooke Bland, M.D. Edward A. Streckcr, BLLD. J. Earl Thomas, M.D. Virgil H. Bloon, M.D. lVillis F. Manges, M.D. Frederick H. Mills, BLD. Thomas C. Stellwagon, BLD. Thomas Shallow, M.D. Louis H. Clerf, M.D. IVE MEMBERS Forrest E. Lowry James Bfl. Lyerly Wlilliam K. BIcDowell G. Paul lVIoser Donald C. Smith Vaughn Sprenkel Saul Steinberg VVayne E. Turner LPHA 'Omega Alpha Honorary Fraternity is a non-secret medical honorary society membership in which is based on scholarship, moral qualifications being satisfactory. VVhile possessing exclusive features as regards scholarship and other exacting requirements, it also encourages high ideal of thoughts and action in Schools of lVIed'icine and in professional pursuits. It was organized at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago, August 25, 1903, and is the only society of its kind in medical schools on this continent. There are now twenty-six active chapters in the various medical schools of the United States and Canada. Its membership includes many distinguished men 'in the professional practice and research in all parts of the country. The local chapter, established at Jefferson in 1903, has always been very active, alumni of whom are in professional pursuits in all parts of the World. Two hzmdrefl sixty-five W ' 6 - ,. W H W Lx L Societies I W X t X X X The Founding of Jefferson Societies N N THE FALL OF 1891, when there was little opportunity for students at the Jefferson ltledical College to meet together, except in the lecture rooms, and long before any student fraternities were founded among Jefferson students, Dr. Hare suggested that an undergraduate medical society might be formed. The object in view was to provide opportunity to discuss medical and surgical topics in order that the members might have the training of debating various topics, thereby preparing them for entering actively into the proceedings of organizations which they might join after graduation. Dr. Hare asked Dr. Thorton to get together a limited group of students whom he thought would be eligible as 'gfoundersf' and this group, when it met, became the first undergraduate student body in the institution. The idea at once appealed to the students of the College in general, and after a few weeks during which the advantages of the plan became more and more obvious, a second organization took place to which was attached the name of Prof. VV. VV. Keen, then in the full flower of his notable career. These were the only societies founded in 1891, but, as everyone connected with the College is aware, manv groups have come into existence since that time. Sometimes the death, or the resignation of the individual whose name was attached to that of a Society has resulted in a change of title, or new societies have been formed under the patronage of newly elected members of the Faculty. The fact that so many g1'oups have been formed and that the organiza- tions have increased in popularity and usefulness is indicative of their value to the men at Old Jeff? The existence of these groups has helped materially in producing a sense of solidarity among the members of the various classes. In the old days a man might pass through his course and graduate, without having any intimate association with more than one or two others and thereby was deprived of that attractive aspect of student life called Ca-rlnaradevie. Often such friendships last through life and cause us to recall student days with tender regards and pleasant memories. It is to be hoped that the custom of having these student societies may continue for many years to come, as it not only serves to carry out the views already expressed, but also brings the members of the Faculty and the student members into closer association. DR. HOBART A110111 HARE. . '91 F o 1 F E 5' 6 Ra fl: N. ii VF T S O' Q. D' P5- w QXES -a in 44 A X serve x s M fx A V X4 J M M sa ww me X X The H. A. Hare Medical Society Founded 1891 FACULTY MEMBERS HOBART Aixronr IJIARE. M.D. E. QUINN THORNTON. M.D. Ross V. PATTERSON, M.D. REYNOLD S. GRIFFITH, M.D. L. C. ISXPPLEBIAN, M.D. OFFICERS P-reseide-nt, IJARRY C. BICCLAIN Secretary, JOHN Lnwzo ll'-ice-President, JOHN N. Bo1:noNUs Treasurer, CHARLES I-I. Siuns MEMBERS Charles L. Ball, Jr. Roland W. Banks John N. Borbonus Albert W. Brown William R. Collette Raymond C. Davis James W. Emery Edward J. Fisher Dennis R. Gillen Henry G. Hager, Jr. VVarne L. Haight Hom-er R. Allen Joseph L. Barthold Kenneth H. Benson Francis P. Boland Nineteen Thirty-One Richard J. Horwell Robert E. Hobbs Harold L. Ishler Peter A. Jnshinski Alfred A. Kent, Jr. Earl R. Knox Othello S. Kough John Latzo Forrest E. Lowry James M. Lyerly Edward T. Lynch Nineteen John J. Cacia Francis A. Hegarty William M. Howell Robert A. Northrop Harry C. McClain William J. McMartin John V. Miller Leslie E. Morgan John A. llfliirray VVilliam H. Newman, Jr. Thomas F. O'Leary Andreas G. Oliv-er Eugene M. Patella Francis C. Prunty Thirty-Two Clarence R. Pentz Arthur G. Pratt William T. Rice Herman C. Rogers Two lzundred sixty-nine Norman C. Rintz Paul A. Sica Charles H. Sikes Donald C. Smith Jack F. Smyth Vaughn L. Sprenkel Daniel B. Suffoletta Donald R. Tompkins Wtayne E. Turner Leonard G. Vatter A. Angelo Zangrilli William H. Tomaseski John Ungar, Jr. John R. Vastine ' 4 ll is f 1 QL., 1 if, if 1 I a 1 W f W 2 ff f f f X f if Q, 1 ff f, , 1 wif' X x- rx , lx xx X Keen Surgical Socie-'I'y OFFICERS Presirlenf. Euxllm' I. BROWN. JR. l'ic'c-Pm-sirlfizf, BIURRIS NVQ CURTIS Nr'c1'0fr1l'y-Trmsurvr. If0BERT R. LAYTON Il:11-old J. Cnkcly 1721111 M. f.'0l'lll2lll Alfrvd Dnhhs Rifc Gi11g1'ic'l1 C'lz1rk Grazivl' Othello S. Kough Morris WV. C111-tis Gvorgv B. Fe1'g:11sou Ivan J. I'Ic-1-slwy Henry N. Kehres MEM BERS Ninefeen Thiriy-One Xxvllllillll M. BIC'C0l'llllCl' Rollin II. Smith Vaughn Sprenkel Giles NVul1'e'1'to11 K011111-Xtll Fry John I.. Quinn Ninefeen Thirfy-Two Sam E. Paco' St11z11't C. Rnnkle .Tuck C. Ullvry .Tzlmes L. lV:1de 1lu11'1ld C. bmith Iilillll F. B1l'fll0 lflowircl A. Johnson lx-1y111o11d L. Davis C l1-11-las H. I'1Cl-lir Scott P. Mooxx NY. H. Brown I . R. L'1y on N X I l A 1 1 '. V . ? X 1 x .Al ' 1 S r I Y K . Y +13 W X I 4 wi 2 41 lfro lzunrh-acl serelzfy R... A ax -of W ,sf SE fi sg: .wi S 2: QNX -- t . A . N: Awww :.RN--f--w-.- Q R-:J XNX.:.F-A ' . 1 xg.: S' A The Academy OFFICERS Prvsirlmzf. CLAFIIE II. BU'1'I.leiu 7'rc'f1x1rrm'. M, A. TODD I'fI l?-l,l'i'NflIl'II1. A. G. O1.1v1i1: Secrrffury, I. S. 1'J1C11'1'ER VV. Brown F. Brunner H. Butler M. Cormau S. Dicfhtvr XV. Dubbs F. Gif-ring R. Gillen Bl'2lI1dXVil11 XV. Curtis C. Dodson D. Ez-oll A. Feissuer A. II egurty C Honorary President lflfrfwifafs. J. CrLA1,M12us D.xCos'1'.x. MJD. Honorary I,l'CSi!ll'lIf Emeritus, Joux II. G1n1aoN, BLD. Faculty .:lrI'1fis01' .HENRY K. SEE1..AUS MEMBERS Nineteen Thirty-One S. Ilulpvrn II. A. Johnson J. M. Lesuow D. M. Lupo XV. J. McMartin M. Marks J. A. Murray A. G. Oliver Nineteen Thirty-Two XV. J. Hinkson J. T. Martin D. A. R. Morrison A. S. Mosvzu-ella A. B. Nightingale R. A. Northrop N ineieen Thirty-Three P. C1921 ver Tzrq 71 IIIIIIITII Se1'e11fy-one II. D. Parks IG. M, Putellu G. J. Ruvit F. R. Riley R. C. ufiSll01'lll2'l11 M. A. Todd H. F. JVhite H. E. XViz111t G. A. Porreoa II. C. Rogers B. F. IJ. Rosouborry S. B. Rose-nbluth J. L. XVndo E. A. Dumbo Z Wi, f , W ff 7 fwfff s N X thx xx Urological Society OFFICERS President. PAUL M. CORMAN Sew-etarry. Vice-Presideni, LESLIE F-. RIORGAN fl'1'6llS'll7'?I', Claude H. Butler Paul M. Corman Alfred YV. Dubbs Reginald C. Edson Kenneth E. Fry Rife Gingrich Clark G. Grazior Chas. W. Bair George A. Baver G. B. Ferguson Frederick F. Fortin J. I. Hershey MEMBERS Nineleen Thirfy-One C. S. Kouhli Ili I. Ke er XVIII. M. McCormick leslie lb. lx1Ol':,'lll H-lrold D. Parks Paul B. Reis Van 'han bD1'9lll'l1 Nineteen Thirty-Two H. N. Kehres Ninceut O. Iesli lllomas F. BLlCTx'lil,-.,l1llI1 Donald A. Morrison Robert BICGOXVQII :XLTRED W. DUBBS Hr-:RM xx 1 . NVIAINT Roll-ind H. qmitlx Donald D. qtouer L iles lVoli erton Heriu-in lVif1n Harold T. Cokely lll0l1l'1Q Ix. Rwthmell S. F. P-ice I C ornelius Perriue B. F. Rosenberry T. C. U ery J. L. VVI-ide 1 t .1 g Y J 91 1 E C . ll to . DQ , A E' f 'H . 4 li FW 7 . . . . 1 g . N v . . Q . , J , Morris W. Curtis Robert H. Lyle Stuart Bunkle I 1 be K 01 . ll f . C 2 M Two hundred seventy-two I Q 1 Q X- : -'ii u' X -'N 31 Sl ki X of - Ly- sbs -sz wi X Q , in X , 1 The Ross V. PaH'erson Medical Socieiy A Senior Medical Socie+y Iimiied io fwenfy-six members having 'For Hs purpose ihe discussion of inferesfing phases of medical hisfory. OFFICERS Honorary President, Ross V. PA'r'1'E1csoN, Demi First Councilor. KENNETH E. FRY Third Councilor O'rm3Lr.o S. KOUGH Second Councilor, EARL R. KNOX Fofzirfh Councilor, JOHN N, BORBONUS gf XV. E. Turner N. C. Rintz J. N. Borbonus P. M. Gorman Rife Gingrich R. N. Smith O. S. Kough XV. M. McCormick K. E. Fry MEMBERS '. . Cokley . T. Lowry '- i . Q . K-iufinfin ' . y. I'I'1,er . r. . Hfiuver 1. . B-il . N . Tycrly . . . Fisher '. C. Mc'C1'iin -. '. Butler '. J. I-Iorwell . '. R-ithmell .. 1. Murphy . . Knox L. H'1i-'l1t . H. BGXVIITIII . . Glenn ' :pay 0 2 II J F u i 0 X T . 1 II C' .ff-, T f R V . XV ' L f C' L . 1 J il , A E T II L C II R T lx . J r E R WV . 2 E B ,f 2 2 5 K 92222 Two liuizdq-ed seiienty-three Pascal Brooke Bland Obsieirical Socieiy OFFICERS President. JWIARNE L. Il.x1o11'r 7'l'f'llNlll'0l', PAUL A. SICA - I-'ice-I'rcsirImf. 1+JUo1sN1s F. Wo1.1v11: Neff,-etary. LLo1'n E. SAx'1.o1z P. Brooko Bland Norris YV. Vaux F401 9 A lvlllfil lbr. Dr. D1 -. ye -g, .. f - - Dr. Francis J. BICCIIHOIIQII ia- - . Cllifoid B. Lull Dr. Harry Sf11c'kv1'f Dr. James F. Carrol VV. Emery M. L. Haiglit IJ. V. Hauver I. R. Hodges J. J. Hurley S. L. Islilm' C. P. Jahnig B. A. Murray XV T. Slime li. A. Sica J. J. f'hvlodPn P. J, Grave. Jr. NV A. Goodman S, FACU LTY MEMBERS Dr. Volliu Foulkrod Dr. J. Bemnard Bornstiiio Dr. Thad L. Montgomery Dr. Jacob NValker Dr. Vlyde M. S maxifdvr D Dr. J. Vernon Ellson 1 Dr. Goorgo B. German MEMBERS Nine+een Thirfy-One A. Todd S. J. G11-611 G. Vatter Il. T. Kessler G. xxrilglllll' A. A. Kent Goldman O. S. Kougli Steinberg P. A. Jnshinski L. Ball J. M. llesnow F. Bai-tho II. F. Mc-Claim . R. Collett G. P. Moser J.Fisl1vr T. F. 0'Le':11-y F. Giering G. XV. Paschall Nine+een Thiriy-Two lf. I-lorfon L. E. Saylor . M. Howell DI. M. Smit R. Iqilllflllilll E. F. VVolfQ Turn I1 undrcrl .S'0l'6'71ffU-f0llV D1 D1 Dr. D1 Dr. D1 D1 Carlos E. uV0lf1'0l11 Leopold Goldstein lVilliam C. VVilson Artllur First C. OSFPl'l1i1l1f Edward Burt Ralph Tyson R. H. Smith D. F. Smith I-I. F. Sutor D. B. SnlToletta U. H. Sikos B. R. Tompkins Q, Ilalpern L. Sf'llllSl'P1' R. E. YVGj'Tll0llfll J. Unger, J1'. FC, . Xqigx , Vx. Sim- T fflma 1. fa.. t., H-fm. ,f..c.w.1f. -.sw-1 l .2 , ,gf-if .5f53.'fLg.,f.ff13gg..'wg1V51:f.. , 1. fo af x . . . . . A . A A n I+ Q. W 0 T P KAN ,- Q :fam Fw. 1 J X fix? , ...yu K . -. A- Q 5,5 x -:Q W M... M sri -.i r 1 x N. . X . Schaeffer Ana+omical Socie+y OFFICERS Honorary President. J. PARSONS SC11AExf1f1c1c. MA.. MJD., 1'h.l'J. 1,I'!'Si11ClIf, M. S. BIERMON Nm-rotary. II. B. lhxmus lvif'0-PI'l'.Vil1f?IIf, II. H. 1A'l 1'0N y'l'l'llNIll'C'l', F. F. JJYE MEMBERS . Baker . Barston . Bell . Bower T.. Barner Britt J. Chodoff D. Detar M. Dacus R. Denny A. 'Deibert B. Evans B. Eslwlman E. Hauser . Jonas Ninefeen Thirfy-Three C. E. Phillips NV. J. Reecly C. T. Bickel' C. F. Schaum F. IC. Swartz G. J. Swartz XV. J. Taggert J. E. Leach J. A. Flaherty P. A. Gannon YV. J. Iflavvkins R. D. Golflberg Nine+een Thirfy-Four F. L. Larkin M. D. I.ec-lllitner C. Z. Metzger Two IIIIIIIIVCII se'1,'e:1fy-five K. Ilabcl F. J. Hamilton M. T. C2lV6l121l1gl1 XI. B. Lenth J. F. lleplnzm IC. S. Loclvr l.-. J. Leiby XV. P. lNIc-Uorkle NV. P. Mr-Night N. V. Meyers NV. B. Phillips R. ll. Redfield f l , l 1 l I I f f f 7 7 ff X 779 ff ff' ,Iy.f,J,xJ.f:n X A S X X SKS f S . The Edward A. Slreclcer Neurological Sociefy FACULTY MEMBERS George F. Phelps Charles Becker Benj. B. TVe'iSS A. M. Perri Samuel T. Gorcly S. F. Corson Yvllllillll H. Schmidt R. C. Kell G. M. Tomlinson Baldwin L. Keyes Michael A. Burns Sherman Gilpin N. S. Ynwger George L. Stephen Thomas E. Shea OFFICERS Honorary Presialcizf, EIDIGVHIIS. FRANCIS X. TJIERCUM. M.D.. 1'h.D. Ilonorary J,l'8S'idG'I1ff. EDWARD A. S'r1:1zcKnn, A.M., M.D. Prcsirlcmi Tnomms K. RAT1f1'MELL Vim-Presidmlf. EIARRY G. I-IAGER Secrefary, ELI J. IQELLER MEMBERS N inefeen Tl1ir'l'y-One John Borhonus Claude Butler Raylnoncl Davis Charles Driscoll Reginnlcl C. Edson Byron Glenn Harry G. Hager Charles YV. Bair George A. Baver George K. Tyan Herman E. NVi:111t Richard Horwell Eli J. Keller ICZl1'l R. Knox John Latzo Forrest E. Lowery Nineleen lVilliam L-. Hughes Alfivecl E. James Frederick YV. D9211'Cl01'ffTl1Olll21S YV. Kredel James Lyerly A. D. Matta Harry C, Mc-Clnin Leslie Morgan G. Paul Moser XVilli:1n'1 H. Newman Harold D. Parks Tl'1irl'y-Two Donald Morrison Clarence C. Pentz Cornelius C. Perrine Thomas K. Rathmell Paul B. Reis John F. Smyth Vaughn Spronkel Donald D. Stoner Daniel B. Suffoletta lYayne E. Turner John R. Vzistine Yiiilliain B. Wiest YVi1liz11n H. Wiinclley F. Frederick Fortin Vincent O. Lesh Arthur G. Pratt Earl Grim 'Phonms F. McLaughlinBenjamin F. Rosenberry Frederick B. I'Iuar Robert Megowan Al-exancler N. Shoun Two lmmdrerl serezrfgf-sim wi ls 'f 9' f l T Q P r 3 f if x i Q lk X Ss E fi X x ,X l 1 ' W? 'Of N X 44 f 1 4 sm . xx . .-N M . - - ,-.-:gsm ' X W - we if, s X M: 73 Q, A .Q we -X .fi N 5 2, W Frank C. Knowles Derma'I'ology Socic-z+y OFFICERS Honorary Prexideut, FRANK C. IQNOWLES, M.D, Henry B. Decker, M.D. Charles D. Driscoll R. Emmet Hobbs VV. Royce Hodges Wlilliam J. Doyle HONORARY MEMBERS E. F. Corson, M.D. :xlJl'2ll1i1l1l Strzmuss, M.D. President, RAYMOND A. TAYLOR MEMBERS Ninefeen Thirfy-One Peter A. Jushinski Benj. A. Roccupriore George YV. Paschal, Jr. Raymond A. Taylor Freclerick R. Riley Hilary F. YVhite Ninefeen Thirfy-Two A. George Ricchuiti Two hundred seventy-seven 1 J y , f f Z , f 1 fi ,, 7 f ff f , f K W 7 f f 4 f f , 4 N , f if f X cf ff f 7 Nineleen Thirfy-One K S. R x.xX R X Q .X xx The Edward L. Bauer Pe-dia'I'ric Soc:iel'y OFFICERS Honorary 1'1'ffxir1en.f. EDWIN E. GRAIIAM. BLD. l-lmzorary Ivesiflmzf, EDWARD L. BAUER. M.D. I uxzflqnt, DoNAI.n V. Snrrn TTC?-I,l'8Nlll07lf. Jolla T.. OUINN Sevrfffu.1'y-7'1'euszu-er. JOHN N. BORIIONUS Edwin F. fifilllillll. M.D. Erlwzii-cl L. Bauer. M.D. Ralph T.. Engle, M.D. Julius Blechschniiclt, M.D. Edwin G. Stork. M.D. Norman M. Mac:Neill, BLD, Ralph M. Tyson, M.D. Henry IT. Perhnzin. TLD. HONORARY MEMBERS Louis J. Rod-1 ver, M.D. . nn C. li'-1 BLD. B-ilclwin Keyes. M.D. -X'l1'01l C.-ippc r. NLD. T. F. ffoppolino M.D. J. X. K-ihler BLD. T4. f. 'lhoni-ls. M.D. Tnrnw lliom-is M.D. MEMBERS Blaine F. Bnrtho John N. Borbonus James A. Uonlan Carl Ti. Danielson Raymond f . Davis Edward J. Fiseliei- Homer R. Allen Joseph L. Bzirtholcl Kenneth H. Benson Francis P. Boland vvebb H. Brown Dennio R. 4 illen IJOXV'1I'lT X. Johnson T4 du-11-d l. T ynch John V. Miller Thom-is F. O T.e u'y -1 NI. I-itel -1 Nineleen Thirfy-Two fl-lude C. Dol son Stiles D. llzell Herm-in TT. Feissner Brincis A. Tleglrty TTilli-im J. Hinl'son T 'i i-un T. Hn ie. I '- wir: . Ylllt-' Tohn T. C uinn Don-lld C.. Nlllifll D-inicl B. Quffolctt-1 H-11-ry F. Sutei- Alfred F. lzinqrelli T. gC'0lf' Moore R 1 iert A. Northro 'Xnhust T. Poflboy l'. Rica IIerrn'in C. Ro ers W illi-im i . . . Y . .f X Tml ' . ugh, 1 . A 1 NK X A Q 4 T , . . , 1 1 W , 1 v K 'X 1 , f . T Tldl C' T' iv 1 K V1.1 , A 'Y JN J YK .A K L i K R K 3 I H C , 'K A x, Eugeie L '. l. ' ', g 7 ' . T ' l 1 .' X T al N p 1 4 f G' . T 1 Uv Y 4 V 1 ' 4 v x K 1 f g X TT. Ennnit Brown, Jr. V ll . T gl -Q , ,H John J. Cacia flldll I I.. 71.111 TVill1z1n1 H. Tlioniuscski Al Y 1 7 if s 1 1 3 4 4 1 A 4 'T' NX' C VJSAEXQ I W W? ,759 I . . . F ' I'u.o lllllldlffli smczzfy eight ff Thornas J. Costello M. W. Curtis C. Robert Darnell T. 'if'- Rohert R. T-13. ton C-u'l S. Tytle Tewis C. M-mbps TIei'In'1n M. 9i.ln'einei' John R. Vfistine J'lIl16S T. TV-ldv, Roy J. TVetzel. N EY- Xl? Q K of Vx-af 1 2 Z 27 ,M . ., oy, A.. .Wi X' gurl..- . gf. MS: Q... r Xa xx W X. X J. Earl Thomas Physiological Sociely OFFICERS Honorary President, Emeritus. A1,1sEn'17 P. Blcumiilzlc . Honorary President, J. EARL T11oMAs PI'6.9lfICIZff, Josmrn T. VRBAN New-efury. Tlloxms F. RIURPIIY Tice-President, RALPH E. FENNELI. 7'f-efmurer, It1c'n,uan F. f,'IIOlJOE'h' Morley Berger Dwight T. Bonham Charles D. Driscoll Ii!-21111-Effll Ill. Fry Edward Gipstein Reginald A. Allen Maurice I. Bakunin llenry M. Bronk John B. Claffey NVilliam J. Doyle XVarren Il. Enders Gilbert H. Alexander Dudley Bell Vincen1i Jf Cassone Richard F. flhofloff Norman F. Cook BC'IljHlHlLIl! Copleman Glenn A. 'Delbert MEMBERS Nineleen Thirly-One Maurice 'Grossman Ralph Nlarkley I-liliary F. Vllhite Leslie E. Morgan XVarne L. Haight 1 . P-ull Moser R. Emmett Hobbs Vincent C. Nipple Pefer A. Jushinslric Max Pepper Nineleen Thirly-Two Herman Finkelstein Uharles I-l. T,a Clair Patrick J. Gillespie Francis D. Maloney Solomon M, I-Iaimowicz Herman F. Meokstrotll George C. I-lohman Wlilliam M. Howell Ilymie Karshofsky YV'1lte1' l. Mvf liutock Myles J. Murphy XVilli'm1 J, NIll1'l 1j Nineleen Thirly-Three Ralph E. Fienuell Joseph V. Fescina Bliss L. Finlayso Ilarolcl J. Fuerst Ralph C. Hoyt Eclwarcl J. Jenkins Myles T. Kavanau Joseph H. Kniscliy NI-xcslyean B. Le-ith J. Francis lyman If dmund V. M-ltys vlll0m'lS F. Murphy IJ-lvid C. I?PlVl'6l'll'l.1gh ,.l J. Stanley Smith Frederick R. Riley Il'lfv!I10llLl A. .Laylor Robert Ci. lishi rII1'1n Ira 1 . JV'lgIlLl' B1llj'1llllIl Irovisor -L George Ric:-hinti Gil-lrdo S. Serino John Ungar Tr. YVilli-im ll. NVinrlley Robert Steele lhomas I.. lhompson Joseph .l. Urban l . Q .,,, l 14: lg 'X x X I A L ' c ' 'lr S? . 1 - . N . 1 . X X 1 I Y ' :- Aw 1 . . 1 1 l l ' , . 5 L y V 1 Q' 1 A A Y , , . Y , l . . 'l . F , l n 1 , 1 li 5 1 rw y , . f rw 1 Q H1 P . ' f f I, ,,, ff Z 'J ffif 1 Tivo hundre'rI se1'e11fy-nme fi A J' W X Y Hn 'N XY NN I 'Moon Sociely of Pathological Anatomy OFFICERS Honorary President, VIRGIL vHoLLANn MOON. M.D. President, PARK M. I-lonToN Hecrenn-y, JAMES J. GRACE. JR.. Vice-Presiflent, LLOYD E. SAYLOR Treasurer, Jo1f1N J. CIIELEDEN David Morgan, M.D. Edward XVeiss, M.D. Williaimi M. Howell John Unger, Jr. Park M. Horton Eugene F. Wolfe Lloyd E. Savlor John J. Cheleclen Francis E. Goodman Raymond E. lVeyrnoutl1 James J. Grace Robert M. Fales I'I'9'1'IT121l'l S. Schriner Reginald A. Allen Francis D. Malony J. M. Bortllwick Theodore Baker Perry Cleaver FACULTY MEMBERS Vnzon. PIOLLAND Moon, BLD. Baxter L. Crawford, M.D. H. L. Stewart. M.D. C. J. Bucher, M.D. M. Kleinbart. M.D. MEMBERS Nineieen Thirty-Two Michael M. Scott Leonard Horn Herman Finklestein Thomas McGlade Floyd I. Hudson Paul Klenipner Herbert K. Young Vincent O. Leach Georg-e' A. Baver Joseph I. I-learshey George B. Ferguson Stiles B. Ezell T.. Emmet Brown, Nineteen Thir+y-Three Edw. W. Custer Harry Pandolpho Two hmz flrecl eighty Jr. Homer B. Allen YVilliarn J. Hinkson Alfred E. James Fred-erick B. Haar Alfred G. Gillis Samuel Branbwan, Jr. Morris J. Gerber Bernard Viener Theodore Meranze Camillus H. Sapletta George A. Borreca Alfred S. Moscarella Marshall S. Shields J. Stanley Smith WM W5 S25 if 5x .55 ii .2 3 ' V134 iffn . Q. .Lys sf f it . .. 'f ww. ggi. .NS eg . x Q. .X if N. -Q sis . 1, 1 XX S V N K XX x . Q :SN The Louis Pasieur Sociely OFFICERS President M. Ricimuu DENNY Tice-President, FRANCIS A. I'lEGGAR'1'Y New-c1111-y and Trcaszzrcr, Nomsnxrr M. BITTRICH FACULTY MEMBERS Michael A. Burns, M.D. Joseph J. McCullough, M.D. Edward A. Strecher, M.D. D Thos. E. Shea. M.D. Norman A. MacNeill, M.D. Louis H. Clerf, M.D. Berillo, Anadleto Boi-bonus, John H. Brown, Albert W. Conlan Adrian DeProphitis, Rocco Donnelly, Edward J. Boland, Francis P. Cacia, J. J. Costello, Thos. J. Gillespie, P. J. Gillis, A. G. Grace, J. J., Jr. Denny, M. R. Jenkins, E. Conol-ef, J. Gallo, F. CHAPLAIN Father McNulty MEMBERS Nineieen Thirly-One Giering John B. F-u-ace. Jos. S. Murphy John Cl. Latvo John Iupo, Deonis M. lynch Edward T. Ninefeen Thirfy-Two keys. N. T. McClintocl'. YY . I . M'1lon5 F. D. Nlurray W. . Podbody A. J. Hebarty F. A. Ninefeen Thirfy-Three P-idula I. Nineieen Thirly-Four Moore F. J. Quinlin W. O,L9'1lI3 Thos. I.. Oliver Andres C. Patella Eugene M. Roco-ipriore Ben. Suffoletta Daniel B. 'Qangrilli Alfred Cl-iffey John Porrecfl George Berrettini A. O. Bettrich N. M. lfidden J. Thomaseski XV. H. bellitto A. M. Robinson J. Vecaro M. , L . 1 , w 1 ,, 41 1 4 , 1 Y! I E Y , , . , , . , . 1 ' , f , 7 1 ', 1 A x T .1 4 , ll C 7, 1 , 1 9 T J 1 I , A , . ox Q 7 Kelley, F. Reedy, NV. J. ' . a , 1 , ' 4, v J v . , . , 4. cf. Two hundred eighty-one fl. . x X 5 X ,Plolemy Socie-'ly Founrlerl 1900. Sill'C01lll2lgllS Nlllllllel' One Imouihis. Cmunm C. Doosox lim-us, li. li. W1f:YMov'1'I1 A. P. Brubaker, M.D. JV. T. Annon. M.I?. P. Brooke Bland. M.l,J. N. IgllilTllli9'1'g, M.D. Albert P. Brubaker. MJF. Auron Capper, M.lJ. James F. Carroll. M.Il. Thotlz, YINCENH' O. Lxzsu BOARD OF TRUSTEES Ross V. I'z1tte'rson, M.D. J. Clll2lllllPl'S Dnf'ostz1. M.ll. A. J. Davidson. M.D. Elmer H. Funk, M.D. 7 Harold L. Golflhurgh. M.D Alfred NV. Dnhhs Paul M. Cormnn M. II. Chnpnick John J. Cheleden Claude C. Dodson John ll. Bnrner Ralph E. Clark A. DllUCfllH:G? Collins Franklin F. Dye FRATRES IN FACU LTATE Ruynold S. Griliith, M.D. Ilobzirt H. llnre, M.lP. W. P. I-Iern, M.ID. J. Cl2ll'9l1i'9 Keeler, M.l'J. J. U. Knipe. M.D. ll. Wl. Kramer, M.D. R. M. Lukfe-'nS, M.Il. J. B. Lownes. M.D. Virgil H. Moon, M.D. U. TV. Nissler, M.D. ACTIVE MEM BE RS Ninefeen Thirly-One Edward Gipstein Abraham Kaufman Vaughn L. Sprenkel Ninefeen Thirfy-Two G. Harry Katz S. R. .Kaufman Vincent O. Lesh Nine+een Thirfy-Three Oscar B. Felclser Rudolph K. Glocker Robert P. Kembler Joseph H. Kniseloy TIVO lnzmlrerl eighty-111-0 S. R. KA l'If'A1A N George A. l'lrif'h, M.D. Ross V. Patterson, M.D. Elo B. Reed. M.D. Harvey M. liighter. M.I'J. Justus Sinexton, M.D. Hurry Stuc-kert. M.D. Martin J. Sokoloff, MIP. IG. Quinn Thornton, M.D. lVillia1n J. Thuflium, M.IJ. George A. Ulrich, M.D. Raymond A. Taylor Anthony S. Tornny Julius R. Pearson Ilermnn C. Rogers R. E. VVeymouth Andrew XV. Morton Clarence Ill. Phillips ff ly off -f.,...fw ,fiovfh 'Aly .fziefrfp Age' Xxi i N NS X xN.,-. vs . X,... 3 , 5 R -.-.X QF' el 2 is ex- Q X- l A -e - . x E 1. , i A' T J . .. Biochemical Sociely OFFICERS President, J. S'rAN1.EY Smrrn New-vfury, IC. XV. f'US'l'EIi Vice-I'resifIenf, J. S. ST.-XBNICK 7'1-emmrer, llA1mY PANno1.1'u0 MEMBERS Daniel Baker Theodore Baker Theodore Barnett D. P. Bell M. J. Bzxrthwiek J. L. Burn Richard Chodoff Perry Cleaver N. J. Crandall E. NW. Custer H. B. Bower I-I. R. Briudle Clarence' Emery J. T. Friedman J. S. Goldcamp M. D. Grim E. B. 1'Iaberlnan M. H. Hawk Il. B. llibbnrcl N ineleen Thirfy-Three J. IC. Davis Os:-nr Felder J. E. Fescina H. IJ. Fuerst P. A. Gannon Arnold Goldberger Karl Hable Yvilllffll' Kotanclxik J. E. Leach M. S. Merman N. V. Meyers Ninefeen Thirfy-Four J. J. llorovitz John Keithau R. V. Kandle Il. D. Phippin P. Salitsky I. O, Silver Harold Smith J. Stabnick T. H. Steele Two lmmdred eighty-three llarry Pandolpho C. E. Phillips S. Seiflleman M. F. Shields J. S. Smith T. E. Thompson J. T. Urban R. B. XVA1-field H. B. M. NVilson James S. F. YVon ll. T. Stewart P. L. Strong lVilson Swanker Peter Urbaitis U. F. lVilliaunS 0. T. lvood Samuel Wlolfe' C. YV. Wurtz J. B. Zieliuski X Q X ff , X X X f I N N- X if TQ fW Kappa Be-ia Phi Honorary President, Ross Y. PATTERSON P1 eszdent, I-IAROLD A. Jo11NsoN Sow-cfory and Treasurer, JonN V. RIILLER Tice President, IiEGINALD C. EDSON Senior Warden, AXVILLIAM N. CRELLIN MEMBERS Jolm N. Borbonus Claude H. Butler XVilliam R. Collett NVilliam N. Crellin Raymond C. Davis Reginald C. Edson Edward J. Fisher Dennis R. Gillen Rife Gingrich Southgate J. Green Henry G. Hager Homer R. Allen Francis P. Boland Webb H. Brown T. Emniitt Brown, Jr. Jolm J. Cheleden M. W. Curtis Nineieen Tl-lirly-One NY?l1'116 L. Haight Richard J. 1-lorwell Richard P. Jalmig Michael J. Hurley Howard A. Johnson Eli J. Keller Earl R. Knox M. Crocker Maddrey Harry C. hIcC1ain Harrold C. McDowell Jxflulillll J. McMartin Nineieen Thirfy-Two C. Robert Darnell Francis A. Hegarty XVilliam J. Hinkson Park M. Horton NVilliarn L. Hughes Thomas W. Kredel Two himdred eighty-four John V. Miller Thomas F. 0'Leary Harold D. Parks Francis C. Prunty John L. Quinn Thomas K. Rzlthinell Paul B. Reis Paul A. Sica Donald D. Stoner Alfred A. Zangrilli Thomas F. McLaughlin NVilliam T. Rice Herman C. Rogers James L. YVade Roy J. YVhetzel 2 .S X A Us ox 3 fi J S 3 1 X is . K Q L KV if 1 x I fo ' 3 4? 2 s J o n -4-fwygg N fx Q MK? , W? ii W., W , Q 1 Jr ji? w 511 2 ss as V Q45 its 1 'iii if -sv at Kappa Beta Phi HE activities and varied routine of the college undergradu- ate tends, despite the segregating influence of fraternities, to make the students of each group acquainted one with the other. In sharp contrast to this, the medical student,s existence affords little oportunity for social and convivial in- tercourse, with the result that fraternity groups tend to be- come more or less separated. The Kappa Beta Phi Society has for its purpose the elimination of this particular and pe- culiar deficiency. Infornially the organization might be con- sidered in the light of an inter-fraternity council, without, however, the executive powers of such a body. The membership of the organization consists of students in the upper two classes, representative of the various fra- ternity groups. Such men, influential in their own organiza- tions, meeting regularly throughout the year tend to create a friendly and congenial atmosphere which makes for greater harmony among the students 'in general. Two lmnda-ed eighty-five M WN zm . , 3 ar if QRS SX X e JW! '41 at fi . if 3 3-1 ,4 , f f4 gif L, 2? F xt W WSW-ss ge wr 1 f Gai R The An infercollegiafe and inferfrafernify senior sociefy limifed io 'fwelve members Founded at Jefferson Medical College IIIco1'poI'ated March 2, 1925 February 20, 1925 Active Chapte1's 5 1 1 Rabelais Club, Inc. CONSILIARIS IN FACULTATE Ross V. PA'I IIzus0N. M.D. SOCII PRO HONORE ! DENNIS R. GILLEN PAUL A. SICA WILLIAM J. NECBIARTIN OTHELL0 S. KOUGH :HOXVARD A. JOHNSON ANDRES G. OLIVER, J G. PAUL MOSER JOHN N. BORBONUS J IRVING S. DICHTER ROBERT C. TISHIERMAN J OHN F. GIERING RICIIAIIII J. HORWELI, U ' f' I 1 1 T A - ' , 110 111111111041 myhiy Sll X4 E s 5 1 1 1 4 U I , fi gf g , 2, Ti Z3 gt rf H. i, 1. cis.. fr x P Hs 'K M 1 si X 'M T4 . ROBI 1-1-90 to 1553, in France, lived and worked Francois Rabelais. Little is known of his birth and early life, except that his education, like ours, began approximately at the age of seven and terminated, in a general sense, with the reward of a coveted Doctorate in Medicine. His brilliancy has made his name immortal. In him we find skill, humor and determination mingled in such proportions that were he living today all of us would be delighted to know him. Rabelais is the incarnation of the esprit Gauloisf' a jovial, carefree soul, not destitute of common sense or even acute intellectual power, but first of all a good fellow, rather preferring a broad jest to a fine pointed one, and rollicking through life like a good-natured undergrad- uate. His works, though in parts considered by the ignorant. to be the very essence of coarseness, if read without prejudice and the appreciation of the fact that one is reading characteristic medieval literature, are still as poignant and sparkling with humor as the day that he wrote them. In 1925 the Rabelais Club was founded at Jefferson. Its purpose was to form a national honorary society which would have for its purpose the promulgation of good feeling among the alumni of the various class A medical colleges and at the same time serve as a reward to the deserving undergraduate who had proved his ability as a leader and' good fellow in addition to a fair amount of studiousness on his part. The only honorary society then in existence in medical schools was one whose prime purpose was the rewarding of a certain amount of honor to the student who showed that he could turn in better grades, sometimes at a very dear cost to himself or friendships and experiences which he found that he had not the time for, than the majority of his classmates. Such is all very well and good, and hard work should be rightly rewarded, but should not the other fellow, who, in addition to turning in very fair fif not fancyj averages, who has climbed to the heights of his classmates, esteem and helped in the organization and administration of his class have a little glory of his own? The only ones eligible for membership in this society are those who have held class offices. Two lruzzdrerl e'iglm'y-se1'en 1 , V iff? 'Lf A., Z, ' 1 2' 4 1 2 1 ,a ' fa 1, af rf 52: ' We way, , , :ra 'mf if 514 ,525 T21 'QV LW 'f f WW f v w L F W P 'x 4 Y J 'r W l 4 , s- X: S-F: KX L' -I N2-I N T 'i 1 . N I E CX :W X N. W K ,,. Q: ,rf , V, :V ef 7 The Senior Year of Samuel Pepys Blessed be God, the Class of 1931 having suffered no fatalities during the hot months convenes for its last season under the birch. The state of the college was thusg viz.: The address to the Hedglings is delivered in our new assembly hall for the first time, and very good, too, by V. hloon, Doctor of Physick and our Preceptor in the Anatomy of the Sick. The entire company listened very polite, albeit I thought the discourse in part incom- prehensible to the new boys, though lucid e n o u gh to - more ancient ears. f Dean Patterson fol- ' lowed his old rule, - 1 - describing the fresh- men to themselves, supporting his eu- logy with figures, percentages, corre- . lations and Pear- son's R. And Lord! Iad liefer listen to the annual report of the President of the New York Central Railroad Company. And so home and talked of the ceremonies and drank a little and so to bed. ill W1 sell' ll' ki, I' 1 4. ' I - September 23. Up very betimes and on foot to the college and make a vowe not to be absent from nine o'clock lectures this year. Fraternities busy garnering new members, my own guild selecting more scholarly looking ones than was their wont in my early days. October 1. Up and to the college and astonished to find J. Miller pres- ent at nine oiclock. And so fell to thinking of miracles and wondered if I could stand the shock of seeing J. hlurray return to school before Oe- tober 15. October 5 fLord's Dayj. Early up and drank a good morning draught. Then to call upon J. Borbonus and F.. Fisher to see would they decipher for me the Special Class Roster, I being no good at cryptogralns. And they 1'egaled me with many a fancy tale of their prowess in such pursuits and so with them to a fine dinner of pullets and sundry other cooked vic- tuals. Thence home to read in my hIaster,s Treatise the essay on Ty- phoid Fever, a sickness more preva- lent this year than usually because of the prolonged drought. J. Mchflartin and H. Johnson interrogated me on certain diagnostic signs of the malady and I answered them nobly, I inno- cently thinking they sought informa- tion and learning later they wished merely to see had I absorbed aught of what I had read. And so, very merry, to bed. October 6. Betimes up and to the college where my NIaster, Professor NIcCrae, discoursed on the diagnosis of this and that. Thence to Campus Alley where K. Fry and IJ. Corman, the equestrian, began a dispute as to the value of lectures in Physick, Fry maintaining that clinics were enough and Corman thinking that lectures were necessary. And neither could convince the other. October 7. After clinic at Benja- min Franklin's Pennsylvania Hospital to Dorman,s Coffee House where the Tum lzzmclred eiylzfy-nine fy! X X X air was teeming with talk of class elections. The situation was in com- plexion much like the national body politick, there being two maj or parties and a lesser group composed of men of various leanings. And great plans were laid and rival generals con- ferred one with another. I thought the business had assumed an impor- tance greatly beyond its worth. October 14. Class elections this day and I saw nobody collecting any bets. The officers elected were: O. Kough, Presidentg D. Lupo, Vice- Presidentg F. Riley, Secretary, L. Kahn, Treasurer, G. lNIoser, Histor- iang VV. Haight, Editor-in-Chief, 1931 CLINIC, H. lVIcClain, Business Man- ager, 1931 CLINIC. And I thought the ward heelers and bosses had chosen very creditable candidates, for which I praised the Lord. October 20. Lively debate in the auditorium this afternoon, Dr. Shal- low vs. K. Fry .and H. Hager. Dr. Shallow could not convince these promising youngsters that there is a transient loss of reflexes during an indisposition of the upper motor neu- rons. Fry and Hager answered on good authority that we should Hnd spasticity and exaggerated responses since there was no hurt soever to the lower motor neurons. A very engag- ing word-combat it was and I thought afterwards that we at the Jefferson lead a life quite as stimulating as that recorded by those sparkling university fellows of Renaissance times. 'Our medical course is an education in it- self, if you can 'fathom my meaning. October QI. Class meeting afrain this day to settle two pressing prob- lems. First, it was voted to dedicate Z K7 M! the 1931 CLiNIC to Dr. Vaux and Dr. Ulrich, who are well beloved by all the members of the class, even by those who detest midwifery. Second, it was voted that our class should present to the college a painting in oils of Dr. J. Gibbon, eminent Chirurgeon and erstwhile Professor at the Jefferson. There was some dispute before the vote was taken, some members holding out for Dr. J. Schaeffer, either be- cause he is a handsomer devil or because Dr. Gibbon found the sour ones wanting in chirurgical learning at the close of the third year. But, methinks, the majority voted wisely because our class is the last to have sate under Dr. Gibbon whereas many a class will yet enjoy the tutelage of Dr. Schaeffer and will love him well, as we have, and I pray God he will soon be painted. October 27. Early up and to my Master's lecture. Then declared a holiday to honor the memory of the late President Roosevelt, and the United States Navy. So to the Navy Xard with J. Nliller and beheld with wonder all the exhibitions arranged for the day J. lNIurph5 was there and A. Conlan contemplating the under-witer boats. 1here, too, was WI. Maddrey and E. Fisher and LX. Brunner and maybe others whom I did not see. And we all gaped at fly- ing boats as they executed such in- credible manem ers in the sky that the local gulls winged out to sea in shame. At lenfrth I had to look at the ground the leaders in my neck haw ing grown stiff and the roof of my mouth sun- bu1'ned. I promised myself a trip soon in one of those Hying boats' I nei er haying been aloft. f 7 Y T T S an Q T ' 7 f m t 2 I . r A1 l I 1 ' 4 IS C . H. c r 7 K as r ' c 7 ' 7 o as a 7 Y . Q f at U 7 , , L fix, If X 2 A f l , few ff Two hundred ninety 4' f l s Q. Q3-S X .ss .s s. ,sft-wg Q NN 14 si October 28. Up and to Eighth and Spruce on the run so as to be on time for clinic. And our President, O. Kough, down in the arena did provoke my ltlasterts wrath by suggesting the Roentgen Ray as a diagnostic aid be- fore all the physical signs were noted. Afterwards I heard J. Markel, ne Biarkowitz, say to our Editor, IVell, Haight, I see Kough has joined our X-ray clubf' In the afternoon to Dr. Strecker's lecture and he could not pronounce ophthalmologist as well as Amos, not to say Andy. And after three futile attempts he said instead eye-doctort' most clearly. It was all very droll and I. Dichter said, Neuro- physician, heal thyself. October 29. The eighth or zero hour was this day enlivened by Dr. Funk's spluttering over synthesize, reminding us of Dr. Strecker. All laughed save R. Tisherman, who slept on and on. October 30. Quite merry in clinic this day and laughed heartily, God forgive me, when I. VVagner solemnly announced that this patient's past history dated back to her childhood. E. Knox opined that it was good to know this, lest we think the lady was born full-fledged. November 3. In the middle of the lecture in Milita1'y Science and Tac- tics, S. Shue heaved a stick of crayon across the room like a beardless high- school boy. lVIajor lVIills said, Tsk, tsk. Howsomever, Shue was a great soldier in his palmy days at Carlisle. November 11 fflrmistice Dayj. This day we were instructed by Dean Pat- terson on how to apply for the posi- tion of interne. His talk was illumi- nating and full of good humor. L 1 t isiikxf W T1 X .f. .- as is. t E-xff...N . X I rx: r X as 592 . 1. - -. 1 NX. xix- 2, . ., N 1 s g x as November 13. Early and up after a dull morning to the Jefferson Am- phitheatre in time to see T. O,I.eary invited down to tread the tiles with my blaster. Asked for a final sugges- tion in regard to the diagnosis, O'- Iieary elevated his eyes as if in prayer and, taking heart, he breathed, MX-Rayf, in fear and trembling. All were amusedg even Dr. NIcCrae en- joyed it a deal. November 1.4. E. Patella answered Dr. Billing's questions so well that the good doctor wondered 'if Patella had won perfect marks in Chirurgery. November 17. In Professor Hare's Clinic, T. O,Leary again caused a commotion. And this is what hap- pened: The Professor began to relate a parable beginning, Coming down Spruce Street driving his ash-wagon, T. O,Leary . . . v At this juncture T. O,I.eary leaped to his feet full of righteous indignation. At once the assembled scholars burst into loud and unseemly laughter and 'O'Leary's pas- sion was quenched as suddenly as it had been enkindled. In order to make an etiological diagnosis of O'Leary's reaction it is necessary to recall Dr. I-Iare's lectures in Therapy through- out the Third Year. Dr. Hare, a magnanimous man bearing m a li c e toward no race or group, nevertheless names to all menial and characters in his stories. gave Irish despicable This day's event, then, was simply the last straw on the camel's back. And politely and gracefully re- Dr. Hare tracted his unintentional aspersion and even offered to change his name to O'Hare. So home, all being happy. November 20. O'Leary this day rounded out a full week of entertain- Two I1 umlred 11.ine1'11-one 7 I R W. w ing the class by delivering an instruc- tive and diverting oration on the life of Percival Pott, an old medical and chirurgical man. November QI. Finding the Amphi- theatre of the old Quaker Hospital at Eighth and Spruce as hot as a Turk- ish bath, I. Zugerman, F. Prunty and C. Danielson removed their coats and waistcoats. But Dr. Billings would not give them leave to remain within those hallowed walls in such desha bille. November Q7 fThcm7vsgi'civzg Dayj Glory be to God, the pleasure was mine this day to soar in the air like a bird from Camdentown to' New York, having promised myself this trip in a flying boat one month ago Praised be the Name of the Lord that I live to record it in my Journall November Q9. Saw this day in D1 Bauer,s Clinic two little girl-children wasting away for want of food. I sat between D. Smith and I. Dichter, the three of us mighty over-nourished The ensemble was disturbino- even in these hard times. December 1. Dr. Hare quizzed two visiting medicos this day, thinkino they were students, and they wishing they had been better students when at college. December 2. The Alpha Omecra Alpha Honorary Fraternity presented Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, the distinguished anthropolgist, as the principal speake1 at their open meeting. The new mem bers of the fraternity, elected, as the Dean pointed 011t, because of sch0l astic attainments, character, and certain individuality, are the follow fsxys? . X P. Jushinskie, NI. Krauss, F. Lowry, VV. lVIcDowell, G. lVI0ser, B. Sprenkel, S. Steinberg and VV. Turner. V December S. The Kappa Beta Phi Fraternity held its initiation this day and after the ceremonies the brothers gathered at the Nu Sigma Nu Tavern to make wassail till the moon was high which is the11 gieat follv Sew 61 al f1atern1t1es now have pin ate 1001ns wheie the bows can gu17le w 1th no feal of the law December 10 D1 J Chalme1sDa Costa dEl1XQ1Gd this day the annual GIOSS Lectuie which he glaciously allows to be p11nted in this xea1 s CLINIC He also announced the pro n10t10n of D1 Shallow and D1 Klopp to the P1OfGSSO1Sl1lp December 15 D1 Funk held clinic and he said of an unma111ed glll 'Il is pa 1en mav be on see aun , he trxmo' to say, ence1nte, and h nking tl1e H19 came befoie the e And his thought was lost utteilv J Quinn said I must look that up in an atlas 37 Decembe1 16 R Smith was 1m menselx embaiiassed at iny Blastei s Clinic this fO1C11OOI1 when a pint of Spuitus F1UI11EHt1 fell out of his hip pocket and ciashed on the H001 A its WRPOIS VICIG wafted towa1ds S G1 een and I D1chte1, these Gentlemen became shfrhtlw obfuscated as the h0u1 w 01e on December Q0 Chiistmas vacation beouns th1s day, somewhat ea1l1e1 than in 0the1 veais But not eails enoufrh fO1 J lVIu11ay, H NIcCla1n and J H01 well they having taken t1211I'lS ing: B. Bartho, A. Brown, H. Hager, three days ago Q U . U e bf. I 0' Q. . 1 I 91 I I 4 U . - - ' . - I Cb R. 2. - ' ' , ff 2 A . - , ES - U f . ' - J ' ' H- 1 - ' . I-a , r S . ' . ' '- 4 . - ' , x N- . n 4 1 . I W I U . , . . , ' 4-I' - I 1 U , A . W ' L ' . I -4 4 Q A ' - . J' ' - ' 4 . ' I 4 ' , I 4 4 4 4 ,J . I+ f . 1 n . 2 it , 4 A 4 ' A . I.. . 4. , . V ' I E I 1 I -4 I a , , . . I 4 , 1 , ' ' . ' --1 ' ' 4 n 1 , . - 4 A . I A ' I ' . I . 4 ' 4 4 ' I , Q . U , ' . . ., . . N . I i I . A 1 , 4 i I J . 4 . ' 4 ' , I , 4 Y '4 ' 4- A , i I . . , ww I ' -4 1 U . 4 4 . fl' , . ' .4 , - .4 , ., , - . V7 I 4 u -a I I I , . 'W ' ey X ,J S 5-, I Y ft? 2 s sf . is e ss ffl, J - . . er-fs 1-.1 as so t f 'f'- s w s 1 x -gg . . S- . rg :ss i... Q 3, x ,Neg -.is Q.. S, . 1 ,, Q 1,1-g Xie - ' Jzzfnu-ary 5. Up and to the college, but could not keep my mind on my business, this being the day marked down for the interviews between the reigning powers and the candidates fo r the Jefferson Hospital Interne- Q ,. ship. So home, to make myself fine, N against this event. f ., And did on my dark .I T f, y , suit and oiled mv hair. Thence to the X l eritg f .ll f if if T K ,il , ,O R x ,lofi K sf ffn 4, it-fs x J 'gl hospital, where some t ' forty others cooled their h e e l s in an antechamber. The palms of my hands seemed unduly damp, and I was wont to yawn again and again. H. liiohler called one at a time into the Inner Sanctum. Those with names early in the A B C,s got in first and having come out they told us who were left, that besides H. hlohler there sate be- yond the door T. lNIcCrae, Chairman, Dean R. Patterson and J. Schaeffer. I had a mind to flee the building as Jake was said to be scowling most fiercely, and R. V. P. reported to look as though he sat on Mount Olympus, and I thought, VVho am I to storm such a citadel? Being just then summoned, I to the reviewing stand, and was at once put at ease by T. lVIcCrae, ever a gentleman and kindly. And they inquired if I had ever taken a Wife and how I spent my summer months, and it was all over in three minutes. 'Thence to the alley, where H. Johnson, D. Smith and VV. Haight told me they too had answered the same questions as I had. And O. Kough and T. Williams were there too and of course the ubiquitous A. . - .0 .QA-. YQ. Tornay. But G. Van Loon failed to report. Matta took no notes at all in Otol- ogy and T. Rathmell and H. Suter and IV. Crellin promised to investigate and see if all is well with Mr. hflan- from-India. JflII'ZLIl-Ty 7. Wlhen H. Johnson fe ll asleep during Dr. T- T- Q . Stellwageifs lecture D. Smith waked him And the Professor V I . rebuked Smith say- A 5 , :K 2- l Q X fi we by boxing his ribs. I . s . . i mg, Let him alone. l ,T q ii s If anybody wants to snooze, let him snoozef' Jflmzavjy 9. Open meeting of the Hare Society, held in the Amphi- theatre this day. Dr. Simon Flexner, a man of vast erudition, discoursed on epidemics. 'Our own Professor lVIc- Crae acted as Chairman, Dr. Hare being too ill to attend the meeting. IV. Turner was there, very fine in his black, hard hat, and the Rover boys, Edson, Keller and Parks, and a host of others. Jan-u.a1'y 13. Announcement came this morning of the appointments to the Jefferson Hospital, and I was con- sumed with great sorrow to find that I had not been selected. But mighty pleased with the general excellence of the committee,s choice, especially in the case of H. Johnson and K. Fry and VV. Hodges. Among those re- jected were two for whom I was sor- rier than for myself but Whose names shall not be set down in this Journall. 6 l ,, lv V l , 1 I f l V f , , if if v 0 4 . , . . 1 v X YQ' C an Wxiffy T-wo humlrecl m1z.ety-tlwee 9- i . ll l xW X xX At Dorman's Coffee House, A. imma ll- ' Zan grilli was elated l on winning five dol- J lars on the punch- X I V ing board, he having X l l,, 1 1 squandered o n l y thirteen dollars be- 'JT 'I-Tr: fore punching a lucky number. January 1.4. Received this day my own hospital appointment, which I had taken great pains to obtain, even to the extent of having had field agents exert pressure in my favor, God forgive me. But in this world one must leave no stone unturned in any aggressive campaign. January 15. Having recovered from rheumatic fever, Angelina, the hand- somest bitch in Dr. Moon's kennels, whelped four young ones and is quite well after it, H. Kessler having a great fear that she would die thereof the dog that got them being very big and her endocardium being harassed by the streptococci. January 16. The annual dancing and card-playing party was given this night by the nurses. And I did on my new black suit and had my black shoes polished by a m lady s, a J found her very fine in her new from n. T ience to the l party, and sau A LII there F. Prunty and I .N - I I r 'E Tl polisher. Thence to , fd y ' ,I X Y J Y I V D 7 R. Smith and many another student and interne and teacher. Prunty gave me E o F-01 FD U2 sh 5 5 sv S ,.- Q U! Z :f 5 :S O E . D. Q , Q1 3 A f V E, , - U A A Q 1+ . N ' - 1 A 1 - U fx R 2 'X N i N4 . . U cr L ' ' U . . , . . ri- 1 1 , , . . T- 'Q I ' . V I L. ix 5 'K - , X X A ' sltskldiiq 2 0 ' f i H. - P V425 U 5 542 . O Citi X X several good drinks and we were quite mellow. lVIiss N. Smith, the llfistress of Ceremonies of the Pit, was there, and her alter ego Miss K. Fry. And Lord! It was a grand sight to watch Professor T. Shallow dancing with la Smith. Jcmfwary 17. Lay long so as to ward off the Spanish Influenza, a mysterious inalady that has lately stricken hundreds of people here- abouts and which I was warned against by my Nlaster. Getting up, finally, I took physick in order to safeguard my good health further, and so could not venture out of doors until two in the afternoon. And so to the Phila- delphia General Hospital to attend the inaurruration of the se1'ies f clinics for the study of the mentally unbalanced, and all kinds of cra7y and in-iniacal creatures. Each of us had 'L ticket, showing that we were members of this class and were en- titled to admission. But Lord! when I went into the Amphitheatre and says the motley and polyglot company I there assembled I thought the admis- sion tickets mus 5 l ff' xl . -- ff fi hftye been sent to all the subscribers of the Philadelphia' Daily Aews or else '- ofiven away, like la ' -- Gillette ra7ors, to all yi ho bought coca-colas in the past week. VVe of the class managed to croyyd in, but D. Smith and D. Bon- ham 'ind H. Suter and sundry others, had to sit on the stairs. BI. Hurley' and R. Jahnio' arriy ed early enough to find seats on a bench for themselves and the two pretty ii omen they ss. : S l brought with them. Donnelly and E. Lynch, both wearing tl1eir new black, hard hats, also had seats. But the choice benches were occupied by sex-starved school marms, and soci- ologists of questionable gender, who crop up like hardy perennials, every year and make Jefferson look like a eo-educational seminary. There they sat seeking, by discussing the cases. to find a craven outlet for their sup- pressed erotieisim. But, the clinic itself-Dr. Strecker presented four cases to shew us out- standing symptoms of lunacy, and he did 'it in a masterly and brilliant 1nanne1'. And the most fetching ex- hibit was a man filled with boundless happiness and utter contentment. The symptom was called Ueuphorian and I made a prayer, in 1ny abysmal ig- norance, t.hat some day I should come down with a chronic euphoria. Jcmuary 19. Up betimes and to the office of the clerk of the college on some petty business. And there heard an innocent sophomore say to hir. Greer, the clerk, Good morning, Nlr. Tuttle. And hir. Greer is no kin of Dr. L. Tuttle, curator of the am- phibian abattoir. Jim-uary QI. VVe now have Daddy Thornton on VVednesdays, instead of E. Funk. All were delighted to be taught again by this grand old gentle- man. Howsomever, the course just concluded by E. Funk was very val- uable and carefully presented. January 23. Home early and at my scrivening until nine o,clock. J. Giering and R. I-Iauver and T. Sica came in and after a pleasant talk with Giering and I-Iauver about such sub- Q x X' - ee U'-:ta sk., lime music Sweet Adeline and 'cVVay Down Yonder in the Cornfieldn was vexed to find Sica had marked in one of my books with his pencil. Fe'b1'rufm'g 3. Early up and to the hospital. G. Van Loon, that indefa- tigable first-nighter, tells me that the new play at the Trocadero is very good. i Feb1 1zm-y N. Up at three in the morning and with J. Smyth to South Philadelphia to conduct the accouch- ment of f'Black-Anna,,' an unmarried weneh, who, it transpired, used to walk with vine leaves in her hair along the riverfront with Daniel, a Pullman porter. Anna had labored long, being o n l y twenty - one years of age with child for the first time. Soon the babe . was born, a man- child it was, and l Anna honored Smyth and me by giving him both our names. So home, very weary, to bed. Came the Dawn February 14. Up and made myself ready to be Aunt Sally Glass's Valen- tine, and Miss Pencezs and M i s s Adams', having writ their names upon blue paper in letters of gold with my own hand. But I lost heart when someone told me I could not be Valen- tine to the three of them, dear sweet women that they are. So made a vowe to send them pretty cards on their birthdays. If all have the same birthday, I'll send cards anyway. Javuwary 28. In clinic this day Pro- fessor Jack Da Costa said a patient 0 X Two lmmdrecl 7'I'i71CfI1j-ff'l76 X X had Graves's disease, and emphasized the fact that he did not fall into the error of saying 'gf-lrraves diseasef, Thereupon he related a most amusing anecdote, to wit: A student some years ago sent him an anonymous note up- braiding him for saying Graves's dis- ease and not Graves disease? At once Jack marshalled a great array of classickal books and brought them to the clinic. He invited the carping student to come down into the arena and see for himself what excellent prec- edent there was for forming the singu- lar possessive in the time-honored way. But the student was afraid to go down, having learnt probably in the mean- time that common usage is the ultimate jury of our speech forms. Jack's description of the scene was very diverting and reminded me of a parallel case in the writings of James Gibbons Huneker. Somebody once sent him a letter wrongly accusing him of a solecism. Huneker answered, shewing that he had made no error and then concluded thus: As for gram- mar, it was made for imbeciles and schoolmarms. Selah! Cordially, Jim the Penman. January Q9. After a fine dinner of fowl,s kidneys and mushrooms, I to my lVIaster's clinic. T. Rathmell was in the arena and he did say that the patient might have portal cirrhosis of the liver on account of his heavy drink- ing. Professor BfIcCrae asked Rath- mell what he knew of the geographical distribution of portal cirrhosis- To this Rathmell made no reply. There- upon T. MCC. recounted the tale of his latest visit to the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh. Wle were amazed to hear him tell that portal cirrhosis is so rarely seen in that institution that medical men come from miles around to see the curiosity, notwithstanding the fact that Scotsmen consume great quantities of whiskey. Dr. lWcCrae said there were two possible explana- tions for this, namely, Good livers or good liquor. The recital gave us a new viewpoint on the causation of portal cirrhosis and many of us who are proud of the resiliency of our gullets stopped worrying. Februfzry 5. One patient this day in the clinic was a twelve-year-old colored boy weighing about four stone. VVhen Dr. lNIcCrae asked him what his chief complaint was he astounded the class by calmly answering c'Cardiac decom- pensationf, Annual Wlilliam Potter ltlemorial Lecture delivered this night by Dr. George Crile, of Cleveland. A great crowd attended, I going merely be- cause Dr. lXIcCrae had told us it was good to hear and see distinguished men. Crile is in the front rank among chirurgeons but he is a ninth-rate biologist and entirely innocent of his shortcomings. Febr-urlry 12. Dr. Bland in hflid- wifery clinic t.his day discoursed nobly on rape and the history of laws deal- ing with this crime. It was ghastly to think how innocent men used to be sent to the gallows for what we regard in these antinomian times as preliminary skirmishes. February 19. Jake Shapiro, erst- while operator of the hiagic Lantern, unceremoniously took leave of Dr. Kloppis clinic this day, he being sickened by the smell of the ope1'ation. Two lzundrefl niizety-s-ia: 1 , G? sf Z sQ,:12'f4f 9 ft 25, ,sf ww Y , S' if wifi .fi 2:1 Y ff f If I5 5 3 155 : ss 4 .gf yxferff w i 1 ' i i s ,Q . 5 -'-- , i ,ii-:N an 55 HQ A swipe iavix , 1 -X1 . y Y .. is . . 1 A '- ' i steeplef' H. Hare 1 ' I have always said that, enemas, like matrimony, are to be entered into, f CC CHOICE TIDBITS LIFTED FROM NOTEBOOK MARGINS J. Da Costa y . This is a case in the surgical grammar, of present tense, active voice, 5. and imperative mood-operate! y N. NAU intuitive diagnosis is a rapid method of reaching a wrong diag- . nosisf, Cancer lurks in the shadow of the chariot of civilization. A duodenal ulcer is the sword of Dalnoeles held over the head of inanf' 'tThe diabolic nimbleness and sagacity of the collar button- Hysteria is the diagnostic dungliillf' uhlerely the imbecilic fuhninations of idiotic upliftersf, The breast is a highly specialized structure, gentlemen-it is really a sebaceous gland with a college education. The movement of surgical truth has always been from the complex to the simplef, Four plus--that,s the highest prize in the 'Wassermann race and four plus by something else-This new thing. In the good old days when neck was a noun, and not a verb, women wore underclothesf' The tongue movement in paresis is like the movement in a field of wheat. 'CI couldn't talk back to a decayed soprano or an uplifter, so I stopped listening to the radio? '4Firearms are not shot anymore they 'go offlf' If I had my way, I'd have all the uplifters put on top the highest reverently, discreetly, and with the fear of G-odf' There's no antidote to I-ICN. You might as well say there's an antidote to a pistol shot. Her kidneys turned off just as if you had shut off a spigotf' The nervous system dances to strychnine like popcorn does to heat. A man who sneezes is not very ill? A man always dies on his back. I repeatl- c'You might as well stand behind the bed and whistle. I-Iell! Give him Five grainsf' At our next meeting the class will please sing, Seeing Nellie I-Io1ne.', Thcre,s soap on the rails, by Jove! V X f 4 i Taco 71 undrecl niinmfy-seven, F 7 W-S ? ff wif. 2 cf ' , 3? ' f z ,u 51502 T. McCrae The outlook is none too rosy? Oh, good Lord, no.', c'Yes, yes, but what else? c'You ought to have an axe behind your ear, You have been associating with the fourth year students. The lazy devil of an internef' VVhat would you do for this patient P Gently, gently, Mr. Fisher! you must have been associating with surgeons. ' 'U-X5 e, aye, there are some snafrs for you to a student who was examin- ing a patientis decayed teeth The Curse oi Renolfus on you-of course vou haie read tha . All its a Gem. S rely You all know of Sergeant lllulw aneyfv o ie-me-mbeis what discovered , 9 I W 6 iiiimmc19 T 't' X II I I ffvff f I fl Two 11 zmdred ninety-eight 2' X KZ!! ff' Q . 32,4 .rs A-. we W ' C ca cc ' i tr V 1 t f 7 9 77 b cz I U1 7' Y 2 ,, ff, ff 0 0 xi it QP f ' e R fl! sa Gb O ' I it Q ,sf iifffx 1 jg Q 0 ' V I .Uwfff g :fn 0 T ' 0 f , ,JY I '17- K' if i 1 fn 1' ' f - li I - 6 T '-- is 'TK '14, - lf X ,fx s i 'V an W if if Q . it . 'Q 1: . M A 'i . TN 'S A -3.2 S s - sxx 1 QU.-n Iyalvben Gi: GL-Bmrrgn, mein Gut fuller? K7 .j jufk, J Jai: QW. , lf S fi if y q ifui E Q ' 1, lf 2 lylrics m :rl Al I dw , 1,'7 ,j 10? li' Hg ,5 l . -.L. J ,' ,l ' A I ' Q ji tlfitif-Z7 L ,- V Qehms S justifies that Vesta SOCIAL NOTE The following item appeared in the society column of one of the public: prints of Reading, and was promptly speared for us by an alert reporter. VVe are delighted to be able to assist in spreading the news of this romance, and we wish great happiness to Gay old Gwijn and his bride. READING DIEDICAL STUDENT TO IVED HOLLAND GIRL Announcement was made yesterday of the engagement of Bliss Griet Prins, of Asalmeer, Holland, to Dir. Gwijn Van Loon, son of Nlr. and lVIrs. Frank Van Loon, of 132 Cresmont St. Nlr. Van Loon is a senior student at Jefferson Nledical College, Philadel- phia. He spent the summer abroad. f rigs 3 X Qs.:.I1 To Fair Alicia fDedicatcd to the hundred and forty-one girls who will help to cele- brate that last eXa1nination.j Bly tout suite Alicia My God, how I misha, lXIy sweet little, dear little one! Alicia, Alicia, I love yuh, I misha, Alicia, you shunofagun. I love yuh, I love yuh, So fondly, I love yuh. lVhen I kissia, my head's in a whirlg The heavens above yuh can't shay how I love yuh, Alicia, Alicia, my girl. Blalicious Alicia, Iill kissia, I'll kissia, Until the world comesh to an end, I know that I shouldn't, but oh, Lord who woulden't Kissia and kissia again? lNIacNeill: Just how do you feed a baby of this age? Lyerly: By mouth. Favorite song of some of the out- patients: t'She gave me something to 79 remember her by. lp 14:51, N f Nlerry Christmas! 50,000,000 Gen- tiles can't be Wrong. , 4 2 J .. . I . Q W7 -.J .4 V I Q 1,7 4' 0: ' And then there was the young gas- -I troenterologist who treated a man for . ' J jaundice for three weeks before dis- '-fpfg-gg5CENE- ' ' t ' t' , Ch' - HEQBEQT K STONEI-iemoe FINDS DEQ- covermg hat his pa ient was a ma CUSSION A USEFUL AW' I1'l3.I1. Two hundred ninety-niin e 1 I ai' f l W ' 4 'f . .N l ,N , he QA. .N Ne: 7 i ha I 1 ,ff iniv X x , Q Nx Q S XX IN THE CHILDREN'S WARD Dr. Tyson, the pediatrician, in- dulges in a little play on words but his victim was not present: Tyson: VVhere's Nipple? Get him to stop these youngsters from raising such a racket. Section X: That pacifier is out on a maternity casef' ? i 2 43 l ,I ll' fl al 1 , will Q R-' ' i T1 r fi 4 , X il.-' He: K 'feel as though I knew you all my life. She: l'll say you do! Well Last night I went to see my girl fShe thinks a lot of mey. A kind of a party-that was what it was And VVhen the conversation lagged I opened up And told them what I knew about lVIedicine fYou know what I meanj They liked it. They liked to have me diagnose their Ills And listen to their hearts And hear me tell The kind of stunts our Jack And H. A. Hare and Good Tom McCrae I Do down in clinic. I had some words-great big ones- Up my sleeve. They sounded pretty good I made a large impression. But say This morning in the quizz I didn't know so much After all. J. Parsons Schaeffer to Ray Tay- lor, who was already under the pointer for the count of nine: Now, then, you'll pass out over the spinal nerve. Dr. Thomas to Moser: Suppose somebody gave you the necessary materials and told you to make a sun, how would you go about it? Three hfzmdrecl 3 59 7 TK me sus .K f-wg , 1 Q Lf -f Y-fx ' ii. 'N ' Dm New Store D 0 1' m a 11's 131 S. Tenth Street CIGARS CANDY SDDA LUNCH DRUG SUNDRIES PERICDDICALS Checks Cashed for Students and Doctors 652' I 1 f Q1 f My ll I W ' l ' , li ' W, if H1 UI 5 l l THE CLINK OF THE ICE EUGENE FIELD Notably fond of 1nusic I dote on a sweeter tone Than ever the harp has uttered or ever the lute has known. NVhen l wake at five in the morning with a feeling in my head Suggestive of mild excesses before I retired to bedg XVhen a small but fierce volcano vexes me sore inside, h I And my throat and mouth are furred with a fur that seemeth a buffalo hide, Q How gracious those dews of solace that over my senses fall . gf At the clink of the ice in the pitcher the boy brings up the hall. wg Oh, is it the gaudy ballet with features I cannot name, ' - I That kindles in virile bosoms that slow but devouring flame? - Or it the midnight supper, eaten before we retire ' That presently by combustion setteth us all afire? Or is it the cheery magnum? Nay, I'll not chide the cup , ' That makes the meekest mortal anxious to whoop things up: I , g , 'et, what the cause soever, relief comes when we call- ! 3 W Relief with that rapturous clinkety-clink that clinketh alike for all. V J , 5, I've dreamt of the fiery furnace that was one vast bulk of flame, ' , i And that I was Abednego a-wallowing in that satneg Q' And I've dreamt I was a crater, possessed of a mwad desire Q To vomit molten lava, and to snort big gobs of nreg U I've dreamt I was Roman candles and rockets that tizzed and screamed,- l , ln short I've dreamt the damnedest dreams that .ever a human dreamed: J But all the red-hot fancies were scattefred quick as a wink , 14: IVhen the spirit within that pitcher went clinking its clinkety-clink. W Boy, why so slow in coming with that gracious saving cup? 0h,' haste thee to the succor of the man who is burning up! if See how the ice' bobs up and down, as if it wildly strove 5 To reach its grace to the wrietch who feels like a red-hot kitchen stove. ,g . The piteous clink it clinks methinks should shrill you through and throughg I ig .indeiaringlsoiil is wanting drink, and he wants it p. d. q.! 3, r n o . tie ionest pitcher, too, falls in so dire a fret ,of That it's pallid form is presently bedewed with a chilly sweat. it ' May blessings be showered upon the man who first devised this drink l, That happens falonfi at five A.HM. with its rapturous clinkety-clink! . QQ . never iave et tie coolinf' ood fro sizzling down my throat ' gg 1,3 gut what I frowed to l?VU1I1i'1 hymnhto that clinkety-clink devoteg X ' . o now, in tie prime 0 my manhood, I polish this lyric 'fem lx ii For the uses of all good fellows who are thirsty at tive TX. M.. l .2 ig But specially for those fellows who have known the pleasing thrall I Of the clink of the ice in the pitcher the boy brings up the hall. fi . ,I ' I li? H at it ' 1 L I 1 ,V V .,.' illvl . , ' Three hundrerl two PY f N X XX N Vixff. it ,X in if g X X aww w.3'1-5.53 F953 1 5:2251 THE 275 South llth Street V o - Q 5 Three hundred three 1 f f ff VVell, well, well, if 'it isn't my little cause the seats are too hard to sleepin. N is is . x N LITTLE ROLLO AND THE LEARNED SOCIETIES fllfith No Apologies to the Plagiarists of '30j friend Rollo. It is just about a year since you were last seen on our campus. And I bet you had a won- derful time visiting the fraternities with your old friend of fur coat and uhandkerchief in sleeve fame. And just to show you how glad I am to see you I am going to give you a treat which will easily surpass your experience of last year. This is going to be a longer trip, but it is going to be worth your while. 93 Letas see who meets tonight? Oh, yes, the Bland Obstetrical Society. VVhat is obstetrics? Grod,s gift to women and the science that deals with the loss of sleep. Yes. There aren't many here yet, they all come in late as they do in other societies. That is the President of this society, Rollo. Very nice chap and he makes a very good president, likes it, too. His boy friend, Tony, is the Treasurer. No, he's not worried. See, the members are beginning to come in now and the meeting begins. You do not have to listen to the fellow reading the paper. Nobody else does. Sh-h! There comes Doctor Bland. Yes, he always comes. I wish I could take you to their ban- quet. It's a swell affair. Wlell, we must hurry along. I'm sorry we had to come all the way over here, but the Bauer Society always meets in the College Society room. Isn't it a nice place? It's too bad that only a few societies use it. I do not know Rollo, maybe it's be- That fat fellow with the smile? That is Stumpy Smith of tea-ball fame-he is the boss here. No, that is not Doctor Bauer, that is Doctor NIcNeil. He always runs around gesticulating like that when he is talking. Dr. Bauer had to leave early. I don't know why, Rollo. Yes, that is John- son. I-Ie 'is going to be a professor one of these days. Yes, that is a very good society, Rollo. Banquet and everything. VVell, let's be goingg we have one more to make tonight. This, my dear Rollo, is the Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy. These boys need atmosphere to read their papers. No, you do not have to have high grades in anatomy to belong here. Just seven dollars and a half. No, Doctor Schaeffer doesn't come a1'ound very often. Yes, these boys are very serious about their work, be- cause they may get a prize, and besides they are only sophomores. Oh, yes, those boys are freshmen, but how could you tell, Rollo? Wlell, they be- long to the Phi Alpha Sigma fra- ternity. That means a lot. Yes, it is a very interesting paper, Rollo, but nobody knows what he is talking about. Letas sneak out, as that fellow over there is doing. Hello! Ive will have to hurry along as you are a bit late tonight. I.et's go over to the AKK house and visit the Keen Society. Yes, this is very exclusive, like all the others. Only two fraternities belong to this society. Three li-rmdred four , i. -K 1 , :sf PM asm sn -.3 .5 . -- :sf ,X 1 - -X xl 553 : Q. 1 . ' A sf 'f vs-if-zz' '59 sqm - : Q : aw? Wswbs E. K. OTTEN F. G. OTTEN Meats TTE SL QTTE Supplying i Finest Quality Meats To Hotels, Fraternities, Hospitals, etc We Appofeciate Fmtefrnity Patronage 1430-1432 SOUTH STREET Oregon 7413 Oregon 8976 2 Q . A 1 - T S ' 'fffls 2 W 5 if A :W if ' ' , ' . , : it . f Z I f f f 7 ',1ff 1 H, gj fhree hzmdved fi e Wf QTY S 'sw ox Yes, this house is just as nice as it was last yea1'. Very pretty indeed. No, Dr. Keen does not come around, he is a very venerable and wise old man. That's Dutch Corman. You should see him ride a mule. That dig- nified fellow? That is Roland Smith. No, not Rollo, '4Roland,7' Rollo. Yes, lVIcCormick comes around occa- sionally. Very busily married, he is. VVell, let,s be off, we will see some of these boys again. This is the Knowles Dermatological Society. I could never find out why they don't have more 1nembe1's. Pos- sibly it is easier for a few to stick together. Yes, those six belong to the same fraternity-that's the point. No, Rollo, they called the roll long ago and besides Borbonus does not belong to this society. Believe it or not the speaker was talking about the universal treatment for skin diseases, liquor ccrrbon-is dete1'genAs. That is Dr. Decker. No, he is not tired, he is always that way. Yes, dermatology is a hard subject to understand. I don't believe they do either. I have a special treat for you to- night and I was saving it until last. It is not often that the Kappa Beta Phi's meet, but when they do, Rollo, they do and gracious! how they like it. Yes, we are in time for the busi- ness part of the meeting. I don't know why they have it because you can easily see that everyone is anxious to get it over with. Yes, Johnson will hold them for awhile until the Refresh- ment Committee gets it tapped. Gets what tapped? VVhy, Rollo-that's right, I always forget how young you are. Yes, it is getting more exclusive than it was. VVell, they slipped in before the entrance requirements be- came so rigid. Ivell, this is not going to last long now. I am afraid O'Leary and Knox will not be able to wait. There, the meeting is dismissed. VVe will have to go. Yes, we must. No, not even a glass. You must not forget your tender years. I'll see you Friday. Wlell, here we are at the Phi Chi house, Rollo. W7hat society? Ivell, I will leave you guess. Yes, every- thing is always quiet and orderly at these meetings, because this is a very select group. Yes, but their fratern- ity runs this society. Yes, it is funny, but you have surely noticed the same thing in all the other societies. I do not know, Rollo, it is just an old Jefferson custom. That is Kenney Fry talking to Dr. Patterson. No, he is not always that dignified. At one time Kenney had quite a reputa- tion for being a practical joker. Yes, he has gotten over it by now. Kough oh yes, he also belongs to the X-Ray 3 Club. That society is exclusive, too. Yes, Rollo, all the papers are his- torical, so we can leave. You say you have never been in the Clinical Amphitheatre. Yes, we will have some patients if I am not mis- taken. No, he is not the president and he is not nervous, either. That is an A. O. A. key he is playing with. Surely you know what an A. O. A. means, Rollo. Yes, that is Dr. Strecker. Right again, Rollo, he is a very interesting man. Yes, this so- ciety is pretty exclusive with the ex- ception of one or two groups. That's lXIatt.a, he always carries that note- Th-rec lzuzzdrerl sim s 5 2 5 is 8 is if 3 X .7 14 . A' .Z 'ii' l, 4 gg, Ei if .. S 1 if Y. K. l 3. l Q ff' ,Q . W at 5 . '5 5 S5 2 4 ., ft 4.2 L s 954 X ' QMS -, ' vs ,i 9 ti MXN, 51 . - 1 fmt M123 1 1- s- , E J Xfmflsz, Compliments o CKERMAN St DeVlNE Pharmacists S. E. Corner Eleventh and Spruce Streets Philadelphia E. A. Wright Company rinters - S Engravers - CP tationers FOR COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS Specialists in Fraternity and Scho l S ' o tationery Dance Programs and Dance Favors y Commencement Invitations School Catalogs Class Day Programs Diplomas Class Rings and Pins, Wedding Invitations, Business Stationery Bonds and Stock Cer BROAD AND HUNTINGDON STREETS PHILADELPHIA tijicates c r r Q X is N f Three I1-zuzrlrefl seven ry 4 , r i Nr c r , iv .Qtr 14 Q55 lllr y 1,7 fade 115 ff,ff.,ff:gQ'e , 2 XN book. No, he's from India. No, Glenn isnit sleeping. You see his eyes are open and that's how you can tell. Yes, there is Bathmell now, very serious minded but a good chap with it all. Yes, he is president. I knew you would pick them out, Rollo, they are always together. They remind you of the Rover boys! That,s funny! No, he is not very old, Rollo, he just doesn,t have as much hair as the other two. Yes, he,s married. Neither would I, if I hadn't known it. No, that is not a child, that's Butler. Yes, he lost his lawsuit against the city. VVell, we can go now, when they start the meeting it is the same as all the others. Yes, these meetings go on forever and ever, Rollo. I know that they are not very well attended but the oflicers get a little fun out of them. Besides, look at all the chances they have to get their pictures in the Year Book. lVe will just drop in here for a minute. This is the Ptolemy So- ciety. I do not know what it means either, Rollo. 'This is Sarcophavus No. 1. No, neither do they. You have to belong to something before you come here to school to be able to join this society. Not exactly exclu- sive, but limited. That,s Tornay. Yes, his teeth are always peeled. VVatch out or he will slap you on the back! Yes, a very cosmopolitan group. The next meeting we attend will be made up of wise men. lVell, you know, they have a college degree. You should not be surprised, Rollo, because all the men who have degrees do not X join this society. Yes, it would be too bad if that is all the degree men there are at Jeff. I guess it costs too much to belong. That is Dr. Seelaus. He reads the histories at Dr. Da- Costa's clinics now. Oh no, not any more, Tom sits down now. That is the secretary. I guess he is pretty clever with the pen. No, all the offi- cers of these societies do not have special requisites. They just belong to the right fraternity. VVell, Rollo, we better make this meeting or the trip will not be com- plete. Yes, it is the oldest society on the campus. No, not so exclusive. There are only four fraternities run- ning this group. That's BIcClain. He just began to look that way since he took oy er the job as business 1119.11- ager of the year book. Yes, ewery- thing will come out all right Rollo. That fellow? Thfmtas Horwell. lNo he is not mad, he always talks that is ay. No, he new er gets into trouble that is, until he 0'ot married. Kent? Yes, he can fret up 'if he wants to. He is just resting. VVell he needs fl. lot of rest Rollo. Lanvrelli? Yes, he is as ey en in the war. VY ell quar- termasters corps, if you must know, but he couldn t ex en get to be 'L cor- poral up at Carlisle. Yes, the1'e are quite a few members in this society. I guess they all think they are voinfr to vet a picture from Hobej at the end of the year. I guess we will call it fl day, Rollo. Kes, there are more societies. than these, Rollo, but we won t bother going to them. They are just about the same, because in all of them,nobody S s X45 ' Y T 7 C V , v 7 T 7 K 7 v V , 3 an Y an Zn 5 3 f 'I V ? 0 y , T 9 f 1 . , r C Y i Y an ci b 7 7 7 r l 1 y , l . T . 7 f 5 1' K A K si 3 ivy? e f it Three lmmflv- ' i fix . ed ezghf , ygggf A .Qssm-X . K: ,sa K1 K, X s elk ,ig saggy . -M... -- .q X , ,-1 Bradley Market Co. Call Rittenhouse 7070 Catering to H otcls Clubs Fraternities For the best meats Q 21-06.2108 obtainable Q MARKET ST. - ,. 1 Institutions Boarding houses 25 f T 2 fa 'Ji Cafes and a ,ini Sign of Best Meats For more than half a century. Prices always reasonableg consistent with quality. W i Best Wishes FROM THE MANUFACTURERS OF ESKAY'S NEURO PHOSPHATES ESKAY'S GLYCEROCOD ESKAY'S SUXIPHEN OXOATE AND GXOATE B Smith, Kline 86 French Laboratories Established 1841 Manufacturing Pharmacists PHILADELPHIA I Three 11Vl1l1'6 i nine l I I d 1 S S S XY.a S pays much attention to the speaker anyhow. The president and secretary of each society have to keep attentive and the rest can do what they like. Oh, yes, Rollo, all the members of each society get diplomas at the end of the year Cif there is enough money in the treasuryj and then they take SNS is fc, 2:4-'l'f't'f'U2Ff'f r9' 'O?2O5? :: ' QEMEESE Siracsi 94311605 gdlfgixgm H. N ,. so Ogiczifol-g'5 f J7'O,g 2H5OgaE FD . 9:4-1-IIS 145 O 3 Q mfzhi emasegg '5'5l3S'z:ru 'D H. p i-Q-OQQHE 55'4OE.QO: 09905552 '5guQCr2Ol+ Emommdq H5iES3 FQ.-4-r-I3r'o'4 sfo ing. W ,Mag .sg Qu' have 1 --we 02 5 Inn get + ' fe W Nu 1AI' ::1.,....-.uiall-l'l,:.i5-Eff? l . l !fl n1i:??3 X X I 85 DELivE12iES AND NWWSKEKlNHKMTv 1-,ai 4,4 -KS Sr :Si 2 Q se ? X. 521 x ga 2 2 . 5 . f .a 7 6 W af V- -M: E ,CW Q ,W 'cf QQ Q? 2, 5 A - 1 wk Q we r 5-. Q 2 Three 111171 fired ten MW .L . me he z ,QS .wif X E s TM Nxt- X1 I xx 2 A .. Q X I 1 1-flash XVE1 xl 5' X 556 wig, ANDREW L. LOGAN SL CO. FOUNTAIN PENS LOOSE LEAF BOOKS Stationers and Printers OFFICE and STUDENTS' SUPPLIES JEFFERSON SEAL PAPER PENNANTS l 7 SOUTH TENTH STREET I 4 SOUTH JUNIPER STREET PHILADELPHIA Bell dld Keystone Phones FRANK L LAGAN GEO H MQCONNELL Doctors Are Salesmen Too S1nce more than other men the Doctor lS judged on appearances a modernly equipped attractively ar ranged ofliee IS an mcome producmg asset The experience gamed from outfittmg and arrang mg hundreds of phys1c1ans offices W1th1n the past few years IS yours for the asking Write for our 11st of suggesuons and the names of eiferson Medlcal College men Whose ofhces we have equ1pped 1709 SANSOM STREET Rittenhouse 361 Three lrumlrerl eleven, , Philadelphia Surgical Instrument Company rtt is XXX , - e N 'S BASEBALL SCOR!NG N Beauteous Psyche, near the brook, Stood long and nearly naked, And then took One last lingering look At naturels swelling tela, Reflected in the aqua. VVoe is mef, she softly cried- ccN3.tL11'6 cruelly lied-that night Eros has betrayed me. I'll seek out Pop Ulrich then, He,s too kind to Hay me, For helll just whisper in my ear 'Pseudocyesis, Psyche dear, a whiff of etherlll save thee'. Here lies the body of Nlary Brown, VVhose conscience held no terrors, A virgin born-a virgin died, No runs, no hits, no errors. THE THREE WISE MEN Hager Fry Shallow Z Surgery Clinic gets aa ' x New Announcer wk , 5, fl J With Qloroib Qfmchmfmf - , Y1O.b. ednesday - ,EM Q ,ifemm 'E XM 1 lf A f' f fy! f l 'III D Q A! I Three lzvluzdw-ed twelve ff 3 ' Q2 gf . ,L .. W 4 .. 1. s X alt. I .A Q X if it if KS I - 1 ii - . X. .fi YOUR PROFESSION DEMANDS THE BEST Williams' Standardv fl ENE N ls: -I - WHITE DUCK i pi .V f'INTERN.E SUITSU f have won an enviable reputation for their Q Professional Correctness, Individuality and 5 , r , -If-A 1-'Q Excellent Service. ' ' Made of Best Brands of Standard Mate' 5 0- V rials and Guaranteed Thoroughly Pre- - Q Shrunken so as to remain True to Size Alter Laundering. ' Af ' . STOCK SIZES, or MADE TO MEAS- Q .. Z URE COATS, TROUSERS, OPERATING E ' H ' SUITS and DISSECT ING GOWNS. ' , . ' Send for Catalog D . , V Q-15 3 r . 1 , f Q I M f, K, 3 Samples and Prices T-I ,W ' y I f C. D. WILLIAMS 86 CO. 'L . I 246 South Eleventh Street - ' Philadelphia, Pa. OUR POLICY: To make what YOU want, just as YOU want it G. A. Luongos only 1.. ,L Jefferson Barber Shop 5 .,.. ,, The Leading shop for 50 years Six Master 'Barbers Phone, Walnut 3196 Individual, Sanitary Service A DOCTORS PRESCRIPTION ELL DEE DEE HAIR TONIC Eor the relief of dandruff, falling hair, itching scalp and other irritations. Try an eightfounce bottle of ELL DEE DEE. Price 31.00. Special discount to the students. Apply or write to Mr. G. A. Luongos. The ELL DEE Mfg, Co.-203 South 10th St., Phila., Pa. T71 ree 71 u1z.1Ir'e1I T71 irfeen. 2 l X s Last Friday the Knowles Dermato-philharmonic Carol Society rendered a very beautiful opera, entitled Six, Oh Six. Psoriasis, the son of Ichthiosis, has just returned from war to find his sweetheart, the lovely Derma Titis, deeply infatuated with Chancre, the nasty old villain of the story. Seeing his love untrue to him, Psoriasis wan- ders to the Extensor Planes. Here he sits gazing in the moonlight, and resolves to lay up many silvery scales, so that he may undermine Chancre, work his ruin, and thus win back the love of his fair Derma. He suddenly springs to his feet. The Crisis is al- most Gastric as he bursts forth 'into the sweet Aria-atta Alopecia. The next scene is the market place. Chancre, the Oppressor of the People, is stalking abroad, laying his heavy hand upon all he encounters. Crouched by the fountain is the pathetic figure of an old man. Chancre passes him by and buffets him with the staff of royalty. The old man cries out with pain and fright, and Psoriasis rushes at Chancre. Seeing this, the lovely Derma Titis gets rash, and rushes to separate the quarreling suitors. She stays Chancre's arm just as he 'is about to draw the deadly bubo. Retainingthis striking attitude, the trio sing, The Differential Diag- nosisf' Scene I of the next act shows Psori- talking to the old man, who is not an old man at all, but a good fairy, named Six O Six. He promises to clear the city of Chancre. Scene H again depicts the market place. Chancre is back to his old t r i e k s and disturbing everybody's VVasserman. The old man enters at the Ladies' Entrance and, walking past Chanere, thumbs his nose at that gentleman. This vexes Chancre, who rushes at the old man. But he is too late, for the old janitor throws off' his disguise and injects the now bewildered foman wit.h a big syringeful. Chancre dies amid the plaudits of the populace. 'THEADDIUON or A BAXLD x0oULD QENDEQ sour: FUNCT 1 oN5 DEEFECT 1 T ei A, Q- fi . Tifjll XY M5 ' 5? ' . f T e ' 5134 mu G5 -IPPN A we in a Us G ' ss 9 r V Q Hy Av .A 1? xp 1 Ar S. -JA15 ' 4 - r 3. 1 ev. if I . W' Xa cv 7 IE 1 1 Q ' r N - - ,PIU X, .ir xr Three hlmclred fourteen A455 x is i mx S: X X w Nia ., N- :wr xi x X X: M- Spruce 7387 Brotherston-Floyd Co. During 1930 it was my privilege to make supporters for Doctors in every State and in many distant countries. KATHERINE L, STORM, M.D. Storm l Supporters for all condif ' ons. Thrcc '3fliy'iJcts'i Iivitli many varinf ions. Prics, instruments M, Liberal Filisf Qhficg Qilili? 5:5554 ll UCH1 Clh' . Every bclr to order. Ask for Lrtcrirturc 2214 CHESTNUT STREET Katherine L. Storm, NLD. PHILADELPHIA Originator, Sole Owner and Maker 1701 Diamond Street, Philadelphia DRE!! UP B117 ly . Scientific Instruments from a 5- ive your appearance a break. . .loolz over the new Scientific House Wilhams, Browne 86 Earle Edward fabrics and styles Inc' 918 CHESTNUT STREET l Microscopes Microrowies FOR THE Bacteriological Pathological . QJVIADE FOR -YOU Serological Laboratories Clinical S24-75 ' S28-75 ' 539-75 Haemocytometers Represented by C -LO .ynetefrs MARK ROSENTHAL O T1 Three lmndrezl fffeen f fix fi 'wwf rl yi V 2, , ' ' Viv U iii fun .V , f S FAMOUS Are you friend or enema- The past history dates from birth- -X-Ray- I knocked that for a 90- X I X N X ff . ff' My YZ I'- J, m -I 2 O 70 U an 7. Now, with my drag- 8. Got a 'tvery well done, T. IVICCY' on my case notes- 9. I can't see any reason why I shouldnit make A. O. A.- All quizzes will be unannounced- 10. Dose?-Oh-h-h, about 15 My appointment,s in the bag- Zf Zy XV N Q W - f minums- I ' ffm-X SEM OF THE DENIZENQ os: ,mi PHYQxoLooY LAB, Foo ouT FOQA LSTTLE I 'fum Z . X All! 2, .A-Q f -oX- oo, 252 WW. Y 0 If 5 ef N Lf 3 Z ? 7 v ii. 0 K ffhwq I. , .JJ Q K 1 f if r K L f ef X 7 255 72- x ' If wh fs 122 QW i J '7 5' ,X I 1? ' A I 51 V A! Three ll'llJIdl'6ll s'i.1:teen 5 ps. : we ia-I 5' . .. .X N , , N RN. A . .ii Q XJ' 'J N., . . ..,.,. Crystal Products Are backed by over a quarter century of manufacturing experience and technical skill, insuring users of uniformity of quality and composition. HOSPITAL GREEN SOAP U. S. P. DISINFECTANTS CRESOL COMPOUND U. S. P. LIQUID SOAPS RUSSIAN MINERAL OILS SOAP POWDERS Manufactured and Distributed By CRYSTAL SOAP AND CHEMICAL CO., INC. ssoo STATE ROAD, PI-IILADELPI-IIA, PENNSYLVANIA I , WM. V. WILLIS 86 CO. Surgical Instruments Hospital Supplies 225 S. 11th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Therapogen Antiseptic Powder ....A ..., I ..... .., .., , The successor to Iodoform. I f , .,.,,,,,,,, A very efficient Dry Dressing. 5, Stops bleeding instantly. EERAPOCI? f Y42.P.. .. ff ' Samples and Literature of the -- THERAPOGEN LINE on Request f eff? 1 THEODORE MEYER EST. HMM-IP Manfacturing Chemists. f- 6, 213 SOUTH TENTH STREET, PHILADELPHIA W ' ii? 4 5' I: I I wi . I I A VENTURI J, ffood CDistribut0rs Wa 52 A Complete Food Service A 1430-1432 SOUTH STREET I . We Appreciate Fraternity Patronage I Buy From the Best Equipped and Best Organized . 1 , Food House in Philadelphia J L. 1 Oregon 0112 ' ' Three lI.1II1d1'Cd se venteen J 4 11' 7 X jf 7 X pf. Y :SNR X R Sax A N is X LeHers We WouIdn r Dare +0 Pos+ J. Parsons Schaeffer, M.D., Ph.D. Director, The Daniel Baugh Institute, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Jake: A lousy 75, eh? Barely over the wire and you probably think 75 is part charity at that. Why you old stingy, you couldn't pass that examination yourself. Never mind, old boy, you'll see your mistake some day, just you wait and see. Remember the Royal surgeon who last year incised the Royal thorax and drained the Royal pus from the Royal pleural cavity and dressed the Royal wound? Well that guy was no Vesalius when he was a Freshman and I'll wager you a gall-stone scoop that you will one day boast that you were a teacher of mine. And another thing, why give a fellow hell for saying duODenum when you always say verTEbral and ceREbral.A Borrow a leaf from Rad he looks up all those words in Dorland's Red Book Your humble and obedient servant, Chuck Mayo Thomas McCrae, M.D. Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Tom: The point of special interest in this letter is that mine is no easy problem. Hold on now, I'M serious Here you have a year book and of all the photographs in mine is the only one without the name of a hospital under neath. All on account of you, you old meanie. There I was, willing to vegetate in Philadelphia for two more years and you would have none of me. And look what you got, X-ray Kough, Greek-God Hager, Corporal Steinberg and Sphinx Williams.-All right for you The fates may smile on me yet, quien sabe? I think I'll go to the Hollywood QCalif.J Hospital and boil the urine of such renowned fellows as Charles Chaplin, Wallace Berry and Cecil DeMille. Think of all the good tennis and swimming I'll be getting while all you stay-at homes are trudging through the slush in Philadelphia Very truly yours, Chuck Mayo Wi 9 . . , ' ' if? it 2 Q 'K Q l 5 . f Xwgadz Wgi Thwe hunmrd emhwen ??fQQ'E X MW LQ , r i ' .X,.,. P. f f AVI E 3' CQ ,I 4 , ' P A P E R Q In A N D efbmmnmm BAGS I44-I46 N. FIFTH STREET jP0AZfcz afe4vAz'cz Tel., Lombard 9106 NATIONAL A Dairy Dishes RESTAURANT S. W. CORNER Sth AND PINE STREETS M. DAVIS, Proprietor 'Compliments of FROST TAILORING COMPANY The Campus Tailor I 269 SOUTH 11th STREET PHILADELPHIA Compliments FILBERT SUPPLIES COMPANY, 234 South 10th Street JOHN JAMISON, 3-5 South Water Street K. AGRE at soNsl S. PLATT, Tailor CHARLES MANGOLD COMPANY SAMUEL SOLOT, N. E. Cor. 11th and Walnut Streets E I l Y f 4 X X iff 0 Q4 f x l T11 ree 71'u1zfY1'ed Mnineteen X X ti X X SX5,Q S 3 Edward A. Strecker, M.D. Jefferson Medical College Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Ed: I just ran across a letter I wrote to Jake Schaeffer in which I gave vent to a little spleen and I wanted to ask you if this form of catharsis is conducive to a healthy unconscious mind. Maybe I ought to have pelted him with snowballs instead. You see I'm in a quandary. Maybe my unconscious is diseased and I can't percuss it out. Please let me have a report on this. By the way, I just Umade my letter,n so Carideo and Brill and those birds have nothing on me. Awfully sporting of you and Mike to deal so handsomely with me. If there were a few more departments around here as nice as yours I'd sign up for four more years. Sincerely yours, Chuck Mayo. Mr. J. J. Wilson, Librarian, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa. Dear Joe: The usefulness of the library could be immeasur- ably increased by the simple process of keeping it open Saturday afternoons, Sundays, for, say, four hours, and week-day nights until nine o'clock. I may be a visionary, maybe I weave Utopian schemes. Perhaps this is asking too much all at once. Again, this outburst may be only a defense reaction springing from my failure to read the newer books and nto catch up on the Summer Medical Journals.U But in the Name of the Founder, I call upon you to stop locking the door during the lunch hour! This much we must demand. I know you must eat. That's an easy problem. Make them give you help. There are experienced, honest library workers among our student body who would be delighted, for a slight consideration, to spell you off for an hour in the middle of the day. There are others who could take charge at night and over week-ends, each one working a very few hours per week. A It is amazing that the faculty has not already insisted on this change. If it ever comes about, I intend to be bolder still and suggest a modern and liberal, as well as less suspicious, method of book borrowing. Very truly yours, CHUCK MAYO. Three 711111111-eel twenty . Q,,,. X X ,X . f -'SEFKN .X , AR-X N. i Q 1: NS 3 . . ss. 1 3 rj: : . ai. is s K Y si 'fig :ai-Q RN ' :xl 'il-NN Q- Q ff 35 .. ,. .ac w , V . ss. 5 ,sw N xx Q J FW WB Nearly every one in 1 GORDON Philadelphia uses a A PlLLlNGfMade Goff n ' don Stethoscope. l'?ik.ifliG I Dr. Burgess Gordon Acknowled ment li li P'lHi'de'pm 8 l e4,-' IKXSOFT in T X fi RUBBER . T W 'WM CUSHION We thank you for your ff W patronage which has made J fl 4 f l :' T sz possibie MILK in GLASS -'t- '- my V from MILKING TIME to e an p 4, DRINKING TIME Nonfchill contact piece S of soft rubber. Hair N r noises and other extrzin- Nail SC0tt,P0Well Dairies Inc. eous noises are effectively , ' excluded. Because ofthe X' G1 yielding contact necessary xg pressure may he applied r M I L K to children or emaciated r adults without discomfort. X Fresher by a Daly Price 54.00 GEO. P. PILLING 86 SON CO. Arch and 23rd Streets Philadelphia OUR PRESCRIPTICN Date: Summer and Winter For: Lady Homemaker Address: Hometown, U. S. A. 1 Modern Electric Cleaner 1 Electric Washer 1 Electric Range fto be bought in small doses, Rest Sunshine Laughter N. B. The last three ingredients can be obtained from any Twelvefhour Working Day after the first part of the formula has been compounded. Philadelphia Electric Co. 1100 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Top-yy Say? : .b QA? far ag lhe 4' .- fhcult is' co carried, I pay no i2avor1leQ'- 4 W Sleephorp 'em X 8 J: il' Y .ilk ' gi, 3 1 r 5 XZ 5 W 3 l lv J ll , ml ' 1. 1 I ' .1 . , Three hfmz-dred tiuenty-one f Xkss SmN'S S X1 S SSRN Mr. Clarence Cooper, Superintendent of Building, Jefferson Medical College, Dear Coop: I've wondered for a long time why you don't install paper towel cabinets in the Gentlemen's Retiring Room to supplement the two linen towel feeders now in use. I do not advocate the abolition of the present wiping equipment. I merely propose re-inforcement to take care of Cay the men standing in line and Qbj the men who find themselves wet handed with no towel at all. In point of fact those damned cabinets are nearly always empty. QDid I say Nalwaysn? ness, you provide a roofs and attendant No, nearly always.j Let me see, now. Paper towels promote untidi- think. Shame on you! All you have to do is receptacle with no lid, no levers or swinging a fortieth of a grain of strychnine for the who takes care of such matters. You'll find no cause for complaint on that score. What's that. The added expense. That remark is unworthy of you. Aren't you aware of the fact we are building a million dollar clinic next door? Don't you know we have rich friends who give us what we ask for? All you have to do is see the Dean and put in a request. Here is how you go about it. Write a letter to Aunt Sally stating your case fully and with heat. Three days later send her another letter, with less heat and more pleading. Three days later go to see her in person and ask her with tears in your eyes if you may see the Dean. In three days more be on the lookout. You will, if you've played your cards right, be summoned to the Office of the Dean. Walk in boldly. State your case briefly, but be sure to include the argument that medical students wash their hands before and after practically everything. I'm sure you will be successful and you'll enjoy the adventure. Very truly yours, Chuck Mayo. 3 Q! I CLR3? Q 3? Three lnwzdred twenty-two 4 W Q E ft QV 2 P Z 3 2 4 , I 552K is 1 e Q 5 Zv 5 f FQ 2 X f Q X its 25 QV Q5 fmmw ff ' ?5 oy? if ef -fi N M f ,157 W? Phone: Rittenhouse 1837 KEENE Sr ICU. Qpticicms 133 1713 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA jefferson Pharmacy TENTH AND PINE STREETS PHILADELPHIA Keeping Faith The scientinc principles on which An' tiphlogistine was originally compounded, have always been the common property of the medical profession. The faithfulness with which the original product has, for more than twentyffive years, been maintained, remains the proud stewardship of the original makers. The unbiased reports of thousands of physicians, basing their ,opinion upon their experience with Antiphlogistine in both hospital and private practice, conf clusively proves its dependable value in all inflammatory and congestive condif tions. YRAUE HARK - is the same today as it was twentyfhve years ago. The Denver Chemical Mfg. Co. New York, U. S. A. WAYNE V. POTTS Finest Quality ME A TS and PO U LTRY EOE' READING TERMINAL MARKET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Three hundred t'lU'611ft1j-tlL7'66 f l lf! ff l T Q f Q . T7 Q M 'W' A ' In - - pyulllll ig I , J -if U xi 4 ff f f X 5109 . I llll U, xy Lvl .fum XX wx F i T X f 24 I 6RAXE:1:1j'uon N! I I . - h Th , il V .IW Q4 H f XQV Z 4 T X 2 X il- V 4 if 1 J W T. A 'Rf . X ,, l, , gr. I X 4 :L-f-fi X . lm ll I G g o . y xi f l ll li ll JUST ANOTHER t'VlCIOUS CIRCLE ACNE, O ACNE, WHAT HAST THOU DONE? Physician, tell me, weighted VVe've had our skins X-raydiatcd, VVith pimples, and castigated Teeth and tonsils eradicated, VVith comedones acurninated, Backbone punched with breath abated, Can science relieve my travail? And hit the cascara trail. For eating Charlotte russe berated, Autogwously vaccinated, Eclairs and sinkers execrated, Lavishly Yeastfake felled, T The spice of food emasculated- T0 b21CiHi, C0CCi: immufliatedh Truly ai tel-1-jble tale. Of what doth it avail? L'ENVOI Are tea and coffee so toxic freighted? VVith many specifics strewn, Have the joys of life capitulated Wlhere pustule and black-head ripen To the dermatologists' Hail? And, despite Resorcin-bloom. Are pustules thus procreated? The battle-field of Acne f ' 4 Three 71 umlrcal t :newly-folzm' l l igfrffff x . f K K J Pennypacker 2147 BEN J. BERGER French Dry Cleaning S courin g-A lterin g and Pressing Special Rates for Students '25 277 South Eleventh Street PHILADELPHIA Tw Bell Phone: Oregon 1420 Keystone: Race 2627 Rowe 86 jonathan Caterers to Jefferson Fraternities for Nearly a Quarter of a Century 'C 'UA IL E031 Southwest Corner elfth St. and Wfashington Ave. PHILADELPHIA A. Gustaf Gefvert's Sons Manufacturers of Orthopaedic Apparatus Trusses, Crutches, Elastic Hosiery, Supporters, Etc. Nfecllzmicians to JEFFERSON HOSPITAL SINCE 1883 Also to Meclico'Cl1i'ru1gical, Polyclinic, Methodist and other Philadelphia Hospitals GENE' 250 North 15th Street Philadelphia K'Meet the Boys at Leon Fitterman's CIGAR and CANDY DEPOT Soda -:- Lunch Everything in the Line of Cigars, Cigarettes and Smokers' Supplies STATIONERY just a Little Different 2012 SOUTH TENTH ST. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Three hun drerl tluemfy-five R s TALK about students! Now take Alf for instance. Here's a bookworm for you. Yes sir, Alfalfa J. Peech. Seven nights out of the Week he labors under the lamp and th-e' sign is on him. He can tell you what Moon said to Rosenau, what Opie said and how it all turned out. He can tell you the embryology of the nutrient artery to the third cuneiform bone. He knows McCrae's textbook by heart except for the preface and will gladly prepare a paper for you to be read at any society meeting on this man's campus. Alf will do big things some day and I hope he capitalizes his talents by becoming a fool-proof proofreadier for Saun- ders. So-long, Alf, and you can drain the Pierian spring dry for all I care. PHILANDER GUTTENVVASH came to the Jeffer- son from the wild and wooly City of New York. The reason he didn't stay there and go to work was simply the Baumes Law. There being no law at all in this glorious Commonwealth he felt quite comfortable-- Ucorrupt and contented. He has a contract with Dr. Xvinston to broadcast cancer-cures free with varicose vein injections-and can good old Phil broadcast! He is no phono- graph record. I look for him to mulct the good people of Wiest Philadelphia out of about 20 grand a year as long as he lives. Good luck, Phil, and try to stick to broadcasting into a microphone and not into a four poster. B . it -f-Ii -V2.4 , N , X7 I gsxsx X E -I 'T' C 'U V2 Us m 'rl O T 'T' 7 -I I rn m Q -I O T O rn Z an O Z rn G '-I I rrl Z 'N FQ If el m 'Sk Q. H. R' 'TF cm E E 'Z Q 5 Q 'ff Q 2 E1 PT' ce x. Monnnclxr SLUDGE came to the Jefferson, four years ago by accident. He was on his way to the city pound to be apprenticed to the Chief Resident of the Hot Dog Department and just drifted into 1001 VValnut to use the late lamented roller towel this nose at the time being all unwipedj. He liked us so well he decided to stay. How he managed to pass all the examinations is still a mystery, for Mordecai always has a charley-horse between the ears. His graduation comes as a distinct surprise to his many friends. God help the unsuspecting public. Good luck, Mordey! J. ST. CLAIRE MUGCHUMF was born with a caul and it whispered he had a horseshoe in each hand. Let's skip his boyhood and ado- lescenceg same old rot anyway. He took his pre-medical course' at the lnternational Corre- spondence Schools and was the first to graduate by air-mail. Here at the Jefferson he has never -been quizzed, never caught absent from classes and never fell below S0 in any examination. He doesntt know a damn thing but always at the last minute studies the right questions. Take anatomy for instance, he once knew all about the circulatory tree because the colored picture in the book reminded him of a bad dream he once had in a Pullman. All the anatomy he remembers now is that the number of existing sexes is more than one. Good luck, Sinckle, old boy and come to see us often. ,.J . v x 1 -11: i f 'af F I l' 1 f f I W XM 7 Xi-f ' A NQ, ,eq . 1. T- IN SPITE f MUCH TO 72 CONTEAEY 7 POSTUQA1. TQEATMENT OF ' DIAEQHEA IS STILL FOUND 4' EFFICACIOUS 0 Three lzufzidred tflventy-sian w ff al , 5 1 Z?- 5:22 Q ff 3, Wsi asa Y! if 5 7 if ! E, is 2 i 'Zi wi- i '-fx: Q: 'fr We Ii 1.1. N5 f W 7 iff? , ,I if 6,1 - 5, M: 2 ' .f X SDE 'I me ES K, ix :i A .X -E Nc N AXA E T. N4 'X -ASYNZXQS X X3 A-AQ 53 P cg ,A , , 4: I ,,. Bell Phone: Pennypacker 1036 C W 1ll1am Cakes PZ or ays Plumbing and and Academic Caps and Gowns t on a Rental Basis Heatmg Contractor 260 SOUTH TENTH STREET Costumers to the Nation PHILADELPHIA 123 SOUTH 11TH STREET Reglsmfd PHILADELPHIA, PA. For C ll BETTER BUILT mp mm of INTERNE UNIEQRMS Made by Paper Products Mfg. The Bostwick-Batterson Co. any 311 N. 32nd Street A See Swarthmore Pa MARK ROSENTHAL, Repr. TRAD ARN v X , , 9 . l 7 Three lzufuclred twevzty-seven mf X , Y is ss if s ss s X, NN ODE T0 THE SPONGE Little bit of Huffy gauze Thrown about by Surgeon,s paws, To thy praise these words I pen Calling on the muse again. Rendered sterile by steam heat, Packed in bundles square and neat, Counted thrice with greatest care By the Pinkies young and fair. As the Surgeon makes his cut Just before he soils the gut, From the husky throat comes forth the cry,- uSponge, my lad, and keep it dry. VVhen you lie upon the floor, Covered o'er with pus and gore, Bletallic klink keeps rhythmic time As your brothers fall in line. Then at last your work is done. Now the 4'Pinkies have their fun, Counting each with oyous pride, Oh my God! there's one inside. Open up the gut my men, Find the lost sheep once again. Lay him gently on the floor- Check and double check once moref' Now youlre gathered for the fire, Placed upon the funeral pyreg lVIetal tags alone they save, For the sponge, a burning grave. Service great and service small, You have meekly done them all, Mopped the pus from Phthisic chest, Put the Interne's nose at rest. Take thy place beneath the sung Bask in glory nobly won. For the brass to thee attached Is a medal never matched. Potentates large and small, hierely dust upon the wallg Wlhen into the Styx we plunge, Everyone gives up the sponge. -T. R. cmd R. E. il' 7' JQQ? . Y .l, '- . X1 -Q ,- X gl ! 'I XD' ' ff- ,L '-igl Doctor: You have acute incligestion. 1 I I She: Flatterer, Ill bet you say that to all the girls. V v Three hwzmdred twenty-eight N ., sf . Asswf E S. ,s,..:.sg. 1 x S 'L ' -2 SIE P -K X X Y r - K-ZS XX X IJ' my, . THE PLACE F For Surgical Instruments As Used ji by Surgeons of the Jefferson Medical College Hospital -A For Stille Rustless Steel Instruments f For Your Office Equipment For Real Quality and Service The Physicians Supply Co of Philadelphia 116 SOUTH 16th STREET Bell Phones Kingsley 9750 Kingsley 9751 The Old Reliable Keesals's Cigar Store 262 SOUTH TENTH STREET We Carry a Full Line of Cigars, Cigarettes, Fine Candies, School Supplies, Magazines Light Lunch Sandwiches, Pies, Cakes, Fresh Daily, Soda and Ice Cream at Our Fountain PHILADELPHIA 15 ,he Best fyxfxfyw C WLM? , CVS . KQ X NX f if fl QMSJJ X V C A ,N l ll I 'mi A l X ilk 'E' l i ff 'll w Q, if o 'fu X- A 01, if QW-X ll 5 ii l N34 ,-4 M7 WH L lx QE ll gp lun --Blow Some My Way- Three lzunzlrefl 1106-:ity-nine 'ff if, WX fo i 1 Qff 1 'W 2? I i f arf? Q 4 7 X X ' W,-1 '5n'fP 'a6,g, . dv., 0 Ag fm w 4 4 -5-'e' .,xHffff,,,p,:w,, ,- 2 M 12 - ' as 99 ,- 7mm,'5m,,T kX ,, Z?-5? '-I , 'f'-mf .xG'.fjS-f V22 f' I N-pf ' S M 'X A 4' 55923:-:v ,-:SIT-1' 'f51::1., 1 K NH I Y! ' A P U X , .. N . ' 9' f ' it fe K X -1 A 'X 5 li FRESHMAN DAZE f E 1 l i E X ' C X ., 9 4 ff- x ' 5 M mmm' ' if a 5' ' V S .1 01 Q L A f x xi X, H . 39' wg nn' f ww 3-7 Z ' 4' r II.: v' ad: fi f sf' - : : :::::L'.'f 1 V 29: S gl oBF XMI ff Y .-2 Z Q I Z 2 3 Q ' Z- 4 6- ff! 1 VXA b::. I fzzi-V X 5 4 N , Q K X , X K , 4 Q ff 1 if Za f , ff Q ! Y 1 f SX 5 S Ns A. R .Qs X ,is B s iff 'ff X2 WX fs Compliments Of Dearborn Chemical Co. 478 THE BOURSE PHILADELPHIA, PA. Grand Hand Laundry 1009 SPRUCE STREET PHILADELPHIA I. VJAKSHUL, Proprietor Suits and Topcoats Made to Your Individual Measure 840.00 and 845.00 S. KEAN 86 CO. 1126 WALNUT STREET Bell, Walnut 7507 THE ORIGINAL Jefferson Barber Shop Pair, Demario and A. Vasili Practical Haircittting Five Barbers Massaging Manicurist 129 SOUTH TENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA U Aetna Butter Company 204 Callowhill Street Philadelphia Butter, Eggs and Clieese Fraternity Caterers MARkeI: 4914 WILLIAM C. MARTIN 908 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Nlanafacturer of Class Rings and Fraternity Pins MAKER or RINGS Fon THE CLASS OF 1931 E. Rutherford 86 Co. 1110 SHACKAMAXON ST. PHILADELPHIA Pennypacker 1884 COZZI 86 BELLANO Tailors MICHAEL Cozzi 264 SOUTH 11th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Three liunzlrefl thirty-one ' 0 5 I if If 5 Z gf Z f Z I? The Best in Laundry Supplies X f fy 4 0 W f f f ' Y ss f 'T 399 FS Q ii' x NS BOY, PAGE RIPLEY! Some people have to travel to the ends of the earth, risk their lives, peep in key holes and bribe chamber-maids just to dig up a few incredible but indisputable facts. But not we, the bloodhounds of the campus! Try these on voui cerebral censor and be assured, gentle reader, they are true. Four years of varsity football are tucked away in the past history of T. lMfcCrae. A man who was operated upon by Dr. George hfIcClellan, Founder of the Jefferson lVIedical College, underwent a second operation, the surgeon this time being Dr. J. Torrance Hugh. A United States patent on a hemoglobinometer or a mousetrap or something is held by Dr. Freddy Kalteyer. QIt's a safety-razor sharpeneixj Luncheon is omitted from the daily diet of those 225 pounds of brain and musclev known as Dean Ross V. Patterson. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania once issued an embalmeras license to J. Parsons Schaeffer. If you look closely you will always see a fireman7s badge on the vest of Jack Da Costa. Painting in oils is a hobby of the ingenious Chevalier Jackson. CC About five thousand Jefferson graduates were taught by Hobey Hare and Daddy Thornton. Practically all of them are known by name to Rosie Rosenberger. VVell known to King George V and other famed philatelists is the stamp collection of Rad Radasch. The VVorld VVar was not responsible for the cauliflower ears of Tom Stellwagen. The correct spelling of the name Condon and of Condon's useful invention are unknown to Dr. Vaux. fSee Edgar's 'cObstetrics,,' 6th edition, page 10.j In a lecture room the professor removed his coat and vest, then his shirt and tie, and then his TROUSERS and flung them all on the table. Quite comfortable now, Daddy Thornton began his talk fully attired in golf clothes. The Class Prophecy in the Jefferson Year Book of 1912 predicted that the position of Medical Director of the Jefferson Hospital would some day be held by Hank lVIohler. Stephano Brothers named one of their brands of cigarettes Sniiles,' in honor of Daddy Thornton. akffr ffksk Three lzimfdrecl tIzfL1'ty-two , gh if l ri l I W YA ' as , f l J f f , so swam :ss N ' ..,. 'Qing 1, 2. . 257- zwe , X w,55 tx A XX ke 'Q' by fs? DEAN ,S American Barber Shop Stuclents' Barber for 20 Tears 912 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA CENTRAL LAUNDRY FirstfClass Work Ouarariteecl 301 SOUTH 11th STREET Rose BROMBERG, Prop. Criterion Printing Co. The Fraternity Printers Announce Their Removal to 257 SOUTH TENTH ST. Where They Will Have a Full Line of Students' Supplies Name Cards a Specialty PHIL'S FRUIT MARKET Vegetables f Groceries 232 SOUTH TENTH STREET Pennypacker 1591 Institutions and Restaurants a Specialty Bell, Lombard 4841 ROSENFELD 86 FELD Wholesale Dealers in Fancy California Fruit aricl Produce 115 DOCK STREET PHILADELPHIA COLONIAL ICE COMPANY Wholesale and Retail Dealers iri Ice 4809 WARRINGTON AVENUE Phone, BARing 7036 A. I. CARR J. B. MEARNS Heating, Plumbing arid Roofing Roofs Repaired and Painted 245 SOUTH TENTH STREET ' PHILADELPHIA Bell, Walnut 0507 HOMESTEAD SQUAB COMPANY All Kinds of Freslrfliillecl Poultry 738-748 Reading Terminal Market PHILADELPHIA Three hzmclred thirty-tliree f X X f 0 Y X , X I X fl f r C W, 7 Q' 2 QWWW Magee W s X X if' QSNS iss x X S' x X Q SN S S X X s sms Foretaste of the Joys of General Practice i in the Provinces i 9- 17- 30 Dr. Prunty: Little Hocking, O. Dear Sir: Q As i have been informed as to yov or your Son being Very good in Confine-ment Cases i thought i would Write you to see if i Could get yov or Son to take my Case of which i am looking for any time if my Counting is Correctly beginning with Dec. 25th last i guess my people have Dr'd with yov. When i were smaller. My residence is on Walper farm at twin Bridges Thanking you, I remain for Reply Mrs . Bert Lones . R.F.D. 1 Little Hocking, O. KaHwHh After Robert PV. Cervix ' He hailed him a student from the rear, Anemic, and Oh! so fairg He bade him sit in a front row seat And he quizzed him sitting there. He questioned him not on the subjects assigned, But on the most trivial thingsg 'With malignant sarcasm accompanied by Trick flourishes of his wings. The motions and mimics that he went thru, VVere food for thought for us, Oh, with six other hands what could he do, That contortionate Octopus! '4VVill the same young gentleman tell to me The path of the pain re,HeX? A sudden horror befell the youth, He trembled and dropped his text. Ah I said he, I see that you Have not been attending classes. Perhaps it's women? VVell, if that's so, Lay off the chorus lassiesf, The student gasped and died of fright, VVhat a foolish way to right us! Autopsy proved beyond a doubt That he had died of Kaltiritis. Three himiclred tlL'i1'ty-four 'w p s Kar 1 ZX W 03 X fy -xx 5 fy Q .1 s K American Vacuum Company XfRay Supplies Bell Phone, Pen. 0552 FREDERICK SCHMID Practical Watch Repairer High Grade Watclies and Clocks Repaired and Adjusted. Special and Order Work and Broken Parts Equip-ment Duplicated. Repairing of Jewelry 1011 Chestnut- Street 265 SOUTH ELEVENTH ST. P1 '1a'1e1P11'a PHILADELPHIA CHARLES WOI.FE Compliments Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Of Personal Attention to Orders for Hospitals, Hotels, Restaurants, Etc. Dock and Chancellor Streets THE CLINTON sos SOUTH 1oTH STREET flA1pa7'f'I'YlC7'll: Hotelj Lombard 0215 Main 5904 J. SEGAL, Mer. Bell, Pennypacker 8269 H R Reasonable Prices Good Work - ' ' H. JOSEL Batter, Eggs, Cheese, Poultry 128 N. Delaware Avenue Philadelphia Tailor aiicl Glothier Suits Made to Order-Cleaning, Repairing, Dyeing, Scouring of Ladies' and Gents' Clothing 236 SOUTH TENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA Fancy 'Work of All Kinds a Specialty Give Me a Trial Established 1906 Q LIACOURA BROS. .Quality Meats arid, Provisions Institutions and Restaurants Supplied Everything for the Table Southeast Corner TENTH AND LOCUST STS. PHILADELPHIA Compliments Of SAMUEL SNELL 524 SOUTH 2nd STREET PHILADELPHIA 5 Three hundred thirty-fifue X THINGS WE CAN NEVER FORGET 1. Miss Snoddy's call at 41 A. NI. 6 2. The third year final in surgery. 3. Kalteyefs quizzing only two men 7 per hour. 8 LL. PGPPGIJS derby. 9 5. Van L0on,s socks and Tornay's stick-pin. 10 N . W7hen we received our freshmen grades. P . Hager's UI. . Ravit,s Harvard accent. . VVhen Dr. Schaeffer announced the mid-year marks. . The causes of splenomegly. ' ' W E ' P x W 'I x X J ' .' , 'X'6 , a 3' ' , A... Q E A , V Z X ylas -' 5 ' x xg t J ff ' W4 - x ', ,f Z lv, Aww' - if E' f 4 xi 3' X lf!! ' is ' L f fa 22 .'1 f Q ' 1 Q N 7 .n X F ' - X5 Coroner-S nquq-3511 Q F, - N015 : f ' me Blvd' S Are Skill f ARM! Three lmmdrezl thirty-sim 3 2' 1 fed sfffifi Q R X2 . SH so R ' X Nw GZ we Nr Beyer 86 Company, Inc. Beachdale Brand Poultry, Buttter, Eggs and Cheese 233-235 CALLOWHILL STREET PHILADELPHIA LOUIS J. MEYER, Inc. jewelers, Silversrniths and Electro Platers Prize Cups, Class Pins, Trophies, Rings, Silver, jewelry and Watch Repairing and Engraving 804 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, Walnut 2223 Main 1892 DANIEL KEE 86 CO. Book Binding f:f Einishing Gold Stamping 923 LOCUST STREET PHILADELPHIA VICTOR V. CLAD CO, Manufacturers of Kitchen Equipment for Colleges and Institutions 119 and 121 South Eleventh Street PHILADELPHIA In the Service of Cleanliness CLEANING SUPPLIES SANITARY EQUIPMENT F. W. Hoffman 86 Co., Inc. 35-37 S. FOURTH STREET PHILADELPHIA Clinton Hand Laundry 1038 PINE STREET x'Scl1ool Worriments are sufficient. Leave the laundry troubles to us. Special Rates to Students Pennypaeker 5169 SN YDER 86 SONS Clothiers and Furnishers of Distinction SINCE 1898 SOUTH ELEVENTH STREET Between Sansom and Walnut Philadelphia xx V r Phono graphs Radiolas and Records TENTH AND WALNUT STREETS PHILADELPHIA Three hundred thirty-seven a O E 75' O P4 U1 'FU U3 Z l l I I G Q I EE I Us Y VIC E5 A'sf S55 s'f's X fwfll srfieg, f' we in elf-szf .Q x N ks-X-fgi OX PUZZLE PAGE NX One and one-half guesses to identify the following: 1. And Rosenau said to me -.,' 2. And Osler said to me that's so and so -. 3. Gentlemen, tobacco-chewing is a filthy habi. 11. 4'It is not a disease, - per sef, 5. 6cW31'1iC0SG weins of the wulwa -F, 6. VVe will have a quizz in no minutes -F' 7. Oh-h-h, my boy - it's a terrible thing 77 tin 8. God bless my soul, not by a jugful -. 9. Gentlemen, the U. S. P. is a BOOK -F' 10. Followed by nausea, vomiting, stupor, coma and death. 11. Gentlemen, 1 presume this is the Senior Class of the Jefferson lVIedical College -. 12. If I don't know it, how do you expect to know it P 13. If 1 were to ask of you whether the numerals on City Hall clock were -. 1 N N V 'f P39661 Sqouligoaxs Z 5 gn! 1 is Q.. K X f 92 Nl l XX, I I J J ' iff 'QJLQJ- FT frxxf Ty' H... o r ll 2. 25. E. 5 j lg ' 177,34 ts V air ' ' Vatchful Vaiting Three hundred thirty-eight 97 fx S W4 If 99 M4 X -15 ' ,lag f , as ff 411 I 414- W N 3? Q4LA13'oL1T1-uc mm NW EVINCES SOME INTQQEQT WA I 5 LN OESOD1-1AGO5C0py ,.? N QW 2 JU A Wfff-4.41 YYVFWNWN wig K9 I . K 1 PX' Xbkx ,' .AM ii ' ' I .f 9255112533-, ffl' ,Wea ....d.f.a.:qg Graf g I awe-x Q3 xg X XX X f 2' S-su V X , Nga V J y 1 , 4 q , . 1'-NNN, 1 W lfiigi- 5121111227 , e f9'f:fa21i22f2'v:f,' L 5 xi - -. 2. fy NN X V.. 4, ,mf ' ' , . 5 , 1 r 1' D -1 -, .V , If 'If H., - , 1 5 N Y f X xg : ,. 1 5 - Nb-. v x N P '-'-. 1 P' ,Q Mira- I ' y f.. - MI, w if fy A..-If !. QA' It , X ' I fir A . I'-A 5' . W ' - ,gm A up' fr 1 ? 1' ' . 'N c W f V NN r aa , is ofa, , if . lf' +N . . I -f . iff N ' 1 v g P fig Three lmlzclr ed thirty-nNi1ze ff 4 , R Q, Ns Rx fs X x xNQ. 5, , C 7 FOAM FROM OTHER MUGS THE GOLFER'S TESTAMENT fSee1z in the J. A. HI. AJ This copy of the Hippocratic Oath started with the old boy himself, was modihed by Asclepiades, circumsized by Galen, prostatectomized by Para- celsus, and emasculated by Bassler. I swear by Tom lVIorris, the father of golf, by VValter Hagen, by Bobby Jones, and all the Gods and Godesses that according to my ability and judgment I will keep this oath and stipulation, to reckon him who taught me this game as equivalent to how I feel about my best girl friend, to keep my golf datesg to relieve my opponent of all the cash I can, to look upon this organization members on the same footing as my own brother, not to teach them how to make tine shots, and that by silence, watching and everything I can, not impart my knowledge of the game or how to play a hole even to those who want to learn this regime according to my ability I intend to keep the best I can for iny self. I will give no deadly boot-leg liquor to any brother physician, and with canniness and cunning I will play all the golf I can, win all the matches I can, and remove all the stones from behind my ball in the traps. On what- ever golf courses I play I will replace the divots and not seaich foi luiking females in the bushes, bound 01 free VVl121llGVC1 in connection wlth mv golf crames especially aftei the lound IS finished I will talk big about mi shots and blow haid about my low scoiing and winnings IVh1le I con tmue to keep this oath mwiolate may it be gianted to enjoy life and H11 pioie nn golf so that my game be iespected by mv opponents And bv the God of the Sand VVedge should I fall down on this oath, I piomise to play only with woln out golf balls, only on 121111K days, and that ten St1OlxCS be added to my handicap each Xeai, and finally, that I become a dub 'main undel the God of dub and the Godesses of hook and slice and be come Just dub dub dub A NEW SKIN GAME Borrowed from Capt. Billy? Simokehouese ilfon-Hzly A brand new circus story is goin the rounds in El Paso. It seems that the recent VVall Street crash left a young bond salesman so on his uppers that he was willing to accept anything that would bring in some hall bedroom rent and a few hot dogs. Hearing that -a trained animal show was playing Hoboken, he hied him hitherward and applied to the head trainer for a job, thinking he could Une yocal lessons to the educated seals Aftei some C011's1dC1'l.t10I'1, the show man oftei ed him the hide of a baboon, ieeentlv deceased and told him he was hued if he could dehwei the p1OpC1 simian antics lhe Vounv' man played his palt so well that his employel was delighted, but in his enthusiasm he did 1 tail sw ing which catapulted h11n into the cfwe of a black maned Atucan lion f :1 2 cm cu N 5 S , C1 T . . X . 1- 3 Qi 9 1 . r 5 1 1' . J - ' a - l O' V gl rx it W . . U , ' A p 1 . . , -. . N, U w l V I , , 4 , S 1 ,K , . ' -1 -1 , I A Y - . N N. - es - .. A - - . -. te A - ' . Y N, N 1 . 1 , , , 1 A , ' - . . 4 , -1 1 . ' . , Q - 1 A . I X , N X 4 I . , - , 4 s , . ' I V J n 1 , A . . A K I Q ' 1 I ' A ' 1 , - A . . A ' . ' a '- r ' - I' ' 4 s X. . N nl ' . N -. . ' ' I 1 I , ' J . w Q ' . . ' . . . 4 i , . ' . e . f . . U 1 4 1 I ' .1 ' r 4 . . , ' ' 1 Q ' . . - F . I I n a 1 . NNI QXZVJQQ far f' fs 12133 '1' We-P 'V LVLWQVQX 4: f S as s 1 Es is as as :X fs, .Q,, The lion snarled belligerently and snapped at his leg. The psuedo monk slipped in his frightened retreat, and before he could crawl away the lion, with drooling was at his throat.. Help,', howled the terrified victim. '4Shut up, you blamed sapf' hissed the lion, through his red Hannel esopha- gus, You,re not the only bond peddler out of a job I WILD BILL'S BENDER TVild Bill Peters, out Blue Hill way, went on a bender last New Year's Day. There's no doubt about it, from what folks tell Tvild Bill Peters raised merry old hell. VVhen heid licked all the neighbors and put 'ein all to rout, they tele- phoned the doctor 'qvould he please come out fm So the doctor jingled over in his gas machine and loaded up his hypo with aponiorphine. VV'ild Bill he watched him and he said, said he, VVhat yer figger fer to do with that little squeegeeim '41 f'igger,', said the doctor with a funny little grin, to stick this needle into VVild Bill's skinf' A fellow he bet nie, it was old Squire Grarin, you're afraid to let a doctor stick a needle in your arm. I bet you wasn't but the Squire said, 'Bill was the biggest damn coward anywhere's 'round the Hill? Then VVi1d Bill bellowed and he pulled off his shirt. VVho says Pm afeared of yer damn little squirt?,' He held out his arm and he said, 'gVVho's afeared? Jest sock her' in, Doc, an, see if Pm skeeredf' So the doctor hopped to it, he is nimble on the shot, and he said, 'i'I'll tell 'ein Yvild Bill is notf' And Bill said, I-Ielll It didn't hurt none. iz. Q S ' regex: . X, .XX- xs: s gss ss sv ss we .. Q .5 gs ...t he l Q? Sf? That's a good one on the Squire, the old son-of-a-gun. Then the doctor said, Maybe we have bragged too quick. You look to me, Bill, like you,re scared plumb sick. The Hell I roared Peters .... Then he started in to cry, Oh, my God, doctor, Pm a goin, fer to die. But the doctor only grinned as he handed him a pan, and Bill did the rest like a very sick man. And that was the finish, so the neighbors all say, of Wlild Bill's bender last New Year's Day. NEVER GIVE UP lVhen you cannot get the cork from out the bottle, And your throat is burning for a shot of gin, Just recall that guy llloliammed and the mountain- II' it won't come out then, brother, push it in. ff X I 7:-7 Y, Hi H. -How I Conceivecl the Big Idea of the Razor Sharpener Three humlred forty!-one 'K JI, W . f f f I If ag. Xf f Q W x Q OUR OWN SIMILE CONTEST ' Inspired by the words of a Jeiicerson professor who once said, Our school is not one of tiled laboratories and long corridors, but one of personali- tiesj, we offer here a short review of some of the more familiar of these. By way of presentation we might just say-pro or con: 1. As brilliant as Strecker. 2. As commanding as Schaeffer. 3. As unapproachable as Patter- son. 41. As nonchalant as Jones. 5. As clownish as Rosenberger. 6. As eloquent as Da Costa. 7. As dignified as lWcCrae. 8. As ambidextrous as Tuttle. 9. As sincere as Stellwagen. 10. As droll as Kinney. 11. As analagogcnic as Hare fpar- don coiningj. 12. As kindly as Bland. 00 FDBM , ' ' UNH' 'O .xf l,I5 5 'Su , 5 . .. . 0 ' - 02 '. . If . 'Z aah 100 00 .oo ' fill l . .6 no 6 go 0 O 00 Q Sn 0.0 419' X THE GREAT ovuM HANDICAP PNCK Youll ov-IN WINNER TWO HUNDREDAND Surry MILLIGN TO ONE SHOT' 13. As gentlemanly as Anspach. 14s. As industrious as Radasch. 15. As retiring as Thomas. 16. As precisely loqugicioug as Moon. 17. As afifable as Vaux. 18. As gesticulating as Kalteyer. 19. As idealistic as Beardsley. 20. As fatherly as Thornton. 21. As instructive as Rehfuss. 22. As genial as Ulrich. 23. As democratic as Shallow. 241. As skillful as Klopp. How About Dad? Senio1': Justice is a woman. Freshman: 'cVVhy? Senior: Because she Iniscarries so often. Three hunclre ' ' Q S I X ' f xx MR 'E X16 ,Z ZW Qc lf the men would like me to-a-go-over a few of the problems- Should come under the head- ing Famous Last Words. d fo:-fy-two W 'U ff ff if i Q B ,At X S X X .X .X X. Af rss xx FA The Art of the Masters in Uur Portraits Supreme bv MER NQBALIBAN I Photographic Studios SPECIAL DISCOUNT GIVEN TO ALL STUDENTS 1010 Chestnut Street All photographs in this book by MerinfBalihan Studios 7 S :I I X f I 45,1 :W 7, .Zu V. ,, ,, f ff f I Three hundred foo-ty-three V Y VK l i L X ffl- 3' '2 ? -59' A 'r7Ee 3'UF7LJ 1 PHoTo- GRAVING yi S COMPANY f ' 12 11 ca CHERRY STS. PHILADELPHIA l w '-'vrf-:f . 'I' mf Fi ff X' 'JN Q 1 J 2 ,L5 g5fr,w 7 Q f, , gigs? -. H2 - '-kx x X, rx ., W X W vw U W A fy , !,L, s . f X, XL.-if 4 f X ,g.,:,, X. -H.. 5 M Lcgijfi-j LJJQY if- ,,,, A, F32 I 5 l I X 1 Nxt .iq , in Z - A wful' I, H Q , In -1 6531- I Xu I in N x 'Vp ' 1 X 'tflifx , f. 1 , fvfr V W Ex XX, ' X K :QQ 3 J X . A :il ufiif'-ff ' 2:1 E Kzilti lljv W M I Q , If lu M Xe L ' - . :ik p -I gl, fr, ,X . ,. 1 .N ,. ima. .x. -H.- Q i Am.,-Nz 'A 6, T6AS:.3lZ6'17.S' lmzstra fozzsm f 6 hoto ffE1zkgravensf gg f7a4A ICERS OF THE ENGI?J4VIlVGS JN THIS PUBLICA TION5 LR X' Nm Three lumdred forty-four ff ' X225 f?if f ,V XA Careful Planning Modern Typography High Grade Paper Quality Printing and Binding Painstalcing Care V ,ss 5 Lus THE KNOW How , which comes only from experience, and s'l'udy , of every phase of lhis 'lype of publicaiion K work ak as as ar ar t 'l' ' ' is whal' gives +0 a year book 'rhal' some- V fhing, which makes il' cliFFeren'l' and makes ii' F a cherished possession. , Year afier year, 'For fifleen years we have F been making annuals for parficular schools and 5 colleges 'l' ' 'l' 'l' 'l' , ' ' ' and ihe service we oFFer every slaFF is t lhe same l'ha'l' has enabled us lo 'lurn oul' so , many ouisianding books. K Your year book lasls a life lime,-and il' is , prinied only once. So fake no chances. Place , il' in lhe hands of specialisls. CLARK PRINTING House, INC. Prinlers For The School and College 82I Cherry S+. - Phila. - Pa. Good Prinling Wiihoul Exiravagance YYVVVVVVYVYVYYVYVVVYVVVVVYVVVV Three Izrmdrerl forty-five f f f X X ff , f f 4 y , f J 7 1 , f lv X, f if Zi' W J 5, l IT ll , U ,.,,.,,:.,:::::5:5:555E5EfE5E5E5f5f5i55555555if5f5ii5i5555555ifz5if1iimiififiiififfii ..-,.,. .. Drink J i ? s 5:s:5:2:5:5:2:a , . 5555555555253 Delicious and Refreshlng 13251212524 nd dull care 1 ithers on the vine l 4: -1- f Q J- 45:5 15:-:3:7:3:5'2:fgIg 35 12513 1' F F nj Fr '12r2gggsgs:i-1fi552,5ii255555255255555gsga:z:z:s:f55i5f5?f5f52EiEff? 555525 :sr if X A .2f S'I'lf'i5E3E5EfE5E5f' 551555552 535555 V A -f--min K L -- - J'.7N2. ' ,.,- - X f--rlli, 1 'A 'fri' llZ7'.,f-'- .Qi 1 'iftl - . 1 K . 1 A ,.x V D r+ QSM F-1--4'---L--, - 1: iq: JJ1',,.-J.m..l-I-.l-,, .. -yvv - l A f-I..-1-, ,. .- '-4. ,' -T' , 7 A .- ,I-. 1.-J- - q',..:fn,k-3 JS-.'1,A, .ig A IQ? 4 T-. . . xlw 7 ,.,4 v1TQ iff T' .' .r - X L..I .JJ..f J - . --wx me -I, ,,.m.u.. .. MILLION aday Don't be always taking your work or love affairs too seriously. It will only end by proving you know less and less of more and more. The neatest trick you can pull is to slip into the nearest soda fountain or refresh- ment stand-around the corner from anywhere-and invite your soul to the pause that refreshes. There and then, seen through a rose-colored glass of deli- cious, ice-cold Coca-Cola, all things fall into true perspective and you become a man amongst men once more. The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ga. AD T0 BE GO0D T0 GET WHERE IT lS.a GW-4? 3 , ff ' 253 1 Itx 3 a M3 cv QW, gigg- Y -nmfliwvnh! ff v -f . .au , nfl J' .-1' . 1 r .I -H--,. , . X 5-4, K, I 1,4 ' i 5 'mrjlxsml , Y 3
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.