Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 352

 

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1947 Edition, Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collectionPage 7, 1947 Edition, Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 352 of the 1947 volume:

,e u H 1 -.44 1 f n ff! f 2 W Y if l .y ....- E?i?:Z::::e,e:.. Fr Fr rf 'IF .... ff mlrrfffr lppssn nr' '1 I.-ff .ff mf wA.,1 :rf nrrrlr: F' ' ll lt riff' 'V ff IF Inf. Hllfiw nrv'1::: gui, Iffrlrrkfrr IIIHIIHE iiifffm M pp mrlfrrrfl llllm ifgfzrrrrrf IPFHIII 'W I. H153 lll Bla i lllullnigg 1 mn as Ill llllfrllrgg asm-may mn ann ppm lllllliil :- JAMES THOMAS HELSPER ' ' Editor-in-Chief P1ICHARlD ALLEN HASTINGS . t Business Manager -----Y----..---.-..,- -..,.-- .-- .,...H,....,W 1 1 S , :ww , A sm ' v , I K - ' S 2, A Ana W is record but folili ybarsfaf kjeiferson Medical Cdllggz THE CLIN C PUBLISHED BY THE SENl0n CLASS 0F THE JEFFERSUN MEDICAL CIILLEGE Since the first dim day that man first trod upon. this earth. attempts have been made to record by pen, brush or chisel fleeting moments of inspiration and pleasure, so that in look- ing back, the full appreciation of the original impression. may be recaptured. r l We present this book as a simple monument to four years of pleasant associations and fond memories, and fervently hope that in the years to come, despite the demanclin.g eazigen- cies of modern practice, we will find within its cover a basis for endeared remembrances and, perchance, a source of information. L, M V N . W X .. fp , , it C , Q- , ww, . 5 ,, f-W A Hag , me es-S-:eil mm Femmmmfin, ,,,,,nwf-mmwnn,-f.. i may , M awww- , ,M Q ,-1 v W- - we . ms we ,,,. NH as if ,S ,N ' ,Here we Iiqggedifhroligh haliowed cnh-ance where exaltecflearleis of medicine have gone hefori aw , it ,-. A A ,,,, ,,, ,, ff' ' f 5 . 1 , if 'za' ' .41 i 5: x s 01 E A 2' F if Q! S 2 in W 2 1 2 5 S 5, My 5 ?', sw us 3' w Ii 4. Q Q-'w :i 1 K7 ' ' 'W ' I ' A ' ,, . . . , , . . f A . N V :.- A ' 1 , ' ' ' ' ' ,. -V e,:::5Csr::::, .121 Q., z::.:I's'..,'-1,53 . I I . . 1f.a'Z311,1'f.,:-' fi-'-'firm-:f.:: : - .1 1 ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' 5 '. - , . 7 . ,. -,-'2'!-.- -.:.:- 1 .-af: ' LTER., 1f,,: 'f 2Q: - J 4 ff' , ,3f,1 f ' ,-Q-ffiyi: 'Q Ig2g:'gElEE:,5'l i.f1:ff: fI:2,::55'5.:E: 2555 2121, -25.12 ii ,.,j ' .-H -f,::'Z,f, fix 'IQ':':-,:::E:55:',5E':-5:I::g.:6'.i .::ix53I-Z-fzif:2'.:5::5'.':f . f1f:''ZF-.f f12 1g.- nv.--1 TYKE JEFFERSON MCDKCM. COLLEGE OF PHXLAOELPHUL S K 7- ? ': u ref. of 1.-sous .51-Y OZDWI- NUT 5'H1f.?,1 . ...V nprll le, raw sail Wy jf. zl- .s tr.. :Z l take pleasure ln informing you that you have been esslgred 'E EZ- Q? a place S11 the Flrst-'fear Glass for the like sesslon, tcsnoltlonsli upgon the mv H -ff? 1 satlsiaetory completion or our pre-nedloe T603 TBKOOD 5. HPPYOW 0 'JW-1' E5 .U School and college credlts 'oy the Department of 'Public lnstructlon of Yennsy- lvsnls, and presentation of evldenoe oi setlsfactory physical ccnclltlen. T23 2 - 55 ln order to effect tentatlve formal reglstrstlon, --4-'. 4 .- 3 niecesaary that you forward to me the natrlculitxlon fee? off Flge golkarsa s ee o 'Iwo Dollars for the Yennsylvanls Gertl cate o re- ro ess one enucatlon and the laboratory oeposlt of Flfty Dollars. This Fifty-Seven ol ars payah e .to he e arson the lcal o ego N1 e eccep e su ec H' D l , l T 5 if d 0 ll , ill 'O t dt by t to the terms 10 the paragraph above. ' 'Q The enclosed blank form should 'oe executed and return ,ziblz -. , with your oeposlt. lt vllll 'oe necessary for you to ,neue the above deposlt anal return the report of your physlcal condltlon 'oy nprll 26th ln case you - -.vlsn the place reserved for you. Eallure to heer from you wlll result ln 5- . gi l! cancellation of the place offered. when you have completed your college requlrenents, sencl me a trsnscrlpt oi your record. ' -:- .ww . l :Qi::,: 'Q :-:-f 1 nave recslven a number of letters ln support of your Q ,W 1 .IL an-gllcatlon. U08 to the large number of such letters lt ls lmposslble t .:.., ecxgnowleclge recelpt of then ell. lt ls SHQQBSWG-. T-YXSTGYOTG1 that You 52 comxnlnlcste to those who nwe recommended you ulfofmetion 001'-Oerilifwf. 'JOWP , V it acceptance. .. .. - :-2 , y.,y .:,,. Ylasse, along wlth your acceptance sclvlse us as to your Z. status wltn the army or navy. li you are not an either trench Oi the Servicer if f',fQg5 ,,j please glve us your status with your draft board- :EZ - .,,.:., :'. , 2 ,:,, 'Shore ls s shortage of microscopes sncl you are advlsed IZ' A- to cbtaln one as soon as possible. litany students have ifouncl lt convenient fiflftl 50 QM-511999 or rent microscopes from doctors, senlor xnecllcal students, etc. ,. p.g,a5,n, after completing matrlculatlon, lniorn us lnmeolstely wnetner or not 'Zigi T L. 4, you have ,obtsumen a mlcroscope. 2': s i at . ' Q Q very truly yours, .- ziz l . o. crmer, n. U., 2 3 Lxsslstant Dean 35s as 'fe' xt Exgssmy s sm s -,E -Em me Y FH as t. -f xt is or E . Rlxsix anvil Upsala I ,gt s V - . . 4, V WEL Bill' . Em V is ' - . nr' ,, .. .9215 in In .. Ms sein mess, .massggg - Q' Bi 2 New Eemf'..s-'ss s ss Wes EB H H E whale Mc nr st fear Wi? d totzucet th e ' H .n nn- B,4,. WSW' M 'Gl5.,? e' K ' C Qwiiu' 472 'Q' els ,0f ,UN 10,16 h Northwestern Umar U UIAQM Rell, 43,90 vmeelo . Susquehanna Univelslll Ame I 'mm Dame University of so st J , University 0 ranton G . oseplr s Colle H . ettysburg College 5 P - . . 307 1 ennsylvama Mrlrtary College new-ge Woo gage! . as 4' 5 ,son eoneze X955 . li' lon and 'le' e Georgetown University my wesmm Utuversill , Was ini Wye . . of SWIM wwgga b Providence College Vrllanova Collegl e f0 - . 'fvrr l amfllig Ursinus College com Umversity lun'-lla, 0 6:90 P - 0 0 iVe - 9 9490, yeh, rrIrcet0,, 0 . rs-rg. 1 Cog!!! Bucknell University University of Pennsylvania 116748, nrvg-,My '76 , ggllil' Wheaton College un . La Salle College t wet I :versity ot oregon udxwsm llnl 3 D' - . - ' ' nl ved 1 rckmson College university ol Nlississlll get Cornell University i om university W6 Wesleyan University Yale University e eg alan Colle ine una ww' I v ' - ff . invites' new 1 ale University I. university o i 6 , Franklin a We 00,18 . Q, Penns 'a i Mm 'Y Wlezl nd Marshall gouege fum, Gad, l I wgsqv la, 1 lllbnght College wg, wsev layer, dyette College . 6605 955 0fd0o, . 'x 'IKM . '09 e 4'-41' 1 cox1Qxe un QKX 9 G Ma' Sha . lim F anlaUn 30 . Unulelsm 1 X363 g I Lewin Ulfiversit Lalaleue Wm Lebanon llalley Gftlleie y of Mississ. B k W Getl 'M ffl ' Ysburg College Rutge U - . Umversif Salle College Mubfvabe, . rs mmsuy y 1 Wmemls College 4' Uoyege arab Q0 Hamilton College S . gona. 090 'Hia Stare c West virginia U l'e'sm nlleem' some Q24 cvhar. . f'? or U -- ,tr aw, so Getamiiolalezs so 1 U y - -eSfff'!1fs - jealous, proud nnislress, Medicine, and hallowed that unforgettalvle deny of acceegliaancd I 1 , - C -V A 2. y s V ', as rea C 5 W s , a ' unlU us... Q .. . Askew- .. QKXQQGXNM- awbwgs . 5? bella Amherst elm SX A 'S Gollete QWQJ 0 rr Uwe, 000 College More . EPS Nlilsaus are e Ie .XS To 'ran MEMBERS on 'rl-ns CLASS ov 1911-7: For the honor and the pleasure you have given me by associating me with your volume of the CLINIC, I should like to thank you all. For each one of you I wish happiness and a good measure of success in return for the hard work that will go into each of your pro- fessional careers. Medicine has become so complex that it is dillicult today to decide which segment is the mo1'e alluring to each of you or for what part of the fvhole each of you is best fitted. It would be well to re member Osler's advice to do today each daily task and let the morrow care for itself. The great majority of you will interest yourselves in the care of the sick and you will be good doctors. There is no higher calling. For some of you, however, I hope that the urge to hunt in unknown territory will be too strong to be turned aside. But no matter whether you stay in laboratories, attach' yourselves to clinics, hospitals or schools or bump over lonely rough country roads, the Watchword to all that you hope for will be work. With all good wishes, FIMNKLIN R. MILIIIER, MD. E I With sincere appreciation the Class of Nine- teen Forty-seven dedicates its annual to Dr. Franklin Miller, a 'man possessing the rare combination of brilliance, 'teaching knack and true humility. Dr. Miller was horn in Bloomington, Ill., on August 24, 1902. I-Ie was graduated from lllinois 'Wesleyan University with his B.S. in 1923 and received his M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1927. Interneship and a medical residency preceded association with the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research as an assistant in Bacteriology. After spending two years in the research field he returned to the clinical field as the Chief Medical Resident at the University Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. It was at this time that Dr. Miller first began his formal teaching as a Demonstrator in Medicine at the Western Reserve University Medical School. From August, 1931, he rose step by step to the rank of Assistant Professor of Medicine at Western Reserve. In 1932 .lellerson invi ed him lo be Assistant Director of the Division of Hematology, Charlotte Drake Cardeza Foundation, followed in two years by his appointment as Associate Professor of 'Medicine During Dr. lVl,iller's active participation in I ss ss ' ' ' ,E Kms . -X , B. sis is s mg mi :si-ss W ss sss-- ssss 5 -sssssm M fm-i - W - -iss SP' ss ss m ss ss ss E E sss mn -is gs is B sms mg V is H sssm ssss s Nm ss- H sa , s ' s K s Y l ' ss . ' is . . . is , . , , ,. .- . , H a1xslisva1iEds1ns2suswg'ggfe.sso- lriimrufst 1-15211 Qsg'sE3gswssfsi,P1r1as ygesldss?p1fge,S,g-Qfgssmsf-t bstllgin' and ss as Q rm ms .is ss' B :U an sss '. s B fs E ss ssgss sms ,. s wsu sg E 'mn ms ss ,ss ssss ss s W s s . , . s ss sm ,s , ss S ss H s -L -sw-G '-3355,-s.g ,f JE.s.:..s.-sps.a...sbm 2 1 .ai ., .s'f--- -2 as M WNW 5 ss sss gamma H s ss s s 5 sa . .. .n,...sf.s., . nas., A-.. ann., V -- T DR. FRANKLIN - Cl1C0lll'aglHg Z A ' -1 .i-:mr -1 ,ff - H R. MILLER the clinical Held, research has always been foremost in his mind. Toward this end he has written papers concerning bacteriology and lLl1be1'Cl1lOSiS. The study of the b0I16 IIIBITONV Solution Of the leukemia p1'0b1em, In days and the anti-anemia pI'lI1Clpl6 iD p6I'I1lClOUS 130 Come we may learn Of the final Cgnquering anemia were the subjects of other writings. of this scourge of humanity as a result of Shortly after coming to Jefferson, Dr. Miller his work. discovered certain substances in the urine ol However, a listing of Dr. lVIiller's scientific patients with leukemia and similar materials accomplishments does little to tell us of his in the normal and abnormal liver and Spleen. teaching talents or the more prosaic ability of These findings indicate a relationship of such making friends, with both of Which D1',Miller substances to hematopoiesis in leukemic pa- is highly endowed. It is with these things in 'tients and normal individuals. His studies and mind that the Class of 1947 respectfully dedi- papers have done much toward the eventual cales its CLINIC. d dicalc thiiilfiioolrf H M lu whom we proriillyi 5: 7' 5 L N ,lyliller iqfiiflcmalologyi 31n,l,, , U A Q New sw-as Z It ini x 2,-gys- ws . ' idfebhese was Dr. Frfg A gw,,,Vm LK . A! A X fi 9. frf. W, ea E Pl-UA OFFICE OF YHE DEAN IOZ5 WALNUT STREET Nl eh- ess 522 THE JE To the Glas g FFERSON MEDXCALC DLLEGE OF Pl-ULF-DEL 5 of 'L7 X Marks the Spot X k you are marked for all posterity to reed ll you set out to do. fought ln this 'ooo that you have accomplished 9. Through four intensive college years you have to your goal to be a graduate of the Jefferson Medical College. dent, and a men worthy of your behind these pages. as e stu stands arded Your record Alma Mater and your profession d your Board of Trustees have rew ' our progress recorded here. io' ulty an having y this Clin Your Fac you with the privilege of By all these acts you are a marked men and is your self-edmitted evidence of it. er page of your professional career he ery furth May ev ording . as wort y h of rec shea , and Best wi K Y. I . U -E.. M.. Vim. Perkins , Harvey Dean ss em t -EX H mga - .f E e na wma rs 5 we es mx. Sewing it Q S8 1- EEE e Hs eggs e is rs W S H A We me E e si aearnqgd eaimtwl H rerimlgnv T H . .1lt5b.lE, 5 Sf 311418 in H , I-f?9I1qlZ32ring Spiait l, 5 Hn . 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ENQQMW.: ,x.g'sxw'1,f-eg ,,. 'gfikgi'?E-f'?6meafggxgfgaiAlgm.-fwLWg- -if . B fi 1 mwswwgmgqsalwmxssggf-Hwwhq 1 m mg mangas xnggwmggun-mugs 1 sw mgzgmxwaigs-mpg: aug-gwviggg nga - ,Z '2i '5Ei 5SwvgfmilffviggfgiiiEi2i4wf.f.w5lgm2'wB,-iwf L' L Nj. N ,- M miggm.5133559.35-sFmggsgIi?jJn -ggm 5wwvS.fLg:amm.:mxxme4gwms.:.aw-- -'ww w -vAsfggxsfsmgw'.x mg: A , . -M GA 5 i 2 2 il ' N,E,33Wm,gg.A nfggss mfgwsmxgmx -' 1,gp5gma:wiqgnaenxg- . m.. Q55 3 .- . +::.g:, .ww-.gzf H ligfg-,AwWlyzx-gf!-42:51. ., an .iw w,-5-my -was :5:.::-- min. 3355 msd- 'LV AV ' ' gm - A35 -. ,. 55? gsm .nf ,wi .Q fha, w .H W T was ' 5 wif L pf ff 'QSM ' A ali? Q wi M. an nga Egg me . ni Qgisrfawh-1 me jaawm . gig iii- 5.3 ' ' N -if , EM X, gg., limi- igedex... ' igifs' 2 'W' ,sf 2. ' f szmbnw .awww K, wr ., 1. .E Q... gf K 4.8.5 ,-Q . U Q. ei ff R mm: ww mmf-3 EQ I 1 QE we-E.: ,, ,. X 35:35 B X. ' fi S ' F3 W Q L , V. XX ww' M ' ix M M. :gf-1 53 .X mg 5 gig Z. up asv. W L E M gf iassxxwrgi-w 5MK5.,wff, 'QQ .1 -.. - :s:2:--:Ei Nm www H-Q-QQ M- 2 gi Q-2 5 2 Z Z M H L Sm Y. Li 7 wfHw,wa.m..g?m'Qw 1e5-,,..,f..f- E ' fwfwih 2.ff,9ig:1w H ' -my Mn . : , Wmfgsj .M 'QM Qin -- n Q : N n z h N A gF.j,j:-: .-- .:. :.: .1 1. M y -X ,, .. A - pf ,mn H. ,SQA I I E fxjgm-14 4 rg? ss van. pa mr ms fa U . SG 'P' V mu iii? , u .Eggs SWT? :wma swf Lmifefg. vi Z g l,iW5E1iiRwii9w Eggs Tidlslw, .. gif 3.52 FK7'x113fm 759: - mf. 'Ely' Aw E:E :E: ' ax-sgmw K-X 31 QQ,'fQ7pff,qw1w1-9551 523 M as-as-mmmmgxw H' mx ssl. SFKA In mama -' Kymxgin Q-z.: gm as w Registrar M . TOR 4' ' mm'H ,. in .wggvf my 5 H H www 'm ', 'fax mia A sw mam ,-max-ibm--anim H- 539fCv,s3?- 'w,,, B ,4,,,,, ., ' . gm mm an wwmflmn hmnsagwgigiwww, 'w i-25 r8i !'Bi...k 'Wm. ' mg: W saws sa, sms mn sa, gps mgwgm H aww nm M 55 mg Sim an 11.1 sms a and our jovial RCgiSfgslAQlQ,m!N'h0 reigned supreme as ss Af- an a mfg gs xx a an J. mn .nm .. a ss ss ug - mn 5 X W Nga sm-in M A Eng .nip R BABE s W wr ymwrfg awp as -5+ S. 22315 ummm? H W H ,. B WAS? an ,.,,, E UH wc- - v na E H Q X H W W 3 ui M M E. -fx E-m W my-1 is N B, -sm? ,, Q M as W'.,...E : W ss-mfw A W- -an P1 H U: mm m vim a Emma- H Wm Q -HL xx wa na ss ss ss a am a ss N ss E . as ss na w - E ,Q . mm E sw mm E ss ru W w a F H zz 'Ama kv I xxx W Q: 5,25 uw ss x E L wg wixgted to register that first year and each vcm, thcn .mwjgn .ww , ,M ,Y-vm--:az xi .MN E w ss ROBERT P. 1101 DPER President HUA RD U I TR U STEE 5 BOARD OF TRUSTEES. - ROBERT P. Hoovisn, President ' HAYWARD R. HAMRICK, M.D., Acting Secretary Robert P. Hooper Col. Brandon Barringer 'Van Horn Ely, Jr. Lessing J. Rosenwald Horace P. Liversidge William Potter Wear Percival E. Foerderer Thomas D. M. Cardeza Joseph Lees Eastwick J. Howard Pew Edwin K. Daly lt is only through the cooperation and sincere interest of a Board of Trustees that Jefferson could progress for ours is an institution that never could be static. It is through the farsighted efforts and planning of the Board of Trustees, headed by Mr. Robert P. Hooper, that Jelferson has been kept steadily advancing. The future of Jefferson is indeed bright with such men as these at the helm. on lo those first few days with their rushing parties, the opening address, listening I2 - - Y :V .:,Y,,.7.,,,:J:,---, ..f-fm .v.7,1,-,..,. - , . .- SENIORS to the seemingly frightening and sage advice of our upperelassmen, but undauuted JAH... -. .. -L ,-. , David J. Abolofia .... William B. Abrams. . , Joseph N. Aceto .... John P. Allan ..... . Robert F. Babskie .... Robert H. Baker ...... Joseph M. Barsky, Jr.. . Sidney M. Bashore. . . Alan I. Blumberg ...... F redcrick W. Bode, Jr. . . David W. Bostian ...... J. Raymond Bowen, Jr. . Herbert S. Bowman .... Edwin Boyle, Jr. ...... . Alfred Brockunier, Jr. . . . SENIGR CLASS PAGE 102 ....50 ....100 89 .. . 71 ....143 ....162 ....101 43 ......155 ....105 66 ....152 82 ......114 William J. Browningg III ...... 28 Michael Bucan ......... Louis F. Burkley, III. . . Benjamin F. Burns ..... W. Lawrence Cahall, Jr.. Lawrence F. Casale ..... William P. Coghlan ..... Alfred S. Cook, Jr. . . . Leo J. Corazza ......... Luther F. Corley, Jr. . . . J. Mackie Corson ...... W. Franklin Cox, III. . . William A. Cull ........ Joseph M. Danyliw ..... W. Clayton Davis .... Charles J. De Wan ..... Joseph A. Diorio ..... Gerald D. Dodd, Jr.. . John J. Dowling .... Byron T. Eberly ....... Leonard C. Feldstein. . . William L. Fidler, III . '. . Harris G. Fister ........ Charles G. Foster ...... J. H. Smith Foushee, Jr. Robert B. Funcb ....,.. Ross S. F unch ....,.. Elmer H. Funk, Jr. . . . John J. Gainey ...... George J. Gensemer .... John E. Goeckler ..... Joseph P. Greeley .... John D. Groblewski .... William H. Gross ..... Melvin E. Haas .... Charles H. Hanes ..... ......134 ......124 ....154 S4 ....142 ....163 ....112 ....61 41 ....147 68 ....157 98 47 ....110 ....130 62 ....153 ....149 ......120 .. 17 4-5 42 85 91 ....92 ....56 .,.22 ....158 ...65 18 ...78 ....72 29 ...49 Edgar C. Hanks ....... Richard A. Hastings ..... Lamar E. Haupt ...... David H. Hausman .... John E. Healey, Jr.. . . . John R. Hclff .... . . . David B. Heller. . . James T. Helsper ...... William C. Herrick .... Charles N. Hickman . . . Robert I. Jaslow ...... Paul H. Jernstrom ..... Albert R. Jones, Jr. . . . . Lewis E. Jones ...... Edward A. Kelly .... S. Victor King, Jr ...... Richard G. Kirchner. . . Edward J. Klopp, Jr. . . John A. Koltes ...... Roy Korson ...... John M. Koval ..... Albert J. Kraft, Jr. . . . . Herbert Kramer ..... David A. Krevsky ....... Pritchard T. C. Lam ..... Benjamin J. Lawrence, Jr. Jeremiah F. Lee ......... Sidney S. Lerner. . . PAGE ...,4s ....a9 ....46 ....104 ...116 ....140 ....161 ....1o9 ....3z 75 ....s1 ....a5 ....27 ....a7 ....7s ....as 19 ....s4 38 127 ...sz .....12s .....1s1 ..119 .....96 .....151 .....qa1 .....118 David W. Levin ..,.. ..... 1 25 Gail G. L. Li .....,..... William J. Lussy ........ C. Thomas Mcflhesney, Jr Robert S. McCurdy ..... William V. McDonnell. . . Donald H. McGee ....... Joseph P. McGee, Jr.. . . . John J. McKeown, Jr.. . . Menzie McKin1, Jr ....... .....148 97 . .... 160 80 20 79 ....26 31 Raymond N. MacAndrew . .... 15 Martin M. Mandel ...... Lester Mann ........ Dante E. Marino ...... Peter P. Mayock, Jr.. . . . Edward J. Meehan .... John J. Meehan ..... Charles E. Miller. . Warren A. Miller .... Alfred M. Mintz .... Walter W. Moore ..... . .138 ....5a .....126 ...vo ....z4 ....150 ....144 ....1z1 ....40 ....99 PA GE Thomas W. Moran. Jr. ........ 108 Laurence A. Mosier. . . . . .... 145 Edwin M. Mszanowski ........ 25 Jim U. Oliver. .... . . . Karl B. Pace,,Jr. . . . . . John R. Pender, III. . William A. Phillips. . . William U. Reidt ..... ..88 83 .. .... 86 ....139 .. .... 69 G. Robert Reinhardt .... . . . . 23 Vincent R. Ressler .... John R. Reynolds. . . Robert G. Rhoda .... Marvin C. Rhode. . . C- Jack Rodgers ..... ....132 ....30 ....146 ....135 . .... 137 Richard M. Roque .... .,,, 7 7 Leonard Rosen ...... ..., 5 9 Melvin L. Samuels .... .... 1 22 Chester L. Schneider. . Albert G. Sch:-an ..... -- Richard 'I'. Shaar ..... Peter H. Shershin .... Richard G. Smigclsky. C.,F. Brooke Smith. . . Edgar C. Smith ...... Nathan M. Smukler . . Richard M. Sproch. . . .... 133 . ..,. 63 16 36 ........136 .. .... 21 . ....129 . .... 58 . 107 T. Lane Stokes ...... . . .I . 84 Richard E. Strauss' .... ,.,, 5 7 Leonell C. Strong, Jr. . , . '93 John F. Struve ....... John A. Surmonte. . . Robert N. Swartley. . . William A. Terheyden, Francis X. Thomas. . . George F. Tihbensf. . . Edwin M. Topp, Jr.. . Chester M. Trossman. Bruce Van Vranlren ..... . . -.....-. ....164. .. .... 94- 55 Jr. ..... 14 64 . 37 74 .... 123 ..141 Arthur R. Vaughn, Jr.. . . . . , ,159 Donald R. Watkins. . . Andrew J. Wehler .... Stanley Weinstein .... Ellwood C. Weise, Jr.. Sidney M. Wolfe ..... William J. Woodward. Noel C. Womack, Jr.. . . Harold A. Wurzel .... Robert Yannaocone. . . Nathaniel D. Yingling ........ Samuel Younger ..... Joseph T. Zukoski .... .. .... 111 . .... so .. . .117 . . .... 156 . 115 ........106 . .... 67 . .... 113 95 90 .. .... 116 ....103 we looked about to meet each other, forming friendships that would foretell many future w x o .:x. -ww .ff Jr if W S2 ww R: W , Fxqf 1 J . . ,, WA ?? x 4 4 ,X . Q. Q... gag My W.: MM Q A N Riff DS? as W mn: bi wiv! 'iw hgn qgxgitgxwgggx if Za mm W H W 1:-1 ,Jn J: A wsu xx X25 Y. A 3-La of , , W , Hg, M 1 r-ww-f ss , tag' : MH' lg gwssga ,jif'igfgy. H wgigggn is .1325 X ami vwgg N s xqwgs' Awww ww Q nz gym ,. agp . at 'ff 5-wgpfg wl-w..,v,. Vs' A-Q-5w,M2-1-vm, , if Ur 1 I Qiriivw 7 wb Wm ma x :L ,M ki. ,1 My A 2?-.LM V fn Kr .f' 4, V , NQJLL, W 1 nf hw 1 wwf K '-21535352 Qxm WILLIAM ANTHONY TERHEYDEN, JR. PITTSBUBGI-I PENNSYLVANIA HS., University of Notre Dame fb A 2 ' K B E Pasteur Society, Hare 'Meclioal Society, Presicleut of the Schaeffer Anatomic League. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. A Y , V - M A ,Y , ,N A YJ -,A gs , ,K ,,,, ,-,, .,, .,,Y,Y..,..F,,. ,, . ., WW ,-.T:,Y.-..-.. The three nihjor forces Work- for tlie rkiiiriiiiifanife di-Xilestoiatioig of 'health afbwdorreut iiivlllill attitude, normal physiological activity and ,nledical and suggicalftherapeusisg of tliese the last is Probably the least.-ANONYMOUS. ' 5 4 ' 'X LX . J A S EDGEWOOD RHODE ISLAND BS., Providence College Ill .-X E K B fll Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Pasteur Society. ' Rhode Island Hospital Providence, R. I. RAYMOND NOEL MacANDREW ' is H5 , ' Q L -, ' 7 il H 15 P' .Sf f 3 K 1 H ' -V V , ' ' ,,'f'I37 'f'f 1 U V . ' , 4' 5, i, V I s gag-1 W f f -. K , Q, 5: cv W 'a we V: x. It 'Ii ' X - y ' Q, . , H te . l, 1, vf ,- 11 W 5, ff l . To preserve ah man alive in fthe midst of so lnany clriances and hostilities is Exsigreat a rniracle as E . to create him.-JEREMY 'l',xYLon, Holy Dying. 1 'L ,I ' 'i 15 A RICHARD 59 J THOMAS SHAAR BISHOPVILLE FLORIDA University of Pennsylvania QP A E Scliaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society. St. Vincent's Hospital Jacksonville, Fla. f , 'cc Q1iEgfg'i'3ggiiEQg iigf iQ3gi5'3?f i rrappyig tseigiifgicasa :wie yszvaausawaf meg 433-afisneaufises.-:alB'vQ amass zz? x e if ' ' ' V ' ss ' gr' -i -Z ' A Y y : l me sg sa nm . WE: sis ss' Qzgiyxggxb' Ms: IE whiny: REQ gsm., s ss . ' as su- ' f- 4, sf mn W.-',Y,-W A I6 W ILLIAM LAR CH FID LER , I II me ss ms B :sax mms A ms m m msn mm sm- :ml an na H ms ms am-ss an a ss mms B mga an a mmm sa 'HW EEE an ex is B w m H- aw wma me an 'ss a an ms a li mm a E S mm a msg E mn w Wa ss W m gm fam AUDUBON NEW JERSEY U uiversity of Pennsylvania ffl A 2 SCllElGff61 Anatolluo League, Thomas Physiological Society. Cooper Hospnzal Camden, N. J. M an-f' 355' 'Q wgfE rgvn.m saga, 'FTE -rf aff WFZTEY 'awww A' lk si ME mum 11 M me msgs we kigaa . .- ,A Wm, Aly P ggagg,f+33g,f'fQfif gyqxq wfk 3535543 wg ww-jwve' Winnie' fag a f A wg M A -Qiffamessi-siausmzm 1 ss ,. In ,sm . W. ..... g .... .mag ana . 1 , Mem Y Q Sig ?, Hmmm 4' mmm , ,, ll-.,K.4.g55 ,E,m.m mmm Y . me gamma me an an values The best jig ihageg-,Lap Vdeggigesim is ve? H 'Savant' , , , X, ,-, J - .fl V. ,L ,- - :WS-Bikes H mit. 5:5 , . 1. , V , '. mamfmamms me wma 'aw I 15 -,1P :' . ff F52 , - 4 f1:1E'P'ffW WW, '-. F . 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SCBANTON PENNSYLVANIA A.B., University of Scranton ' 111 A 2 Y K B qw y Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Scranton State Hospital Scranton, Pa. JOSEPH ' 7 GREELEX . A V YY A mn, ,.,, , ., .-, ,,..,,,,,V .Y fr - . T. .- --YV fm V .---fe.--,-f, V -is-,4 Tc., 'fiti'-3f fa1'1?Ef' . . , 1 we I f -,--: it W fi it We W s ,i if, V :tw I lifg Y iw: Elin: :gpg 1. .1 s.js.V, Vgilliefft v?f 'iT . ' ,T-il.:,i.QggES13Ef,I3h . , - f K. -.- X - A ' 1 'ulnh . , . f g . gf r N AQ :N pm V-.:, , 3 -vw. l .Q -'- . e ,i-Ely.. ,fu mmf 13: ig 'arf P9gg2f99,.S15Pn3'?3315f a5'-e.- W A219571 .wwvt-iiigf' nl? 1,,f.w,hgs'ftff, 5,qL.. .L,' 3,,,f3J v. -jj , Y L3 gg: ,K A-.7231-w.f 'K-,ll-CAL5 1 j ,L Hg' if , 135 ' l ,i ful .- 3, 32 1-15 'f.gy55zBfy gl . ,P-3,15-3 Q Q? K fi .5235 g 'M ,gg-1 , f f . ,r i , lg, mga! fc V- .dlsggyz llsgifx,.:V4lH?3fgik.kiv-9593.3EV1,,iif,l4g,:,5 W sm , ms, msg, j . I it -Y ii EH .' Q iv :sg-nw. ,viR..-lx in .,, 3, .X 4,4 H-' ..,.,M,.,-:L-t :ji JT, 1 i H: i we ' ,Z x wr 5 4 .H V pw -fi. f iff, , -ss 1 will ' - -- f -if,-11 i -mf ,Wig . ' V .HM Mi ff I M WN f 2 ' ,Lip - Q - 1 -,wt a ,' S'W ' P A -I8 LANCASTER R PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Franklin and Marshall College CIJAE KBQ' Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeifer Anatomic League, Hare Medical Society, Pastciir Society. St. Joseplfs Hospital Lancas'l'er, Pa. RICHARD GEORGE KIRCHNER f2?Z'ff'.f -1 31:9ii-ga:qsf,yf,,g'-5g,,1g3gi..'gg-'gq:f':a54g5f35a -ip: 5, v , ,-uwfr ' 141:-mg. - L - if :.:.1.w:.:, :,,:5,:,. :Em.11-.:.-.W l ,v - - i... - -- -- --f- :L .... ,. , 1-V , wh o - S- . 72 v 1 '5 :.. , ' ef -' . 'ESF A F W - Amt ' ' -'wer if- 1 Yff7FTJ:i-ei.' f cane'l 1fT--:ilwfeaxfa-2 - mfffu ... 1- ,V --1 ix , - .. - - , - . -- f 1, asw,veffff,..f4 wg- fff.-flf ffv-1 an 2-,lf--fr . .4 . 1 V- J- fe -law -. -N l. . , .. l R :M ww-S 44. V wife A' 71 , 6 522 : , '? 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LH.: - .. sr, f- f,p:,+1 ., ' 1, , ,,4-L, .-45131: N- -'wg-WN -. gs r:-17-rqffis, ,, ' - 5.5, .-.L---:Z .13 .3 l 'V 2 '. - L 5 -. 13' y - 'f '.3l'fi1-.M ' SZSAS'-y3ll'-lx M5'w:23H1V -' '..:ir'.Wf5f,df:l:, 1 Q.:-Qf.Yl..'n9: ,ig-'-N,::F'eb 1,-.V42r:5 ?5'Q2f2i'fQ?f.:'f53mi,'fQ'-- , 231, - ' '.fYn i1,. -yjfffi F ,Q A, I9 CARBONDALE PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Scranton University ' ' QAE Pasteur Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Hare Medical Society, Gross Surgical Society. ' Scranton State Hospital Scranton, Pa. MCDONNELL 1 - f . .' MB ' 'eusie'-'Jw-az- '1f-s ' 5' arm'-wwe A ff w -' fi.-. .'fY'1'ff'15' ' 'f W 5232255-A tiattfftjgttg-. H555 1 . 3 sq gl: 523-.wl,,,.nv: ..-as-'Z 'A 1-rl A ka 1 Lynx - J .y 53.4 ,:.-4.1, ,vpn 1,2 ng, H . . , Li jf? P i- + f f-1 , W f Q 'im,?QiL '?E mm'fl-g'fQ:.-,,L?Q2L5?f c,,., ,21i.n.l??Q.vr.i-,,giEwQsf..: 1 H ff A 20 CLYDE FRANCIS BROOKE SMITH MIAMI BEACH FLORIDA I B.S., St. J'oseph's College KIPAE Schaffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, M0011 Pathological Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Alpers Neuro- logical Society, Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Dea11's Committee. Misericordia Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. - 2 I TH BO op PENNSYLVANIA B.S., University of SC1'El11Al.O11 KID A Z K B CID Schaeffer Aiiatomio League, Pasteur Society, Thomas Physiological Society. ' Scrantoli State Hospital Sc1'a11'Lo11, Pa. GAFFNEY . . Li,-I , - - --J,,--if ,Qu gx V i. ,f M- 1. - -N, 5 ,,fM-- ,,f. 35- - -ff ,,:,-5 :jf f--f 1415?-5, '75, j fr,7--id-V 5-if gjmj:-15'-iii if 'ji-1 'gi ME W? f Q 'SSS ii ,1 we 322 3-5552? ,f .',+'-efgiiiggezfg-ggee ie igsfg, 555 , H N if g.Q2:.f1g egf5,,,,5H 1' fi L-'I '- vw . MJ , .-.i ?'- '- 1 if '1 - v , k- ' . is - -- -, , Q' - o i--+N-:-ai ', e-4221-:Tu A. 5 3 V' 7 , ,, .fag 1 1,5 Qs.: ' -' . , lp :wg f -.-5,1 -. Fi Ja wg ,ig-fri 4i !fLe,1:mi g. '-, .Y 'aa--1 :iff :.'ffE'fKM1' , - 523153 2 Big? o N r I -y'2 f.-f..: Kina 'rf-Src: 2f,. : --Mel --. E-,.1,..:1,.!f: Y? 1 . ,J , A I JBDQ 5 ' y QV A ,ig H e, M5:.1:, -1-ji,v1::f.1':3,l- X, -Zhibifllliig-Efljgqg 553' QQHZQ-5 ff fwf' f l ff A 2251 1 mf. neva! eww'-ffpesm' , wezf-2 A 22 S1 GEORGE ROBERT REINHARDT KANSAS CITY BqISSOURI l3.S., Providence College ' TAX KBQD Thomas Physiological Society, Sel1aell'e1' Auatoinio League, T 1115 CLINIC Staff, Class President. ' . Research Hospital Kansas City, Mo. .Z.m,. I -S ..,,--,,Y ,- I . W-- -, 75I4,N.,.......-.,,., I--- T,,..w75...HY,,.,, ,i,Y,,Y Y-,fIY R C 17 ..-W- -S ..:,., r..,3,5.:,,.,-. .kvq gu -,.. ,ma BZ-354 gg: S , M , , 1 :ZH msg? I I gm 55 I Hg-gin W U .,I,,,wi,Q,5fm S, 53523, S5553 H I 1 ,., ,. n 1, I 5, S S .wg fag ' . ., , , I z ,S H V S ' jjg 1,.1ssfg,1f'-.E umm-'L E., I. ' ,w.f ,.: 'l.,3gr,.' , if, . .. ,, I, ,p .K may 5, N055 , . 1, me 'WA V - ,, Y Q: . S , EA ,ggggepois 4-ugekalways workmg, tg e1:ver ,ealrh aggigogggtodgrggy lmibxic ,the lanngg-gr5fI1hef f 2 I I :-I A -313 . A .I , -. A -f -I ' me - ' 'S ,w , .' . 1 wr : . . ,mrs 'www fe I as 1. Emma, I 2 ' 53 .tglliilugcaggs I , S wmiaawzmr, IYJQNKSQ Kwai? g?B.Mg:E H SBEEEBFE S ,Segway M are W, asggglwwfsmmliig swim: W H if . -I-:+A--M . w - ,W-awww 'awww Hfwskgqem-:S-use ,fgwmgi-ms, . WSW! wa s,?wHwE2-gw-Wwgrega-W wel 2 , -was was imwws. M f ' if -93551 i2fH'M H S- eoimww-BWHQSAIIQMvwwew-Q25 Sm--V .wS3?ggM z ' H eglafsgi-3wwmwwufgeifiewwwwfrf H-:wel-is wx - ,-gverfgmix ' ggi mg is 5:5 W2 -si . my -, wang- in .wgg.wm4Q'1s , ,Legg -- 5g,.i:- - -was .W 'U W. S was glgpggs SMS H H NWUPYSHUI 59 H P1 5 .ENS 5, - Q xgng B Qswg- Q 'mwq Q-Qjgiwzg' jig -yu: '.- jgzam Q3-1: ',m'k xxx' W ' -, ggifzzmzu Simms Es gags S' B :Higgs ,3 f :iS'g,,,EKs1g5m,k , Jgisgbm lk Q z f Qui :AJS S :I,-V:,Ai,, .Lev K-..,.,...., .,..I- I. ...,,. few, .I .. .lr ,-,. Y. , ,WL .,,. SI, ,L Y. ,V .'.4. I . -I I, ..,, ,.,..I-AL,..,. f... .. 1 -,,?.-,. .M 5, M, A UL ' 23 ' ' maui-M S X EDWARD i JOSEPH MEEHAN LOWVELL MASSACHUSETTS fl5.S., Providence College cb A E K B qv Schaeffeli Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Pasteur Society, Moon Pathological Society. . 7 , ' St. John S Hospital Lowell, Mass. , ' ' tt 'T S ,S Q-'Q' ' ' ' f i -- to-t --'- --l- -M-e --' --W' 5 '1 flag, ' S SQ S-B iw ,.-T Kem 1 Y . , ,- mm f V, A-WWKSQ .a.Ql3f'l'15wvw':e u:e'Ulms4'5V ,1-M.XS, mama 5 if W V , - '--.W . ww fy we 4 Q. Sy: '55, 4, 3. qw'-yf,k,,s Politefdxqeaseslzgqake some xdlnts wiainy' ff ,A , i Y f 3 ian ta ?f2Mh1ch21f11pfgggb11uatQla5 welll-1F12ex3E91gFg'wi59J5t1gaEgg ,y gg. of ,,lSl.L5g,,. tf Y-,,..? -+ A : 3 , ' S 24 ERIE PENNSYLVANIA Villanova College fl? A E K B C11 vSCh3.6H'G1' .Al1ElLO11'llC Lcaguc,' Tliollias Physiological Society, Pasteur Society. ' ' Hamot Hospital Erie, Pa. i l EDWIN MELCHIOR MSZANOWSICI 'fmfi' v 2 '1 'N, 1- .21w'1.e:'f-:'1,.Wv-. - T was N-gig V: '37, Ei H lg 'gfE1f,Q yinwfw-'?ff.A v si f ar - V ..,. G.:-Alf---5' 3: H 5-Eieeeafi.fm1i'gi.?2533312527 .Fi-iiaiefoefiv:eff-f-'ffiie 32: i.i. e:aZ3 isfi.:,.ff ' ffimiigg . w4.13fi7Yl,1?Eg.,5ffi leggggtglngi ,V :eq ..:,.,2 .. ,- Eimlewiisig I 1- ,J M F- 1. f 1 -- '-- L- A a 1 ' '- mf ' -V .. ff:-14 .Z3 2'+11'. w1v if.Ji1- ,: 5. 1:34 1 . s 1, -. 1 7' I .55 lvl 5' -' WL, -1 ,,,'e.IQZ . - r1 fi 1f -gf 1:,,.x.:.Qw!,' 'arrfrf-,'-'f' :.9-- :gi . f -' 'ji Alf Ig. :gh L-'1 -1 - al, ,.-'j3.,:g - E 5 ,15nwa.. ,-T . , A nf - i '?'5.Z'- :2 l.' J i, -f i gl-' H ' E' A TU '33 EH' f f--4 -.1 ' -. 5 -.gif ff' ' A - AIQ!vlrrgii-kjiggjgjg-Q92,gr-iFg12fJ'v11' figlfjgjgggggjgji fl' et-mf 5. 1 ,'L1-,.fatg-:ggi-Qgjjjjgjg-gg'Q31GQ.423 L,-g9,jE,3.:A Eiggg,ZZ5 7,., y, , 1 5 ,... .... . -- .... e 25. A JOSEPH J PATRICK McGEE, ,IR . PHILADELPI-IIA PENNSYLVANIA - BS., St. Joseplfs College IIJAZ l Schaeffer Anatoillio League, Thomas Physiological Society, Hare Medical Society, Pasteur Society. Fitzgeralcl-Mercy Hospital Lansdowne, Pa. .ff-safe-W 'if:i1g1.':f.ff 'ES':V3'5 f ' of is fff Tl ' w:,.gg.s5f fff',:,,E,f5as was -1 gfgf,f,z,f,,gs2sgig?gWs,sAy ,wes,if'.g,,, sQq,Wfg'iie ':1-:fs ,. ,gap 5115 ,,,, an ef ff, , 'E sgygaf- L' M Ki we N' A gi 1 A S -N 3 2, ,. , . . 3, - h , . -,adv ,,.xjEg JL ,lf L -5-my 115.311 veg, -ijffui-ZLL i.,-53 :3.y,1,fg J emi. rn, yah A- pl , 1 ' .. 'L 11-Q-. '. g- 'QQ wr.: Mm, .,,. gegimg: bf Q xg N ,ms-sm- ,yy . 541 eq-.Q-'Qjvf-f-f-I-ig. --J 1-my 1-.1 Q, 1.1, --:ff-fs -Af-11-nf -,L -1 ,Q , A. 12-2 if sexes! N 'Qi gym, 1 8F9',,Q21'fizS-,.f?, Q Q95-1,vxlasmmnesidXl9eirf.Q1P3Sl,J!!e595949 Egg: ,gals E -,fs V 5 ,L gigs'-Axgvyil ss W, J ,-T ,,.,,,ggsf I fy ga , Wig. .M iv, V JWEWQWV Q we s,,,,,!.,,W?,,..w.g1.,.s ,fsfQs:,,in-wM,Wl,gf,,l,Emmy .535 Q gl A, y, i so , 1 4- 5 ' 1 eg 1 , PS l ,f'5ma.2f?'g1l,yg ff.:j2f'2'gQ3 3ijgfQ2f4'L'i ,- ly ,,1i5WgZ,f,.,em,j,-3i11T'.fL5,Wff 4: gig, .gggygggisfi'3QS?:fUsvr1EgQ1g, ilg1i3,1Q'gl2,5:iqrQegTg1q:i 1mRit.'5lggiijmzgggf-,gg.jlgjSv? ,1j'5i:1f,f.Iq:fifS5'4:,i gj fikff A :H . gf.- ' A A 26 ALBERT RICHARD JONES, JR. PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Haniiltou College' F11 X A Bauer Pediatrics Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Lankenau Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ,, ,,.,.v ,,, ..-. ,,..,..,,,, ,l ,.,. ,......,.-,.i.,,..,-Y. ,......-, - 7 . . .i . i , r . .. 4 4'S-- . . g? ' ' TIF21 '! 1 ' .'U fYVi, !79'f !: i'E E '?Hl : i-2 '5'Tf: 'MZf5?:?f'?F F'iiif 1,5 '1'T??T:lEl ,. ff-fl fi f A , - . P l ' P- c.', fid - L vl,i f Q:- ifll ' I 54 i.P, ,1 7 fia is . W '.-oi' is 'Le JJ - i f 27 MERCHANTVIIJTJE NEW J EBSEY AB., Colgate University ACIJKT CDX KBfIP Alpers Neurological Society, Glee Club. Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. WILLIAM JOHN BROWNING, II1 MET. ffl Z, FF ZF cfffif Hip E ,V 0 , , ,wi ., ,,- E fa E mwikm was fi. .ffgn dj MH K Gmwa-r.-Q.'Ein?1S'2fs1i:-5 Rss-as 2W'm,i.+f5.. E wif-f ifwwiff- 'le1. ' , . YW'-'E1Q. 5 gf Elsie' Syl- ., ,X-V .LW 1,1 mm 1. . fu',,,.,:a:..1,f, -, . f. , ' , f A ,V , lg' I 'Q' fff rv' ' WJ' f-V-Wf'B,---1' : 1' L f-I. .ms-AE .l.-ri. .2 Q - f. K- 4, ' ' ' . ' e N ' 255-512941. -Hfeefiehfnleahevi . as levee... 524252 wal? ' as ef, af E Eg gg Q M as . , ., . , V 'Zi eff' 'E I if ww? T 'E461fIDw'fHemed1Qrurn.-i52mQxLS. ' f. :fy 4. W Y Tk, . .mn ', - Z- 1,3 jQ+4.1,,.K f ,,- ' QM: 51 fijl' R , .5 I . -, wfgflg ai Q-gusggfggffi K. Egg- Q-ffN,,,:igA. UH ' f 'ir ' , 1. f K ' 1, 11 .1F'za4 - 'v H u.'fgQ -:Q-4. ff'Y?i:,' .Q !-,1i1EAMj.f- fig. Q A gage. Lai. Fuel:-fig 2,2:f.1aifE1 me-faf zz' ,--,.,W,,,, 1Z?:'5.a. ,Y .-.2 5. B 28 EIEBNDON , Q PENNSYLVANIA A. Bl , Susquehanna University ASZA IIJX Alpers Neurological Society, Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society. ' 1 Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. l l MELVIN HAAS Wig WJ is , K' - ll : FEQ BN msgs gijwmi-Half-L H EAA' S2511 ij-Q Y .Wg I, I vs? ay: jE.yimM..5-DIE ?y.f-g:y3-L-Q- ---- 5:-If :M M x.,-fi 3. ' H M., k- .J W , uf 4, Tioiwlfg. M .H - lf ' '-'W-mgfgm.-ffggc' T 'M si S g H ', ' V - . , ,, U Nw-f1?'2?H My ww Ml, ' WW Qgg'Q.,,:fR-gLf?EiJwji5,.iw K ' wW,,Q,,,qW Turn YgfTf,:w,5wgzl:35mEff?gg X Dlseases Ulllclfy H112 NSW! NEAPIQ3, m,'se11l1442w2 Wiki bhlxisf Elifiyzl -uleuayagvg . -w V M muy., ww .. 'i rf' ' 1'--: Wy 'fl .. -N I Q ' ' Q Yhkeloldyapplcs,'make fthqxn Srlmggy 'ana'I:om.1f?sd.4-l:'iQixE11fL' ,HBfgi13E1SIjjjAnatongy-g5Q11?iQMel5QgH0Hy,'g,H in jf ' -W' 2 -1 .1 ,,1 1 -va W Q - ' NW' M . '- Q- ' 5 , ' ' ww - ,W 4? Ki MQ K 'ff'-:4',pM U. , , V . , .. , -f li , ., A M M Q 1 Af, ' - . ll 1 Q A ,Q A Q, f , Wa ':- .f -' W U , - -a ll 1 . ' mx 4 -' zw X, N 'A . 1 . X. 1 29 B JOHN ROSS REYNOLDS UPIJER MONTCLAIE NEW JERSEY AJR., Princeton University :Ir X Moon Pathological Society, Alpers Neurological Society, Thomas Physiological Society. GGISIIIQGI' Memorial Hospltal Danville, Pa. E ,O A - l A is , G S . E ' SH if WWE 1 R1 ' ' t ef, ernezgwsv Oblstiiihife sspiqgsefpoeede noilhsggggggges-1 :wi1!,nf23ggv -he 'that heilfiis not expemenclilfd ap? pa1i5.++Sd1yuLiiEg,Ff 351225-f 3 -,Z , 51, V ? - 1 'gi A ---. -we -. f, xi ,,-,lp ' fi? Wi L1 f-my Q NA11BE1airH PENNSYLVANIA B.S., St. Joseplfs College KI' X Alpers Neurological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon Patllological Society. J6'll'C1'SO1l Hospital Philaclelpliia, Pa. JOHN JOSEPH lVIcKEOWN, J R . Q - - - -- V- , ,.,. Y, , ... . ,, E wma BH ss nz sm W Q g-Aw ri v H H Q M E M2-'W H Eigwf, . V. The 5? imfx ' Megs? 1 A 225555 -wgffs ' ' - , ' . 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'X Kg . in , . m M a as , ms ' -in N1 ss B ,Kms a EM ss ma a Q is is B 5 , 31 WILLIAM CHARLES ' HERRICK GLASSPOIi'1' PENNSYLVANIA Texas Technological College B.S., University of Alabama QHX KBKD Thomas Physiological Society, Alpers Neurological Society, Glee Club, Editorial Staff of THE CLINIC. Union Memorial Hospital Baltimore, Md. y , ..,' if nfs ', I 'Ifhd grdatest thing in afihi2Qiczi1?st1ii16nt21s reliable bbseryiation.-JMINETL M 5 L - '3. , 51 ' v 4 ' :L 32 ww? SAMUEL W ICTOR CING JR SHARON PENNQYLVANIA B S PCI111SylV8.111El Mllltarv College Cl' R K B YP 1 homas Phvslologlcal Somew Mpers NPllTOlOg1C3l Soclety A ebllenv General Hospnal P1Ll,SlJll1gl1 Pa 5' 'WW 1' mgffyfl md- wen Him ,,,, F ll ' ' M. .gg Ekgwwi, ' WS L qw, 3 Nilgkfiwwk J 'fi gent 1856553923 ad, death 1S ,91ll? - ge isgo fi- .13 -3395? angling Mum -af 51 I aww If. , glffw' W Y r -dawg l rr we xv 2 1,3 5 1' rg, W Jnyvx El f I M5335 Magi W f 5 Jiaggiw N 33 vg'f'?Sfw . wk K S J? ww me E: :-fag ,ww mr ,ww m n mmm., viz: swan sw: :many wi. M1 'j N954 Y N f Mfg ...IH MQW mx gk SB wif 'swan 2, D., . :Q www: 1 , . . 5, I 4 ., ., L- . . -. . . , , . . , U 1 f X . . . . . . 1 . , - . R 1. I , .L .. 1 ., . . 0, . .. .. . , 11 . . - .Q , . r1 3'iL W' f . A I- Z. n , 'fi M:-1 ffe','7' ' ' .lf al:.,.--22Zf1'2r'!:2:r7eH11-: 2'f g2ff1ea2Q:2sE.TI'-1 , Y., . ' uc, lv' - .1: 1'f? fab 2.1-+1 1.-is. 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' fg+2i.ffrf'f1--' '51-vimglilw-' iv f:,1g5'l' glrz-ff-4' irj-g,, . if ml -Eli ,WM 8. -' M21 -Er?-eiii bf-Zmfillf.,-1 E.-, , IQ-1 .ws 1 .,f' L. -z-sixMQWw'-:Q'?x1Q,2Q 1- 1 H1 F? -.1-r'QgfF:f1',ii. mug: L1 JJ'iw.:.-v ' 'L '-'f'l2iAf. f'- .- .- 'V 'I' P' 1 LES-WGL- '.'X' '- ftwf 'f1:'fN '-Y fm-I ef -1: iw-'Hifi'-Tfff fQQixszf.x571':?i Q-fi f-'fl 'I-g.7kCH!'5J'g LJZTTQ-J f'f,,.1.j 5151. AQ fag ff 'f:'l 'tgn ffi , if .L' 14514 fffii' ,f 'If - ', Q 5 TQ J' ,5,5g53Q,'Q1.,j,.,.'.gf .Eg ' .gy luv. 5-.,j'.2sg ,V WK W- Nq,9'fV,gM-g4g5-,JQQ-ai!! 1y'3zi5f+fg g.:nfwf vyf.w?i' , ,J f ufswww 11 5,,?fgg,1gwfH - N 4. 45.1.5.1 ...... .... ..L..-QA,:...41h- .,.,-l.:.1l-l..4,l. .fx ga.. ?S,,,.:.-1if1:f'.1'.'T5'. gl . ll ' ,J , V W 'ff 'fm H PHILADELPHIA , PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Princeton University fb X Schaeffer Anatomic League. Pennsylvania, Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. EDWARD JONATHAN 34' KLOPP, J R. ERIE PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Upsala College KP X Alpers Neurological Society, Vaux Obsteuical Society, Deaifs Com- mittee, Glee Club. Jefferson Hospital Philaclelplria, Pa. me a na mn mae my aes am SSE a a ma is new new B w fs me sms B ss H B mn mms lm me WZEB WMUEEN H S8 lm!! HB MW me H mmm :SMH M M H PAUL Q B H H In mn ,Q s me B mfmmmmi HERBFRT E H Bi .IERNSTROM 5:35535 W Q H a s mmm new m a is fl -fe - f -. 'W ' M' ?ffff'Q?1 WU ' 2 -,. -- --W , W- -wg xr , v All-fi?r,14'5rl-L -ii 3 4 5' ff , cIs-.ss if N- ww kia fx- 1, 'J Il ,ii FL 'Pu J mr as E 4, fglgiirw Wag? M, 4, B K ' + ,wi 'gi PM 3 5 'J W? AX, 24 Q2 ws gee lea Q 'l A 'A 5 my WM Q- 'H W Na 'Y eg. hmqtt Oil H , 4 'EJ gf 'Q Eggs MQW ,lg W King MQW? b WNW -4 l Nxmfff-'WT' JN? 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L7 -.,,. ,ii-fi1'i5.,Z ,i,f+f1'5,.-f51fg5-.- sq-.ff-sfQ'2',,gz,q2----Q-3:-5, L-333,-G,5f c . . , e- . figs. , - - , ' , -FW --ms: -.4y..,.1f 4 L Y -B?-,'--A-:--1. f--2-Jag-1 V-Lf-1212, yissiaa-....iW1--' '..:1.'L.LjQ by ' i, , 'J' L, f,1g-,y'?, 5 1-LL ,,,,,,..:.-1 if ' ' 1- ,'KM2,. vxtmskgv motel 5' 5, , 2 3935 W X CLIFTON A.B.,' Upsala College TIAKID NEW J ERSEY an X 1 Paterson General Hospital Paterson, N. J. PETER HUNT SHERSHIN :nf A j--'-.H-Yr, v-rr--' -' , gf .M Y,-as ,Xi , . . f:'ff ' : j,IT ?3j jgji f g y,',?x :f7pwj- .wiggfggf5-j1iif x5'jg,ji 55311-''H2515135iliilrffziflisz,'f??1 fi'-fog! W 1 V '7 QF'-f ,' AF 'WW Q -Iuka '-iw 13.15 11':Ff?'?T '-J' ' Ts' 71' mga Eggs-W Wy K ggge sfm,:??3ew zmipezfgif' W'-lfyxiikwggf Ti . as1ce:fgif.fgaf:55Q5. . -1 pw- ,. I-Leer: xr.-I E mir .1 fa ii: I In .-:if L :E L2 E :S i .- 1, 'Bl ,sf .14 Aer 1' ww- ww f 1-f-'--.vu 1 Lib i:,..M n :AK . Q1 i:,1'.:,1?.- +-rw, new f? -1:4 :ff-ff'-1 .ag :dm-v: . V--rf , -A., M.w:,1,.?imW-D-.25 -',x, ,-tc, .0-fA,1M'vf,,, ,.1g.gy,7 'Q s1-.- ,Agn , .'4,g,- -'nf .- , ss... J -. -3.,,3'j-55-5-,q-Q'-13'-Q-3113,F.g3..,,-, ,..,3g'-',.:-A33 4,5 .. - ,, was mf 3 1- X- -' - 11 10- 'ak 3 , , v'-11-,L Q -.,.,.J1e3 S:,,..i.fMmiV . fm , '. ' , 5ef. f - V 'fWf iE,'4 xfkwifggg' fm -A Nggww-g95f':wXgfd!g!1NW - ,E3:ga:a2f1Ff g ' E. 5 -V., .,fk:.'.z ' Nm , : ss Ea if V? . 3. '. gag 35' 5: --g 5 11- ,. jj! T-ri , - ',iE,,y ,gs:,:5 5.- wax . 33, 2-., - iii' J- ' , ' 'JHfLZiQQ.j?Wf:-I4-F f fr'qgYjQgfig fF 554 ' 'Y V. V M . 1' 'f lf J 1,15 ' Q -' u:a+ ,'w: -1:1-g i'-1-. w w.. H N A A 55? 1 ,. Jw Q C 6 - .WF 41- ,Y ,f , gg, H Y -.jf ,nil ,gg QR? iwmifzifgi '1EgiQk2gf,1g! a is 36 I 1 K GEORGE FILMORE ' TIBBENS WVASHINGTON PENNSYLVANIA Waslliugtogu and J efferson College A T O KID X ,Hare Medical Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pa. W I. l V fo . A f'5L'fj e' M 3 1 - VW ' W' ,-QQEN, ,V Wfaw -53,1 syle 2 5,5 A- 1 is-55f'.':. . W. K.-. X Lfjijii' 5.25 , Mf K, of J 1 l e' V ' M n ss- ' Ti? f ' 'ssfxmxl' - ' - V . 'sa' A52-sw :eww -ss .-an - V 4 Y MUW5- ' ' ,, ' wEf:'1,,,y,-,ss -,wma 1fg. 4..' .,i ii',I1 'R la. , : ,- . 'xi if-'.': ..,., l.-- ' lf f1.V-wzeif'-V Le.-1 is Vi: -3. i2X2- 4 A 'iiigwLg.-V1f:Qi9?siYIg':f5QliiQE'i if 5 37 B PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., UniversiLy of Pennsylvania qv X Alpcrs Neurological SocicLy, Thomas Physiological Society. AlfJiI1gLO1'1 NIG11101'Zl8ll Hospital A Abingtoln, Pa. , ,,,Ll . oA,,1lo. . ,.. . .llo . .W . , .fx Aww-mggga 1 w is N va x a v JOHN ALBERT KOLTES 8 N 51 r o . N N...-. S31 oo N' vvl'-5 ig 'i o N .. ' . ' 3 ,ff A wg,-2,'.:f,,ai ...W A '- , M -mmm A, -f,x.,W., wmv 'wh L 'J:i'1,v'2i.5 ':' , A.-73 11131. yr , -.1 ,, g., -P1-' 'if-. r,z13g1h5 'T' V :sifw-l?,'V-.fix 5,bff.2'5-S3 L- si Nigga?-82' :Um f IF-via wigglq I figa1'Vff,g.'.A.3wEwa4f2,. ll ,5ggx'mafE3fiv9fg?aE'xQ5!f fzflLf'fiQ7Sf QSQFEWWEE-gli? f'fg,?sz.,'P3 We QIf:1t 5lf1'W33iQ - 'f '- . xiii ,-2111 W f 'rw ' 1 , J.. I MQ .wxfiwf he F 54725 S YH '-iw-fsf fk? H-' fy-wlfv, LI. . -'1-L,f,1g1-mm'-W.,-,:,, Lf-23 iam- -. 'ru ff all -' Q51 H. H ' - S -'ww M 1 editzil ' 0rF'6oi1ii2Fa1,' filtrlzi T'aflmosi2-ln 'flslijes-+fgIE1:sIJq v-121-Wil.---.:M' a -4351 71.-'15 :i!bzlL' g5W.v:PSw-s+wQfgm.,.e5i,iQ 5529? ' A' '4W'g9? S Wf522 -J'Jm:SZQ 'A-f-wl5?.' f1 mf- Zlphw tflf-f5E'f'ji1s,. 'gkwyv fisl.-EQ, ,E, l-.g2F, .-Qs? .5g'Hm ,SES-filggii lm, , L 54 , ,Q my-mama U 4. - .Lji-j:, wma-nf-sm, ,g .fQ,,y. lg-,fa -jg: :Winn gg., , -my .,,,,yj,X n , V, N., sg V gg , 'l,,,fz,.. sf, Vp v N ,P 35.145 ',fC.l:f,3- 4-,N 5,-Jiilyu, z'Eq1AIg4'1,415:,.5 114,-gg, 1. P F, ,E as 1f:'a'lf2f13!5f'?f?'m 'lgmm mi- ,Q 2-wwiwwfsrf ws' L? v s: 'g?SEi,-JQQQY 'iw1 v1effx4:-g Xlf?51 .l5 ifff fa 'lffaaif M f4'x ffl M V WE-.lfile- ffl.fe?fgl' -S,fl 1 , , 3521 ' RICHARD ALLEN HASTINGS I : l ATHENS PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Pennsylvania State College fi: X K B fb A X E . Schaeffer Anatomic League, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Moon Patho- logical Society, Alpers Neurological Society, Historian of the Class, Business Manager of THE CLINIC. Robert Packer Memorial Hospital Sayre, Pa. gs I-S .s,s.s- Q, I.,,,,.lkT.,:!:XE-:E:,:f:.5,R vgma: ,331 :1m5sm:.f3::-.. T. .,5s,5::f,1.,?,Fl,v, ,s:.f.?,: ,A .TXWLX WL F ,,,W.,...:?-.:-.535-g-5-gf''w. 3fs'j:ggeE 'T 'fYidZ'K'fwT1s J'? ? - 1-':. wif -- -5: -:- f -'t '- it 'Hi . f:zf2f?.2E,?ij 1 4: I szfiiisv 2:25355-ee if ziissseei:-ae T-if-ff -: Q 33, i::1,-Egg, W Zigi-,ggjffjf-Iinf'QwjgggtgiialfvgQ32155E:QQ,I5:5:-g,fi5,l55Qs'gw.t-I, V Vj?.sE'3f,5,:g5,:5-:ai::Li::,:, if new 1. I wwe, 51565 : . . ,sg V, w E fqviftw- :fmsgasra enerelllwu egixizs-- :equae mia? lEt!l5S.5I15B2lfS News-asf. 4 s :-sg-ww rg-'Isa ::: :.: 1-, ::s.w.al .:. : ' '.- 'rg :.: .:.:.:. :.: .mf :nw ::: mg' . 'f-1 - K v -.-... ef'f' - 2 -- - Q v ... .. . vi - ,.. ....:F:.: - -Q: Lk .. Ag '- ?1 e'5fs-'Lan-sc-a smfvl-'-asf :J asp.. a assi-fakes sais . -- l 1 5 Hi u, ZW ' gi-3' ik Jil QW: Q3Qf3Q3..Q3QQg:g ' ti 1 V 39 B ALFRED MARTIN MINTZ PHILADELPHIA , PENNSYLVANIA AJS., University of Pennsylvania A fini QAPK' Thomas Physiological Society, Hare Medical Society. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ,- ff Ml., ,.f,:,.,.-,,... J . ,T , f Y, V NJ, 4 ,-,I ,. VM' ,,: V H- Q Wg- age, legs Q-Swarm, MHVW mmgamgfgg W'-.ashgg H -Q Mu.,--W-N iw 1., M, ix- - . .- ,gm F U,.,..,,.s L gs ,N B al Q .EE U-,gl HE f agile? ,A I 2 -S: 22 jf4.?a'jQ.!gFl' iiHg?ggj!k,i.E2E:,'.sgg? S357-X. ,9mIgf2.Ie.eg:g3-!g5g'f',gi,lA: 'lf,:1QQEi,Qliv lJ' :wg E 2 Wmiwf.-51.52 Sag-ZS -gxgwmlwlqf.-ff ifgvf-5QKEESW3ife.wiE52'ei'rvQE S .yFfw'w55A :5'-fa'Jgg- .QQfs 'liiE1Bag,gQKil-A Hllgi-'5i 1j3' aa 15,w '4 -' w H -. f , ,- -'1 , E ' r - ,,'-Pic ' F-im H- - L ' ' ., ni ,Ma weft ' 2, ,5 ' H1Wa,a-.A.i3- .4 ,eg ', SS nwie r 2 fi, W-allege 1 EE Q54 3538 34 H fl lui-iff 'Ml' ul '23 - ' f' . 'jam--',, :V , f, 'QU 1, -.lu , Er, 3--':.:V'iL.5 B-1:5555 W --:,:5E:.:J nm . E-J, .I EEE..-.,i.-5:?.E:E:-P ji I..gA,EEE:t',ri-.wgg-:,',:-: 1-:-21525-:-:Z H'M5.3-3 5-5-gg:-:f WQMI- 5::s.:.11 lhl, ,.,.,,.,i., V,-.I .:V.:- i Us ' ,,,, MW! 'gf' '52 H' i' I.. .al-.' :E-'.i---FEE' '1!9--i- : ...:i' I-1.i,.,'l , L- IH:-V 1-,.,wj'r::1 ,:,:-:::'E:'a gr : .l :.: QQ 3 i' Vi.: ' ' N1L.Mc.J?xiiSfaa.aw:'..2.l-hal-alba-.a -- N , '-a.+E,L-Za!-4 ' ,.,:.'f - 'M-1211:-1 '-.ar 'figm,.:..a4:-1:1..Qi.as i A : - C 40 LUTHER FRANKLIN CORLEY, JR. BoAz ALABAMA ALB., University of Alabama ffl X Alpers Neurological Society. .Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. Q, fi F' ,L 1 'iff ' WI .-, .- 1. - . +,1---- Y . ,. , l -1 17- -ggi:-5. Q--,gm Y. , H . . . ' J NWHLE. W . -A9 M ' , . m . , ' . H wr -, N. B A ,gy 1 ...ZH 5' . ww' .f ,, K Sw- ,'.'y ' ,i ' , Vw, .M uc L, , , .. 1 , A ,V ,Q lf- ,- . 5' fl f, ?,1-gQ?i?,,,,,- Q' 'wwzwm 1 ,,,, Gln Kang Wi.. 9 Q1 af A i sw .. . . . . 'AW M W' PJ v?.T:-fi. 'Cn:l1!k.i:FuSZ Ivsl r ' ' 412 ' Q?Q.,,LQ 'Lam Q pa, - 2255! mana agzgzlf awk X mwiam a.. . i .... WW miami 4, mg Q LQ E E xg 1 mfr? xS,wE , A 'B' 1. Ma' 41 In 5 3. K is W, ,- A, L, ,J i . -,, ,A ,-.,. 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A A H ' --42 ' 1 1 4 '- 'B CHARLES GODDARD FOSTER WATERBUBY CONNECTICUT Jefferson Hospital Phlladelphm, Pa m F, ,WI Qvsm , f-Si!,s3'a 7?5jfE?f '5giig'?1f''nrggr ,vu:1'i'l EjT 'LI '22 We H' M '- ' ff if ' Y, ' J ' f grim , .5 , ,' H M v L: V. :S-HwwifW1,'awy.f : Wx .' Hg 'xx-fkgga-fa JT. ::q:-:f ' :aw -- 5 -',,'-.v.'1,. 1. 2' cl' -Bu f - -. Nr Bff,i'-'m'2,m'f 32 m. 's5E-,-2251 . 3,i,zm?E5-:iff 'WMM -2345. - gsxfW?,,,' Ja JA w -FWw'2eS -55.55 :wywi 'nz-V , A ,W ,, K, ,, , .,LV , , . . , H Y- ,,, ,V .- ,A Y ,. xx Y Y - ,Bai ' .5333xgfu5x:,,:g,.'jQ1,,tgK:,,2y-a',swe--,f,.1g4Il,i fifif ,L-j.5'A -5 xL5f.,-1 , 143,z--gf-g'.wfE' -' 31,54 : mf- QPU Q -. X Q Tim, T'i'?2'f?'?i1-LJQ2i,,3,,f5f5if f'?f?5glg?gT: ii? gh.. 5, Mimi- ww :QE 3: a7w f'f'?f?f .ggig rg , , gzf. ww '.:.f9:,, -3-,Lv gym A fix 5-,Mrk yi 'L - j-5.zLr.:mu-QA, ',g? '- ..i'-., ,. , fu Y L ...Hf1Efi1f+'wii's -1415+ Ram ALAN IRVING 4 ' BLUMBERG PHILADELPHIA I PENNSYLVANIA University of PG1lIlSyiV3I1iH 11' A E Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ' , I I ' I 513,-,alwisnlgsiiaqi ufianafgjmwthergilggwi '?lY13S5.g.gflP11X5l!Q5g5l,!Q' tbg-wzgsm I W:-31 1-I. I,f-.ff: I '-wwf My ' i I-3fl'f'1WlJ?W -X ' I if - ,wmv MfwI?'4efg: 'I-1-IH 52.-,,-U'-,-,Q5aQ'sW4 'mi-WI ' 7 -1EHE5 A,f I., ff: 'A 'I -. I MI-Ig :I gn -I img ,Aja-YS, - ,MTEHQ V ' U . E. g1Sf3f.Q,I,,.A.-ff , is-5 gin-'av wqgs5 15, J ' 7' ' -fir -' 5K.iEf .Lita-M.92'5F,, 'I , .-E-.,f..,f . -'isis 'Wifi' f' +'-L'-' :f ag gg . f A - - gim dui: 2y1.h.Qg.a1p hp , I ng Rf - 5257 ' L Iggy, 5 .-,q -.13.'w,gjgg-gzuifdsy ,iq-T f - .4 .,.,. -3r154,ljE25,5'g5,:Q1.-1''rwiff' -er -Q' 1- 9, '?IQ'f'fJ?- 1. , 0' w r-11: -E: Sfr.i?i,:1 - -H' '75 1'- ? ' l i ' J f 5- ' - ' ' .qiwmi ff?- -' '.'fE.1f:T':'.'-it .T 4 ,ZZ'. ? 'A '- .av.'w:If-iwififfff'-1 'LJ 'vfisi , 4., 'IHELI-: - Ib' -.5115-', --:,L2ii13fas1E5119 ' D EQ 'gbfif- MM I--if ,Ie-249W 43 ...V ,LLL ..,. -.-.-.,,.- .ILI W ,LL I.I.I-.,,.F I-,,,,I,.L LLL. I I I LIILLL ,L-, L, I I I . I I BKKVWLI Y lk - saggy J 'W E I E I , A BAKER OREGON AQI3., University of Oregon A S2 A Dearfs Committee Santa Clara County Hospital San Jose, Calif. MENZIE li - MCIQIM, JR. E-5, 'M 5 . fu H 155' Q-X ,L Q. ja Cm.. fn- , 1 Q I H if -VI! f'i ff ' K '-'lf' Y YTAT' l Us Sh w 'Q ' K . .Q - W -V if W -H ia- vw iff? vw ff G-Em saw via. Wm, '.,,Q, W- i'11l131m,Ha3-veya'-iaught' gnaliomy not-afrom Qiooks but fron1rdl,ssect1onsg,nojgl frnm supposxtmnsfaof , . SE Tw , .H V 1- 'rl nil ,V M ,i ' ,A ff Qs , phllsyfxihersiifbuvfrffrlii -C ,tt, 4 . l it 44 lVIAPLE SHADE NEW JERSEY A.B., Gettysburg College T K E B B B Hare Medical Society. Cooper Hospital Camden, N- J- l HARRIS GERALD FISTER W - .- - ---v - ,. . ,.... , ?. . .FV .,-V..,,.-.-Q ., . ss m ss' ' , . . , B B sage , 1 : X ' 2-1 'F0l'ltl1C generzil practitioneg, la well-uged librar3?2gRqheg'QQ,,1the 'fQ?PjfAAQQl'l'6QtigQ539f t1'igEQ!'QgEl8tlIl,2Q ' . . - . 4 ' N . ' , f S V . ,4 ' B F' .. , 'E D'-TF W 9 C W A ' Q 'A W W ,, 0' H if W Y' X-:JN rr 32 senllxty-which IS so apt to 0VCl'tl3l.1iC,glllll1-+SIR WELf QSgJER.H Wfip B V . A X fe W ' Z Q N , , 1' ' Z X: ffm Q 01: Q 5 B ex :Q 45 C LAMAR EMERSON HAUPT SISIAMOKIN PENNSYLVANIA Bucknell University . fb II E A X M Schaeffer Anatomic League, Hare Medical Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Harrisburg Polyeluuo Hospltal I'IEll'I'lSbUI'g, Pa. W V , .,n,:..- -1- , ,::,,-, ff,--91: -'rr'1---rvz:'vQ'rEhXT'51!v'TYA,, 'FWHF5 -XT I i1 , ,-,cg - - - ,-'f,1 ' ' 3' mf i ef--if vi 9211132 , .4,gg1gr:jiWg34aggff,g' mir',Wafiisgag1: iQ:Qf5fE-::.s:,af2r.,g1'1.EZvf-'42-',L1f,:qicy., BT PN :f ' ' - ' 'Mime' E1..:1-'HEE. '. 'jim W,Wv.rg1 '?fTig1E LiXiw ggi? M L- C gg?-'ei2'!,u.-24'.1f - '33 .::'f:'Y?'1-5 'z' , ,fdikfx F ' '40 15-fi---:Q 'ig'?l.'e 1,-'f1'j'Tz 1l1i is - ' - J ' '1 - v . 51 ' X '- 'W :fn .1.'i -f'?f: x iii ' -. I wx' . f' R - .1-'. 1' '- 'en 15. H mf' '4J :.f?f2-I-,131 1-INF ':,Q-do Ag J v 1 2? .aw '. f..-1 -' NST. ' ' 'ii mn r'?L:.,,.i1w: .jf U 1: ii ff-'-2:-...ig 'iii mei' '19.:Ff'l'. . - N41-23-1Y'w:1'S-,Q-5542?'7ilf F31'-1-'Tfiislg-.,,f? . .5 thfqr ' M- i - -- f . -.L 1, , -A W Mgr.. ,fix V WM ji-' gif - , -Le '-Sf rf ,5f,:.,:ym, f aigqg 'gl-raticanyhe hadirom the.druggistsa+SgnLLLhB53g:-.X, 1,,-.'iT,a,', f,,':fgqy,.. yi ,N Wa eff S V312 ' ffif ' eff' ff' N' 'flijif' ?jf1 i?f'h,Ia 5' 1222 . ' . e .. ,' ' . lg, Ki, H- ' ,A::. ,g-.:,,, -' .,....-.. -..a , 46 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA Yale University Q B ll Schaeffer Anatomic Leagiie, Hare Medical Society. Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pa. WILLIAM CLAYTON DAVIS .. , .,,, - f A E W . .r ,Q Q- Bi NV yi 'QA PhYSiP'aH'SliP11!S1010gY has 111111211'P11011S2'11sf?Jef21f'Pi5Qf9sfeah1SA baffling,AasffwlerlafsivfllrivrrykfA hasatb hiipuwer of influencing llol 1,,-n A f . f . , H W 1 ' ' f ' X' :V . Wigs: a A , 41f'Z...,:?.' k' A 3 'M vrifgx, , W x tr-:fx KQV Y A mm! ' .Aff ' wg. , S, f ' - -a. 4 1 ,fl 47 C ,NU EDGAR CLAIR HANKS JoHNsTowN - PENNSYLVANIA A. B., Gettysburg College A X A Vaux Obstetrical Society, Hare Medical Society. Bronx Hospital New York, N.Y. o , ,V H , ,Q - ,M,,,,Q,l,-A,W,,w,iT,T,,,,,,,h,..-,,, i,,To5,,,..,-.-,.,x When Il consider tllxe :ifsidfilty of 'tIaislfl?crf23ESid6li',l hge? Wllflgejl- -ndtfoifily, eneralg ive their lneaicirres for halt' vallfi, hiit uysiegtlie ltiostlo exisiiaeivefrerlionstraligibs' tdigduqpkilfb -sick to ,come and be cured.7OLgvE1+ GOPDSMfTH f17QQ,:1774J.g ' - ' - - H Y- , , 'Wu LQ, mf ' ,f,,,:,,11gw f,,J,,,, ' , 1. ' f C 48 CHARLES BENJAMIN I HANES AMBLEB PENISISYLVANIA A.B., La Salle College ' P fi: B H Schaeffer Anatomic League, Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Associate Editor of T1-IE CLINIC. Chestnut H111 Hospltal Pluladelphia, Pa. ... E Zi.??5EiLf'li'4- Jf1 fTQf7L 1'T - ,,., ,gg-111-f-,.g-5-bs.,-W ---. ,, - . ww- . . if- f , U . -- w e , V iifgml 'gfifif iffii' W Q , , Tgfgx .:. I QQ-5559? S ? B--an H v :Wil E ' sFg,,-,-'3.3 g.1'1'-' -Lf, 3-341115513 'dlsr .:..:::: .,. 1 f M l 5-5-u: e4eiffi,j ,,3u-'7l.f : - - -Qg:i.,gf Q. -ig -'j-Effie--'l '49 Q, 515 N 'U I . -3gf,eY:35i,'l'.QQ mfgu3',v.:,fgs5 mga :::y,.'j.1.,3,g1 L,-,,p:qi.N:, ,X- 5,2-.. 'i,' r,1'.Qqg,Q,4gL.,miF4f if gg- of -1. ,-,ggi-'Qin , 51,1151 :fi : ww? - B-' Qi- ,meg , an ,Mpeg fy ' :ffw 'v' .- 'f '1 'WU -.1 'wi- ' ' ' 1'--31-1-'W' ?r 'gfiE, V59 M1-H' 1 If . Em ' W,, ,, ME . 5 . ,WWW .W Q - H Q 49 VENTNOB NEW J EESEY B.S., Rutgers University 2 A M K K NI' '11 A E A S2 A Schaeffer Anatomic League, D63.U,S Committee. Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, N. J. l l WILLIAM BERNARD ABRAMS sw, U -1 READING PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Lehigh University HAH AEA JJAE Thomas Physiological Society. Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ROBERT IRWIN J A SLOW mf Twice fi' 'f P f ff 'ww 'W' 'Y'T,iw:i eg M is eases 1 34 w my-L if fl 'DEH ui rr. yy 3 mqiyiwmw igza-kay 435-'J 'E-Qf vsu it Q, 3' ,gg .54 fir swf 'S k 1, , ,1qhl?f' is Yii'j?.wA fi' gi 7, W KW was -1 ff if 1 5' wllgfi I N ' 'Q' .X we-1 an My Miha 93.1 weiisezfi il A ,A kg.,-f ,QW JAWXFX' Bl- -'ip 3,1 Qgla ffm: K 1 nu,-1 y'l6 1g jf 5 saw my ui mwigglv n gimf gh? :gpg 3!L,L,7wi1il5lKu- 'W Sngsrsii w .1 R fi? 9-fn Q iw ,saws gvlmgggll 1 wsu? as , 'view ,dr Nlfil -ll A-av. Y. 51 w gvlbiw 1 Y 'wo Y is 5' ' K fix I' mm X Q 'Q B W iw as MP? rv is as qw mg. W 45553, 4' Y fi W' w fi X 1 M ,. 1 f ' V E- Q w I E- PQ, I 2 sk . i 1 ff? ' A is Q i .Wi - fs E X 'fx' , -is . ' ' A 1 H .L H Q X 1 Eg 4 h7i?9 '.f -Ql f3:1:?12f'xii' s til., 31 T. TSW: f4'3l',WN f.-,,-,-,V-ww-.V 1' -11 ..s W.,-A,, Vg x'-w - , -N-.-- g,,.f::::L.4 --gm -.-rf- ...vs :.: .:. ,--L... Vs. ,H -..,...,, vm... .. ,f --.V V p:,,,...,..:,.,,.. ,..,,,,- shi. ,s,w,n.-.-,..:.: ,.- ,:.:.:,-..:. -. n.,.4,. - up , ., . i . - i . 5125- 'fig-54r::1:':::ssav1 221-.wf':faf'5: 'J 2 :if .:. ?' ..:. ..-,,:,:fH: .51 555 ' . 35' fn,.,u.,- 'A .f r-r 1 . '.-- Zyl ' . W lisfieg .- ., ,:: - Q .lFng1.r::M , - ,- Q.-ii aw, -, Mg is L - ,,, .- 5529. .1 ., , , ,R 1,9 3 Z, , . . X ,Q X :gi 1 . ,N A , ' M A 11, Mg - i n inn x - I A - -1 'E ,:':'5?' - 5' Q1 'i -'P' If U T31-. 1, ji 'gf - ' ' Q, '-,Ag A 1 , 14 , 1 j ,, ef - 5 if ' fs' 2,9 :y11f'fev,1?if.fv.iafiwia +f'E:2x..fs if - ':?'7-fliig ' if -fy,-1 Li 1' L fini-E13 52,5 We . 'fn . - 7-421' 1-2:1 . 4711 ,lm-. -.-,f . - :iywi 5 Lf, ,wi-I ,ip -fa 'v '- - '- '--f-4-uw V' ' - ' -..f-s,1..,- 4.33 -cw ,Q um iv , .g.j-El- --fLV Ef - Zajqgilix fx'-wi 'Z-4jv1L:,, '1-1 '- ',-.-1,:,,,,-lecvew' , ',. , - . .W -fMgnHf,,,.,:-.tif Es , Q 1 ss 5 ff ggi ' an ii, :VK fivs-fi.a4.,igQ1fLff'51...f . fgQfQw.2:f4,i,,zi is ff . ig Qui: X 3 Ai' Wi i 3 2 .:y,g:3ig1r4,'1 1,1 3' -,lg f-xi. ,mai ', I, W l' f' 'aww ml? ' , wiv 'T ' i- , HAZLETON PENNSYLVANIA I B.S., Villanova College Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Willies-Bai'1'e General Hospital Vlfillces-Barre, Pa. JOHN MYRON KOVAL l C 52 LESTER NIANN PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA BS., Villanova College Thomas Physiological Society. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. -,.-wr,--pfg' -Q, ff-ww,-. 1, 11,-M. - - ,Y 1 , ' laifsf-.f,-, ' -N , -f L - 1 -':'I'Faf'?' . 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F - hwy L fix' 'I--.gy 'gj-fm' ? , W:-'Stag 'f.'.1'1 g 3' ' - ' i , 21 ', :A gl' :qua v .'m,x..1- ,umggpfgc ,m,w..f -' as-Zz' Q: 11 xx ,mza.f:'r.'v'L :5Y:'.v?255rf?4 ':'. ,:. !mQ5'l' E' 1 ' NWEVW .-1 Q ff 'T1'3 Mi5' , ' Q , 'ww z '- ,wnilmf ' ' ' ' - ' 'E H .25 i':,,:', .' w1g l,'.fi.j:,':ff-5225231',1:i-eyW., A 355,23-. f -omwvg-31 f' ' , - 1274 53,2 1 ' 4, ,TW: .-fain: .zfa-1 A ,ff-iifafiff ge.J2igs:.u.q:.f4.:f' r . fa:-,g E F ' 1.'fS:'s2f2- -' .mga-M. -lv.-,W1l,.. ..- L , , .i. vi, . M. M H . 0. V, .wwf ,W .- ..A,:'m.,,1m..i AMW, iv 4-S. nd' .,... -uaasff'-2 e:,:fL.f:m1z1 9rfL1nf.-,4:as,.ug.:l.L,2sia2.l4-:2S1.1l.ig5fgf2f?i.,Qag,.gL-4115,,page gg.L'.'4Nzog5 -, aankffgof.-M Q xxx . F?-,f,1f:.'I,.'.-eagvgeifgggf 53 PHILADELPHIA , PENNSYLVANIA University of North Carolina CII A 9 N 2 N Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. WALTER LAWRENCE CAHALL, J R. . IF- I WR, H...-WA.-. . 1- - . r,-'?f?-21 - S'1'?'5'i PiWEf 1'Qg'2, 'f'E . .. .,, - . --I ,- - ,. -ff.e1f.- .w n::, r7a'v'fwr'.ff JL I-1ff': :-r fu, . :iii '1 ni ' V 3' -if JPEG 'uri1 -'QKA-'fis3:L+'i ' -'K' mfffkt-?' 'ner-E ?4 W fl.-' Q' ei -, :,fK: ' 1 ,- ' - 5QEg P fJEi?T?55 .jiiiggw 3' ff ?3f-fi'fQiv5fgif ?ATggZ f -i::'TsiEZ? f54wE5 'gQ3?5Qfgtg5455:i,iffwEQ-.-Wy? lglgggfw 5 el! wr ' E, ' kr-H2 f ' Q g ' h JA! Q- ,ji i .,f,. J T? F-, Ju 1 +C 'Z -fl' 5: 4 .-4. .,' - i i1'.2i1 'Q'-2' : 7,-g ' 'EQ '- 3 '. 5 ' A '-'21, !:,. L 'Tu ::f:5f14'?1fY2iri T'd Jgi- . 51 f- 'V if-1 C164 ehfpyeffffgj F -'.,: If - A We -Wfwftiwf-Lf 1-QW I . -Vim been flziizli xr 4 wi iqiwltlw Q , -H x Qw vlg :.:-.-5: k . :J H .SME . N, ,7 Wigan? if,-git, gut mg9gg,,.32,4 3' i5m7, s-..1i.4-.. :A F d -- ,' .gf-L Ei' ,,m 9s,i?b:1 5-, Leg , '1f'l-gd' '-tg if-w ig-r 115- Lv1's?35L:f.'15f13, ., - Jw- Q., , - Ne w A ND. .A 'wf'4 1f .-,,-4:'fUg'f'1-f it-ef ia-'-f1.,.w n, . iff:-E M ..,. .ff1'cama?'ni an 5- T' :9 'ggi JZ: . ' - 1 3325-Q J 'e-- 1 J 13 'Q ggv5f .fgf1,' hue' fu' 4.21 V . , . ' .- TM A A.f1..g.f-?1u:, - ,3 .. - ---- .. - :Q -' ' A .P L. me ,...,.,,-4M.fQ312eew-PA-1- - - . .. i - 54 ROBERT NORMAN SWARTLEY PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA Unlverslty of Pennsylvanla 1 I ' 1 I CD K 22 N 2 N Germantown I-lospltal Phlladelphla, Pa. 4' TT:-.15 wAff' 'E Tx 'WTR 'S-'? 'a7 '?'5i 5-lj? FT Tami19''f?TfT'f ?F?Efs'1i'.'F'1 435431. , 1Tj'f?v:Vi- .'-'I'-1' ':f,.i21,f-13.1- rvwfffe- V I' Wa lf' I f251Q23f1fx1f.'Ev-affezaifwil W .?'f'.e-su,-.LQ - JIS,-'-ff ' 4 :ff will ,- ' - A 1- f-QW' -,3,,,-.kSI.42f,-M- E ff: If - - Aw' Hk:'ve1IvQ2f'.!.4:M, fi -mia,-1--I3 f YT '::. f5'?Vf:w'1f3fffS2f:1.-,- .: 5' 55' :Ma-few Qm..-ww.-,ff'1v21 ' A 1s1g: '7fi,w'a. , ff.,fHff . , It fr -. .LQ -'F T: 1' 94 1:'- ff YZ-'k' I-' . 9--Wwwfwif 1 .W f-if-IP 'Ley 2'A-i'Y 'f,.,,if1iI--:' f mf 55 I sm BELMER H ENDR ICKS FUNK, JR . OVEBBBOOK PENNSYLVA NJA ' B. S., Haverford College N E N Schaeffer Anatomic League, Bauer Pediatrics Society. Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pa. -.Wm --K .I Y 71. 5,7 5 im K -' 'HE E ' E Sgr as 5?-'wxplg ' W HN f -ar.: A gk gala-B A B52 rw: risk D 56 ELKINS PARK PENNSYLVANIA B.S., University of North Carolina Z B T Jewish Hospital Plliladelphia, Pa. STRAUSS Wu ' ffm ,V f L- ,Jw ff-www' - 'mr '31, 151 sw- I',,1,!'?-1 1- -'M'Q'WT1?TTE5Wi use ass ess i V 51 2.5 f Q' Wig gsm?-5-vr if :Wg -I V , 1' A -'- ,. ,. 1.5 I A ,ig i 2 I-riisw isf +L-Na 2 -1- 2 2 S Lg , V S?Fl1er9gf5ggg1eatfs11!1'Q1:QngQ :betweeg-faiagoodQhysLc1,q,g1gg1Hi1fnzg?13a11::df Q .p tssaeia ,9'IDlQfi!NehEveenf.2g gogdzq, QL- 'yfzggkigilfw is Y, ,- ul x l gw: 715: -LJ ,-,gf-,331-. .ggilE3,.,,.,g1,,5H'! 7 --'wZ.1'....f lim .. nu ,i if L- ' mi, mt. H - gg:-:- -::: :::qL-yi? ,,, 'fi fx N32-ww H 57 QQ: 15- ,V lg ig :I- ff V .... - - '58 f 53 -F :sm :.: 5 QT - ::waQ.s:e - 4 v'.:., v .:. :.: .:. :.: :.: .:.2a:a T -- 4: ,:,..::::.:.:.:.:s1.:.::: .:. :.: H 1? ' 'W 2 :-:' iw . Wg .. as we semi in 2:2 Eff.-2 5: -:--.:-:-:-: ,.,., 57 NATHAN Q MARK SMUKLER PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., U'uive1'siIgy of Peimsylvania CD E II Mft. Sinai Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. A P, ' -a.' 'L xii LQ- 'Tiff' 'i,L3:,!d1f5:' L11 1 gi , K ' 'K If bm .ll. -'Al 'P A F7 I' ' if if S g T gig? fi llifilliligii 5 iii H -355 5 T221 if A A A Ev 1' f3?? ifLM l A .'ff3 Qf2f. ,, , :a f my E5 'L.Afi ' ' 7' - A Fig 'N ,KLA 58 LEONARD ROSEN CHESTER PENNSYLVANIA ' BS., Pennsylvania Military College Thomas Physiological Society, ClI'Cl.llHT,l011'lVl3.11Elg6I' of THE CLINIC. Chester Hospital Chester, Pa. ii I ''ffT.fi?f'lfQ',l'Q5 'l'3f'S?-ff I 1 if T' it TT 'Tf'f ' I 'Eg ff- lT72i2WE'Q.iW5i?? ??fi?Zi3f3Eie 7? f Q ., - jg git? ,lm V F15 '. ' Q. : 1 -' gfiigiit- -whl1i1.y:-fig 'Yifif fi :J ge, B'f'gi?2j ' we-1-,gi f' A ' 1 1 , .- ,Q r Q -, : 15 Y? ' f 3-W' IQ 5. 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' 'l C' 'Y F 59' K 3 5 .. ., . ,,.l:k.:.f: E? 1 i Slat 5 f ' ' ' Q4 -4 vi 1 K ' Qu ' St. MABYS PENNSYLVANIA A.B., University of Pennsylvania dl B II Pasteur Society, Hare lVledical Society. Nazareth Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. AN DREW ,I HN WEI-ILER ,ff izfw -T: ' Y- -- ffffnfw- '-im' ,- -ref 1 - 1. ' ' :ffv We ..f..f,GfJ. 'vw' .' Q . Y wi- vi TQ ' N-TW-gQieE5 '-'f Qi5fi'f,-gs-ffw15Tfzi .fgiiglifg-5:1Z-m..'TggaNg,f-siiifiliga fjiZEE'gf'gw 55221.. gge-.fv'g,E4x2,5-9211 ??wfwf 'L B3-52. Evgen! 9432552 View ww , .' V ' 1 . Hn- '- 1-v mtg .H r' T' H ef, 'ue-'i' ...J5a:,.:'-.E'. Y f ,' .12 f. ' '- ai , ,' '-fig'-T'-' ,Z 'E-, '-Ti'-1 J' fig J, f :fgF':f2:f H glam -vi'wg5'ij 5133 gy?5Sf5ff'i?gegl'2g4'fg'Sim 'Li-.f.'32'f,Z5'5'ifei5 -3551 L'-NF' mul E'11-'. f1:lm-':'f.','3a1i :- Sw H, P, ?'.'fw-:.:1f:tf'-:'a-,Q '1,.ufg.'J-A'?3 1-'L, .' ' '. ?-'ini f:fff.:'4 -. fha- wf'i2.'11's 5,9 ' ig Ph' 1 :Q . f,i:,3f'k2',',,'? 4813 1317- -' KLM y H-i?E.'W,mH laws WH Mr: t . 55' HQH-wi, :e '.Q:ju1:t1:.fl- ,, -VM if- A' lf . -1 wus- ggiim' Q' . ,1TL-E 'w 'APS L -,' wwf 2 fFA,gb, 1:-I A 5:11 -' BF-52' z 9225 l'4'EE'f- 2555 'Q ' 2' 7 f i ' P ' 4 f A 'l: l 'Q '- 2 2 '-. A :eL1f'.4fLff'7I -' : ' . Exjls' 'Tr :Yir1'.- ' -' 'i WISP- fi de- - -' ' 1 ' 1 , 60 E J -1:3-1135.1 FREILAND i PENNSYLVANIA Ursinus College Q: B TI Z X Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Alpers Neurological Society. idszgerald-Mercy Hospital Lansdowne, Pa. LEO JOSEPH CORAZZA i V1 , ef Hz f f rr-'-v-W-'-T..-A-f'mw+Frr- - ,. NW 134 ,,.,: X as K V . gf, P1 - c w V A . , .' ,, - Prevention themlajfghlen' H ,Q im., ffiffv f-Newry: fim-N '-X , E - In , Ewa, 4 ,, .vw i Q - wi fx i' W .Sess,H x News 3 i, . X ,, . . ., .4 . , W a, M , N NM s 115 ZH ' '42 is ' ' Rl W am +A QSM N1 ' Halal-if fifif geifs .Jw , iz Wg? , f 2 1-Q .W fl f ag, evzwf , My f i -4 Q: , fi --omg, , ' ff-JFYI2' , i, I iw, Q ,. 1 if 1 ,, ' ' A . V 4' 1 ,L .yy me 4 , . .-,-..,. ,- .,,,,,- +P .. Y ,. , W- 7,1 6I , W gqw, w A S, ,M Vx ape., D X Eg if Q iw2Kf2.gg?r,g5 131 ' ll if' WS gl' .raw 'Maw 61, B , pg- ffig K ' I WN viii: ,gw f, - IW? M.. g..V'E-Qu., 2'-pg GERALD DEWEY , DODD, JR. PH ILADELPH IA PENNSYLVAN1 A 3 - AL., Lafayetle College 1, . l+1Lz erald-Merc Hos ltfll Lansdowne Pa. . - 9 --VA - M W Q' M 1 if ' MW PM Q 3 5 H f H H A V X, Q -A g 62 PHILADELPHIA - PENNSYLVANIA B.S., St. Joseplfs College LIJ X Thomas Physiological Society, Selmeffer Anatomic League, Fitzgerald-Mercy Hospital. Lansdowne, Pa. I III IXIII III IIII I mI FfII II Inm III II II, II I IIIIIII III I IIIILIIIII I III-IGmIISIm Ix-I IITiw I-:I ' AI BERVII I-I I II IIQI III-I I 'II I In II I. 1 mxmxmf nl QIEORGIC KWH II. . 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Ig, JI, nge IIN I U E H, II IIII, ,III ,I.I,, III, WWII I I M I H- M I WIIFII - I-III II WIMLWP IIIII. I-I-IIIII WWII, Haw NIH II II I - M . I . ' ' I-. I I , I I I - I II- IMI W-I: , WWII E iff. Hg-IIE IHIQE H-II H33 W .. , ,Y I I . I ,J , JJJ -IA I I4 63 A FRANCIS XAVIER THOMAS PHILA DELP1-IIA PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Villanova College SCl'ltl6lfGI' Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society. 1- , ' ' 'A , ' ' V A lfllDZ0'6l'21ld-lVIGIfC f Hos 1Lal Lunzndowne Pa. D 7 M H .,. ,.... , ,.,,. vwf: - ,A ,-i vm-f fe- ..-L 7-1-J-5-ff-f'T':' Y'-14 X -, -Wnrfwf W-aw 12 ifW'isf -:w'1'1w.:1-'zf-as F'-11' VM' i5Wmf :.r.1 .w lrf'fffEw:f' K' 1 A W .M as img Ugg H I fr .11-fl-'f--fgf,,a' L'l11,m-M -Slvfffifw gym'-erZur i:2,:,'-.mg, -Q-pw-' 'M 3,1 li if Q Q 5 Emi 1? viii iilwiiiweiw H X , be wwf :af il A 25 :fe -' 1 we .ise W 'W0:al115b6r'xa'gf11rist our fi3V'1iQ57!i??5?IiQE36721fl1lE1flS'i5m3lS2111mf?'fUfifflFfPBHOWE3?f-iffwifliifiP gg' W , . ,, ' , -. wk H , fy' ,ig -gf ag QQ,-.J ' --f A 452 ,N H aw- xfkhl -1 ' , 'Q WJ 'gin 1 A252 1, 551, :fic I-15,1-xr giifll-Qfilslif , ,wba if .P w- 1il3'i.,,f.x'2'x,- '--ii5fNJ1. Q 'Q ml. ,M WI, 1' 231534-' ' 'nf Y gfijlzi- fgwllfgyg ' xii , ' iw m4.fLV1:f,g5'f'J'ff1jQ'2 +571 , ' ,, , , . 'f ', 'e ,Ji V '- gf- iN ' D 64 JOHN EDWARD GOECKLER Wu LOW G BOVIZ PENNSX I V aN1A Ursmu S College A P I' A lx K Dean s Comnuttee, Glee Club Abmgton Memorall Hosplbal Ablngton, P'l 239: I Mwafxl slquwmi-F k if R' am? 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'VH 52' - 5' : .- - -JQE1 M if Q -2 Egimew ff .QW yt- -V -'Pvf!5f2i,f.fH,:'?fE N A by Wffm mf.-N? MM ff?f:IW'gf-' 1 f f.-IF -Q' WH -'4 fb f:afMf,.f.12w NN Hsrw:':'n 1-, fini :,.fcg:.m ada!'wfierA-r,av...4i,3ix,u W ' L , 2' 44.-1 fa 11.1 4 R l f. . if - - 1 V , . ,7. . ,- : W. rm . ' fy Uy1wf,, ' ,A I ':f., ,- ,elf ff, -,L -.1.,.w,U 1 ,f,, V -3, ,JH , W- - T , ly J ' ' 5 3 f ' 'ww-5 3154. fwwi '- -ebiffvl ,-15211 ' ' : aw: iw? - E fin '- M - - :, .vp 3 NEB,-V-1 .,.l-gb V ME'-'mi . '1f.M,Qg,,g. . WBSFA N ff 3:1 Ugg 1- iglggg ,' n , 'I ,5Xf,N- 3 1, ww ws. y Q, aggwfff , It My v wx -f r- A H .gg LSE.W.'31,f,.-.L'31il.i f i .15fi1.,f,f.11.,,:,,,3.5g,3:,,?.-.' Qikiii,2m,:QM N,U,':I ' LQ 'WV Q . MARGATE CITY A NEW J EBSEY B.S., Dickinson College KE' NEN Bauer Pediatrics Society, Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Class Treasurer. Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, N. J. 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Q ,g,,gf '- 1't:,1-c',', , 'g 21 -.' 2?-Iii. :..L'P1' 4E'cv. 5, ,1'N?:9?I-liz M1?YGY,4 '2 515?2,25jT ' L' ,.,ST,g.W Y-: T-A-1' uf ' ik s ,4 ..,.-.-.-.L..SL4' v-1,-Kurds nu.-.--a Q 4,.-. -Eli Quan M.u,,,,.,L,r fy.-1-32-...-H .. -- , . .- -- V .. 2,1 -Emhfgq E 5 an if Q sy 2--1.-ww fi' ' K '-'ggi f -' Wt? 2. ii X LIANOVER PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Amherst College 9, A X N E N Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Hare Medical Society, Gross Surgical Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, THE CLINIC Staff, Dean's Committee, Glee Club. Union Memorial Hospital Baltimore, Md. WILLIAM COX, III ,-,,L,.-. ,....,-, ,E ,,,,..-,,.,l,e, , ,V , ------M ---' 1- f-iff:-we ,V was - K Q P' f'Tf' i TTT' LQMLQQQ- Q me at iff - E2gff2f5'5.iis:ff55ff , - 11,55 .iw 2- .- ' . '15, ' ,, .. I -' '-':: 2 , '. 1- -if-5'i'faZ.?2gE,Qi'?I:. y.' fg'a1':::-5-is sg? L.: f Q I W K 95355553 SEQ-Sgilie if IZWEEQH1-15511 0 7 -- 4 wg: T',K' 'fi . 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' - A Jeiliferson I'IOSp1l3Ell Philadelphia, Pa. 9 : 'W 7-P--T l ' 1 'W' g ?e 9 4 - fe: -'. 'j',- '1 'far' , -'E ,-.H Y -'f-,gn -e ,f---frvv. ,. .. .... V --Y -V , - , ' .Pi-s E1 ' A A 5 Q - , ,- :W ' .75 Q52-, - - S' ':'f'1:2f.T-i.rw-fmql- Q:-1.7.53a2?T3Ff'1,:ff K 4 , ,3.'Z.,gL ,f J we f - 'J- Z.'i ' K? .-Q: 4 RWE' K 'Q EQ ' f - 13552 'RF . , jjfgn-gl:','Li':l 'W' . S - '5gl'iil', . . 5.5 1 K'-'Yfw' ' '- 'g':5':f'4-lh ' ,Av 2' ' 'l f:mffg:1,'l' 'P :' V- V mm ' BMW ., KQAHVSSE ' .P - 5535 .P MQ ffzxwfwfw' - ,Naam A ,Mas e W l -pm , .ww wwafiw 'WWE Q Us H 'give may ,gg -ai 'mwvgw---' IE www e 1 - :game -My Wg- ,-.. H we-Mc M aw cw eww? wmv-M W I EE wwgwygww--HW. Ai.. was eggs- ,ggamw aw has-WW S slew --ww gi -gf,fH-2'-al--,B EM I. WM Sw.x.:-fafif-Wage W Mlm-2 'H -N ff.f-fe, awww' Q:-. aw ...scam - -.-gm 5: -- .gl .-f:n,:,.,',,Nbl,:L.,? 5, , v mg , .- Au.-, Q, ,l i p ' .-.' swab ? 1 '- EQ? ami' .. 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V sw-Y. ,mtg re. 5.5: 'a-.Lt if -1 ?.'.'i?Wfmlm 'iff H 1 :VK '...' :'J::3f'-.-W -,.',. J' ff' 'iff-k .'g?'0iJf.q iw ii'-. -'W ' Jai-Eysz A- 1. ' -mL - 1 gk - iw- ' '-'-'T'xe'e- -,, 'fin ,fa lifriwy -5 - jifiyi .-Vip-f - '5031-' T- fFil'-gil W ggi:-f i-g.g1?:nsgj53gwg 'isagggsggz Piir2'!f.?LQ,'-'Q,'fa',?,f .gTf'l-,el nrt:-,:'1'?:a V .e N,,4,M4.,.:LL4:'1-.-- ,,,, .,::. b- - - ,gf-1.: .1 mg..-.-W.-.,,.,, L..q.,...J -. ...-,...,. ... ......-r - - 70 ROBERT FRANKLIN BABSKIE GLEN LYON PENNSYLVANIA Bucknell University 4 Hare Medical Society. Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Wilkes-Barre, Pa. -y-4-w--- -fu Q rf. f V' N- :.- f Q N A 1 . .N 1 N r 7-5-ftlfifih ' if A-!.77,v,-,flgjgflj . if 'V 21 51 f-A- ,, 1, 'iff' Zi' 51: J -,gg Q3 flf-'Lf ,f 1' - fl, N , 5: V 3 - 'K :wg ,gjf . .,.l,., ,.,- . ' .' - . 1 '- Q ' TLT 'U fQ.r'1rPfM'3'5 fi K I6 fl - ' ' - A, .' 171 5 11811 ..' , .-1 , ' ,I -ses 'Z :2: vi W my tit - ef ':': -,,. Q' . 'UR 'I-,r-,,,g.,, , 11:-Q A '1 A M53 l ., V. .':.,1-g- fi .,., M 3 -U - ,- , . 1 15'-' - - ', its is e ,L - .,., 5: -- ---- . L- hug 4 -. T F-fkfxsf 'E+ A' gi fs t'tt ' - N - N Q '57 WT 'T -L :': iw-'-.e1,e ' '. -:-:- fmuv gig.. ,...cc 2 l ':':': 71 T if , 'VU ' .mfr Q, V le'-,-'--Q, ,pn .,,. Y -Vi M, 1---3 -iff. ,-..,n ?,, ,.,,,,: , ,,,,,,.,,..., -l.,,..- T, fe-.ef ,,. -am Y .QW .J .Y ,,.,J - , . E - M X . .-,-- , 14 Q- .fs-, I.-. . mf , .J g, . , 5.23-IQ H, L-'lr 4, .f-. 5. ..:,.,-ni! -v1g.,:,-:af-,.,, H --my h m 1 A , T l l , 511 az- '- f W - Q l Q 1' J W H 'n M S Nt 'f-L fu 4v.l :- W f r r K 2? X11 LI v kg H I Rx Xa 7 ZH W 1 am -is 'gg' H , 2 XL, A l L: fb .E -4 L ,ws u J U J ls Y' I J R E im, E5 M ' 541 5 Q fguhlgj wig L 1 1 'ig if Q an H f ,ff J S H my F' ll Q Q Egmm' 'sf E .xl 'Eg 5,1 w ' 'M ! ml A is I 3? J, as ws ypmuxgi A3588 Ewa' B :msg tis aww Bmwxswass ani 2 I qfgfxzx W z 1 555,55 Q r-H911 E, :Iwi A NH A N1- F P. 4--' 1. F 'V mam A tie We Kg W '. 'My' V Wg M 'Lf' H A Q-:H ' , . 5 5 sa wav AMX mm-a 1 E E X X we z H, A411 hx 11 -' W , Ar -5 I1 4,555 33 r rel 1 f f SY ' 1 ual WW W2 H ' 'var W9 1 1' 3 'ffeg x we EQ :N .mus.mwi.,z,,gn'af:f.W 1 WILLIAM HENRY GROSS HUBBfXBD 011110 ,Georgetown University - Vaux Obstetrical Society. Youngstown City Hospital Youngstown, Ohio ' '- ,, 1: ' .' F ,' - 1, ,.v,,i:f,,j 1 in--355. , -.v. ,ye A Y L 'Z -V .' Mtg : ,fu 2 35,3 , ' 5, 5 A, wwf- -:MI S 1 S '15 'hw -mi:5fi '.2JgA::?' sm-ef-ZetA,kfWf-is-3359 'iggiskf'i wfil5i1':-if? -wwiAff1XwS,1 wi-uf 'iI,f, 5-sf if-1'T.1fZsaffN-pw 415351-fgfzi ' ,T f-1.',L.f.,., 145 t.,-3, g.5:2Q,f. f' ggi--.'L1:xgw,.,,fggg?3L,,:,Lg lift Aff-i--Q,-4-,'A,,:'QfA g,471,v,gQig1.'Q 1 .5 lr, ' Y'5,1.'gQ.-'fng gLe:2.'5Lrgc7,w,.'ig3 HM., -' gfn ,,,f,,5,i,gkgpngfessiQ,N'fl1gg5fo ffi15,png1 Vee i!Qi':,i0!. ' B!!lTf5?s'-V,-. fi: ,, ft mf ,E sw, 913- new 'WI fm .MC,,fW'Z PW- -ff'.'5.5ffs, i . . f glqrwi: I gif: 1- , -Hg?g5gm':,w? - ., 1 Mzsgj,,wg5,5,t-Mf2,, 'ie--Q ' Q Q -sp .'::Af'm5' 3 E.-Li: gm'-If-,a.f 15 rr '45 j'V?,3,g,'H, 1 5'f,,gfggl.,-ggiwis ig? ,, ,, ' :aff 4215.1 -4 ?.,.Q:PiJ':3 i::u ':g14'-1 J Mfr- U - U- 7'Es '-25-1' 3'f 'iQ'4 '41 ,f-'f ifi -7. x. 'fn' .- -, - 5-vi :gf-'I' 'f :?3' 411:Sls. 5' -3::il?',ifQ'Q: wr413vQ,.k..N,,5E5,,3,,Yg25,:,feg3,g:- W Ut:fA5M,f, fi - . , jwryjz, W M-5. H14 .,,, vf-PM-'f31i?4:'21E'2 - i':':..,'1H,....'-1,1 22' iw' ' 4. ,I . mtl P1-1 ILADELPI-I IA A PENNSYLVANIA A.B., St. Joseplfs College K B fl? lScliaefl'er Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux ll l ' O bstetrical Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society. Fitzgerald-lVlercy Hospital Lansdowne, Pa. EDWARD , ALOYSIUS KELLY if ,Q Ag S E' y .1 ,I 41 - f usa..-l -,g M male., Y- - ',A-jfs'-lj .e-P21-:Q - ,53Tf4.,gE-U5. L-Yffqfflfzlp .I .f,',+f: fi-gig,-ji-: gmt 15.4115 gig ,-1.31, ,1-'p'f,Q51'iig1ri-3-'-.-if QKQ'-' 1-ml--.' , , . ,U 1. .,m'v.'- ,mai gf ,. 'ls ,. ,l .- w Y- ' ' -Fig ,-' -.a ',1'-Q ,A . il- g L ff' 111111 -ff',Q,ggg5'g-'.'.v,-af -3111, ala: Q '. .QQ ,. .,.f -.-1 mi -.Nl-nj. , , W, . H ,pg -V si., .fm 1f,f,.yf, l rua,-fgkg ' wE:w.Hr:'i:fua: ' 3 5s,:5'Hm' .i1ff ' -' wes2'fJ',:5 -1 Q , ig. wi-?E,s,-a -:Jud ffanhy ggnzlixwdecyxgg-5 -A Flgiwziw felilgmw ae gis?-E,al5 ' gg43ies -H '1 1 - j2'22gf3-sf' H ff',-'fveiweeas'-'31 F ' -E 71 aw W' swam.--if ,: f ,g'e.w'- ,,,, vmw have W w e ' nl. -K ai 4 ,il -, 73 E EDWIN MITCHELL ToPP, JR. TUPELO MISSISSIPPI A.B., University of Mississippi I University of M1SSiSS1ppi Medical College K A if X Jefferson Hospital Phlladelphla, Pa. eff W 1 I I . - I . .-,cya 155 ',IfY,w.ff,ff'.1:lq':- 5Q,f2'?'?5 7i+Di-g.gg,I ::5fQw'.vgf,?5 :1-- ' Aw fIixw?,s.- . -gfif be ., - C-Sign F- ,3'1I' 4-sill? fff,.fM,z1q:-Qwifggzzif . .LM-:JJ ,ws-4-',f?x?,1',fgi, ,ww Y.,- wwe:-M S,.vQ,4r, , :I-g'w.mf. 'I ,I I M, . r EEYQXR Sagem? 15 sa.: E?ig?.1EJ's-'miie QIQQQQxefskbmfifiivgfIaf5QwsgmiQ35I5iYsQE2iSQGQWWSLXS. 74 I CHARLES NORRIS HICKMAN LOUISVILLE MISSISSIPPI l5.S., Mississippi College fI1 X Shreveport Charity Hospital Shreveport, La. 43355: Eff ,,,-'NV' I as S 5-' LK ll -fi-A '1 1 sf I ,I i I mir new few-WSH we ers if If I - M- ,, - I .9 11 1 - -- I: ,gfsgf f ,I wi. , I ,in 533312 mmflfif S' f-:fW. f '- '-f 'f 'fl-HI-If 2 - i?W'fJWf' .15 M iglfw-?'J?.' alwsoybxlbnuvsemvfi or adsl'wheigweSdzsiggisiipgffftqweiservWhit.ybgcariifram,-'lfff2fSIR,fWIFriiilmgi, .SEEK I S . ' . , ' I , 75 .iffy-v 7- TTiw-Var,-w,,,K.:E-:F,'. T. , it-gy. . BQ .I jwf--Tim , -,I-QRS..Zvv..-1-g7,xT3,f,-3713W3.,ZgW1,tm-.f-41. ,fit rjfzgivl l l 'Z I-. jx ,-I.:-,.:. in i ,XNQE-lrgrgs-5 3 - Z .3 . in ' W- I: I-it Q sir if-3wffa'n51g .. ,ff:eiwH9f iiiifes,-W1.'1'7v fifihefife -' 'ef-aiii v sgi .' .fS351I,1f'ws-:HE- 1 S39-1'Ff24 Y ES W A I-, . W . . M, fm , - -M ,-if I .-SE. M- I I -. .I , qv Lew . Ng S My . 1.1-I - . V., ,J , .. xi ,, ,ssiggw -, A M, . Ne, , .M , , , , .1 B, Q ,. ws. , .. . . S ., . . .. 1. M. . .. I.sf'E3'2i ,. sf , 1- . H Q 1 5 S I I H I I, PH I2 I S H ff I 4 I A X S Q - F f S H is Sw . 1 4 ,I v M 'sf ,Q I fm Qi za bm-5 1 W 1. ffm. n 4. -I if 11:21 v ' ' fr rl ' R I 'I fffdsi' ' ' , ,,,l?A?'of ,rw ,z-- -S553 5 5 ' I F U ?r 'I- f 4 4 r , , .L ., ,, 12925-I1:'riaE?E65:Hr-.421,3 University of Puerto Rico BS., St. Josephls College ITPII M NE N SehaeH'er Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon Pathological Society. y EDI'1'oR's NOTE: John Healey interrupted his studies in the senior year to work for one year as Research Assistant in Surgery under Dr. John Giblnon. ' n vs fx sw af JOHN 'ff EDWARD HEALEY, JR. 0 '..'f':f:::1:-vs'f'ri'f:ffff'v .- 'Yi 7W'f'ff f? ' 'W 'T -i 1:5-'ll?i?77Ti2s W W s 1 11.49 is Ray 21232 Tiwbrkiiliff ,.,QQTt?e11fb7Ef1PgfZgt11eic1rg11mf,-ipiig?'gmifappesiwlllfefiintimcdrcuppiarjgdifoglwihgougglsither-gtg. 25411157 'K l.w:5s5,w Tw lege lm s Ks'-3t,,.,,...,,. ., W ., . ., .ew is .1-x, Lwrmf - , 1-Ee..s:a.,, ,gi ,- , H. ,.M5,.., ,, me swarms, 5, .ga ,M S- ESQ 5 f. s ...,.a E ' 76 PHILADELPHIA ' PENNSYLVANIA University of the Philippines ClVIa11ilaj M E fb .. St., Nl a1'y's Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. RICHARD MARCI ROQUE l R R' RRR - .-RR 1' R-R f-ff'f-f- we-T-. .Hy f-', - RR- - MRM. ..--AR E. x cms Rx, X ERRRR B -M588 RER FKRR. R E555 sm -.R W - FWRERR RR EER, R R N - , R RR, ,, 'R :RR R ,HR vi .MR W :WR Y RR R ,RR R Egan RW RWm'fgR'pm ' RRBRERER? E RRR ,A 2 M I RW? R H'-'f'Ei,e-FW? RR 'aa-Egg-'H ' 'Rwiliggwm RRRXQRQR RR - R is RRS R ERE , HRV JXMRRN RR '. RRQ R' . HR R RW RRR XR KR R R R R R5 B 1 BH : H SS SS R 5 E Q BEE 88:88 ' . . R ,, , R -- -' VN. H 1 . M ' I - R , RR ERR P1 eventmn is better than cure.-DICKENS, Muirtln ,Chuzzlewntfl R R, 1 R - RQ - R in -R I RR. RW I RRR - RN R . - . H R law RR 5 HW W 'E R . E ' R R RR ' RRR RRREHR R EER WRRM R as gg-RR I 'RRTR PM , 5--Jf,, ., 35.4, ,, R ' RRS Rf RR 77 JOHN DANIEL ' ISROBLEWSKI ICINGSTON - PENNSYLVANIA .B . S., Bu elm ell University E fi? E Nesbitt Memorial Hospital Kingston, Pa. I, , Q, V I 4, , PM , M ,, ,K,,,,. .,.,,.Tr,- ,. Y , W- ., . .?T,..V1-'ffm -- Y!-FT. ff .f :-.1 --Q--,-ff:ff-j---r--.--v. 1-mfr' iam-f 5'f3:ij .4 5' ' in wsgs e'3'Xf'1se'2us,' EH 'egse1y'SCff',5T-espwef' '1.. 'ffs,' was KW--,mafia-A'-r.1 L-E Ef.!g,f5, xii. vine- gfvf3fQT,.E.mQ.4-gs' Q-',-Wgiwill, My .33 F130 :.g.sg.f ez- , ,E-5, 7 1: ' ge W E' M35 ?? QW X is my H ' g' H? ' E333 5155WSEMESE5g31g??5Wi5f2'-fmifs?35155'?l U'Mg'1s.'ffifigzN-iii-22553335333-E'5?Sgf.nlig1 5EE? mwwgwm . Y, Jw. mm ww W M ww .1 X .W -'s.W'.E.'1-H1 .ffm M.--be-ff . -se'-' , was 'W-fwm,. ,Me ' M ww ww f- 1 'QF' aaiwlrv. ' 1,4 :--2-,He r. fx? ,JMR -1, tw' ,mv if HW- '-.ef ' jkiw gigs Mm 535 was M32 -Qdwgge M fe bg sg, gEgg55,zs?552'gfge.wH sfm'v,1g,g, -Wm,LQfgSf2-gwem W5g.QmWf:pf5Q S-Q,-:iwgmwgf nw ss HM K- A X-4 R ' -, .-as iwxxfz W ff w 4 -V 2- ' , ., '. ,, ,. Sis - 1 S Ae sogll'f0S5Ef-l'1l1fBCg0f'l'1gf2lTes!?flTQ0S9i-'. - HQFESQELBQ, '?K1I1S,sL5if-' ' -no-V gf f ef we -3. me ws so-V W- M mf sm H e ,, ,-X, ,Q .' M., -M, ' ,L 1' M '4 --ff. , :ea n meg,-, . 2,7 w . , K, .. , t iilfwzim 'W H in 'imiigf lsfgffiwiig ms - n was W - . , - , 'ss' -: . .1xm',.. . ' ,xf.'1F . - 5 'gg n 14 '-'VS-. P1-3 '?.- '7 fi ' . . , 1 v - M V -' -. , '. -' ', 1 - ,ZH , -L1 :: f'f, - - ' . -' :'Y-- ' Q,-f f., 'f3.. 5 -' L W M swim '54 NSf,T,i-5,521-S t??f.'L2.f,n if ,T7esEw5ii2-WQQZSEZi?g?ffes?',.'im'S1ag.ffL 78 ROARING SPRING PENNSYLVANIA Dickinson College N 2 N 'K B CII. P Moon Pathological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Bauer Pediatrics Society,Hare Medical Society,Tho1nas Physiological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Gross Surgical Society. Delaware Hospital Wilmington, Del. lVIcGEE V E V 1 V QW, L ' ' if Eg tv , .Q 55,9 Q' E ,Qf,. ,Qf H f pain X ' Mega 2'-E, ,i'.'-'gg-'yiaffgw ie! 2123-'5rQEEE5s,Qgg??a2I.E5:3g-,E-,,:5Egaggi9gi,3g.g.5gggmfiaixa2i3ii,3,1,QW3Qj9.pe'fi Fc-92i.s92ggggg,i ifrigggggagagzf- if' W 'I 'W - 58 ' . '- F f in - N ' KJ.. .sf '-Eiliif' w 'A?Q,.f 1225- .,fff9,f'1l lk Q?-F Y QTQW iflffiif-fp fffi-fi' ,751 ff. : nS,'1Y- LFw?' V ,,g1':zfHfE,s41g?'.,j-,n The ly? 01303-1' e fnthe c1eVel'eSf ,mellsf Elle' 1113111833151 'Q'595,1Qhe1113165121lea1'i1g5dg5anfL7ifiHei cloc15ifgjfggkeg'ili25ff 'if if K, ' most sen ' le -- LIVER WENDELL I ' 1 ' A - ' , 'Vff-fli 4' W ' i hiYRifi'.',fl 1 :. ' ' . S L' V P I' ,, P 1:i,:T,g9eigg fiaiihgifi. Q.,-L2 :Q-Q 25553 f V L iff' 4 N , 2 ' . E gg 1' ' - :f'V-AQYQ5' ' LET ' E' -.fm 'lg if:-' -fQ .Q13I. , ,, 'gliflr ,A BSS 'QHQQ7' W 'lg .H LQ-fglrzil' - 75721 .Q M Lsgifqgf . --S555 ,'w11j,1fg5g'5 -.nl . ' -- X ' H 1'2w'iw V we ,l1l:' -M' M 5 . -2513 w rfigil' , at I Hier-iiiiiiifii.-w:'ieQi.i.. My X , W X - was V, . -- - ....:f,. 4.5. .,... ua,-ax' ., ff. ,Li V, 'f 1 wfi'f1L:...f f ? '?f'i3 Z..l4 M' , ' if X' ' 79 F ROBERT SEIDEL lVIcCURDY hflATAWAN U NEW JERSEY A.l3., University of Pennsylvania Z 41 E Schaeffer Auatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon Pathological Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Editorial Staff of THE CLINIC. 4 ' Pennsylvaula Hospital Pl'11l3ClClpl'l1H, Pa. is H ,Z V- V F W ,Q,:., ,lx im, haf J, .xx .A,-A .'.,,: Ms., I- i '-I-ix.-va? ,yas - ,If 15.21, Stepltowax-dlihealfgli,1,1:o5i1:ng3y,,med1sqgfgQ.7fpE1QxsMUs,. ffikdagxasf' S i f 6' - - ,- ' 1-is V A 5 . XM A 2- ' , . Y' . 'f' ' ' - A. , iw 1, r , V ,. 1 ., -f M l ,WMM 1 , ,,, W - ,- f 4M4f',,- V. ss fi- if , f . E sf am ,gg xanga, ,-my as -gfwwf, wg, Q mi, -'-sg il' ' .. K .,,,,. ,v,4, ',.., 1, .UL-. ' 'X ' ' '.,..:. . ... -,L-L.L..hw 1 ,..J4,,f.,...I. gli... ...EL..LzL..L......4L.,!..h 80 JEREMIAH FRANCIS LEE PH II ADELP11 IA PENNSYLVANIA B Q Pennsylvaula Nlllliflly College N 7 N Sellaeffel Anatomxc League, Thomas PllySlOlOg1CEl1 SOCIGLY 41 zgerald Mercv Hosprnal Lansdowne, P I fi Kimi '5--U1 wwe wa E Ku- HL? ' N egg W N -I J A K E . . . E I 7 b I .. ., 1 ' C A . ., w . . . . . . F.t . - . 3. ., mf A-.efmefr--1 .Qrrv we jim ir. V' '-ef' fi ,ee .Tff'f' -' 1a -X- QW M J ?Qf.1,pg,,,.i?g5L15lf.ga?,x?3,?'.,477 eei?.+,,g5,Qg,l:aw 0,fVg5Zggml5Qgj59g1J:I3:3i is mi1,iZ?5iM M iki EEE? E is H X M el SE:-Qin-nfffbmrizmnl-gxxgpxw fsiand,amlaeceemmfn1:l1ve1'big1fI0 df571i1-- ff, I f ' -T - Q QWSW el' Y W 'W , it F - - ., 1' 1 ' M - . 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' ' ,,,. :5f?::,' U niv - 3542-er: 'fum-' mf- 1-wvkfwi ,pl avg M513-751, l ' .xiii ' nk-If fi3i iiQ1'1-E-5.-3,7 7: 542'f2E25.1:fU:1:57C?1411!f'l1i'?,l'9??i-5'Qtr Inrviifsiv -CQ? gfliff- 3 up , 3514. 4-'iS-:f,l- 4 f f.fg'f':gaiQ- ' Wx'- sallirf' H 'M l' m 'V 'V 'I H ' 1'f 'S' 1' 'S - 'S W ' A R73-13325 '1' - ., ,- iw :.- .' 4 :-ff-P :-1 Q , 1. Q, 4-1 , , :- : ' X A L'- f' , 4' - ft' ' '.f. -:. 7' 'A :Er 1, -:::-::x:-- ' - ' L.-J 1'QTE?!LLE11?z31'1T5F7-5464:'tr 4 w ifi., . - F f i f f' at . l'- i?l1f9S 2- W-12 2, 3- - Efbefffzfy-f 'Wi nf? vfw, 'f-:4L 3i',5fwvi. 1125133-ikfs Q- f 'id Lfiil 'f4l 1iffi7'l?:' :Y J 161,50 Wiff.'mw. ,pgfgifg -1.5-f Ui?L,T.Afi'-5,'::g'.,1.-iii 5'i5:,-'Q:'5t'5g ',1L'?'t?e1':'t 1'-r 'Cy1P:1JE'.:' QW' -'flwfnl' 'xii 323.11 TLTVI mil- lbiifh' W' '?i:1 :-'Q' i - . EVSQI' - 4- -3 ,. - - ' ...QQi'g.g--'35,.Q.f.1'f.2--.g.g'i.,:Lg,.. . - ..-,g,--L .- :,.-.-H,1n.,C.. , ,..--.-n,n:n 4,,-,.: , ..,. -.-.i.-n,...., .. 82 I 1 GREENVILLE NORTH CAROLINA University of North Carolina Medical School QTY X Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. l KARL B USBEE PACE, ,IR . si:- '..'u:.r ,v'25'.',,:pwz,y, 4 ..I.Liq.:2:-iiiq'. 2'2',95:.Lv:1f,f:i'2?'.1a-iw-ish .-ZSiwZ4I25!ff:3F1E,?ifffgwfic M. anew? -- . 1 .... agkefgfi-Xf::1,WQ!5-:gt-:ga'?:::f+aiftw 11 555' -f-,v ff- 1' - if ' - QW -:P in . H , ,-.A -'ELgfsz:e:2a-xg,EaffarfYip.-::sf:f:3a??:f-ae'521:-rim:l' ,if,.,,f:-51.924Qlamh.5.-.2 K , gSi1, -r',.1.. 3 .:'?i3'iz , 4,-QF B - E Jw' 5 W 'H nf? '- 1 2:52 -QEFJPT' '12' :M Wie 3421 1 -1 xiii: ' 33- f ily: ig- . - 4 Y , ?Q1 -. Cif uil-B. 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',-'L-'jlfliw '-L-'Zf'--gn..:g,,:,1wfL-.,.,n, J...a.1m...,-.,i,,,q,!?wa' , N ,,,,,,:,, ,gi .W f ' 85 F CHARLOTTE N o1x'1'H CAROLINA BS., U11ive1'sity of NO1 tl'1 Carolina University of Nortll Ca1'o1i1'1a Medical School A K E fIJ X Penllsylvauia Hospital Philadelplnia, Pa. JOHN ROBERT PENDER, III fly . ' f'T. 'f 5? ,-..A' T: a' :.: - :.: .-,-' -: - .V .f.. fr- Hyf- .1 ' 1 m'iz',-, z .'.-.f 1:f,f:T '3 PM-f Tlff 'Ti+ va '11'i ?':f 'A ' ' ,ff 7'TTE':ff' wx- 57: Ilfflfl .71- 5931? . ,ST-,I ggw, 255529: :frail 5sE31f4,?'.g24 Wiggg Egg? 25? 5 jg xi., I 1355 .-gggvznqg ,L l-. ,1gf.-- w -. . .. K- -f - A - - 5.1 - l ff . -Y wr . w, ,- -Y . , -.f .2 ma- XL. .. , ww: ' ,.,, .:. 'FLA'-Q' F NFSQ !:'?-,-di he ,, X.-1' E-,: 1251- A -Aff 3-' ., ., ' I J.- 'H 'M S11-JJBT4' -fwr :Q-I 7,- f.',-.-, .f----sia?'9'a:4 wGf'1 .w fwfr! 3551 ':-:L- . :.1 'Y' Y .-'.- li: 'nm'-11 -:JW 2 GF, -M - , . nf- 222:53 5-an-fn .... 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' Wk f A t r 1lA'r H A r- r-rrf'r fff' 1'oo r'f'fiff'W'Y'fT7'W Kiwi: gmfj I 553 E2 5 gr my fl E, .A ff 1 k' ig , 1 rrrr .4., 88 CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA AB., UDiV61'Si'L5f of North Carolina X KID A K K K B CIP Hotel Dieu Sisters Hospital New Orleans, La. i-na JOHN PURCELL ALLAN . Q - is V H I gg L M 5 b ggsis, ,gg gig? , Q5 , 'K - QQ J lu. Sees 1 W3 v ' H' 1 K M-5,55 1fM+?f'ZW- H 'imimmf U3 5fmfi-Hegsiifif 'WEE lgfi ?:55':':'7 ' my MNEFEW H1 is 'Thdi hnly' pg?-gonuxto Qwhoniga bocmfxorniixnssaylexacitlywWEEE'1beg'Ehl33kSgQibouEEixQ5f1iQep,A-Dcict us tgggfi 251 L, ef Pegg W .--I ' sw. J' .1 2, .. 1 3' C 'mai ivy -L Q nw, k , ' f f A- 'Ms' 31 -mx-Q .15 wife. That-1sfu5hy4.prgggt1qa1Iy,:al1 Doctqrsnire mangled.-loans Him Q - W A gig 1 -. TF ' 4 3 .fs IL, ' -gl la , . ,f V.: W . 'mai A .K ' A .1 iiwfg. .,,. Mswalxse' ., H' asm, jig.. gig, ,mime . X M4553 -uffzw wf 5. nh ,, , wuz ' -. , ,fi JSF . ssisxiffw. 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' 1: - 1 EC ' - 3 101- 1 :- ' f 4' F .YJ ' L ' 4 in it ' : 4 K' : ' 1 ', :,s A I fa I I-,, V'-' rg A fr ' wr :a L cv ., '11 5:51-33,15 ss.f5':'15A farm' E 2' 'Q:5g22s:i53zi:1., rg53,na :.:LE:5se:ay. - Wil 1 .J 'W :3'ff'i1i-'E-3'f-'-2:15213ii -.':Ei1:2? 221:29 - .rm-. ,: 5-: Julian. . . -. ,5,,gg,,g.AgM,.. ,.Mggr:-:vf-:-gimghfzg,ifit-95,,gr5f5,?-f45Ex.fQ,.,.2s.. -:'?:..'w-sm-5wcyfrffa..u5g::-a-,-:fsaa.:T::'::::gc1:,,-91. caizwrsfap--egfgg ja'-ggi., It-:a':::::'':r::gif-::- -'f-:--- a.a:g,:e,:: 5:14-r:s1efffi::s,::5l.q, ya' .,-,.5,,:-25515:-fqqf - .., iii' dy J..-5 1:3--,::,., -,.,1': .,- in iv ' W.-V-fic ,-:', a n fe.-rf'ii:r:1:-w-.'1-12--- :FE'2 ,'i-1 'A4-.-MP5-ul-1 1 -b - PM - 1,17 ':'1'i f' ' H 'xyw inn V Af-- 'l A '11-A Qs 90 l ROBERT BATE FUNCH PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA University of Pennsylvania 11: P 2 President of Hare Medical Society, Dean's Committee. Germantown Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. .- ff ' f - M. ' fre' -NM, e -, '---. 11, '. - Y ' .V 2 - 2, mai' w'.'ws. :.. 'iw t' :-: ' V 1 avi: .. H. 1 :.: Z'-HAI -I--:fa-f -1-' 1'- zz W . -- ....:.:s3:a,!'1?gfg-zf'g5i,, g 5713 L iw:-11- -:'.+,fYnew .V -1:1-9 lining .i1.agi:au.:,i.- va .-'V--'v' ,:.' ', :HV 1- 1: y 'f',fgfa:- j 'gig-,,5Q51'eg , .5 P : , '- 7'-if-'-'J'-fvi'l'Q-2.553 '11x',iweNa 9gJ,eg 1,'i Qfgq1w.'f,1.a v' 'MQuiiiqbsg.it--,,f?'.Q?,,.vQ-?i. '- perl - , 'ffm' - H V321 1 . wgwsgfif' 'QQ33.5iaQiq2:fm g, ?!Xzqi'EyQilnififllf-2fQ+fY2'gi5'Qq4?455-,gig g s y, P QVM af l ' 1 5 A- if-sa4'5eHz:f'L--KY, M-HF? '-' '- J ':fs?f- if 'W' fee'f-?- wwf 91 PH ILADELPH IA PENNSTLVA NIA A.B., University of Pennsylvania 'P P E A 9 A Hare Medical Society. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ROSS SIMPSON FUN CH . , J, X , .. -1 ,-- ,. , fu- V 2 -1-.V-.1.-4-,-PM-R -V1-'-JF-Ha'- T, . 'Pnf-v -ff T7? 77'hTf 'fT '.'T'fYf H gigj'5sjff,iaiv'QEf -zf'f5iyfail3??a1Qik.sqE3i MEQ:,,:i::51w2'.:EEQYQQ gg, Hawaii! j-:fgw yl-. 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I , NV- :- 55375 ,.w,.x-'J M15 .1 1 -'.-1 , gl:-5,,q ', .:- -' ' ' uw -,,:J.. ,-E.. 55 .-w .I 17, , 1:,f4.- LLM, I, :Y g??v54'Am.Mg5'?E',Efl'5 W3W1WiSs!',1iz?H Q-1,hirs.m,wif5Q5g-'ewhgggrfmi.:5..3,,h-gK3.Ei.2.Q-i1a'w'5 T ' f u.-..A.a....h-- - L 92 WOODBRIDGE CONNECTICUT- B.S., Allegheny College Delaware Hospital W i1mingLOI1, Del- LEONELL CLARENCE STRQNG, JR. Q A K M W l W A , QQ 1555? Vi ,. -Z ' 55535 --'-l 5 w l HH 1 In 21 4 1 51.1 5 HN' Medical men don'h learn to know drugs they nge,,fl11Pi3zQlhGi1fEp1:ices.7RcJGi3i:I',,53AqdfN3 CI21gi5l294Q Q j ' '..lA- . . 9 ' M ' - , A , K .4 ,, ,, 93 G 51-532 ',1ex'9wfwf-ga, 11.1-Elia :flee f,1,,, ,, ., fi., , zggygmygw A 1 g- -E' gEqQ.3fi?fv5u.fgfifg Pig? B? V . , A Z' - 14: 1 4 QU' if .1552 7, rflrimellfrl X' KEY: , ,H , A, Y, W, - 152, -3 ff' 4,,i'L' U Vi U og? xlg.,,w,Q', ,M V, :aggsv Bs M,-, X X X1 71 W, Ll:-.ff sz ' 31 wg R51 as fl 1 : M. ,sa -kris- wi 1: a 'fl JOHN ANTH ON Y S UR MONTE NUTLEY' NEW JERSEY l3.S., Villanova College ff' P 2 Class Secretary. Newark City Hospital Newark, N. J. vw f 1- ' -Ma' 0--A .A-r , .wwfa zT : 'tin- i 'f2' f fm' 41-fr'P2 u': 'ima' 1'fIA'?f f?F'x f?3 1ZTffW1', V' l 55 fl- ' Q - .2 P 1 'xfviiff if V f: ff:'f11fk2f1f'f12e:f'xi,-Bhaf Lbs wffqgf. '5' 4:26-,:1f. 'ms-', i e HEX ' -l wg: '..22'W5f W' N Y1Efv19ww'-lla-11:M'..,A '-KM?-4.i'ff1q. Qrsmfif. 1- -11:3 S?:.ni1:X1 ' wfff' , lg ' fm: W .- . ,- ,- ., - v, . .,,,.,-.,-,A..,,. Q- , v- - , Y-: ,- , - -r -ff f N1 .AU-..gJ,5y,-:-if.f-:.f,,,.yip,,g.l..,qL.: I W ' vf'x2 't,1 f . '2maumf1fe-wfjz,iwf1Q,.24fiSms-Flamg151552-ikfvfffvaf'gm-'kxk1k2:,.1.es .':f?':- l , 1' U I ff, 1, hiv, Qfiifiif , 1-we ig? 'f-2 l-cj-QI we 2- Q- m g,.v,lll:3g,f:l-ggiffgg,ill5?.5' 3555 X 94 MINEBSVILLE PENNSYLVANIA 1 B.S., Lebanon Valley College Hare Medical Society. St. J oseph's Hospital fb P E - Reading, Pa. LP ROBERT YANNACCONE Y 'Q H- t H -' N f w -- 'wzl 1 we M '- lj 4 ei-eq ,,-,Xu-I-,gg , : -V In 1 ,, ,rf fe MJ.-.31-.2 5. -. 75, .... ,..:4.,,m. .. ., W3 NES., M Q ,Q Q-if , -wggifisffi..3EigggEi'5.eag25fgif?i?fF53igfQj,QfiE-ignmggggqx,-3,Q H X' H ' 2 -' ' A 2. Q' 1' -.,ff -'gel-i'ff'2iii W Q.-,H AM-g 4.wf1W2Jf'.frim' ' we-in 2. . E. H. . . , Q l V15?'SQw ff?l?1?ii??'Q':'Qs12i? iwjwk f xlegigi? Qif?gffQf E'jgf5? .Dwldg Kyvur fruenilQrws2eqna'll1y.abe3Lwe. ix. ks. lnnyw g rngwl eliw-Sfwlw w?,ffg3ww.w-2.Eegw,f WWW X E., M . .. .. .W , , .. 1..,. .. .... 14.1. S. W . ss w xx. . . fmm-.W , .W , wwe www 5235 .wma , U ,E .. i......,, .... E ....mgw, QM.-.,.s QYZM all .1 .L qw' -f me E H.. E.. .-.E W Q we 1 ' 8 . ea . .Q ,. - ,K M ..w-w.. ., in .W E in . m, am ks . - A H , K- HQ-K E E .,- . si ff, -Q 55 ,5 , Q B. -ggeggffxd. , AQYNTWNWQV mr MgNfE,3gQQE..E,:a,sRn5.gig,aygpgma-: 5,5 :P stigma. rf .Q,Q1w,.w M Egg E . Y E - wa C gf, ,LQ-.V L ,, :4.f:x-:'g-.'3e.V5 i. .--1g'.H.1 1 gg. .Lrg ,JJAQNQFQ QLSQEV 1. ,' 55?-V 5 We -v .grshgvfv sw E-...cgi V4 M-.-,flvzix -A ' -. ' 'Y ', '1. ,-li .- . ' .mm ..-Www, Lf- -'wwzjj' 5 '.,,5,y,- ftjjgiff, 5 95 1 PRITCHARD TIN G CI-IEWf LAM HUONOLULU 'FEHRITORY OF HAWAU HS., NO1'1,l1NVCSALGl'11 University Hare Medical Society. 1Jl1iltldC1fJ11i2l General Hos ital Philadel hia Pa. 3 Q - .Q fc 1. mu ii H-4 Zim ,J+g..:H.g.ssafa lk .y!V V A 4 --5,3 NME mlg,QL.9Ng'g?lQ . IIEQF 7 K1f1ThereLare'vQx11,y tivo sgl-'Lsffigf,g1qQEEwfJr5Q tlgggqb pgigjpipqQf,jt1iigtH6ir'!brgins, Mui 'rheil-Awngiles.-Qsin A 1 Mfr Hi 3- Q, ff K ,,QQ,g'2,3fA ' V. A - - .- . yn G 96 VVILLIAR4 JOAQUUW LUSSY SCRANTON PENNSYLVASNIA B.S., U11ive1'si'Ly of Scranton CTP A E Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, PZISLGIII' Society. Scranton State Hospital Scranton, Pa. 1,-1-ff--1-.---A V--4. W--'A-L:-:.u1:': . -vi-.. -1, --Juv -Q--5:-'-'ya ' 1 :-: -3- Y- - u-1 L: .:. f.:-- .. .. , 1- 1 -v .Q f 44 A:,,.,...,g.:,m . ., . ..,-.kH. , ..-.., . -- 'H ' , 5, l ll J'.': 'F I- - v'fAf?l : ' '--'J' Flfl ' Pfizer-55 Af-W' '-3' '12 'Q' .. . ' ul E:-rm gk 3:4ff 51 'IH'i'1'- 'P - ,- r 'h',-1'4 ' 7 '-2:32-:45 -:-: ' vw 2 - f Q ' N .' - ' :':':' W X 1 'V WWEE W' I ' ,Q-.w::.4LTf. wkjgj 5 ' Ns. ',.':f 'Ii i- fl ws,-.'-1.51 fa . I-' 1' .... w:..!: a!- '-' L.: ,mf .11 zz- ..' ffF'T - 'Mir'-' gm-.1'.-. wee- ' --Em me 4 mme - Y ' ?Z??I'5igP'C : 4 'if5E7.1,.i3 fifffllli l?ijjY1f,,,' F135 ff. f ' -e ,-,mi 3 -f f ' '.fW1:iE5--7 'C.2bI'tCLr -?w,,'11F1. Q 'F,,52: 51612151-' .-in ' 1'f'. f 1. gi, ,L- V-.-1 fffw.,-,. ..-- g:..!f' - 4,.Hf.,,.- 5137, wif:-iEf':' n ', '1 1 ui . ' ' 'l'. H ' ,v . 9 '51 ' 'T :a 'ze :E ,- Q-mai rm - f 3 - I i:MZ3v:1f':Lwff me.. .-xxx w. L-f::.U.':r':-332 'wa 4' SEJZES '51--f .1 : if fffahw 'www' 'Q' A ' 53 R2 ,1:3fC11f. Qf i1w.f1C.1f:E q. .. '- 1 .5 14 J J-1 -,fu?Fgg, :s , f EM .f:? :f : 'S-,fpwf il Y:f5Wwm'g,, -ie, Z?.f13Ai?g?1. if? l,Q'i31iH9f'f1-1 P1-3,2 -f11:1niww N'9'-ti,15 Hr:-'T,k: 'M -7 :C-iw,-, Fwy-I . f i Y-f-1-H+ .'.,-, T415-4 fs w e-6 'ifbflif A we ,-:H awww ' ww- 1, -' ' ' 9''f'..1,L.fi5:.f1.... ' J-....'7 : ' '-. 3i 1-1.1-.M 541. '. .M-JCL-.1'.QgEsLL' f4'Li41:.! 3:S'3,1' LQLQ.'1L'fl ' Z ' ,'zf-'11 :f,e:,'2,- iw , ,Q , j , ,P I , W ' ' ' ' - Y Rf 97 HABTFoBD CONNECTICUT Trinity College EN CTJAE Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society. St. Francis Hospital A Hartford, Conn. JCSEPH MICHAEL DANYLIW . 98 r SOMERSET PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Franklin and Marshall College if P 2 fl? B K Hare Medical Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League. Delaware Hospital Wilming'ton, Del. me n, ,YM 4 Je.. ,- s , fx may f 1 ZX We 72,1 M 11 at U WALTER WILLIAMS MOORE 1 m ' :,..E!!'7iE51 , ' L. 'QW'- 2 wi-'f - - ,Q f - f'-if --N ,- f'- - A f ' .V 1 -.Q-lggg v fhfl i t ggfgfg M. 'E ,mf :QL 2 5. will 'fl' fy: 4 ' ,- XY U 1 1 ' 5-:p f ' ' , 1 :-: '55 5:i:::.::. ' 9'fr'N ,db-'N '- P, ' V 9 ki:-.' , ' Sf'2'J'., .+I - . gyT : I:I :.: QZUUY' ' '7 ' ., ---LJ-3 36.129 C '-:-fl 'TTL ' ,, ?' 'L zfiifpfm 'Hai , v wa 'xx W A sl' - H V -ve fu '-A vg cl '5 QM 3-N 5 -H-fLg?e ffwg- a. f- ,wafer ml-.ss :,4, .P V -:vow FUR-,r v ff- V X-' A W1 1 H ,Mg 1- Q -i::'1i:J ! ' 'evehgrs i ' .: l 3 9 T'-,Q-l1f .Wi 7- : 5':'f1 L' 'fglkfif' If4?'ff1f 'l8f4f1 r'+5,. H5131 515-'lf V-'f-'Eff '2 - - Q ffwf ' a V Yi- 9 ef ' Q. ff ff M, H A lairlxfffrigf' ni. '51, F-all E 8.12:-iv? 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'1' 'W??El f xi 'Tiff ffsfiw TWH-Q ff ,F -:1-I -Y 131- ,M - Y ' fi L-, .1 '-up-y', - -Lg ,j,y,,,- - f. - 1 ,yy gif' .ai L uw A ' any ,Q X. ,Z 5,3 -2254153555: :-:I if ,, ,i .:. :-:an-:,1-a5iqf:m,.w .-., -.-. . .:., . .,,.. , 1 e-,V w7.5gl,',g:45 152.-5i2flf+?J ' fill' 51'-slf'2'1if:Lfe'H4ri! 3 15i?e5ff2sivf3:'sBe11ifee?4r--1-aifwzfwigjiiaffh-is -:were zsfefgefl' ,U 1 f Hy,,fiE.T' 4 , lOl PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA B.S., St. .losepl1's College CIPPE Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Alpers Neurological Society Nazareth Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. A H A A gfi.. T., h -., A ,LQ I .. -..m.5,,.g,T,,, .l.i,?L,,g.T.g..g... , A 3 4 E515 ig :M vs gm ss V' +e sgtgf is '52 Y gag mg iff ji Q, mgflil. gli ef - .fitliff igffg 'Q 111 V: , Q f 3 4? W J! K? f. Us Y it ,T iw j :,.5ljigLj.Zf.5.A!5,,if QQ? ,I gl ,Ai Y Qing I 1:2 5' ' , E l Afif' I fff .25 -5 9' ' f' It I Wffufl - if i. 'X A ' ,f1'iiW-2f::TQF'- fA14','52'5'l ,. ' 'Exif 7'-'RV 'T ,ig Wqgrljgg jg: flags. fha .153 .,:.':.g-rj.. 51: .gmgzggg 75-fu : I mule Y 4, ,gg Vg -' -.V lf, Q, -A, M: 5 .A gm I, -,gf ,LE 'Z-'.1-fy 1- :V L 1 ey-35, 1 ,jj 555, Ai wwf-.. Q r I, 4 Q44 - .V .- -FSU? 31: .. A I02 JOSEPH THEODORE ZUKOSKI Mooslc PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Scranton University 11: B H Hare Medical Society. St. J oseph's Hospital Reading, Pa. Q ,W L, E 3. jf' Q O f E g W we ,Lge ii ' Egggfjjjgj ,553 f Writing lfirlpglgqthian exacf 'N ',...,:l A--L 1 .. ,,,, ' ' ' N , ' V ' T 103 DAVID HENRY H A USMAN PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA University of Pennsylvania fr B K 111 A K A sz A Jefferson Hospital , Philadelphia, Pa. lXqILTOlN x PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Bucknell University 111 B H ' Schaeffer Anatomic League, Hare Medical Society, Al1J61'S'NBLlf0- .., ..1 logical Society. Geisinger Hospital Danville, Pa. DAVID WILLIAM BOSTIAN l -,fi--F1.-,--,L Ay W Kg. -5 5 , 'rr--,H-,Q 4 .1 X-T .:,X.w, ,F 3, , , :':,j'VT':r'1'pv-1. Q. an- E1-Egg f-gt. - --ily-mqsqqgggf Ne w -, 1Q..,f.?7 X Eli , if A 71 - i12eif'fw4' .- ',.s2v'fxi3Q.,gi if -- - ' lf! Q. H oy , 5 . ra- 1 , Ai 'Elm ii ltgaligfgigqigx -:Q-uw i2i,.f:?JVEvQ,??23gINFQi.,1:A3i.f.AN:4,A1?:5iLiFi:fg-muff. sg gi I g 1-:jig-.-yr..2, f --,lf ,Y in .1',g, ,f-,.'gB5:., 1 v N',.:v.'u:-1? t w-.14 ,-u,4, ax 5-.-uv Amr., ,mem .rf 2' aw: --wif' -.2 M:-:in,.5E5,'f1-4if:.:,n3 ,. 55? - I rm :-I , f gx H I,-6, P' lo A 1 L , .,..,.. , , 'IH '41 M -f-- V - - , 21 ' ' w 1 - , -. . A ' -- ' 21,1 '--- ' ' , -, ,V Q , -. .. , , , - , ,, V.., . , .. ,. , N 1 riff!-f f?i fi -fl.7 ::fM,ff:4. ' L.-1... 'L-Q. 117, .,.x.w. . 'A ' LLM, vs. -.:'ff,'gY ' ' ' ' L,-if-1 ' ' 'fm in , 51- 'mimi iw--A - 1 IOS 4 53 , Q :eva I. 5 . xi WILLIAM JOHN y Woonwixnn ATLANTIC PIIGHLANDS NEW JERSEY B.S., Franklin and Marshall College L LIP K T CD B II K B KID Hare Medical Society, Pasteur Society, Moon Pathological Society. Henry Ford Hospital Detroit, Mich. ffTf?77Tffgfff 7T7'?TQlQ.-W WTS, futli-S - me 'f5 P'li 724 5:1 f:se::w,-- wffQi.1i-fUw'+..lg,s n me aa, -. ., , Q we-. - ifif:eggegvigil?5?f1i3Sg3fL571'-hge'.2i.s2igfT-f'21ff3EE'ffgiggggifjigggari-T.:eYfgFgasilggefgwise-'igwgg ,,5??gt'ef'L2i5iIg5?aatEift-'' im 1'f3f5i-'tysmvtjygffffe--.Q.s Q 'f 1 WE-Zv'EMi7x Y Nfz' 35 -' '51 Q' ilf'i:l,.ff 4zQ :L Siva'-W 'we ,ass-me 'i'...5fz'v f.f'.'fl,'f,.'f l igz' ::'iw'1l' .'- wg. 2 'E -i S2-' 4 V .i V , ,V H S- :ef-ef ' A l lx fit fv'Qew,i will t'ii'i'f'a fsu -Ji' '14 -Ef n'i5W,.Ez.:, fv1wM '1gi My , K!-1' ,s -f..'pf y-,igiwsw 5 KSN-M. ,' 'Tm f' ,:,f-1-1:lf, f 1, Y ., Q ..., wig .liaoliglpf , 106 L.. y 9 fr 5 A 22 RICHARD MORAN SPROCH www Emnmagm N-ugh - XLE mmmgzggfffmngug mmm:-is gg 2 E 2 sam.. W f is .. 1 - - ia g Xl , .. if MNH M ,N lm f a E m .,:.g-g.:.f.- .. Bs X m :-:-:-: 2EI 'fi ' s :.:... ,.. J., H H2 . 2 E w 11 - an . .J ss 1 w - iz - :-11:-:::: 641 'll 'M Q E M - r s ---in we 9 -'1 m ss 52 :I- E M M if E' W ' .aft A 4 ,cg my -H TK ' is ' is E in 1 B B is a is Q S1 2 S A H E X ,A li 1 B is H H . I , is f fs ,4 K 5 X W L - Q T Q gs. H H ij W if 11 H fc 1 gf LATBOBE PENNSYLVANIA B.S., St. Vincent's College Villanova College CIJBII KBQJ Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Hare Medical Society, Pasteur Society. Delaware Hospital Wilmington, Del. H H ll 'WT H l zz assi: - 3:5 ' cm - H- ' . ' B as . . . ' H ks-sal,-:ure M11 mt' ' ., fa 2- af W . , ' - - H 22, V ' ww M52 ,V gigs . - any-Z ,-'j-1, saga' 2-E Q ,mas was 3 ' 'sm , iss. mas, ' ' ' ,y '-mama' 'sus-'aged 4 om Eau E 5 murmur Q, 5 J my nw na as ww , Q- ss eggs. mums -VE -fs? was Haggis, ,ggi-I E mis, Q A mszgwgs-saga E mm wg Emma. 'E wi- ',,, W, . .. 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' 9.-,wi V W' 1 ' 525 , v' ff: 555 U! .:. a.: ::--15:5:!u,Ef .:.: .l at-,::p gag 3 f , , ,, , ,, Am M- ss. -wilmilvlm avr,5331's-vf'M4'Qx2iT3am,v,gggl,?f.jHg3,mg1,g4,a:wMi-imtigfwlm.21.Q.53EE,a,?' b -. f-S-9:1 :tibia ' R' - ' ' IO7 Q sa I T' saga. :' T-' me xi '.f ., ,385 ?'1'v.,'.,-1-1 ?' lisa 'Fa ' D , V. f 1 - IPB' .4 . -we , ' .- vii Q .w , , I . :.,:: .:.,::: Y Q., Y H .: if Agp: QW N.., V . . S+' 1' ' , ,HW LATBOBE PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Dartmouth College A K 23 111 B II K B flv Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Hare Medical Society.' Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. THOMAS if WESLEY MORAN JR. T- ffifjfjq-1 ff 'V avr y'?:j'1.9::,',,.f3e ,ifs-':',-gg,7,11i -a::y--w-5.4Q- A .. - A f . -' , ,,g,3aai:,i5f, 42713, Eiifyjfjnyfx-..2 :!:g:e1v.,-life fsfrnggqvf.trek'-:ig-1T,.1 y2g3,ay, Him rw: -DEKAVK-vzvfurv : Q ,V ,wp Wk., f y iw: .J gsff F gli ' ,...ws gv.g.. ,-,gli Q' w,1g?q7 relg5 f nl L .7 Kun guyfwulxg- wwf- N V4 W 1:-elsif .ft .Jin I' :gp ,gf Y-ug V ir 1 Q --A 1- gil?-?L3 4,55:L1,e,i,, f5fg'E,1l3ffSWwl 1 Eeiej-,MK,F5gliE'31Y?fie,:fQiq5E1:4g-fi' QQYVHSFTSIM-,,f5f111U.5i51?,.,351g2eiEie zEf1i,'We flAe'Tf ?'t'1 f,sf.Z-E'-f'-. fi,g:'la.1 5 ' -KZ'-.,A,n'm.iff1f'f W5 5j.:-.a.g':'4'i:,i- -' fait: Q , '21 , ij-y:V,.j,,5p'm:g'lff 2 'GQ' K ' - i2'ff' . f'-L' Slttf-' 'ff--'J'f1.13-3..v- 1 .721vg,,.'1,-Qggfgfi':3.:'A1eL.2ffL v g A me -size - H A' ' -f'- - ' ' ' E 108 SOUTH ORANGE NEW JERSEY l3.S., St. Vi1'1oent's College Villanova College fl: B H K B cb M Pagteur Society, Haro Medical Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, ' Thomas Physiological Society, Vice-President of Class, Editor of TI-IE CLINIC. J ersey City Medical Center Jersey City, N. J. JAMES THOMAS HELSPER ' V E-ni.:-E1--1,7 -X.-mfg H -,mix-,-f -,FQ-..-...T v,, ,,?:g:w.U T., - ,- . .v V, ' . , ' J ,-.M-.., Af. ., ',, f. , I T '- i 4 ' . Zhi In t11e.mul,g1tude:o,! cQun5e1lg!5g,1:5!gggg,tsga1gzgyz7gnovE1gBs..Q., Q M ffm, M5i,g,,i?:gi,, t S , is , ,Q ,--E' ,. fum ,,--ur H, - .NA-. ,A ': Eg 1' Y ' M5 ,jr U ,' , I 1- 5, - ,K.,,.,I V -asia, j H Y ,Z - ,, tj living? viii, , E ,H ' f,, g '- 'fm ,- ii f if ,U ,we -, 1.4-E 414.4 :.,.-,-.. V W N ,. . 109 H CHARLES JOSEPH DE WAN SAYBE PENNSYLVANIA Lehigh University fb B II K B :D Schaeffer Anatomic League, Hare Medical Society. A St. Luke's Hospital Bethlehem, Pa. ii 5 i ct IIO LANSFOBD A PENNSYLVANIA B.S., lVIU.lll611lJ6l'g College KID B II Hare Medical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Dean's Committee. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. DONALD RIEGEL WATICINS Q , . 'Mu -M13 f.-:WM awe' 'H1ee... 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Mn sm, Um - f mm' Nm is HV! is S ss 'Qu ' ms m.ma gs gy x me is Q m E . a ,,., an JUS, a ' aww sa was E ,ss- ingqm .. my , ff 1. ,ar , ALFRED SEARLES COOK, JR PRINCETON NEW JERSE x' Lehigh Ulniversityg WVashington and Lee University Q K XII Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. Mercer Hospital , Trenton, N. J. .,,. .L AL - - ,-, .,,,.- I ,. -WA .V ,,...ff.-,,. L- ,. .,,. , z-3' ' if , T. w ,KQKQJQ 5 mgigff' ffbam f:..FV?m f ,gun gl qkgi,-,,:.fg 1. Mmm..-, f 3' ' 7' V ffii-QQ . i1.qf?5.?3?M '5?5M,il'my-5laXff??i:'f??i-14253594'Wi 1' ffitifl,-N1 'iw' ul . ' . -1 -gf: . .- Jw i i- 5f,Vfi.,' . us. 1 M W Pi-oveiall thingsg gggbld ifavsgithatffgiihidhl-isifgoqcg ITHIESISALONI-ANSA 1:1-5.5 A : .Z - ZW 15 . :fa I' i 'i,, , Af ', Q fi , ' KW - , Nik 1:fxf.w,w:'i .-WSF. V' -1-wiiiz 1' '- .1 ' Si f- .iw-L 7, , . ,W , , . 44. Z., A W.. ,i lfufvax we Mn- 1 M 'A 5 533'1',1- 'ff-.'+11 f Q- . -'if 12 . h 'fn . ' ' . ' ' i 'W - Kiwi N.. ' -. H2 -'57 xr HAROLD ALAN W URZFL PHILADFLPHIA A I3 Cornell UDIVCTQILV B211 CIJAE PENNSYLVANIA TVI1, Slllill Hospltal Phlladelphla, Pa 7 F?-dw, gZr0? 'QQNPW 3 N 'lvfpy-QTY' - 1-.IX rl' ' 4' g, Jw? WW -ez nn.. C' I if ,Q I WE? H W., ,WW 5 is E A RAW gf wwfw wwf: E W W ,iw xamgh wma? nr imma ms!! Ag M FA as ii -N ' A wi 7 J . . J - . . ' , . ... I - 3 f . . L . .I 1 J 0 A - l I O - . .1 -L mg.: - f V ' --- -.f - -- :-11 ' yr- -1- - 'rf - ,-4'-S- . ,,.-' 2-f'T.E':'L ' -11Hfi EEi'.1 3 Y , fi -4 fb ' my -12-A .-,. QA'-'Qld 9 -.'fVLf 5gf.fT'-f- 'm f' ,Ffii-Z'-i'g'lM!: 1 ' n 'fl 533 5, -,'fz,'l5, 53, it ,g--if, 1 Q54 Wi QPl2fx'R.,gg mi wg?-15.464 ,-53 3.2-:Eff ' n f E 52912 -5- ,rf 1+ 15 -I ' -' -'ww A -sf'W?E1'f:!?g ' + if:Vgff Q Q L -.,4,,.Y gr ., - V- .. . - : X,,,wB M ,ww pa .fyf,y. ,sg , K., ww au' ,A -1:-r.!1f1: we '-11:-,z1,i:s'f' ,nr f-lawzvzz-f,..' ff - .'L,.,w.,.1, Q: ip-.1. fm, --.-.,',-.' 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AI FRED BROCKUNIF R, J R Q Bs? 3? ' 1 Q Q X S 5 Q H s .wg g E at r 3 5 as Q M2 Es ss WE if H is Amsgegilfig H lv llllfllfeleww .i H H4 .J O W, . . ,.,., , .ww , ,. ,H .M M- , ,I -1 -- V-V T ,Y ,,,, :-ff ff-as 1- 1- . h ref Q W H H Q? BH is-IEWEH ei -Ei mT:: H-A all-1Mg'H'W91l il , 2 . A Q E Q .-L Y' 1 mm: - L wif -' -V Q f e - i'1A-YES' 'ily' x ma V-8 :W ami., ,w,ma ' ,gi fl.,,m w3z1,ww,,,52W..:gPll544f'H wi ' in e' , , Tbefsodi ggC'l?9i' '-fvbnsig wvweufiein nw. . ,. V - np- ' -xx al . ,Q H: -,S 1 . f 1-i 'al fa- yzf- f,,:jfi.i:,ffi,-25 -, 1 3 ,V-,iv 'swf' 1 , s k4,,.Vg1 glial- ,Ea ju f5.I,l,fsw:EgvQ,v in J. Q E .a i r H X, ,, MFE- - ' Q ' ' 1 ' , S 2 SHE ,, , ,S , . W! ,W n ,... 1 'E H5 H ' ' all , --5 - H -Q sf 'Wi W , --JM M Fejfmg ,wli,':giF ?P:,f il,wlgl?' 5s', wH1'1!?,l5f- asf--Qin 1 ?- 5-iz-WWF-lx: 5314 Q5 HX ml- , . . W' - H' ' - H El ' 1 - -' Y' Q5 - 13- T -'HEL,gl-.'v'f.1.:-niza'-L.L...,4-1:-f-r --':--if W , HY . In 5, ,, N H, M, UE, ,J,, , 7 .Y 1 Q- - - -- ---Y--HL' f- H PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA B S St. Josephls College fb A K A Q A lhomaq Pl1yS1OlOg'1CE1l Society, Schaffer Anatomic 'League,'A.1pe1'S effel son IIOS1Jll,Ell Philadelphia, Pa. n mama .mp .ma miss: WH in may E awk A A was ma -mn svn A me EQWMW em A gigs Em mga 535 ,imifig mag A mn ms mam we an V rr fr ' .:.jj-:351ag2:e5:s5,Af 1f .::5gaE:ai1.',. wfxj' .5,5gg:.gf-'-Sf: VF: -'H : ?',. , R : ff' . : V JL, ,A A. + 5 ' A L, 32 if i,, A . llllfl rihiljgifllf-Emil-fM5fL E W' f L Tw 455' ? ' E ,. '- mag nail! B Lfifiiilliilf if ' -fm 1.63 1 fuinzls aku: 1-A 56:0 a elbg -- ' QAM' S I-I a5a 5a5:,..gQ-I :5Lags355::'-.'- -.,,. 2.5 5 A '. .. ,5, .. ,. ..,. ,. .,.,.,.,. ' :ji 5- j-E-x - q'. 11, 7. '- ,i , 55 f .. 1 we - 3 'fl 'Q' P - L 3' A- f 21 E mi , 552355 ,gi WL ,, X, an 0 y -J, w 11 I,.3.E::1e.5:1f,.f:.,.pg. .5-'-':f:,:5:f151,1g-cigfs-Zs.!.,.g,:gg:5.Kf1H.,.. ,.,. c,L5g:5:1f5:5H:5: 1 :-: - :-: :-: --:- -:- 7 B wks. A B H W J Y Wi' 3 'F 1 14,1-K '.'1:1lii5.i?i,1iF 2 ' . t ara A m y-l'. 5-ii ' A 4 A U - qv. QL st. 122-+Aae1:'fr4qi:r.m f'a-fQU':. A, :nies -: W W Life ml 1 A N' 1 .X ,ff' -'f- Q Y F1?2fq,f,i,y3.g1gj.ggg,gh-.j,43w,g?3, eg.-T,gg..3-'veg . Eggs: -W, M- , - Hgh E M. ' W A ad 1' -4 K 1 - 'Mmkxll 'w'wMw4fba'miA?3g: ' Q.!b,.Ti.3:.Q:225333.4,,..,5Ql:::as32'A,.i.ms2E....1 QX4-Llfiilfii A SQ gf IIS PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., University of Pennsylvania Q5 A K Association of Interns and Medical Students. St. Luke's and Childrerfs Medical Center Philadelphia, Pa. SAMUEL YOUNGER H V v Y Y Y A,-W ,M T, ,sm , I . ,, 7- , . .. .,A..., ln... If ,,WA- i..f,-.,f,,?:-79:Me-w :q:vrzggzvs may-yr ss ' 'Q 3 , , Q ,s , ss ' K ' ,.v ' ssfrrsi-,Q ji.. -,Q -' ' 25 . X1 ' 'l V B P2 .A gg: I SMS- ,gm iaqwqwg-.A.-5,5Qsig?554W.':3m'5qg3:3gE:AWgL,,me igiwiifgyf v f , , . Q , 1 fi. 1 ,- -- ,, f ,Wi ' 'fm 4. H 2- :A 535 f, 'fm-V.-21, , A - ,Q Yo11ripat1el1!1gh5lHZn0'I!1151'Q aught no. the?m.uh. thx!!-rh9Il1aS Iroi,Q2lQth0tged19111a1!1i Xgligfsadffl R45- He mania getaanif nacsaasa-gtadsfof is I A I . H 1 V aww H-RQ? I wal ' was -fi W ix 2 is ' I -W gm' 37,1 , ,2 1, . wi, W ,. . AI f vs f 2 A: ff M 4 ya n 1 ' W my fs 1 P f ,F ,. gl , R . . it ', , I , '- , ' ,fl W , A , , I A v -I -Y 3 A , I -A ,V J f f iv 1, 5 ' 11 if - I I M V dh h,Mh1g,,.g ' I- ,mn I H6 STANLEY 5 w WEINSTEIN Pul1LA1JELP.H1A PENNSYLVANIA ALB ., Temple 'University Q1 A K Association of Interns and Medical Students. Mt. Sinai Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. i1i Itwig not fpr-askillfiil lggch fogwwhiiieficliarnfigwover Zggiofevgtlidtfcrdiigeqafkfiife., 53545255 'f Y ' , . e . 2?-Sofnocnms 'f4g5-4s062BLG.7siQQff,i ,. Q Qi.. V 4 N 1 :ct ,xl- H7 I Q L M14 W is xzliw ,-EH 'z'?s. as as ,.,, 1 L1 'v-asa A 'S 'sgwga 'Ka 1- :A N Ns .Y - Q V j, ll wigs PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., University of Pennsylvania 111 A K Association ol' Interns and Medical Students. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. LERN E R -W -' U M .- ' ,. -'-'av v---if - As' 1: 'Tff'r'?f-'i ' TXT 1 z ' , we , :Wie 535255 iff g3,.2SSEA2iiAAgLg:?gTsf if mg zggfgfygs f fggiyijizglegg-115531 Q . Z, 'GW 2' ,- Y - 'V V-' . ' 7 4 4' . -'V'-1'-J T' 'A ' ,'15l, .RA ' 'f'1F'f .',f4 '.',l' 2- .'- ,f ' :Z-1 L.1,,l:'g.fR' v'-3 1+-as-uf-1'-I Qi '. . i- V M ' 'L I LW-Lzvmf in .':i..'yf1'fMT x HT'- 1 ,.,. 'U ST' 'i'f2:,f- 2 S iff-1 +1a?9s5f35?i.yA:- 3281? 51 Y . if-A .1 ,A 5:13372 seams'-.. ,yr .v.,. Q 33,1 ig . 4.W...-Jl y v, H 11.1 g9,f51:+n-L-iw --H 1 W Lf sgf- 1 l ' fl A f f: : .:., 4' 'N - 1535 37. . ' 4'-:. : -:- Q 'T Er ff .fl 'lla iv v - 5 S425 f . ' J S li ff Adv' We Jw A G! qvli- Jiff'-ml v Eff!-Qtjyz.-1 1f.. -nw wg- ',:r5,+L,.f-.5w:ff-11.iw 1. v ,fp uv' ff- Lf. 1' A W- - N P fin 'Tia' - A.:--la-L1 Y. ' ' .5-W 12-1 x '2:1j,:s'1 H ' ,,.:5Z:.::,: f2:Eg'4:-I , 25,9 -1511: 'jig-:'ag'H,,':gq', il J., -1. II8 DAVID AVRAM KREVSKY ALLENTOWN PENNSYLVANIA A.B., lVIull,1enberg College fb A E Alpers Neurological Society, Moon Pathological Society. Michael Reese Hospital Chicago, Ill. L f i ' e L f A ' wi 1 ' -iii? ei' iEhe2nlixaisiesrlnmula ibiiliamlifaidiiiiieiiv1951-'eRs1N1eHYfmff5fiy3l'dnu:5ness assrenxilsnifeebgetb H hge? pf -.'- -L ' 5 5 9? .A L A E II9 I LEONARD CHARLES FELDSTEIN PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA BS., Pe1msNy1Va11ia State College St. Elizabetlfs Hospital WHS11iHgtOD, D. C. - J , -. -A - -. . - - W-M --v ff-. - A-N i Q- -rv: 1---1-ff-1'-K,-L, .., .... , -3R.,.P,, M, me QQ Y- u .. ,Eff .7'lf?Q, 1 f-. ,f-if az BW. 11w,.,h H1 1 , H .,,'Fmg Q' ,M Z, :fl 5 I xg ag fgf N5 75:2 VVf1?,'5fg,a gEa.,,,:jyfzgQE-- 9 mg 1,,:m5,4 mg Wig, manga 84 V:mgiW:1g.,,,!wg?-1fg5q,1:wg A K ,ikv--,fm - ' MW gakfg ,134 mg'-KYB. j Q gif ' M'-'52, Awwff'-3-E1-A Q1 211'-N if V Fi: L 515fA?f1 'yi' W2119, daugliteg ogxlimbgralaxihgg-HQQC ,hm'ffgmilsxnb-g45?!aas1ng' f1Qhhs3QQQ59 i 1 ' T - i C 2feffyFfaf.f?t13f 'Qfijijif igfflfdf? rg- f,?5?i2gf1fgQfs'1f wif f' . ' .. 4 A,w.wywga..j .: - -,'- L, 1-Q ' -' -A ', ,.iI'j 'A ' 'ji' .gpm -. :Mg .ia-ff 'pm nf, f ?3sf1':3,..1 ,- ,-,-yy L N '-'gg 'iffiu .:,. 'rn-xi .115 fs 1: ww BW. Z ,fij3'QN9,.f' V '.'1f ?5l:?iQEQf 1 45FW'5 k', Q- A Q-'Ei iff '73 wQg,igqk1i--2'i3.s -.-4':.-g.f'i.x.GE1 'R SWL' AA kai 11,55 .g.f'v l' .7 : as-,.: I4 H1951-:': 'Q 32'-4 120 BATH PENNSYLVANIA Ursinus College B Z A Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon it 'Pathological Society, Hare Medical Society, Gross Surgical Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. St. Luke's Hospital Bethlehem, Pa. 1-F--v-- M ri-' -'sw.A ,p ' 'wvfwp Q-nj? fir-'7' -eg ,-',Qw22ir'wffvw ,AWA ' sA'e 1M-Y?2H?fs? e: . V, - V, , 5 Ax , 5515-M 'flWsr,,,Ae ' A 55551 -,. -U52 vi 31 Eve-is ins ,Q 4? 3.5. 5i3'?iH,ef4f,E -' 55:13, A 3 in if 0:34 A W C ,gags fam, H3535 , gg-fzggy iilakfgggdwf fjggxjfg 5: L,?g?f?Fj,, , . Y -,kj .- N' mg wi: - 1 :Q in '- Y :m.ng:. 1wAf'k,.- :,f.-:.,,.5, '.' ': :m1g'j ,fffbljfsx lzvf . ,gs . l' T Kg 5 35.1 , .Laws are -like medleinegtheyfggemiically- cure,1i1ifi?6y111ib3i,r?11lailggiigA95emnS5i5ES9!E!12r+?l3,!,5w9Q1f:Gig A igiggajf ,iifsai ,- ., iidjiif' 1 , 1' -Sill' -fij 'TL-Z':I,eB1'WVT'51 'r-425. 3? 225' V Wei -'-' 5- W55l:5:5:55:9'5F1:l'.iifrfii Ti ff '-if Eli' '5 Wfis-55 '-f f'1i J' '15 ' le. 'P ,MQ HLz.f:.:F-ir'E,ii1gHii.:!gg.'f:f2s'15,-3gf?i!3f','2., ghd J' 5,i,5.f,eeei,-,USTA 55 ,'E':.e f IZI I X MELVIN LAWRENCE SAMUELS BYWOOD Alameda County aw W an B gas -fin ss ss X H H .s,awa.iwEw .H vga E- lg, Nggalzkm b mm 5 H -E E-la E ax H Q ' aw'-Q l H-E Q as B wygwsg 5 E H wa gym am H My Em ES 8191 mmm 'Jaffa' 1813588 B I Em Y is Hsu: X E W N mwmmgvssxssf- QFE 551 S8 if 25 W - Www S8 K M , T M ,Q Q, gg B H I six HBH H .31 HBE H H Ma U' ,E ,.,aa.Hg,WW gf- B H 'H E S8 A K: mfs Snugma El.xKwmW'k X B H a, N H gm RU 5 -an E la H H H M 1 1 . H X M Q A E B lm www. H B gag E was H is PENNSYLVANIA l3.S., Villanova College fb A E Hospital Oakland, Calif. 1 i i N if mv? AM. I .,,,,.,,,,.-,.f...?.,-v-3--v-M-ff12.111-R-v:.'.wg ,-A-rgff-fn' 'arg -Q,,..,,----. .-, 1.---Aga ..,. ,W 1 ,Jpf'fff -w-5.-ffs'rf,-Q '-.'1vf?Zf.-S?.fi4a3 '-Qt. 1 ,V ., ' -, 1 !'g39 HlH- 3F'?sfE '-.g5 ',:X'5: ' lfff -EE , -s47'?-V1g5qjE.,: 'L if-Y I L, -wig.,-.. 'T Q ' 'gg ' '-.E , - K-ff' ,rf 1- H, ,W 'g - 4'1'..' 1: ' f ,.z,'. vip' 'iii , -, -Tff,,13Ql.Qy:.' i.,,g.gaME.Wlg:. Elia.,-rg.. H g j, YSL :I 1 5, if-.V fi,-la ff I. -:- V, 'Iii V-Ag.e-Qty-'4L'U:.iJ-'lair3'gi:ff',Z:LZ'f':,:-R 5 'sig ,R K. gfiff , - 4 nie- -is -I L, Q. -. ,E5.,1m -vi-X -.wx - Wm5l'?:B'-Wim'-QE'l5155? 5575 ?3'.WE1l' 5? ,ifiiifil-.,:lS' l-'fsswa--H5----H-ig. wana: w 9 Emi? sg. ,ga ,QM Eu 5-.'x..f-:lf . f,,wf?I,.,,f,l-1gf1?ms13a1ggTl11g,aggip1e11t-. Xea,,..15l11-.l.,,.gW,,, , .. -, 5 4- H -E al-4f,AgL.'-'s' WL an H H wa, W- mi aw-L Ka'f'f-lgmwsfwam' :w W agaw.alf-'W' --'iruaav , Q-Hp'-'wg' - wggnff- ,ag Q'-sr Q al .ga .- - - ,Q Q. -Jw. 551.3311 -T 'lg -gwaww K3 R,5Fgfzf-if m6zfll1f+gl1e24192i?,-31Q,aQ:5EE1?kQf Q -afl fS2.-fag-:aa wg :Emwia,53d,m5f6f322a1ggg3,S.Hai , in f,gl ,K11Q.l , K H' A R ,- P --.1 ' -,ya - : '- as .E lf' 'La' -,4. Q-'1? i1 'h , 11Z.Ia11'a.'-.g,sr'T1V1D. , uf, A :.f.a1'idg,1.-l.a,.:ra.g:lg.-,qi-.1.. LF N --m - A -- 122 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA I-Ia1'va1'd University 211A E Hare Medical Society, Alpers Neurological Society. Jewish Hospital CHESTER MARSHALL TROSSMAN Philadelphia, Pa, I I t :I Egg, egg-fe fe-Ifgeiffffis' ,fag I MQW we w e H . I , - , - ,, ff ,I V A 1,-JSA.. ' wi., ,,,, 'mriigg T5 E I A -mggqfxila A2516-I,A,t: Ms 'A A ffm A .AQZZA wi V 'ggi SQ,-2 nPjTEgg.5EiQf'i?g5f:f3,4igi. g:ig l QQ Eij53IgQ'gi5,QM ugFiwj,f,, :iam I '1,, .W ,, I I - we U H - - , . 3' fp HSS W-E m'iE'9f?'f'51'5-9732-Efiy Ilwigfgu w7wl99V was lm' fe :fl , A - :F ,M 1- ' ' - ' ' I N. wrap: A -, P'-it-:Sf eww, , ,V V 4, Q V . , .rc - ,Z W . f -fc.-N ,NF -l.4 ,I5,k.AW. ,I 5? A A 1 51015159550-9!9e?,9gAbesgghnekzabvfi A I ., ,, . ggi ,AU ,,2g,,,J1g, H 931'-A. ' 5,91-ai32J..w'S-Sf Efsig. we B'2k'iPf2f'i32, - 4 'Khi n N3'?+m?65,f'Hf?w:,Qis-529551251 l 'ef A K, Ni 3122 I P, M y A -,fl wwf.-JI. . u' cf-5 .A ,- 'A -.' --:A ,1 1 Y, .e X. -' I .A-Mx1,2g:seRS ssl.-,A -- V :Huff ,,. .- 4 ev ,M'g5z-,,.,- -tv-west: -:Hg HW i 4. 57, 4'li?F9?W? L JlEL5 , ,-3Q?f M'fi,i lziffifin jfpi ,,r':f.u1Z i??f35.Tf-T3X,.+??-ff. 7- Egg : ffiicir rdlfgii' 1' 3 we 2.5 ,l ZLZLS My EM- ht- A 11'- 123 1 A If ji fn' 2 Irg:1rq::,, f,-'QA '-J , 'M' ,:,: .,. .,. :.? W -Y , - M ,A ,swf A . H V. fi 3- - R - cfm 1, : 1 ,bl 3,Z,:, 9 f -:is mime' 2: ,1'M5k7,li'Q35z,,525g, 3' We -'Yi wi' 121 Q Ig:ws:2??il fiwz'fif In rx -4- W.. .U Q 1, 5,?J,, ., f!i3J rf' 'K'-'IVE EI'W-'-'V' EASTON ' PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Lafayette College NEN KBIIU OBII Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Hare Medical Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Gross Surgical Society. Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. LoU1s i FRANKLIN- BURKLEY, III A . , ff ' xi ,?i'f- V W if Iayielii ., -5115 ff-fi'f'1Hf-fewf ish ll ., '- -pi , , -- A- J 1-' .1 if H ,Na1figf1iS,e1aqohetii5'?fiiingsgarfidiTlQn6fi'izS:gQizi1tol2lsePar5retftheY115M3'111vPar'2SfffQn4sfthsfg1191iPfu1. 151' BHHPIC 5 'jiusffjmiggfiuagxig:5a,FQ.'l, jfgig?E.'AgMi5,'.:gHfwfr ifrgy I5 TI: 5Lfki21f1pf?,2', Q-v'yL,5Ex5,32 gxw,, 'qilfsg i -l L. 3 v Z- V - rii' f Z 5 3fjm,i?fZY2EA w-f3.s5i51 ff,iiei,zfQ fifil- Sf X 1.151-.g5m,q. ifHN5f ,' fix gl, -.aQ,:.g:'I W f2f 'QW flu- ' g--,- 'lf ' g' 'N ii, A 1, -I, ,Al - 7 A 5' I 124 .PHILADELPHIA i PENNSYLVANIA B.S., St. Joseph's College il A K Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Amitoniie League. Mi. Sinai Hospital Phi'lade1phia,LPa. DAVID WELSH LEVIN A . , ,, , . , . ,I WY- -.U-My ' . mf Languor seizes- the bodyifromyhad Y8D:tilRtifjE1.v'-OVID, Ars Amorizoriaf' ' w. A- fun l25 DANT E EDMUND MARINO PIQIIIAIJELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA AQB., La Salle College fb B H K B C11 Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society, Edi't.o1'ial Staff of THE CLINIC. U. S. Marine Hospital CPulJlie Servicej Long Island, N. Y. ge A A S ie if N 3 A J Q wt 3 52 EE' ii 5 Ei ,glow -' - A ie-.J ' W- 5, .W?f'?1gL,..:-. wr.- -'9.i.-...,..-.,..,1' ' ' .L - ' ---'- - -1-' 126 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., 'University of Pennsylvania Editoral Staff of TI-In CLINIC. Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ROY KORSON K . . 54. H , . . ' sm' . .. . . . .W nw.. .. .,. .. . Y .L YL.- W. .L ,, L, I, ,,, ,Y Lb, mwgl I MMA: - K... ' as 55, E A 5 5 . M.. - . - ,M ms A W . A A I A A an Liege. , 1 I Z I 1, QUE, affix' L, A 'I There are worse occupation? lIl'11hlS-W910l'ld.'ll1h3,i'1 feqhpg a-woman'2s pu159,LS'1-EIINE A . . f - 4 I . V A . KH K , . x f , . ' -f ' , ,M N A , N A-Q' - ,y I I My - -I M , A we -I A . f , , Ili, ' Hsu Ii , -f gen V I -I 'I ,WA - zf I yzm If fs' . . ' -.,f.i'u+ .. x:il'1,,'1w,' l :- 127 is A A Am, ALBERT JOHN KRAFT, JR PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA ' A.B., La Salle College fb P E Hare Medical Society, Pasteur Society. Germantown Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. , S 1. ff , , rx -1 . A ,Z W , , . 4 ,V , , .. ,A - .1 A library is a, greatbcqtalyzer, ,qccelergliillg Agilxggglgigx-itiolglglrfil rite 'of 'pgdgressin 1g,prQf5BSi0l1'- N H Q f W ic Q f l A l W+gzn Wm,rxm'fOsm:n,l A T ' S ' WSU S N WENT- fa A ZEWQF lflll ' , ,K H L .A ' .W We , ...., .-1,. .. ,. . K 128 EDGAR CHARLES SMITH PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., La Salle College qw B H ' 11: B K Hare Medical Society, Pasteur Society. Misericordia Hospital Philaclelphia, Pa. A :a:5,,rgf' m'll7 Q?lo??5'?e?T'?lf7 iifvf aigffif-Fqrfzfffgxe2Q:fQ5 7'ffw'-: xfgumi. 'Tal H -affzgnf rif- 17L5P'H-Xf ':,':Sfl'il??7'5l'T2J?ffef ' -:-- l 1319- lt Rf?il42',12,9 53 ','?fff ' :Q.i51Z5g 'if1iffff': KWmi1?:4i'13QH-1 'Qual wwf, 'File-' SH ' -WW V W' lg.-C33-. f :-: cithfa iivfteafifiksiafrligj KEN ' H S ' f ' Cl L H ' W L 129 ' K PHILADELPHIA ' PENNSYLVANIA A. B., La Salle College fb B 1I Pasteur Society, Hare Medical Society. Misericordia Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 5 JOSEPH IV-.- ,.,,.l.-- ,, , T -,1--T , , 'Aw I, --'--- T 1fi-11,-,ifpq :zfsf-gig .fa yy- Exwlw, A Q in ,S A: 1: 5? EQ, 55 ,gf-AAA gg ff ., H ,, , A. - A , A K A, 1 , QF bfi'-Q: l 5,gg': 1' ,IL1.:,.11a A ape.- E Q A M Em wg, wma-2aW'w.H,w ' wife we IEAN.-weA5,51HW-'kSisI,i?.W,aIieAff+QW1'?As 5Qe1:?f?'QaEg::?HaASSf1f.kA-HTQ-'- Z r Whugfthgddcgqis gqnsultg,-Elie pgfQggnt,g4ficg:1TIoIIN'lilgyymgpf?3EngliShAI2g9N2Q!Q2sgg5, fi. 3, -MS: , Y is W , - , , Ag t. ,, M , :Q A A AIN A ' , A ' , , -M 'a I . , fx 'v 4 'Z sz ' 'ss' . ' 4 E UNWEA z, fum I ,xggxms A me Beau xr min 1' N5-I al' 'lm ' 1 Mc ' a ' ' ,Ama .5 ff? .5 ,JEJ .Eff ji' Q-Yggldj M, 130 PASSAIC NEW JERSEY A.B., University of Pennsylvania CID A K A S2 A Hare Medical Society. Jefferson Hospital Pl1i lade1pl'1ia, Pa. HERBERT 'gg-',: ,ly-M-A-5 2'F','L lfghi-:g jgpl ig:-QQi'j:j41:Z,5gg5j,:ziggy :Egg-Wfagg, ' E -: YL , -In ft -I - - ami ,ga 'E H ff H fff . 1- - 1 - A. : 1 m g. ge t 1 my 11 555, . M, RSWY 'MFA 1 E E ,'f1g33P?9i?,1hQ'EPPii3H of -evveieensagglesesw vyglggilrfflwkislsvsximOtfgenaxmgxxfl ,1!3?B1l1i,si,il!0'Fijf3Eg,S'Sf'i'Q!1S95Q2.2,, f ny F V IJ -, - ' ' E ,Lv ,Q '. 1' in- ggi V. .Nw ,' t fwqg-,1,g,:, Q , aus, rife' W, X 55 ,. H LT' ,Q , XA - .. ,Mm ' . JOIYI12-u ' 3 v 2 'E ,of , , '- :4kE,.H :-.X 'jf' ' ll wwe sw if ' - 3 -M ' H -- 'EEG ' ' Qf . 'YQ l ,E E l ,, ,, Bi . . VINCENT HA READING PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Albright College Beading Hospital Reading, Pa. ms 'ff ROLAND RESSLER - A 1 ' ,- Tw: 1 ' 55 - Qifii .ig L:':lW fi:..YQQQfQ' f:-'i.3Q'p- 'Tl .. '. - 5-7 -. .sf iw J.. -'l 3 'iiFf1 ' - UQ 'll1 '?i- Hi . ' , ',.! mmf .. , - V3-1-ya He' n 'Viral-5: Fl- '--'11'5. ' fyiin, 4 .21 43fS5: g': .1 ' -31 ?i.f :::: ,mzfz gji 13 155,735-.,f -'1 N . 'fi a s0ld'leFP' .V M lg ' l li?-31' f ll ' '21 v VUL' -sf i f 'HJ Tld' :Zv i - .-'il' . ww will ,ml 11.5-ww ' v-1 E- f 1 .1-W, 14:-Swag .,S'Vv-Wal, , - A aZ3,1,jg - fsmaggl, 15' :'1:1'.ywg -zglqrj -, - 3, mlm- 'Q-31 Ag - lswwwl ,, yy 'Tr-',,::Jg.w'1-'B . ., ,. ,Hi Y - :Z :vm ,Q - Q -ff N sim gpm- .gg we H. lr X ssAs5g,x5., Y . N11 vwggvmi. N e,3.,.d'.fgL . ik.. wlydtjvxi-1 fig, . -bfgjigi-g-Mt jvjlw iwisggmgl -rw , '-X ss ' - - ss U - 1 . . y . 1 .4 wif' -UNE Q 'rw 'K ll A :1 'ch -, 'sez' ,-, 'r T,-Q vf'L4.1x:,' .111 5i'..w'L1. 51 5 3 H31 iff' W wif? YN. .rib N . Y 3' 'Q5l.f.f.igQiLf'f7ffh:Q?A i1l, iF fi' '.- 1132 I. CHESTER LOUIS SCHNEIDER PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA AB., Wheaton College Christian Medical Society, Dean's Committee, Associate Editor of TIIE CLINIC, Glee Club. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. .-gi? .... fi.T-..iv ,Wk ,-.I---ewlgs f ft' . V ,V gina -ISE Yr 1 rig.. Y -:,g,E. 4 A Y ,E....'., , .I A.V, if?-gs?v.v.i?,9l V: T, v ,tg XV. :F 32b4'f1slIQe91vfs-eeH-fbsib-eff'5Qe31191121222:l1!f9ve1,f1s i6heS Emifevivxhhlffszzwsfestvflvfhgwhesgeeaewaeeess4 5S?Sgiffss's is fsffal11'1:H-Qrwfsunes and-rfilesioff11wivii91+Sw01wQL51Q me I M M ' it if I'tI -- +I P -' - .sam LM' W-wfemlf sieaiiigf:egga3,M,3g1tg.tJI.5E2Etc,.,i.,f-2535 133 K a ss ms Wyws yn gss 1 a ms ms a mu sw :ummm E Wi' mm gwsw E m E smxwm E H H W E Wigs W H W KB E H ss w a ea ss-x mn ss B as .-.-H mg 'Q as Us ss ss ss 'km WILKES-BARHE PENNSYLVANIA .B.S., University of Scranton Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Wilkes-Barre, Pa. ss . MICHAEL BUCAN , , ,. . . .. . ,, -,T-4 'f'-----fhw P EEZ W -fa. gin AWE? sy'-lg H Z -.il-3' wmggagggwsixgi Hpvwi Q H HSE gg Q gsw .2Af1-Qgwgwz-.YEL ,kgwfxm my K .ss an -. Q pm mn 'ss .va f -m ms mf. ,A :-, 1 ., . m .' ' V . -- . . V . - . -Q-.2-1' swings 52525 Q: Q A :Bf'i EmiwgEM5:W?FvEh 55 an-RFQ: ss?'m:'mW? Ng2i..,gg5'F'v.,gg'ks 3.0 'vw 'im ,'S5 'HE: lugs?1' -'m',lg1:i2f1,.4,pf5Em,mfg : S- -H' 3 5 RTE hgsliq- egfe1fgrs'gmooEl'cwke,.,6 J - E AR, glwegeuw- gf gm wwf NEW? 'Q N H 'migmwmwwxxgiiim 'W QQQQQSK WI' ii if ' W f H E by ' mb. H 'HQ wg K B- B --H'-'-'-'Q Wi 371' -W wg M M W . A E M ww M-Wg Q. y.. m,mmri2.,E.-,N ww .-ggmg,mmg.mJ,gg5 Wm.-. H ,ggmw Axgmmgwg mm ' rw, a V I f 51- : : - ' ? fia , af ' -1' ff' mx ,Q Jn 'wg x - Ex! , - ' ws ' . 1 1 ' .USE 4 . 1. Q NJ5' r-Yw'fm5 I . v w fn: Q , , . . ,J sm ., - J ., .. -as -.,,. . . L.. B4 Mm: -.thaw H 1. Ama, t . I B Q . Y ,Q - ' ,E w 1 - '--' M , V. 1' -,-, .. .4 :HJ ,,-.w,- .,,,. . vu.-.4 . . vs.-J. Y. ay, S W . H.mW,.':-- ,W --Hwww. ,f wg gl, .Q T- 1-.Af , v, 4' H? - 1. --Q. -..H -.,f-,HF .ij - I '- fun- :H fi-,. . K H H52 fF.f.T?i...5i?1t:i H 53352 V' W? . H Q ' 'QfiZ.??5.i.Q,1.EQ'E EE if miim viii.. 134 IVIARVIN CHARLES RHODE PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Ohio University 111 B K A S2 A if A K THE CLINIC Staff, DeaI1's Committe. Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. . . 2 if I V ,Wm I , -13 . , V , MMI, --,LY--,, . ,.,,-i I M,,L,,,-Lm- I, - -.-.-,,,.L.-.....,,,, IME.. ,W-.LL ,.. LLL, L.,M....,..... .i.fL,...... - ,L , 135 ' RICHARD GUBIN , SMIGELSKY MT. CARMEL PENNSYLVANIA Bucknell University if A E Geisinger Memorial Hospital Danville, Pa. ' W H e fini' fT fi 'e H . fl NH H H' fa - N N .'.' 1-lA 5 WW H H, -'-f-I P- -H ,?j.fZ,' -N - f felv 1- Q' B ,,. ii W W. ij, 'gLl1,5 'gL'f:j:,3., 1- '15-,'2j,H- il' ' ,'.-gv',:fi4A' .1-15 ,2-:l-5, 55:3 M Hr 1 1 ::- E ' 136 I WILLIAMSPOBT PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Bucknell University fb K wif N E N K B fb Bauer Pediatrics Society, Gross Surgical Society, Moon Pathologi- cal Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological b V, Society, THE ,CLINIC Staff. Williamsport Hospital Williamsport, Pa. RODGERS , , P W- . ,v . . ' '- , ' -,A 'f-1' wifi. V ' fs - -'faq ' -1' ' H- F' '. Y W 9 P -X -. ,ej:i'.'.:, 'f ,, yy.. '5-' '- I was W 51, V Y 2' ' Q' 31-Q-'fit , . , , , L fi 'fi 'fr.:,wl' .-s ' ,1 ,f . WU -1 PML 1. ' Ji, --'iff Ijfi -M ' - 1:3'f g,v?m,, '11 ' 'fQ1,,5 -5 Q 1 ..',Ef? l ':.3'. fig, gg! -5.15.1 Mil.: 5 A104 12-if 2' ' -Fi' :lg gf ' uit its 21 rf, uri '-'. vF1f :-'J'-159 TMTVVFI a:g3:.ggf3,,f ' ' ' VH 'A'-' P fl 9' rf:fii'4q.27,J 4rE fe, -- 'Q - .'EE. 4,.. , my -4.:f3?f:f' 'F1?1.-i'!- f'A'f5E'f,-:-53?-JL-fl1:-X24 -f'.-:?5.i:kr.r.t.'?f1 .,Q,s,.Q.,?aaxl?fsli g if ffi l ll f..:2l'...Q:Llfs.I..2fg.2jiiPfg.Qll L....:sl-i LF?'isQ.s.:5I' -423 I 137 K MARTIN ' MILTON MANDEL PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA AB., University of Pennsylvania Cf' A K Moon Pathological Society, Hare Medical Society. J elferson Hospital Phlladelphla, Pa. we-ffrmzi -f e r -.I-:f ir if . 1 f -I k'T3 1't , fW i fff'1f'i'Wi' - 5ffW'egee:'We-iel'.' Q35 I, fly A H 5. A QV it ,E ' ' i W- fn -, 7 N ' Pegg Ek .. . 5. e.1'g1'E?Z?51i!35i?!if35f6f3ii1lii5i!iiif2J!?f'lfG?s115il2f!l1l5ie!5'2ii25'f'f1M1!9'iQhffifiiffl150139129595-h4iff'Y'G1?QEEn55??9'if95miLE5 E ' W il 1. gl. .15 , X -, 4 1 - 4 4 4:1 , -gl am - g im '. ' v' 'f -' ff ' K 138 WILLIAM ALLAN PHILLIPS WHEELING WEST VIRGINIA A.B., West Virginia University BS., West Virginia Medical School B 9 H N E N Delaware Hospital Wilmington, Del. - -eeee --'-Te--Wee ---he--Y 4- e .ii ,I I 'rf no A ,tx ., Wig, in 7.5 Q45 Hi-VW AS33mi:Zgrvtswgggii,H e:2fg3r,g3,.f ,, It -an A: . V . . - - 4 M f J . Q ' I 'fl'- 4k?f z1'f. j .l.gi.:'f1z7l 1- J,:i?V-L32': FH1'gT:52,.f 5?-'Fil 1' M - 'LU -In '-:5l 1?1f 1 51 159' d9C?0lf'S 1ife.'H1aybn0f:.he -andivihe'-vocations + :fir Vffgim:'fz:1 ? as : :lr my Ill' A. IZ, J, gm xml MT Y :ii 'avi Q A .T me-g-55,5 :-:-::: gli al fnwagpwaimgwr E' 3,mV's5Av ::E :::i: EEE .:.: A lf I ' -:e' . . ' Ie- 9, L nigh .,,qgg.3.,3,,..,,-,f:.'. -A ,,,, +.x.4-'-.-0--- - ---,- A A -- - - - --- ' I39 WEST ENGLEVVOOD NEW J EBSEY B.S., University of New Hampshire QKXP ASIA Vaux Ohstetrical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa., JOHN RICHARD HELFF jar ,.. .E . ., .,,...-.rFv,-...- -.-if----V-v ---- -'vw------VM fwgq. fum- eye' .gg rw- ,351-' '-' ljf?f.'I?g'7 Efff:e'Y'ii a'iPTST-V 7'5, 4??f'-.rT 'miE5Ff'3'.'fTi'??-- QW ,f ' Q, 1. 115: .V -- ' , - f 1 . ' -4 4 , ' V 511 1EiiZf5egqs??i322f.F3'ga-giffli,wefiillia- izfgfiia Hifi? '-f,25'1 ffwg2w,a gaHgf,fe-SQL -law, ,gg-., xi '- . , .f fi -,'v:Y '- 1 P? 1 13- i..2fg'ir-ri a2.f.-fwfa.-'V' a H' ' R' f ' , HV J H Y Tw N' M MSE, aff .1,,.gfa5': aw' wig'-.gw55,c,g'r 4arm- ,,,,1f..,'Ee'f':wg,gg,,s, -'f' f-page -.25 fr f fa 1 . , mf .E M ,A 1' 11 .- if .- 1. , , ,, . , ,N -,fl ,Q ,,:1:1:zf1-f, i1:':w BLS-Hj?j3. fzzggiigui wal gig AQ: -?,l5w-+1 Z V X11 Hina, ggi., 21-'35, W is-, -5--V - S ki Q,-'J ifwgieigf5airl1a5idQc1i5i2mn4lvi,4Q,tQi5SEiQ'aifg?th?iiQg1QE?:iiti'l5Ief'l5ii1'F1193,,ph,arqpaekgp9qiqafNA1?0IeEQI:f'QBQNAPQFE figs f ., ,-5549 24 ffiwiim is,ieiffgfi?ff,.lfE,.',ifff?,giaiEaifgggijjeag'Eff 1 , M '.-., F NNW. ..!: .52-N 2 -lla . 5 'f , 2'N'w'v- :41iA- -' lei LJ-my . 5- -'l-'- W-'iff Walt :wjgffi -ncgzi 1- g.q-li-was 5355- i fag: E'2-12eeg?f, img ,v,,5:: :-: '.-11 .53.-:.: ,V W E5,,5gg5,:,.:g: Q:-:JV M - 1 ' : ,-: bg , 5 m,' -mE9 ,- .51,g,,'uri-J. .f .BS ' l, L F ' nga'-a gs A ,gf-55, -W fm .W-wa awwfjw -15.1, Q -- --.Ewa-1e..m ,.Q+ ,-,+'.,,-,ui,,,,J-:1E1z-.i- . ., ., .J V U , 5,g,g,i.L435g0a ,, W fl ' ,, i .f:.'.r::' 1 : , ,,-:vig 1.'..:',, f-Q11 J.. .,--, ., -.--- L 140 Los ANGELES D CALIFORNIA ' University of California O K Xl' A S2 A Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Deaifs C0111- mittee. , Los Angeles County Hospital Los Angeles, Calif. ,H' xenm ,. w E ky. A6413 aff? we M C gn'- ,fga?g3,fjx ni, iz, x' uni in H BRUCE VAN VRANKEN I-Ie's the best physician -that knowsnthe yyol'ihlgSsgnesig'of' the meglicixgiggii L f gmc ',k, ' 4 . .X , is n - 4 is , ' Q: ' is if :A x M ,ff ms . .. ,ai an , as, S . in -fi 5 ,JCM i I4l Y- F ,,V ,, V I. t ,tally E , ,, 315, WW.. my Z if M , t I , 1 maj, mfg 5, el,-BENJKMIN4FBANIgLIN,Iwa5Po0r Q LAWRENCE FREDERICK CASALE POBTAGE PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Franklin and Marshall College G K X11 K B cb Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Ohstetrical Society. - Mercy Hospltal Plttsburgh, Pa. --frm if-agmf:'j '-'- 'aj wflsumsv-:2Tf ?g3g-fi.331a1aa2Te3A.l':5gfFgayfgglg ffgfalgaxga-.i g. aa. W S5 S 12 l. f M: 5 ESQ:---E 'A P Q12 H - T . A R of ' N A 'if B 2, 5, W' gaaE.5wweff2,. '-E2-e-wwe:-,uf'Claim-wi1 aeg-'ialwr--Q R .. Thgigggzggjlltgnd Qogggrilcribsqgsglgygiljseigzaggiggffgi, hyiizgtsnrogativlfsi 155-l95di?1fi?3 fDc6ii1'1 by M 347-52 K fs ,j, we fy f T M 'f?M?LT ,, 1 1 f fm J lv. U11 ' , lf ,. wg., ,ij ,. , f M 1 , Lg . f ,., , . . , . . , , .A I ii V Y. , A - .l Q , ., 0 , - R ,mf . 'NU A: , - .. , ., , , , ' . ' w Q ,M , M. , M H 5 YL . L 142 LANDISVILLE PENNSYLVANIA BS., Franklin and Marshall College 9 K WI' Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. St. .losepl1's.Hospital 4 Lancaster, Pa. ROBERT HER SHEY BAKER 1 M ' , N a , . - e - ,- - -Q,-,,-,, --- -M 4 - -- - al H- , M- . 5 -- - ,1Y- , V. i nf K W 1 1 1 - A Q as 1 N N A V A h ss n 11 , - . A E, . Q is - . K - , , nz mg , K w - , . .M ' .E , f ., .Lf . NY HF Ml '55 www. Happy lS thay doctor who, QII'-d0VOl21I1g, 'hlggpgelfwito nqqfgluuoqs SgyigfilafbfElI1VElYSQQ,5dQ,C5 nmiilineglict spiritual development.-Tliowms M.kfDU1iANT5 M.D. ' 6 A im . ' ' 'Z lf' 143 L CHARLES EARL MILLER BETHLEHEM PENNSYLVANIA Lehigh University . 9 K X11 A sz A K B qw Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. Jefferson Hospital ' Philadelphia, Pa. E 5 yiy' ' . TQ.re4f!'HeXtb,Qe1sSsigxeeyfbsmgfde 12594235'foliffixavlefi'3filrfWJf1f2i1Q 'wifhffheedkeflffe-gfwil harris. shrepbi'tlS'1'fP, Qes' 1 , ,1 , , . X ,, T ,, X ,yu ,J .l -,VM EFX, W Q V fl! Q., . , , .. H 1 - '. N ., G ' - if L -mfg as f 5 ss X, vs 'Q Q - Y Y A - an H - ' N ' - suis- 2- xg 'ir ,A-yr ,sms f - L 144 N 1, -' L . ., ., 1 ' . , , . , . , , . Q I I c D n - an -:::..::f, 4 5 ' za- ' - 1 .,:'- f : , '- HT H.: ' 1 .-, .r:?-'wx'-mf-.5 --'5f't: w , -' ' - 1- .,. fr-::. f-2'---5-1--7 .Y ' 1' f. , rf , --err- S ' - f.: vac: 'w ?'1mW Q W' 'X .V . mfr-N V. ami' . AW K -'H . 5-., ' f5i7' '. 'M gl W' b mmf- 1 - 5. K ' ,F 2955--W I I, . I, L .I I ,II 4 gm W gi .II A I I Qi : 4. E33 Iwm , ,351 WZ? I, Bm :II 'gggfv maxi .fjqps-.g,+3.13,,,'-,-,aQ.g:-fggf.-5411158 3-yigf, QIi,,g,g,i-2'1 ,LH ui' ':LE, , 1Hfi1q, IQII .,-, , 5. 1-' I-F' I g..',,jY-j 2 -3 J .M : N, I M: I In H 5 ii 2? ' LMI? IIIUM- ,:f :g1II. 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E.?5.- .1,..-. ,-.,, B H jj BW ' LAURENCE I . AUSTIN MOSIER CHTVY CIIAST MARYLAND A B Lehlgh UDIVSISILY GKXI' AKH Scllaelfer Anatomlc League, Thomas Physlologmal Socuety Moon Pathologmal SOGICLY Vaux Obs lzetncal Soclety PFGSIJYLCFIHI1 Hospltal P11l13dB1ph1H, P Cllr nk: E-li' 0 E,-IM -Lrfrff-iff? gm my D QQ Q Q W an-Q ' 1 S WEN Q iwgfigsu R I- ma :J I .. A I ,- - I - MF ' ,. W -,,,l,f 145 ALIJENTOWN A PENNSYLVANIA A.B., University of Pennsylvania 2 CD E 9 K XII Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, THE CLINIC Staff. Allentown General Hospital Allentown, Pa. I as flfwf' Y:-'max mem---- W1 an --- :Z as I is ,Ig T -, , , , -' .M ' ,I ' ' 2 'Si T' . m is ' ' ,f,.-1,4 wa- , I ,L -14.52-f'n.'fr.'jI i5L:rf,yv.' .-'A sz' -'Q ni 1.:+j:131?'1' if' Y-im 221,-Iwi' . if '-'- - iam, M- WW ,T I- -If - W -- sv-- Lf .--wi .ff-5--'-'., :M J-,i...I---A-1. lql,-:- vi' ,uf 'if- : 722 .1 -- 7 W -QI' ww B t'fS'Nm'?5 Zf'H19Wif asf- SMI 'fi-W-iw 31'-Vi-'f'HIs -WEE' f. In-i-HT. ?'1'effFlr..4 3lf'1' f , . -I I .if : I ,. pfmf: W ww ww- ar I- -Iw- A ' . - C.:--ii f- .. 2 ET..A.fislvia-aigdngispesQyeiaahagelsisieteage:1i9xIii5J1gevissess,9lgQ',5 .-43 ' If My r- L. 5:34,-gi . Y In-sei 11' Pant- Jian' .- Pgfg-55245, .pawn 'Siam--Fg ,,,.gQn:.I-I-:gma ng-,lfftivjzkqly amiga T1Ei2.i7w5gL.L g3 1451.2-,ijg:Y'.n.Ig,E: ? ! I:- w JR W: Qi. ii, .19 X - , x iv G, M: 4 ,Hg 3 Q, - . ,-M-t f , ,ri -jx A Q4 LN:-'ug WEN- L Sv igslqxi, -- ,Iwi X: M Af., fy .ip gf wg 23 W- git Mwgygg W, fMg,fp,, . V, ,gmail ,W gg ,I GA: 5 Mya- gi , , I ,E iz, ,Q my W- 3? ,,,,'g1NZ, , J, ML . , 1, ., J. V, ,,,' XI, . at -Z Q f . ' . P 'f ' ' I V Z-,-- gf -' '-.- I.:. ..ll..- I A .zu - ..a..g?.-l+.'.I,.Jg.J... ,fi LA- 1, , e -AML. f...-.-.... ..,.. ....., . ,,,.,l..,-. I. .. ,.. .WA . L I46 ABINGTON PENNSYLVANIA - B.S., Franklin and Marshall College . GKWII ADA KBQ2 Moon Patholcgical Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League. J eiferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. JosEPH MACKIE CORSON aw- 4 ': TM: V wif X af M. - 'egg-LT W --' wwf- 'ev-:ra K ':r:r'-,rfef-we-f ' is f f: ' as s Z f ave 'jj.i5+j.2-TE:vfiii,ij:-93-sf ,.3v3.'-,3,.,2j?3li:1'3-' gf' ' 5-.'i5,3,iagQ :1fW:'?'f.,fEE.35-1:32--ia eE,.g2g,yg11qJfy.Qiaa5, as ' , , jg 1 ,ta g f.' -f.r.:,Lf - .:1:.-.-,'g,,,'iLJfU1 :,'-AQ:1g.i'.'.,.1-g5,j'fW,.' ,,,:.,g1L' 219. -5 3:5 ' - .lQ,3f.'E',f -12.625 'CML 53512-J, -,signs y rf, J 4 f N ' if Y' Y W lil'lEY?fXi1H'Y'PIOZ2,fI?i55ESviagig' pg! filagf.-311:fgfEi55 l4l'f' W 3359 , I 'gfff 2 fmylff 1ff-'-14 i' 1 If 'f:f.-iQ-g,QZ5',v- ig?jiiQj,3:!43E.gg.--Lf.i1,fLEx?4ll'1,3 AQE,'5gafi:9:,l.f5iQf1j 2551 , K V V -U-Q '- W1 -I , W -' b, ' . , ' 2 l 1-: j,TTf: 2JLZ?L'f.jzTiE , ' 71 ' ' 'F ' ' V 2.1 , , , M 'N Xa, l iii -1'lga'.,5'sf3., ' P' ff' 'K if ,irga ' 147 L HONOLULU HAWAII Yale University GKXI' KBKID Vaux Obstetrical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League. Queen's Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii B' rw gig: E f mm H W A wfswzggmfw, 5? GAIL GAR LYAI Y eeee-e'- ---Hff---- view- A--fe -'l4- :A---ff vi if.:---1:f'-'ir','e'f1'7g,. e. gr-: ree-+ fFff'-?2'1?? r Q gg M Lt' f A Q if 2 - -i,1e .1af-- ' - 'al5g'e.Qw:- 1-,gtg ' y- S' Q l Q 59St1?ST3f?9513 'isrif 5115 fwoihaazfbeenffavli A iw .1 IfH-'1zw1gg'lm:- f -I ll -gl ,pp We-, .' 1,5-fy -Q, -V ,A , l. - ,W 4 - :,,.-. . ,. f- .l of Y. 2 .VA . ka mgwx :3,1g5, 1 jfia WH 'Ji Q MN V4 Q ,TI -55 , gi g '-M 148 ,ya QQ: ,ne -4: -M ,pr gf. '1' fif-'.:,i,ewfa- v' '-1,,,,,.wE .w M. -,-wi .-- 4 ,N f 4-lg - ,ll 145:51 55, 3. Vx-awk, , -A 'r-I 'ff' 4-. X - - .f 4 A in .M '-an y - K .. . W Y, , ,, , Y 1..- .,.., , .,,,---,J, BYRON THOMAS EBERLY LANCASTER - PENNSYLVANIA - B.S., Franklin and Marshall College II T B 9 K XII Christian Medical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society, Advertising Manager of THE CLINIC. United States Naval Hospital, WT B ---,, Y---..--W-,. ,vwviwa-CQ. Ng 1- if-1 rl I 5- ,mag vi ,ff ,--qu L- 1-.fgfairvg ,milf F51-1'-1-Q,T,,,.,:..,.,.,i,i..5,7.X, EHS H - H V sm' k gm' V ,, se.: Q.. ,. S - S gms mum: E E Q my Kgs fl35.3-.EEE-awwaitjrxn E., .5534 Q if :N A 'E ' ' ww 'ns H was - Q Qi .Q 2, H 2,53 L mam NE 2 Q E-,Wgas-it ryymgmgf , W .Q ' - .. , Q ., ,. i -' , ,Y 1.7 , 1 Y . . a Y . - 5 -- ' ,Q . sf Too lagens gh? medic1geT1'epared5: wlieh therdisease has gzufiedi strength Hgyxl Jgldmeilagxg, 54,31 5 lg gy E if isps ' H H,-, ' ' H '. r 'as . Q we 1, , ' '- , Y.. ,f.i,..e ,, A . -me--N V , .5 an Zig E E if , fi -U mg K E Q W K H Z 5 -Q Ut? 2 WD,igI'?GiI18dl0EUH1HAEDI0I1S'?,EmuE we E522 3- 1 K ' - ,- 1 ' 'K' ,, S M- E B' 'H B Q E E 'aww H E-new we Q im we at 'Wmmwsw gee- M' A , - , I S ,E ,,. 5 , 5 Vu, W E. . , ,H Q mf, ,, ,na-n amps. ss ,,1, N -- PM , eva. at emi? E, 5 swam! F eg. MIA egg mm-,Wm B Q Q W, ,mg ,Y-wi, b- Q ss: ss, 4 :A is s -X V -' ' , ', W' I ' Mew H -e ' E Mm W E WWE 'fs Et':QBW-'5'?5m'Q'1 ,K'nfism'fxw ' - r , ESS-I we ENE E ' . ,GS - . .W E - . 5 . . ' Z -gwgsgman, - -s . ,.... ..,.,ii.,-,.4,,-,,.....,nm.,.1 .wxca e,.Lms,5..E,.e' m,ywis,n.gi-...,,,,nm1ff .H....,a .wqsiatlzism R I49 L PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA , B.S., St. Joseph's College 9 K XI' Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Ohstetrieal Society, Advertising Manager of THE CLINIC. Miserieordia Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. , 5 ' ,I Q H , 'N ' 'pjw I'a:m'iE,gk, , 7 -'.LW .s -4, J'-,ffm-ggi, ,q2: gl,,2'- '35 5,1vff.',,' w . Eg ri is 5 Q, ,E lgsggg,.,Qg,:4,5si,:,gaps eggffsimsif gfnfliu sf 1 ,I -Y gg- , I q ,Hg 311553 :.-Si' ,, egg-sxsi 14 :fag 'HH-':,w -1, 'Eye-ilvglmr' 2- Am,,ni1gf1S',ek!s-2 m? ,ski ggi, 5 :Q,. :L,L 1 W ' '-f?iZ'if'HaQm-W4 fl- at I P -glwaxiy,dishesiaggiqelimfiiiieasm-??1Y,F5sfs11itet'Jic?ffHSilE67gil'?Qi1xie9ffE1iQQ1iJg5rn,1s-l1l?BftN!i!+1EIw:3Sflf licimse. 33515,-ff' iggiffgii I . -. x I A Hair- I . -,I :af ,- ,Q ea!-1.5 ','1At llJkC''Wka'1'cI?'?1'.. ' I w'3GAT':'- -sw, 11 -la' :J ' -'h zffe W-. ff'-14 ff-A -.f VW '-' L. ' Hw Y:. 'xl-fs L- Ya we ?'1? t'a:::w:,.rI ' 13112:--4 'r : 1 -I f 1 -' :QQ' f- EW sw ..,.. 'I , -' N If- w e ,.... .. .. ,, - , Y S L M F E as I-gl. E gf Vg--1 jg5:,i?Sig? Ws Vg I -, I H A -I l:g 4la,,,,?,M a,.,5, 4ga , . .,.-,3:1i'.e1.:g L 150 ...i..,.,,.,, BENJAMIN JONES LAWRENCE, J R. RALEIGH NORTH CAROLINA A.B., University of North Carolina 9 K XII Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. Charlotte Memorial Hospital Charlotte, N. C. J , - ' f -w ' mfg-. , ' . , , I 5'X:j-'N BN - .MA QM HHN 7 AE ' W 'HG . 'V 3 x J . 1 ,,,:- W. W Z ss '. inf , . 4- ., R N , ,I H, Y, A , ,VL 4 4 Y me al, emu H: A M 23 m Q, ,M l :gf nga 5-1 -X sa m - I1 y S W Sfggm . t 51:5 W Si rxkggj, - A 7551? A eggfk X.-EIHEEHF maj VN Mfgfq . .fl g ss E SEEK . ' --A 1 ' 'f -- , - ' --- rams ,- , an ei X' w fe 'ws .V ww' H A ,V ,. N 1. ,N , M 1, . M , , N, N, ,in ., . , gm - A He who Wag negen siclggpdiesihe ,atfQrpLiigs.fTHgjMAs,,EU'LLEn', ,Gnoxgglogiafkity M .J M - X ' X. -ea ,E , :ep ,- wma-l. Q be . .- pz ,Q . ff-,-A wif 1. tg, Z. We -,mga f 3 ,,f'r1m . .,z?2'K5l? it If 33 3 .grief fmggli, ,M , 'N Q ,llwlmagasre ,,:elf,4,2vAff 3.5,5,5,,,j2?jE5g Y -- wf sh., , ,,-E.lEmQL.i1?.:f,,.q.f4iM.:,QL.a:- ,4-.?i' 1.v.' 'N .,-,.-L.,- 4,4 ' ,lf A 551 1 '?1e.5f,, -Nici l5l A A V. K.. 5' ,l 'waste ' mass-3 .,.-as..,-.'1.'-'.:f-- I 1 '41 fgfxifii Q.. . ,, , ss: Q , ' - W 'aww 'xx ma- -5 J 2 he F, -Ma , me .z,,,a,,g,-,Mg Jnmfy .,-,.......4La,.m,,.U,uL...g..'l. 9 N Q Q A gg-, . , ss2il,:,M,W,,J3,xH,W,m,g3,g,,,,,gig,'fg1r,., , ,Q-urls! wifi-:,f,..Mm:ii.9124:1.i4f.-53...4g-..g.,gi-..L.. --,.:1i..?.eM.'...,.. N... HERBERT ' SPENCER BOWMAN HABBISBUBG PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Gettysburg College 415 I' A A S2 ll, A K Thomas Physiological Sooiety5 Moon Pathological Society, Vaux Obstetrieal Society. t x Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. C, fr, f- . - A .- A , 2 st.o it 1 i- 1 f - - Au ' ,, ,N - fs .L E 1-we wwamea siwtgs ligase-W' R -t--gwf',fifg.:,?'f- -'E A 'iz' al A 'X q 121 fm W M 152 4 JOHNSTOWN - PENNSYLVANIA B.S., University of Notre Dame A K K Pasteur Society, Moon Pathological Society, Thomas Physiological Society. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. l JOHN JOSEPH DOWLING P' 4 ' it 1 C' W imuw --:p,m21.,-is M ' :ffx., 'f':'2.'sL,.'1 In .,-,area-44'L'fff.:L,23'-,IAg :,: l .,., I.: .,:.: . -.:. , -' - :v...5'5, 'ffg3Q.4ij j.--f:,,,- ma' ,,.,. .::: Q 153 - M I BENJAMIN FRANKLIN BURNS HARBISBURG ' PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Princeton University A K K Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological. Society. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. -',,i H 1 .'P' no ' Q V M5g1iQ51 L 11116 S9111-via -if 'ilifsgfhffvrni -wear,Shim-awhevqssafeaf ,c.. f P, - S i,.a P P FREDERICK WILLIAM BODE, J R. PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA University of Virginia A K K A T Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 'W ' ' ' ' H ' 0 1 f 'Aff '- fwfr: -113:-y 1, N-,-1-fn-5-ff-:,gf:.:f-A rw - A -- ff . -,.,f-W,-vw 5, . A- A A A A 1 ,I ,ww A ,gi --fsewwwa-:lf uw 'Fe-'ip A Alf?-.N . X . .- ,A , ,. . . A ,ww we AY , -,, j,A1,ev,., -mc1fw,:-mme,,',A,1 ,,,, , 4ss.xL5-SZ, ll, ,Amt EW, 3. ,Q :z -- .irwif - FW A 'IE ,- . Hg? -ieffmi-wiwi2 3iM54'i?A5?'ff4 ' mw iigfiiff g fflfhat Pllzsisicxaifiiidlg ,irdly be fh0l1QhtiifEl'Y' cai-ifuildf ilhefigiglffh wi UFFPSIEE9 .j'9!153'fiw!1i 'P ff lgisffifffg z 5 Ja I I ' ' R, ' f 'H' ,MM ' IH ' H jf Vg,'L, jggrgi- -, gi- --Age.:-'M nj, if . Q , ffm'-ggi jg Ww X Ag I, VC Avisigxgs H 33:33 E al - smikls ,. I W. :ggi Qing-A N A, Jig-Egwg H53-5111 . 'A A 1-' .-1 p. - - H. '1'-E . . , - .wpw-N'.-vg1j J 2 . eng . 4w,: AQ.-:E -.5-: - jawn . 'E --'- ' , M '- -: -wr '-an ' -'E gf.. 1 Ijj K N fit? . -Q 4, A Qi'Q4.' i'5f'.1'if3T. '.3f.7'?Ii-'i'.iQ. 252755 if f f 155 NICHOIJS CONNECTICUZ A.B., Princeton University A K K Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Photo graphic Editor of The CLINIC, Dearfs Committee. Bridgeport Hospital Bridgeport Conn ELLWOOD WEISE, JR. i af Y :ggi 1 2 g L. A ' yiuth' kms 5355, Pfgif g? fjg1Q4g?g!?gQggBgqg1y3E:ll'!G55f,,iEE5i5QSgE12gt,gSS2!l lf, t jFi?Y?ujP9neiit at, exercises QgiJ3Q.f5gQx'f?iiQiS2.g!'12?NH'4!,h3c811t11fn2r25!1 3vaysrfiequelgfiafgsntmgfmg:fxiglgg59sqh,aaqg3L?pgggx:Q:?lI953F41E,:rQl694cl'77'35 if Yilgviff Ye,i'?w4fl3'f,f'lLf'iQ fl?5i'f?i We Vfifqw-3 'Gif iii 'dialmSjf1zi'5f'ffQH?f - We W 1 'f .j,wf'1?d ',,f1-iw-.f--if '.f3ff-,wwf if iyllligjgggq-igajhli E?2Qg,i3ggf39V haigmjglgwyi jjff, ,iff 1.44 L5--1, ef 3' 7' IS6 M 'PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA A.B., La Salle College A KK .Gages Surgical Society., 1-5.351 States Naval Hegfdlal WILLIAM S CULL l l ' f 'ffZ'M le - iff, if A'ff'f fML!' ' s, a A o u n , hx 'A mi ' 1? ' YQ? , . M f X , 55. 1' - Jim. Physlcnans and pohtxcxans resembleeach other ln thlgw1'cspect,Athal: s ome defend the QS0DSt1f'l1t1Q!l, and others destroy it.-ANONYMOUS. 3 , L A gfilf if' Ylflirlgi . e ,L 'A ll f '- ' , Q f e , 157 M GEORGE JOHN GENSEMER PINE GROVE PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Gettysburg College A K . T K E K B fIP Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Ohstetrical Society, Gross Surgical Society, Hare Medical Society. Jefferson Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Talk 'of iqurfl?5ciei1iielf,Afis2r'all ie? rgfa6eS1fhf'l Fells,Mfe11f'i'lf5'???,f?fMf1iiQ2?10u1d'Y,,q1.E?SEif1?ei'f05550594M aaii H ,y 2 P N1 Z , ., s 726 , it 'Ms ,-, Q. Q wc ' gi 's Q E W vw.: 1---E G, E H . , M 158 PHILADELPHIA ,A I PENNSYLVANIA University of Pennsylvania N Z N O K 2 Thomas Physiological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Hare Medical Society, Alpers Neurological Society, Vaux Obstetrical Society. Germantown Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ARTHUR RAYMOND VAUGHN, JR. .S l A S P, 'ia 'E will 3E'?3Qff'53Ef if I The hosviffllisiifhwnlyiiifoves 001leS'2ii115y11i01iQ5,i10f Adisciplfiifolf meseuliplpiiikiwiiiiimx- -- , U . A , iii me H. is -Q , 1 ez We Q :assi we . 1 s :Q -' , 1 Y Q ' . .wk Y , , ' w ix fx X . Y Q - fl I . ,- In - V ,f N 159 M CHARLES y THOMAS MCCHESNEY, JR. SNVABTHMORE PENNSYLVANIA B.S., PeIII1sylvaI1ia State College fb K 2 A K K Thomas Physiological Society, Art Editorof TIIE CLINIC. Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pa. eff -o--a -'44 1 x if .I ', .I'- 1:12 E If--- I I as,I!Te1ssIl2eck'!1Qi11eg1,sahslesigirf6ns46rfw'.1a661255.e6i5bS:lHaYQ1-yeiigred11151-Qgoia1S1fe1b-toniagpfllhs?Qas,.QI1-lslmgflff L I '.-aK 'I If 11 fl Lis, -21-W.-f.a .. 11 V N, 1 2 U r V M lk., , My.. r ,gg ag Hale.. I .sjgww fy- lm- M l60 DAVID BERNHARDT HELLER RINGTOWN P15 NN S YLVPA NIA Ursiuus College ' N E N S2 B II Bauer Pediatrics Society, Hare Medical Society, Moon Pathological Society, Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Vaux Ohstetrical Society. Miami Valley Hospital Dayton, Ohio fjg, ez. : . 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I f - l6l M WILMINGTON -I DELAWVABE , A.B., Wesleyan University NEN KIJNG 'IIPBK fIDB1'I Moon Patholgical Society, Thomas Physiological Society, Alpers Neurological Society, Bauer Pediatrics Society, Hare Medical Society, Gross Surgical Society. V Wilmington General Hospital Wilmington, Del. E . JOSEPH MITCHELL BARSKY, J R 5 'SF 1 9' mghtfw LIE-.' il jgiwmli is wg 5 ,,t, jahgied Jfitiiylgaidv-HixWigsoi1iQ1iQ?1VLosses,ftoin ff' 1.,.: il E. it M 1 . K , - k, Y ...Y in , ,MT . , ff,-Y-.--W1-f Y---1,1 v Q--2--1-'H 4-' e-:fr-if-W yr-1' -'Pip-,Tl FIA f '-gn.'F 1 'f'-1 f '5.f1'?af'.-' '2'Tj B F' Kgm Us H ., .E H ' V. E- H 1 ,, ,fl we H , vfvwlml. -:g,Q----,-3,.Lf ,?l: '...'?i mx.L:w',,f-l,k,i'i l we 'H' N- 5 'H WWW' 'ts AME Qxtmm , ww -Q wWfm.W'g'1v-Mm PH: '-Q V 5' -...-LES SLT' ..,.,.-.F 'w H -' is 's in H' 1 ,,. i-as s-- - ' .5 .,4 - ,l J 5, A :4,.'g l -' '-r4.':aa-- r -T my Es 4 : 1 :ytssyy - ks , ,AB 1,37 '. ,s'n.,s1,, H ,.., .: , 5 ,wi r J, -151 , .4 3, I-fa. x' F31 ,wsu iw, Asif,-. fs- ifl, :51i?i 3 it M E lzi-Synietrialadiispirfif riihfauwdtifreervusf allflfmiliff ttthlstacmiifed-lb? s ' s Q N E as . . l. s S : i E' 3, M E E E Q vm S., gp H A .s gy ft? sv? ENZMEE Q, Vgtgffgi ! :E E as :mmm 1: :Elini yarn: mn, mswggng H.: as 1 M am Sa :':Hs.sgnsssf-'ug-.Elm' tsgwss, w,,f.-W' ?Im,aNsssw5,m ,Q-. JL E B - 11 i if fir, E E. ,VQ 1' : ...:, MM, F E, 1 I .J-Mig, auf, 4, -nf., ,,- ,,,,,,.. 4v-,,,,. - -,.L-.v,.,...- A -A -----V 162 BEAVER PENNSYLVANIA B.S., Nstre Dame University A K K Jefferson Hospital A Philadelphia, Pa. W 1.45, 7i?lf1 VT'eA7?f57is'f'f5TQ'1'l1jvw3v. WA V 'Ni' i'I '1Qil'i'j ffigi'fnfl'iw: l.:Ll:.,'flf-., ,, 7',, f Ng, sal , ,lm ' , jf, ,. s uhguens is 4 W 163 M w W A -mu Y-f g-A,-Arm A---,N ,,,,,,, M... -..-M..:.-.A--4 A,- - 74 Y ,I OHN F ORNEY STRUVE PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA A.B., Allegheny College O B H CID B KD CIF P A N E N Schaeffer Anatomic League, Thomas Physiological Society, Moon Pathological Society. Wh1t6 Plalns Hos 1oLal wV.l'l1tG Plams N. Y. 7 M,-.,..,...,.. .., ,-.-. ,.l., .M gc , ig .- '? ! T. ' ' w23Qf5f5Tl5?e?f?. : g Y 1? 2 1 gg Jrgagg lain, ig? wjf.1L?.w:3,5?g gb Lyxjggmdtg wi-1 EAJEHZQSMEA isijij, my '5 em:,...:.g ,giffkx-.wi ,,,1i,gi,5::, M: i, ,...T:.3::.: H Mrmly- hell-avei iilwl-:finarerla fin?-.f if ,,fa'1:'L, if .1 'VW 'lfcii-1 gf-fx . if : -if-P'H!1, mf 'I-iwfv SEX l2-FSf'- 5f-'- 'f T 1 - 5 . V ' A a s-f1' , .-'W -. - . ,f l ..f :all the ilretiiir lffQigfiniimk1n'iil',andc all5the.1W3rg'5 fm? -Ihpfqisfheifa f: 21,14 - , ff? frat-' 5 wif' fzm-1Q,5.ffZ-ff if '. .1 , - - - , - , ,V , -M , 1. , . -L fi- - M 164 D SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS i Lqfl lo, righl: J. 'Raymond Bowen, Jr., Treasurer: James T. Helsper, Vice-President: George R. Reinhardt, President' Richard A. Hastings, H islorifmg John A. Surmonte, Secretary Cnot picturedb. SENIIIR CLASS IIISTIIRY In glancing back over an era so full of l1lStOI'1C value, yet so fascinating and pleasant as our early years at Jefferson, we hardly know what incident to describe first-where to begin. So for the sake of novelty, and just to be different, let us begin at the beginning. Grinning, in our shiny little uniforms fsome of us in our shiny little suitsl and coming from just about everywhere, we converged on a vomitus-colored yel- low building called D. B. I. There we received the first of what was to be a long chain of locker keys and a slightly used wooden box containing the essen- tials of an osteology quiz. With the boxes safely tucked under our arms, we dashed over to the college to be issued a microscope. Someone dashed too quickly and, as a consequence, found it necessary to begin his study early by articulating his skeleton in the middle of Eleventh Street. Once at the college office, however, we received another box from Mr. Storm. This we tucked under our other arm. Thence over to Williams' for our four lab. coats, which we placed carefully on our two boxes. Then back to the college for books, of which twelve were stacked up in our hands. VVe waddled out, already in an unsta- ble dynamic equilibrium, to buy clip boards, paper, files, crayons, slides, etc. Needless to say, all this was rather cumbersome, but for young energetic men like ourselves, nothing was too difficult. So somehow we staggered home, set up our little studies and began the four year grind that is medical school. First we ground bones-to the precision demanded by our masters. We could give the borders of the fibula so accurately that Gray and Morris would have died of shame fthough perhaps they did so anywayi. But our knowledge was all short-lived. For with the passage of a quiz and the advent of dissection, bones were relegated to a deserved limbo. Gone were Dr. Lipshutz's Da capitate and da hamate bones is ossified at boith. Substituted were Dr. Schaef'fer's gems of clarity on the tissue spaces and Dr. Ben- nett's dissertations on the autochthonous muscles, not to mention the lectures given on sweaty after- noons with the lights turned out and a hopeless maze of turbinates, ethmoids, and nasolachrimal ducts flashed on the screen, accompanied by a stern warn- ing to get this down now. VVho can forget Dr. Michels, loving our bodies as he ripped nerves, pits, etc., into brilliant exposure, his especial love for the splenic artery and his masterful explanation of the rotation of the gut. In a flurry of wires, ropes, and paper bags he made vivid the potentialities of the intestine. Remember the quiet assurance of Drs. Angel and Hutchinson in the dissecting room, as they doggedly tried to find the heart and aorta? There are so many things to remember about anatomy that we are forgetting our concurrent courses: Drs. Ramsay and Bates in the quiet, restrained atmosphere of the histology room. No livers were being thrown around thereg no penises being pocketedg no student running over to the booming Dr. Bennett with a whitish cord hanging in his forceps, and a puzzled expression on his face as he asked, Is this the brachial plexus? There was quiet, methodical work-broken by the .brief explanations of Dr. Bates and the lriendly dis- courses ol' Dr. Ramsay, whose techni-color lectures remain fixed in our minds. On other days. we collaborated with Drs. Kriedler, Meranze, and Blundell in trying to make a science cf baeteriology. 'Remembering sugar fermentations and the characteristics of pneumococcal strains re- quired work, and the tremendous effort showed in some of us. For example, one or two imagined they had a positive Wasserman, but of course that was silly and impossible. Medical students are reputedly immune. Occasional stimulating explanations by Dr. Blundell-as on the heterophile antibody reaction or the mycotic infections-caused a mild flurry of excite- citement. Otherwise, the course was uneventful. Such cannot be said of 'LUnclc George's sessions. Lectures were packed full of thrills and meaty infor- mation in a lovely script on the blackboard. We were dying to get the terminology for in getting itl, and a little writer's eramp now and then did not deter us. Dr. Bancroft was a master of many artsy no stu- dent left him without being a better penman, ety- mologist, and Greek scholar. A few even went so far as to learn the fundamentals of chemistry. In 'their endeavors they were more than ably assisted by Dr. Hansen and young Tom Williams -the latter, though so 'iyoungf' was unfortunately afflicted with echopathy, centering around the number two. In the laboratory we worked in unison-each man lifting his test tubes at the same time. Eighty men were trying to pour from the same bottle of imitation gastric contentsg eighty men waiting in line to use half a dozen balances or to have blood withdrawn with a number 12 needle. Constantly chided 'to transact faster-to hurry, hurry, hurry, we occa- sionally thought we were smart enough to skip on to the next paragraph in the manual. Then we would feel a hot breath on our necks and experience a sense of oppression, for standing behind us with knowing, steely eyes was one of the laboratory overseers. Suddenly one day we found ourselves bombarded with fourteen examinations, followed by a block week- whose only significance lor some of ns was that we had a mental block. Then three devastating examin- tions, a lew weeks of holding our breath, and we were sophomores-learned, intelligent, wise, capricious sophomores. Returning from our vacation, tanned by seashorc, Florida, or California suns, the pressure was oll'. The old drive was gone, and we glided into pathology and physiology. into neuroanatomy and physical diagno- sis. Dr. Moon was pleasant enough-a few lectures on cytoplasmic substance and shock, and we were . . Running ear for six years . . Black and Blue fingers . . Smooth . . Teacher Won't get this apple nine-tent.hs through our pathology course. It only remained for Dr. Stasney to tear through Boyd, Karsner, or what-have-you, to round out our knowl- edge with details. So with discussions of maha- gone-ee and organismess under the handicap of always being a week or two behind regardless ol' how fast he went, he set a pace matched only by Dan- gerous Dan McGrew. In physiology, Dr. Thomas lectured quietly and composedly, demonstrating to us the conditioned rellexfassooiated with a warm quiet room, a monoton0uS lecturer, and a subject occasionally conducive to such a reflex. Sleep was merely a reaction to environment. For those who attended Dr. Tu'ttle's lectures, they were certainly inspiring. That proponent of ambidex- terity and showmanship could at any time be called upon to plot anything against anything else tstudent against grades, grades against student, student against the wall, etc.D, or to produce elephant erythrocytes lrom his pocket. Dr. M. H. F. Friedman was ever a dynamic and compelling.lecturer-especially when he whistled to punctuate sentences or stood on the table, as was his wont in the laboratory. Our favorite, and by far the most lucid subject. was one where we had previous acquaintance with the department. Yes, neuroanatomy. Dr. Schaeffer in his ever inimitable style, wherein he interspersed with a goodly number of stories this didactic presentation, made unbelievably apparent the mysteries ol' the cen- tral nervous system. ln the laboratory we hacked a mushy pulp into smaller and smaller pieces until the preservative became as turbid as our concepts. Late in the afternoons we convened with Dr. Charr whose explanation of how to take a ten-minute history required seven weeks to present. Then we started on physical examinations per se, palpating young girls for thrills and old ladies for shocks. Our greatest dilliculty lay in percussing out the ureter. Then our schedule changed. We were introduced to a course whose sole purpose seemed to be to induce anorexia nervosa, nervous indigestion, spastic colon, and nervous diarrhea. In Dr. Gruber's bibliographical lectures, we-ah-learned everything from-ah-the action ol'-ah-yohimbine on the-ah-cockroach kidney to the contraindications for jalap. Formulas on the board served only as a barometer of approach- ing blue hooks, followed by l'alling grades. On Mon- days, we were enthralled by one of the students' favorites, Dr. Hart, an undying source of lielpfulness, kindness, and inspiration. Occasionally, he and Dr. Lisi were even seen to smile, though when twenty men .were informed the next daythat they had made less than four in the last exam, one wondered what they were smiling at. At .this time we had clinical laboratory, too, where it was our pleasure to count blood cells until we had . . Bottoms up . . Your move . . Friend, surgeon, professor . . Reporting on my series of cases r , Three no trump . Ear-ie . . Garcon and Frankie . . Honolulu-bound permanent spots before our eyes. There were com- pensationsg however, in being able to do venipunctures on an unpopular neighbor, though some of us carried things too far when we attempted to enter the su- perior sagittal sinus. Dr. Erf kept us abreast of recent valuable discoveries such as the hematocrit of blood cells extracted from bull testicles. Surgical pathology was a course given by Dr. Her- but, who leisurely crammed more pathology into an hour than one could find in a book tl1e size of VVeb- ster's Inlernaliunal. Tumors of the finger were not uncommon. Neuropathology was an attempt to iden tify artifacts and dirt seen on the slides in the sixth- floor laboratory. Certainly no one suspected that those three extra cells in the pia-arachnoid-which in itself looked like a high-powered field of dust-indi- cated meningitis. The lectures, on the other hand, concerned themselves with classifying Nile Valley Fever, much to everyone's dissatisfaction. Our only other course was surgery, involving lec- tures by Dr. Behrend and Dr. Surver. The former was popular for his movies which gave one a chance to rest for the day, while the latter was best known for his ability to appear late or his failure to appear at all. It was early summer when the second year was de- clared at an end, and we were declared, by virtue of having passed our examinations, juniors. .Tuniorsl It was unbelievable. Here we were on the brink of our clinical years. We took cognizancel of the fact that several new members had joined our broth- erhood, and thenceforth they, too, were included in the oft-quoted Uwe. It was all a mad whirl, a host of subjects, a new world of clinics and Out-Patient Departments with real live patients-coughing, sneezing, vomiting in our faces. Warcls and ward rounds, post mortems- each subject had its merits and its faults. Looking back they seem not too bad-but at the time . . . VVell, for example, because of the early hour, many of us found it dillicult to get up in time for applied anatomy. Though Dr. Bonney gave a well-organized, cogent lecture, he occasionally quizzed-and they were the times the attendance dropped from thirty to twelve. ' Pathology was better attended, despite the .fact that shock was reiterated and Dr. Stasney again 'plowed through the field in about three lectures. We some- times think that the attendance was in some unknown way connected with Dr. lVloon's amiable experiment of taking roll. Post lnortems at Philadelphia General were attended at the same time that Dr. Swenson was giving his lectures on radiology. It was often diili- eult for the student to be in both places at the same time. Occasionally he wasn't at either. The Dean gave a series of lectures on preventive medicine-which were sound in principle, though thc principles often seemed difficult in practice. None- theless, armed with knowledge of Zooglea and Schmutz- decke, We contemplated preventing hall' the ills ol' the world. Obstetrics was a fascinating course. Dealing with the parturient dillieulties ol' the opposite sex was entertaining, as outlined by Dr. Castallo-for whom it was always a bit wahm in heah -and Dr. Vaux, whose cases were all interesting, at least he told us so. Weuwere always glad when he brought patients into the pit who never utte1'ed a word, were asked no questions, were so bundled up that we couldn t tell if they were male or l'emale, and linally were wheeled out again having done absolutely nothing. Dr. Lull was most appreciated l'or his stories and for his state- ment, Tonight l'll let you go early, whereupon we were dismissed at two minutes to six. Surgery lectures were an attempt by Drs. Willauer and Walking to teach anesthesia and fractures. We get that early in the course. As lor Dr. Haskell's proetology, we got that in the end. The Monday series, under the auspices ol' Drs. Eger, McCarthy, and Lemmon, et al, were worthwhile, especially the lectures given by the latter lnot all. Dr. Lcrnrnon's definition and description ol' a sliding hernia were so clear that one hardly had to read Christopher more than twice to understand what he was talking about. Therapeutics lectures were notable, mainly for their organization, though it must be admitted that occa- sionally no one showed up to give the lecture and we never knew whether to attend or not. Yet we owe our thanks to this course for establishing the position ol' sitz baths and ice-water enemas in medicine. Dr. Semisch's lectures on the eleetrocardiograph were as complete as any we had had before. More than that can hardly be said. Dermatology and orthopedic surgery were popular and well-attended courses. The former was a matter ol' splitting peas and beans. .ln the latter a knowledge of clubfoot and scoliosis yielded a 98 average. The dermatology clinics were a privilege to attend, espe- cially when a person with pediculosis corporis shook his underwear on us. Dr. Davis, in explaining the vagaries ol' the urinary tract, did so with a sarcastic wit which we were to ta know more of later, while his illustrations were like an art collection unto themselves. He could render a prostate in two tones, or bring it out in bas relief so lifelike that every time he touched it, we could almost see the blackboard wince. Parasitology and physical diagnosis were given on the same day. Despite that, plus the fact that they both begin with P, they were in no way similar. The first was a review ol' first-year material with innumerable more details, so much so that a wet . . Dance or trance? , . Quite old enough to feed himsell' . Pahdners . . A Rosen among-other musicians .Q H awas- ...vga ,E W smear of blood that we could have identified easily Chaving seen the patient from whom it was takenl, became confusing in the search for details. Physical therapy was a conglorneration of thumping, pound- ing, shocking, soaking, and burning patients in a pleasant way. In lectures we were told how and why, and in the clinic we saw on whom and when. The electrostatic machine, specialty of Dr. Schmidt, was a perennial favorite. To see a patient, -formerly hope- . . Cut-up Convention . . Relaxing with Ernest . . Freshman-Class of 1966 . . . Notables relax - lessly paralyzed, come running out of the door was, to say the least. surprising. Let us not forget gynecology lectures, given in semi- darkness because of the hour, and in greater darkness when slides were shown. Though Dr. Scheffey and Dr. Montgomery exerted themselves, it 'was often diflicult to tell exactly what was in their minds. As a result, the most complete darkness settled upon us at quiz and examination time. Psychiatry was presented as a full-bloomed flower after the few buds we had observed in the first and second years, when Drs. Matthews and Bookhammer, in turn, led us along the neurotic path. We were given a modicum of pertinent facts in lectures and shown many impertineut patients at Philadelphia General Hospital. Of course it was the custom to bring guests to the exhibitions, but one had to cau- tion them about asking which one in the amphitheatre was the patient. Pediatrics was presented from several points ol' view. We had clerkships in the out-patient depart- ment where each mother shouted her history so loudly. to be heard above the general tumult, that we often found ourselves with the story of the baby in the next room. Actually the babies had upper respira- tory infections anyway. Infant feeding was a problem discussed by the entire department, each man giving his own opinion with no two agreeing. Clinical judg- ment, it appeared, was the deciding factor. Dr. Bauer's lectures on sociology, politics and economics were a change from the general order of the day, but discus- sion of pediatric problems was a veritable rarity. Our clerkshzips were unforgettable: the Surgery Out- Patient Department, where more ethyl chloride was sprayed on students' buttocks than on any patient's extremities: Medicine, where we slaved in the student lab. looking forward to our senior year. when such ward-jockeyiug would be over: ward rounds with Dr. E1-I' in a quiet corner on the second lloorg histories to be taken at ten o'clock at night from a Portuguese patient with laryngitis. Peripheral vascular disorders were explained with special reference to upregan- greonic lesions. Cardiology was best described in the words of Dr. King, who gave it, as a meat ball. Dr. Pasehkis, who knew more about tropic hormones than the pituitary did itself, gave a whirlwind review of endocrinology that made Best and Taylor seem superfluous. Otology and laryngology were merely a matter of looking at throats and ears, cleaning them out, Writing a prescription for ephedrine or glycerine, as the case might be, giving the patient a big smile, and leaving as inauspiciously as possible. The lectures we had before emerging upon the patients were most often drowned out by the shullle of students rearranging themselves comfortably. Neurology lectures were nothing astoundingg the real advantage in having had them was the ability to diagnose our state during final examinations as a motor aphasia. ln respect to the big three clinics-medicine, surgery, and therapeutics-our ' job was merely to attend and to watch. Some did neither, some, one, few, both. We ought not to slight military science. Actually, some of us experienced it in om' first and second years. But though drilling and reviews, and lectures on map-making and sex hygiene were in 'them- selves worthy of mention, the outstanding feature of our military service in the 'third year was our leaving it. This coup was accomplished by the Navy men at mid-term, while those in the Army departed for Fort Meade shortly after finals. Our pompous entrance into the senior year came after a long holiday. Though there might have been a tendency on our part to prolong this into school hours, our professors had other ideas and we settled slowly into work. The term was divided into tri- mesters, with long vacations at summer and Christ- mas-ample time to catch up with all the work neg- lected during previous weeks. Courses were much the same as in our junior year, both in content and in presentation. Medicine was again the test-tube car- rying, vein-sticking, urine-testing job it had been before. The 'Lbig three clinics were the same, only we might experience the sinking sensation of being called to discourse by Drs. Beimannf Shallow or Gibbon. If we were at all sorry about severing connections with Daniel Baugh Institute, we replaced ,the loss with a multitude of new endeavors. Section work in proc- tology-replacing prolapsed rectunis, psychiatry at . . . Getting a discharge out of life . . Exams tomorrow I . . Clean sweep at 1025 . . Photogenici' Philadelphia General Hospital where prolapsed brains were the order, and ophthalmology where proptoscd eyes were eased back into place are but a few homely examples. Urology Out-Patient Department, familiar from our junior year, held less of novelty than it did of accomplishment, for by the time the sessions were over, a number 40 sound slipped in as easily as a hairpin. The ward work was in a class hy itself. Drenehed with phenolsulphonphthalein, and with fin- ger cots, new and used, hanging from our pockets, A we struggled feebly for air under the enormous pressure exerted by Dr. Davis. ln orthopedics, we strove to watch tenotomies, although twenty-five men practically standing on each otlier's backs about a two-inch iield left something to be desired. Exactly what is dillicult to say. ln the Out-Patient Department, one either glibly prescribed Corsets for backache or swcated over removing a complete body cast. Radiology was as ever a matter of orienting the shadows in our brain with those on the film. while neurology consisted of isolating hysterical reactions to tickling from a true Babinski, or avoiding being struck in the head by a limb with hyperactive reflexes. Obstetrics and gynecology were high spots in the senior year. With the two subjects being suffered together, it seemed on more than one occasion. that every woman in the world was either preghant or dripping gonoeocci-or both. VVe came to anticipate the lithotomy position of all females. .Measuring a 300-pound woman in the Obstetrics Department was' no mean feat, while doing a bi-manual on a patient with vaginismus also presented its little diliiculties. The OB,' eirterneships gave us a chance to wear scrub-suits, yet, paradoxically enough, to look im- portant. The real attainment of satisfaction, however, came with home deliveries-where almost every con- venience was at our disposal and there were only a few occasions when we waited twelve hours with a woman in false labor. Pediatrics ward service was short-lived-a few brief sessions of wrapping paper towels around our faces and they were all over. The entertaining lectures were sustained throughout the year however, their popu- larity being contested only during the football season. Surgery ward rounds were what we made them. Il' we attended and stayed awake, we could tell a Schmincke's tumor from a Scl1morl's disease. If not, we missed the fine points and could only resort to exploratory operations, the still inexplicable point being that, if we got the fine points, we still resorted to the same operation. The senior year was rife with clinics-urology, neu- rology, orthopedics, obstetrics, ophthalmologyg even laryngology and otology degenerated from the fasci- nating elerkships to mere didactic lectures. Yet we took them all in large doses-along with several other dessicated hours in the form of surgery, therapeutics, and urology. . Hardly before we could realize it, the year was drawing to a eloseg and with the prospect of oncoming examinations, we were poring over our notes on volun- tary commitment to mental institutions. Yet, in spite of the peptic-ulcer environment, the paranoid delu- sions ol' persecution, 'the lapses ol' memory and gaps ol' knowledge during practicalsw-we survived. We emerged from the murky depths of studentship to the sweet air breathed by the graduate. ROY Kousow. . . Perry-sh the thought! . . Hello, Men's Surgical . . Prescription for Radiance Dept. . . Conference with a punch to it UNDER E Having thus met each other we went on to wx elcome each year of our stay s s 4.. 1 xx , V f n 2 -, W N R N5 5, Tw 2 D ,KH .,.., , uw ff f ,,, H -, ,- 1 1 . my ,V F H . M1 'wif-A - M f. S S U .. 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Q .5 Q Q' 'A sv Q2 'Z ffm 'E' K 1 ' 4 2 sea H 4 2 ,ui 1 A L ,Q 1 ,M E X QE .F ,, W Ewgfw nqxw ff X Q1 V ,. 11 E W wQ X- um .i,,, F is ' 1 , 74 Xi v -ff:-mxilyl 'VVS Mmm f- ' ru W '5S1W'Q,gf12.f 17 rnismffxw' 5 If Q,w'T,i.W W if wifi 13 '25 fue mi N'sa'fr:a:'7WvfQsf6: w ,.M-ww, G mrffr? 9 9-, 5 is ' ' T T e s A 'ws ,,, 'ffgpe ses 25 5' VTE-M, .4 , I: 55 J- ' -v 5 4 ag 9 Wi B1 -f v. A '-Hi.f,.,,:.NaBful .mix-lab-+ X Q 4553185- L W www .- .Q X aa: W is 5 2 Q nw .H .: . - gmfpw t 1 iff: ' 7 f:3 c:: ,Q EQ, gli' 5 Eff A 64 mae xv Ag -Q. -. -., nm JUNIQIRS CLASS 0F NINETEEN FURTY-EIGHT 5: s a s JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Lefl Io right: Paul C. Eiseman, Presidenfg Robert VV. Alexander, Treasurer: James W. Daly, Hisloriang Patrick J. Frank, Vice-Presidenig Donald G. Birrell, Recording Secrelaryg Jolm n E. Connolly, Corresponding Sccrelary fnot picturedi JUNIGR CLASS IIISTURY As we all know, the history makers of the world have been very busy in the past three or four years and momentous events have become everyday ex- periences to our generation. A far more specific and to us a very important history has been taking shape in these past three years, also, and this is the story of the Class of 1948 at Jefferson Medical College. lt seems a far day from those memorable first two weeks at Daniel Baugh Institute and the great many other dark and forgotten hours of our freshman year, and yet it was really only yesterday. With our eman- cipation, as it were, into the status of Juniors and thereby embryonic clinicians, the dawn of a new day was at hand as we proudly entered into our clinical years. Juniors? Of course, you've heard of us. We're the fellows who know it all back at the fraternity houses and advise fearful freshmen as to how a cer- tain course is cased, We started our third year back in April of 1946 and it looks as though we're going to be juniors for quite a while. We were the class of acceleration and now we are the class of deceleration, which may seem a little paradoxical at first glance but ends up as the same four hard and joyful years of work that innum- merable classes before us have passed through and the same flour years that we hope our sons will have the oppoi'tunity to enjoy here at Jefferson. Our year was somewhat broken by two long vacation periods interspersed between three ten-week periods of school work. We came back in April and started the third year very much refreshed from a month's vacation. We went to our various sections and soon were back in harness and applying our first 'two years ol' funda- mental work to the practical everyday clinical prob- lems which we were meeting l'or the first time. The many small fragments, which we had learned in our 'first two years, were now beginning to take form and fit together into a broader pattern-the pattern that is medicine. We could now appreciate, perhaps for the first time, why our professors in those early years had been so tireless and persistent in their determina- tion that we understand the principles upon which we might build the edifice of our dreams-a working knowledge of medicine in its many aspects. As the summer approached we went on the first extended vacation for quite a few years and many of our number went into hospitals throughout the coun- try as junior internes, technicians, etc. No doubt a great many things, both good and bad, were learned by us, but on the whole we all came back in October with a greater appreciation of our opportunities to learn here at Jefferson and convinced that practical work in the hospitals must be backed up with sound didactic lCCl4ll'GS and guidance. . The first week was a series of rushing parties. bull sessions. and rekindling the smoldering fires of old friendships. Many old and new professors were back from the armed forces, and a feeling of cooperation and renewed energy was present everywhere. ' Thus we continued in our section work, our week of OB, medicine at Pennsylvania under Dr. Duncan, llying trips to Philadelphia General Hospital once a week for quick symposia on the G. 1. Tract, Surgery clinic, Pediatrics and all the other clinics and lectures which became so much a part of our everyday lives Oli' again on another holiday from December 15 to February 10, a great many of our number took advan- tage of the respite and departed single bliss for the joys and responsibilities of wedlock, turned 'tow:u'd the sunny south, worked in hospitals, or just loafed. Back in February for the last ten-week session and 'then our fantasy world suddenly became a hectic, mad week of crarnming and worrying about the legion of exams which stood between us and the green pas- tures Cill of year number l'our. Letls hope we'll all he i'grazing peaeef ull y on Jell'erson's vertical green- sward when the leaves begin to fall next October. JAMES W. Dlx Lv. JUNIOR CLASS MEMBERS Richard P. Alexander Robert W. Alexander Julio J. Amadio Charles VV. Anderson NVilIim H. Annesley, Jr. John B. Atkinson Sol Balis Charles R. Barton, Jr. Joseph Bartos John D. Bealer Leonard F. Bender, Jr. Velio E. Berardis Robert A. Berger Ptichard L. Bernstine Donald G. Birrcll Thomas F. Blake Donald MCN. Bletchley Bent G. Boving D. Andrew Boyle Paul G. Brenneman Thomas R. Brooks Robert G. Brown Ellsworth Il. Browneller S. Boy Cable Robert J. Carabasi .Joseph L. Carroll, Jr. Charles P. Carson . .Profound . . Chummy, what? . . Surgeons aplentyg patients none . . Anxious CPD l'or another lecture . . . Cards or books? Perennial question . . . Proxy et al yodel . . . Barber-surgeons . . . Pulchritude: a morale builder William J. Cassidy Andrew J. Cerne Robert C. Clark C. Harold Cohn Joseph V. Conroy, Jr. Donald A. Cornely Millard N.' Croll Chester F. Cullen James W. Daly Thomas A. E. Datz Roy Deck, Jr. Rudolph T. De Persia 178 Thomas E. Douglas, Jr. Meyer Edelman Paul C. Eiseman, Jr. James H. Evans, Jr. Valerio F rederici Donald M. Feigley Edward A. Folder Albert J. Fingo Robert K. Finley, Jr. Albert J. F lacco Charles D. Foster, III Charles G. Francos Patrick J. Frank Larry B. Gale - Robert L. Gatski John B. Gearren Charles C. Goodman Edwin Gordy Alexander Goulard, Jr. John H. Griffin, Jr. Bruce D. Harrold Robert C. Hastedt George J. Haupt George B. Heckler James M. Hill Gilbert M. Holfman Richard L. Huber Eugene P. Hughes, Jr. John E. Hughes William F. Hughes James J. Humes Edward J. Jahnke, Jr. John G. Jones Murray Kahn Joseph P. Kenna James S. Kessel Wm. C. Kittleberger, J James F. Kleckner John M. Kohl James W. Kress Robert S. Lackey Edward L. Lancaster, J Richard M. Landis Paul J. Lane Robert C. Laning Ralph H. Lev Henry R. Liss Gordon F. H. Liu James B. Loftus John B. Logan Charles H. Loomis Clilford B. Lull, Jr. 1' Creighton L. Lytle Thomas J. McBride John L. McCormack Robert W. McCoy, Jr. Donald J. McDonald M. John McGettigan James E. McKinney David S. Masland Alan L. Michelson Earl S. Moyer George J. Nassef James J. O'Connor, Jr. George J. O'Donnell Stephen E. Pascucci Theodore E. Patrick George R. Pechstein William E. Peterson Joseph C. Piister Richard J. Potter Clermont S. Powell Norman J. Quinn, Jr. William A. Ranson Robert D. Rector George F. Risi Roberto C. Rodriguez C. Jules Rominger Daniel S. Rowe John R. Rushton, III Charles S. Ryan Nelson H. Schimmel Ralph J. Schlosser Richard A. Schofield Francis R. Schwartz Melvin L. Schwartz Edward Scull, Jr. Lee S. Serfas Howard L. Shaffer Ernest G. Shander Daniel L. Shaw, Jr. William E. Sheely William B. Shope Ellis Silberman Raymond E. Silk Richard VV. Skinner Edward C. Smith John W. Smythe Henry F. Starr, Jr. Charles G. Steinmetz, III Henry M. Stenhouse, Jr. Robert P. Sturr, Jr. Curtis H. Swartz David W. Thomas, Jr. Emanuel G. Tulsky John C. Turner, Jr. Stephen B. Vassalotti Oscar M. Weaver, Jr. . Edward L. Webb John E. Weyher, Jr Roy C. Wille, Jr. Robert B. Wright Stanley E. Zeeman Harry M. Zutz Ah, Morpheus l b You don't know what you're talking about Esquire, page 34 Doc, my leg-she's a-hurt .1 I79 's THE SUPHUMUBES CLASS 0F NINETEEN FUIRTY-NINE SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS ' Left to right: Grant D. Stelter, H istoriang John R. Healy, Vice-Presidenlg Louis Iozzi, President' Edward J. Chmelew- ski, Treasurer: W. Bernard Kinlaw, Jr., Corresponding Secrelaryf Francis E. Gilbertson, Recording Secretary SOPll0MOIlE CLASS IIISTURY . It was on a warm, early autumn day in late Sep- tember, 194-5, when we walked into Mr. Storm's oflice and registered for our first year of medical school. There were one hundred and fifty-odd of us-about forty in Army uniforms, fresh from seven to twelve months of hospital work at Army posts, and in mid- shipmen's uniforms approximately the same number with several months of Navy hospital experience. The remainder of our class was made up of veterans and of civilians who had finished an accelerated pre-med course. The war was over now and our class was beginning the deceleration. The days before classes began were filled with rush- ing smokers and parties, book and lab coat procure- ment, and advice-filled discussions with upper class- men. But finally we had settled in our rooms, stacked the texts on the shelves, and in anticipation trooped to the opening convocation where we had our fust view of the Dean and faculty-and an impressive fust view it was. A reception in the college offices fol- lowed. We learned that this was the first of what profitably could become a tradition. We left the meet- ing anxioustto get started on our medical career. The next day we were welcomed to the Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy by Dr. Schaeffer. The Great White Father, as he was affectionately known, was to become to many of us an inspiring symbol of our goal in medical science. We were then introduced to the Bacteriology and Biochemistry Departments, and we learned that we were fortunate to have Dr. Cantarow as professor of chemistry. It was his first year in this capacity and we were to come to respect his scientific approach, his knowledge of the' subject of chemistry in medicine, and his teaching ability. Time went rapidly. Weekdays were filled with lec- tures, classes, and dissection in the anatomy lab. And will we ever forget Dr. Bennett and his pre- dissection oral quizzingsil Rumor had it that he had a studied ability for remembering names and faces- and he often put it to use. Wc'll remember a long time Dr. Bennett's favorite alliterative grouping of names, Healy, Henderson, I-Iopen. Week-ends were filled with fraternity parties and dances, picking the winners in the football pool, and occasional trips to visit homes or friends. Christmas came and went, and with January came midyears and a grouping of prelims thatkept us from pausing for the next month and a half. Then came news that the Navy members of the class were being discharged from service, and on a week-end late in January they were separated at Bainbridge. Late in March the Army students were discharged from Fort Meade in Maryland. And thus an end came to the service programs in the medical schools. We looked back at the early morning hi- weekly hour of drill as something not-too-pleasant, not having to be end1u'ed any longer. Classes for the most part were interesting, but the constant strain of study and testing made us anxious to see the year-long period of trial nearing its end. x For lab finals the Bacteriology Department had ar- ranged an unknown test tube which contained some types of bacteria. Along with this we we1'e given tubes of culture media and a period of two weeks in which to return with an answer. The problem was made slightly more difficult because Selma would sup- ply no mongooses for differential tests. Finally came block week-that lull before the deluge-and we paused to catch our breath and to correlate and coordinate the information we had received in the previous eight months. Then, before we knew it, 'eitams were over and we were off on our summer vacation. Looking back on ourlirst year we appreciated these aids along the way-Dr. Ramsay's fine presentation of the subject of embryologyg his colored photomicro- graphs, well-drawn diagrams, and systematic approach left little to be desired . . . And Dr. Sawitz's scientifi- cally presented introduction to parasitology was one of the finer courses given . . . Also appreciated was Dr. Bennett's dissective skill and ability to demon- strate tricky dissections. A few of the events that brightened the year were: Dr. Hansen's lecture on reindeer milk . . . Dr. Kreid- ler's drawings of sinks and rows of test 'tubes . . . Dr. Bates' neuron with the axon stretching over to Locust Street . . . Dr. Michels' demonstration of the embryonic rotation of the gut . . . Isaac's projection of slides in Dr. SchaeIl'er's lectures . , . and Dr. Warren's jokes. The summer gave us time to relax and to take advantage of the decelerated program and to correlate what we had learned. Varied were the methods in which the class members spent the summer. One worked as a longshoreman, several as camp counsellors, some applied their education in hospital jobs, others just plain relaxed, and a few insatiables went to summer schools to finish up degrees left behind in the war- time rush. - And then the summer was over and the schedule of courses for the second year was upon us. The subjects seemed to be more closely related to the actual science of being a doctor than the more basic subjects of the first year. I' Pathology was one of the first departments with which we came in contact. We appreciated Dr. Moon's admirable scientific approach and ability to get across fundamental concepts. There were few of us who would not go out as disciples of 'The Chiefs theory of the mechanism of secondary shock. Morbid anatomy was ably presented by Dr. Morgan with the demon- stration of gross pathological specimens and his tales of Army life in two wars. Top lo Boilom: . . . F unctionaries . . . Reception: lieutenant and p. f. c. . . . Singing praises . , . Soph expounds as Dr. Gross observes Emma-- Prk 3 255385488 s zz : SS N a 3 Yifsi The Physiology Department, under the capable direction ol' Dr. Thomas, impressed us with the quality of its original research. Dr. Tuttle's dry wit livened up his well-developed E. K. G. lectures and demon- strations. The call ol' Joke, joke, at the beginning ol' lectures was competently met by Drs. Friedman and Pincus, who just as competently delivered their lectures. Dr. Schaelfer in neuroanatomy further astounded us with his knowledge ol' structure and l'unctional aspects ol' the body. The Thursday and Friday afternoon sessions ol' physical diagnosis were made interesting and profitable under the able guidance ol' Dr. Charr. We especially appreciated his presentation ol' cases to illustrate the symptoms studied. And even though at the time we disliked Dr. Gru- ber's habit of surprise quizzes, we feel that he gave us a good foundation in the broad subject ol' phar- rnaoology. ,Now our pre--clinical years are over, and welre ready to go on to the various clinics and departments at the hospital. Wie trust that our last two years at Jefferson will he as profitable as the lirst two have been. GRANT D. S'rrsr.'rEn. NI EMBEHS Robert V. Anderson John M. Applel Francis T. C. Au Richard P. Avonda S. Jack Bascove David I. Biser lrvin H. Blumlield Lawrence K. Boggs Scott J. Boley David O. Booher VValter E. Boyer, Jr. Gerald M. Breneman Robert S. Brennan Victor A. Bressler Richard L. Bryson Charles A. Callis .Richard A. Carlson Joseph IVI. Chiaravalloti Edward J. Chmelewski George M. Clelan Samuel M. Cleveland Richard B. Crowder Frederick VV. Deck, Jr. Paul R. de Villers William E. Eakin Howard D. Easling Peter L. Eichman llichard A. Ellis George R. Farrell F rcderick A. Feddeman Eugene S. Felderman Joshua J. Fields John G. Finley Norman J . Fisher Charles D. Frey Albert Gelb Francis E. Gilbertson Canzio E. Giuliucci Top lo Bottom: Cortical cells in action . . Cortical cells relax . . What a maze of gyri! Now, in da cawpus eallosum . . . Joseph J. Gormley Stanley J. Guseiora Stuart W. Hamburger Charles E. Hamilton, Jr. Rinard Z. Hart XVilliam Hart, Jr. Thomas F. Head John R. Healy Joseph M. Hopen Charles VV. Hull' Park W. Hun Lington, Jr. Harry J. Hurley, Jr. Louis lozzi ' Roland Johnkins Matthew E. Johnson Robert G. Johnson W. Edward Jordan, Jr. Howard Joselson David J. Keck Russell lil. Kesselman Richard F. Kidder Yvilliam B. Kinlaw, Jr. Paul J. Katz VVilliarn J. .Kuzman Duane R. Larkin Paul Levy Otto M. Lilien Milton H. Lincoll' VVilliam Lincoll' Marvin M. Lindell, Jr. Benj. E. Longeneckcr, J Frank E. Melilree Fred D. McXVilliams Koen Tuck Ma Lowry B. C. Macbeth Saul S. Mally Conrad F. March Simon Markind Gerald Marks Carl J. May Howard Mazer Maurice M. Meyer, Jr. Robert L. Michael Thomas D. Michael Charles A. lV1iller, Jr. John E. Mills John S. Mollitt John F. Morrissey Gust Mourat Stanley F. Nabity Mortimer T. Nelson Leroy Newman l'. John J. O Neill Arthur E. Orlidge John D. Paul. Jr. Abraham Perlman Henry M. Perry Thomas C. Piekenbroek George Popp Howard P. Potter, Jr. N. Leslie Powers, Jr. Edward F. Purcell James H. R after Edward H. Robinson Hector F. Rodriguez Henry A. E. Roman Harold Rovncr Sheldon Rudansky Nvllllillll T. Sallec .Edward J. Saltzman Edward A. Schauer Robert E. Schulz Gerard M. Shannon Henry K. Shoemaker Samuel J. Silbcrg Erwin R. Srnarr Amos V. Slllltllg Jr. Burgess A. Smith lrwin S. Smith Allen M. Snyder Ford C. Spangler George R. Spong Robert E. T. Stark Grant D. Stelter Harold L. Strause, Jr. R. Oscar Swan Leonard M. Tanner Robert NV. Taylor Henry J. 'l'eul'en, Jr. Robert M. Vetto Juan E. Veve George B. Voight T. Edw. A. vonDedenroth Howard R. NVagenblast Martin H. Walrath, IH John,L. Weaver Jack I-I. Weinstein Mortimer' H. Wells, Jr. Richard M. Whittington Neil S. lVillian'1s George A. Winch Jack R. Woodside Conrad Zagory Carl Zenz Top to Bollom: Prof. and ex-soph Brain fag Morale building . . Signing on the dotted line E i ,K xxx E f r THE FRESIIMEN CLASS 0F NINETEEN FIFTY 187 FIKESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS Left Zo riglif: Edward H. Malia, Trcaszu'er,' Leonard M. Del Vecchio, Presiflenlg Darrell C. Stoddard, fsfantlingl Hisloriang Patrick- A. Mazza, Jr., Corresporzdzfng Secrefaryg John H. Titus, Recording Secre- laryg William R. Clark, Vice-President fnot pieturedj FRESIIMAN CLASS HISTORY For several years now we had been acquiring pres- tige. That gradual climb to the finesse of the college senior had been interrupted by the humbling process called Army Service f'or some of us, or perhaps we had never beenfortunate enough to complete col- lege. There were even some fellows who had planned to enter Jefferson several years ago hut . . . there have always been wars. However devious the route may have been, there were more than one hundred and fifty of us who wandered greenly,' into Mr. Storm's office to sign on the proverbial dotted line and sauntered even less anxiously down the hall-then or later-to settle witl1 Miss Gray. We had heard about all this. The postman had visited us frequently during the balmy summer daysg he had brought many invitations to join this fraternity or that. Occasionally a note of more immediate importance signed by Dr. Crider was our portion. Registration Day: advice was cheap-it was free and plentiful. And so were lunches at the numerous fraternity houses for a while and it was during these times that we met many sophomore sages. The juniors and seniors were friendly but there was an air of aloofness about them which asserted itself. Perhaps their official duty was to lend dignityg after all, hadn't that junior across the 'table at noon boasted about being called Doctor for the first time by a clinic patient that morning? Our visits to 1025 VValnut Street were few. 'iLif'e for us assumed new meaningg the word was now spelled differently- D. B. I. Its definition included a stern but friendly white-haired professorg we had heard of Dr. Schaeffer but such was far inferior to seeing and hearing him in person. There were synonyms such as Great NVhite Father and Jake Further conno- tations of the Anatomy Institute included a box of bones and Bennett, cadavers and Michels, micro- scopes and Ramsay-all these came at us with amaz- ing rapidity. We learned that we were guinea pigs for a new system of teaching at Jefferson. Anatomy, histology and embryology-all rolled into four months of sweating, cramming, dissecting, drawing and. of course, listening. This was the first part of the new system. The fellow who dreamed this up must be quite a spectacle to behold! That fellow! Some of us had unknowingly met him prior to our acceptance. The majority of us saw him at the Opening Address and met him at the reception afterward. Our Dean seemed quite friendly and we learned from some upperclassmen that Dr. Perkins, formerly a medical missionary to Siam, had worked long and hard-visiting, planning, scheduling, study- ing4to the end that the four years at Jefferson would be more effective for us and those after us than they had been for any previous class. We were glad we had met him. Before we knew it Christmas vacation had passed and final exams were before ns as a series of scholastic Mt. Evercsts and Death Valleys. Then, like a bad dream, it was all over and we were soon wanderers in the fabulous Land of Beginning Againufwitli some depletions in our numbers. A Now our time was spent with test tubes and kymo- graphs, also spelled Cantarow and Thomas. Here- tofore-we heard it from the lips of fraternity broth- ers-physiology had been a second year subject and baeteriology a freshman course, but now the two had been changed and we were at once eminent surgeons- frog surgeons. But this material was certainly more interesting. Everything had been so very dead at the famous resort on Eleventh Street. but now all was a seething mass ol' life. Occasionally even the con- tents of an innocent Lest tube soared skyward. We learned plenty, being often reminded that all this was the necessary foundation for the structure of a well- trained physician. Grammar school, high school, college-all had been foundation work, and here was mo1'e. Obviously it was important that we should be started well. But would we ever build above ground? That shingle looked, eons away. Men have always been fascinated by the study ol life, especially human life, and we were no exceptions, despite times of drudgery and discouragement. The chemical actions and functional complexities which were part of our own lives soon became part of our daily thinking. There never was presented to us, however, a satisfactory explanation ofthe phenomenon known as Spring Fever. Perhaps it was of bac- terial origin and we would be enlightened next year. But as days lengthened and the above-mentioned dis- ease progressed we soon faced the last set of hurdles between us and what we had come to View witli envy- the desirable title of Sophomore And then it ended. What a relief! Pass, llunk- who cares? The freshman year is over and summer means vacation, one of the most welcome respites ever ours. Next year? Let's worry about that in October. Dannlsm. C. S'roooAno. Top to Bollom: . . . Quite a scope of knowledge . . Genial explainer . . Blunt dissection . . Seeing-eye aff' MEMBERS Daniel L. Backenstose Robert C. Bair John R. Ball William lVI. Barba Linus A. Barbor James D. Barnes Louis K. Baron Francis X. Barrett Eugene W. Beauchamp Harry B. Bechtel Byron E. Besse Joseph J. Blake Frank E. Brown Richard L. Callista Mark O. Camp Ralph Cantalio Emil Capito Eugene L. Childers Edward J. Clark VVilliam R. Clark Edwin I. Cleveland Marshall L. Cievenger Leroy W. Coffroth Robert E. Colcher Carter F. Cort Drew E. Courtney Louis M. Crews Robert J. Critchlow Vincent P. De Augustine Leonard M. Del Vecchio Charles R. Derrickson Henry C. De Valinger George L. Donaghue Thomas J. Dougherty Richard V. Dulfey William P. Englehart Leonard A. Erdman Philip J. Escoll John B. Evans Top to Bottom: . . . Bone-ing . . Photogenic trio . . Skull session . . Books away Erich A. Everts-Suarez Francis X. Farrell Frederick J. Fay Thomas Forker Albert Foster Donald P. Franks Victor J. Fredrickson John C. Frommelt Thomas E. Gazowski Martin Goldberg Marvin Goldstein Eugene L. Grandon Albert J. Grant ' Milton S. Greenberg Leonard H. Grunthal, Jr Albert C. Haas Laurence B. Hall Wilbur J. Harley Harry L. Harper Albert H. 'Helm Frank R. Hendrickson Charles PL. Henkelmann Franklin C. Hill, Jr. James C. Hitchner James R. Hodge VVilliam B. Holman Robert G. Hunter Bernard V. Hyland William J. Jacoby, Jr. David J afl'e James B. Jamison, Jr. Ernest H. Jensen Joseph J. John William A. Joy Harry H. Kanner Robert E. Karnofsky Kimball C. Kaufman Lester Keiser Murray Kessler MEMBERS Robert F. Kienhofer Weir L. King Bernard A. Kirshbaum William F. Kraft Paul W. Leyden Glenn B. Leonard Henry Lesse Donald B, Lewis Milton L. Lewis ' David J. Lieberman Jose R. Limeres-Jimerez Morton Lipshutz John D. Lopes John C. Lychak ' John E. D. McGuigan, Jr. Bernard J. McLaverty William B. McNamee Jay 'W. MacMoran Edward R. Malia Joseph S. Matte Patrick A. Mazza, Jr. Donald I. Meyers James R. Milligan James M. Monaghan, III Ralph D. Moyer, Jr. Robert M. J. Murphy Albert M. Murtland Richard L. Murtland Michael E. Nardi George W. O'Brien Dean B. Olewiler Richard D. Owen Robert H. Painter Chauncey G. Paxson, Edward L. Pennes Irwin N. Perr Gerard J. Peter Carl G. Pierce, Jr. Joseph L. Pond Jr. James D. Hipepi, Jr. Alan S. Rogers Mortan A. Rosenblatt Aaron Rosenthal Richard L. Rovit Joseph J. Rowe, Jr. Virgil W. Samms. Jr. John P. Sargent Donald Sass ' H. William Schmidt Paul J. Schouboe Hubert S. Scar Leonard Seidenbcrg James A. Shafer Charles G. Silbermen Gerald F. Simmermon Richard H. Smith Hal E. Snedden 'Aris M. Sophocles Robert S. Stein Arthur Steinberg ' Darrell C. Stoddard Howard E. Strawcutter Andrew A. Sullivan Joseph F. Tabasco Richard S. F. Tenn Theodore B. Thoma John F. Thompson John R. Titus Maurice H. Turcotte Frans J. Vossenberg Thomas W. Watkins George W. W est Olin K. Wilancl James H. Williams Williarn H. Winchell Hugh B. Woodward Probert K. Worman Herbert A. Yantes Top to Bottom: Healthy, but for how long? . . Formal attire . . Jovial pledges-to-be . . Hazy outlook S I -1 Y ul YJ J V 4 MRS. I-IAHRIETT SHANNON 4 MISS MABJORIE VVINT , MHS. AMELHOSE WEED Secretary lo lhe Dean , General Qmcc Alrmznzf Qllice 0-FFICE STAFF Cheery Smiles, clicking 'LypeW1'iterS, willing help- fulness-'these eharacterize the Women who carry on 'lhe inconspicuous belt necessary olllce du Lies So essen- 'lial lo our matrieulalgiou into, inshrucbion Within, graduation from and post,-eomlneneement contacts with the .IeIl'e1'S0n with which we have become insepa- rably and proudly uni7t.ed. 3 . Noi Pictured ' fl MISS DOROTHY JOHNSON MISS JANE ANN LUTZ M1SS CAT1-1En1NE HUTI-I fummi 'Wee Genlffal Office General Qflice L. . 2 k Az- new gg-, Y S M, R, X, -N 1 SU - we S -. fm W - - 4,-.W X5 131 , K W . .lil A ,. S. - x,l fl :ig it ' . S 2 . -Y- .1 MISS MYRTLE BREMERMAN MISS VIRGINIA ZIEGLEI1 MISS MAIKIAN GRAY Daniel Buugh I nslitule Gefleffll Omce ' Cashier ' l92 I PRE CLINICAL YEARS ' ! Q To say that our studies began is an understatement. They overwhelmed and Q? 11 wx 'Ks Q R P V fg- f J 5' if Wig ,, M 's 9 :1 :Ji . E55 as J Q M sw , v N v ,ff ' K- f. ,,, sa' -'Q-A. A yi-: W A I M ww -X A wa L I ,. .5 - - J, '9 .I?Ei' Q' 515251 ::!.' iif1f 'L':2fm 'REM' Y '5:- 'sf- ,.,, .. ,.,... .... ..:., . ,. .,l.., ...: , .. X I1 - - 4. .. 15222-If ir: ' '- r 'if1':.: -. fm .:. 3 5' . - f 21' 1 -:l ?S'Z'1 ' '-Y. , ' .Ffz?I'f'1:. f' K -av : '5'!'f5':: Ifhiw ' 'IFA '- - X ' -X ':f.::zf --2- N., - I 3554 1 - 5: ':.. 21. 55521 , f' .1 sf 1-21- -'V Q 5 V5 ...-Q22 , - H: .,., ..,.,., ' L ' I nf Q M N' 'f My -75' . ,wma N, if W ' I Q-2:9 V ,W f- ' '73 . . fig? 1 ' . ,J f LS, ' ' 'Z 5' 1, .f-.-Q . , 'sl 'F ' -1 55525 5w- i wwm., N 1 F , ,N '- ga g , 5 ,W , ,E 1 U f , . r' M, E ' JV - ff H 1 . ' Q 3- k 38 'K 331 ' ' .Eff :-:f V iffi 31? 11ffw:541'1, Before we had a chance to draw a breath a huge pile of bones tseemed like at least two or three hun- dred of theml was thrown at us and the inquisition began. First it was Dr. Michels, then Drs. Saleeby, Ciliberti, Berns and Wagner that made life miserable. Many of us had just entered the armed forces and some of that number were still sweating out our shots -in January. This, combined with protuber- ances, rami, processes, sutures, foramina, crests, tubercles, facets, etc., gave us two weeks of misery. Then Iinally the day came when we were assigned to our cadavers, What then was a cold, formaldehyde- ish corpse was to become a sweet CPD lovable C3150 body. Ah yes, well do we remember the platysma, the superficial and deep cervical plexuses, and the awe and reverence with which we gazed upon the specimens in the Daniel Baugh institute Museum. How dumb the student who . . . ANATUMY And then we met Dr. Schaeffer, who was to guide us in the days to come through the intricate course of anatomy. In the beginning we were full of trepida- tion and 'trembled with his every movement. Finally, however, we came to look upon our Professor of Anatomy, not as the Dr. Schaeffer of Paranasal Sinus and Morris' Anatomy fame, but rather as the Great White Father, who quizzed us sternly, amply, justly, yet kindly. And before the year was out he became Jake to us-among ourselves. Yes, on to Dr. Bennett ol' the exact lectures. The orbicularis oris is a complex muscle that surrounds the oral orifice and forms the chief intrinsic musculature of the lips. In the midline the fiber bundles end partly in perimysiurn, partly in the skin . . . and so on. But we were interested in the orbicularis for other rea- sons. And then came the astounding afternoon session when ole Marse Bennett looked at each of us, called us by name, quizzcd us, encouraged us and began to take us over the hurdles ol' the obstacle race called anatomy. Dr. Michels' lecture on the rotation of the gut will never be forgotten, what with his apron and clothes- line. Also there were the gems of learning that spilled from his lips when he got going about the spleen, and of course we must mention his super-blunt dissection with which by one lunge ol' his scalpel he would accom- plish at least a week's work . . . and woe to the student who doesn't known . . , how dumb the man who attempts to enter the second year of medi- cine not knowing this. Those afternoons of sweating over the eadavers were enhanced by the presence ol' Drs. Swartley, Ciliberti, Angel, Hutchinson and others who seemed to be all over the lab answering questions, setting the student right, doing a dillicult bit ol' dissection here, and, all in all, keeping the course moving smoothly and orderly. As for the more minute things of life, the Depart- ment of Embryology and Histology kept our eyes focused on these. Heading this microscopical section of the Anatomy Department was Dr. Ramsay, the Now in this ayreeah . . .H l l man ol' skill, humor, brilliant lectures, clear and con- cise polychromatie drawings, who insisted on giving us slides ol' liver, stomach, intestine surrounded by a trachea turned inside out. What a startling sight this made when magnified! Associated with us in this department was Dr. Bates, who could be so very patient one day and so very perverse the next day, especially with his own brand of quiz that would have slowed even the great Da Costa. Between Ramsay and Bates -our mornings were well lilled with small details. Exams kept L'swamping us. - We took the practi- cals-or rather they took us. XVl'1o ol' us can forget the doctor that tried CPD to pass oll' a baby's thymus as a lung? Finally, the exams came at the rate of two a day for six days a week. Then the actual linal examination Ilashed our way, they pulled Constitu- tional Anatomy out ol' the Introduction to Morris and threw it at us for 'ten points. I'd much rather they had left it in Morris. At length we traveled the long but happy road from the doldrums ol' despair to the heights of rapture 'when our grades came through showing that we had successfully completed the finest anatomy course in the world. We left Daniel Baugh Institute for a few weeks. soon to return as sophomores and begin once again to sweat. This time, instead of the whole body, we had only the brain. Did I say ONLY had P Well, that was more than enough, for the involved neural pathways were entities that nearly threw the entire class l'or a loss. Dr. Schaeller escorted us through the complex inazes of the brain, while Dr. Lipshutz, ably assisted by Drs. McCarthy and Durante, guided us through the dillicult but fascinating disseetions. Sure, the columns and tracts will remain with us for lengths ol' time as various as their own extents, but I doubt il' ever that neuron final will be forgotten. We completed the sophomore year and passed the examinations, thus becoming juniors. As such, we come in relays of twenty-two men per carcass to study applied anatomy. It was quite an achievement to catch a glimpse of the body, a 'triumph to incise, so we slunk oil' into a corner with cross sections. 'Twas well that we did, because these same sections Cumira- Sure, I can find the aorta bile dictu J yielded a very good understanding of struc- tural relationships. At our 9:10 A. lVl. lectures Dr. Bonney went over anatomy from the aspect ol' sur- geon and medical man and gave us an excellent clini- cal correlation. The laboratory part of the course was handled by Drs. De Carlo and Moore. In an allied course-held at Daniel Baugh Institute because of the facilities-Drs. Robertson and Rankin intro- duced us to operative surgery. Al ter completing these live weeks we bade adieu to Eleventh and Clinton, scholastically speaking, with Miss i Bremmerman, Isaac and all the other fond memories. ln summary, then, the first year served to empha- size the unity of the three great divisions ol' human anatomy, namely, embryology, histology and gross anatomy and the advantage of their coordinate study. fflniztimzed on Page 99.51 Angel-lace ftp-'. gs-' , 1 fii i i i sjiw ,lg .:.. . l In these days of such unrest and conflict, scientific advancement has been so rapid that we have been warned of the gruesome possibility of bacterial war- fare. To us as future active practitioners this pre- sented itself as very significant. How did such prog- ress come about? What about the advance from no knowledge of microorganisms to the present state wherein their existence is recognized and combatted by the medical profession and their cleadliness is exploited by the proponents of war? Leeuwenhoek, Schwann, Koch, Neisser, Pasteur, Loeffler, Wassermann, Jenner-proper names-thou- sands of them. All these names and their associated organisms, test or discovery were for many a week a discouraging tangle. But we did learn a name with one unmistakable association. The name was Rosen- bergerg the association-genial professor of bacteri- Now youjust . . . sniff . . . do it like this W BACTERIULUGY ology. Ground floor auditorium and Dr. Randle Iiosenberger were inseparable fragments of our newly acquired bacteria-conscious minds-for a while. We -learned soon to respect the sagacious words of this man who had spent over fifty years at Jefferson, learn- ing at first and then helping others to learn. His experienced eye was of frequent assistance in the lab as we looked at empty slides from which he showed us thousands of common organisms. Were we blind or were his glasses dirty? Neitherg this man merely knew his way around a microscope slide and we were willing to he shown. Diseases were caused by organisms, not humors, but Dr. Rosenberger had brought along some of the latter in his transition from the old school to the world of modern medicine. Eleventh Street never was a garden spot but he vividly painted it as the Temp- ter's playground. Despite our typical bacteria-phobias, we felt safer in the bug-laden sixth floor laboratory than in the slough of iniquity through which we were compelled to pass to and from Daniel Baugh Institute. Then one day-a different Dr. Rosenherger came to lecture. Everyone noticed it, he even closed lec- ture early. This usually brought glee but today- concern. That man wasn't well. It was shortly after that, in February of'191t4, that Dr. Bancroft concisely summarized obituaries and eulogies concerning his close friend by announcing, One of the great has fallen. We had only tasted of this life which had passed from us and, like those who were our prede- cessors, had found it extremely savoury. We were so glad that one of the fondest memorials here at Jeffer- son to this departed professor was the continuation in his honor of the annual College Christmas Carol Sing which he had instigated many years ago. Like- wise to his honor are the many Jefferson graduates who are better equipped for helping sick people be- cause they were well trained in the fundamentals of medical bacteriology. Freshman year moved on and with it our need for learning more about bacteria and related organisms. fC'o1zt-imlerl on Page 302D Bugs, Inc. fMartian versionj I96 CHEMISTRY y How do you do, sirill' This huge man must be' the coachg what a player he must have been in his day! He replied in a lriendly way, What school did you com,e,fron19 Oh, you did? Fellows from that school have-a hard time on my team. When Coach Ban- croft told us this, we nearly dropped the whole pile of equipment which the trainer, Joe Poppel, had issued to us. Soon we were down at the practice field with our 'teammates and the Coach was starting the lirst ol' his many skull sessions with us. Wait-he was tell- ing us how the Greeks had played the game. Say, that was clever-wc'd call signals in Greek and Latin so the opposition would be confused. Before long he started sketching plays on the board, putting a C through the line with H and O blocking. Our coaches X in college- had taught us different variations of the same play but Uncle George Cwe became tired ol' calling him Coachj soon had us learning complex plays, typical of the professional type of game. He had three C's going around end tied to two O'sg they blocked for S who occasionally passed to N . One day the workout was interrupted when that crazy mongrel belonging to Bernie Houssay ran into the huddle and confused the whole team. - . Several days later we had our first pre-scrimmage session up in the locker room. Line Coach Hansen showed us the fine points in the actual game itself. If we wanted to get anywhere in this sport, we had to block out those micelles. He reminded us that occassionally hc'd take Lead out and put Iron in the line so as to make more progress on the play. Then Uncle George would stroll in and nonchalantly tell us to run the play entirely differently. That made Hansen burn up and we didn't blame him. Finally, they decided what we should do and told us to get on our suits and get out in the stadium for a scrim- mage. We wanted to 'take a breather before the two-hour workout but Coach wouldn't let us. We had- to get out there and transact-how he loved that word. Backiield Coach Williams was always out there the coached the scrubs, tool. He spent most of his time in the ollice figuring plays on some of the coaching stall s yellow paper. He let the boys use some of his paper when the Coach quizzed us on the game as we had learned it thus far, but did Williams ever blow up when one ol' the fellows took an extra sheetl Out in the stadium there was always an abundance of feverish activity. The A team scrimmaged one day and the B team would practice the next day fthe teams were rather evenly matchedj. Both groups had a couple of boys who never did the right thing and, as a result, Coach reprimanded us all. Occa- sionally Turner appeared, he was a scout who spent most ol' his time looking over the other teams but he knew our plays like a book. Qfontinzzerl on Page Removing COI1fuSi0I1 , TWO Sheets of paper If inanimate objects could write or recite their ex- periences, what would some ol' those intimately asso- ciated with Jeil'ers0n's Department of Pathology have to tell usi' With Alice Col' Wonderland famej we meander from unimaginative and coldly scientific environs to the much less nerve-racking Land of Make-Believe. A1- ready our wanderings have been rewarded by a most enjoyable series of reminiscences by the unas- suming Sir Lecture Desk from the South County. It was a warm fall day in 1944. I was lazily recover- ing from a two-month rest when I saw a group ol' students come in and take their seats. Soon a large notebook was opened on me as the students applauded and a kindly voice greeted the class. I could just understand snatches of this man's conversation but I could read the cover of his notebook: Pathology Lectures-Dr. Virgil H, Moon. Such words as Osler . . . congenital . . . pneumonia. , . cirrhosis . . . Grady, You'll lind 'chewmcr' cells. PATI-IOLOGY alcohol passed over me as the students feverishly copied these things. I shall never forget some exten- sive material on shock, capillaries, histamine about which the Professor lectured many times. I could almost repeat the words back to him. My cousin to the north said he too heard this often during the first half of the second year, but the last hall' of that year Dr. Herbut appeared once a week and gave some rapid-Iire lectures on pathology of special surgical significance. One day Dr. Moon did not come to class. Instead there appeared a short stocky man with a broad smileg the class welcomed him in an unusual manner by singing something about a birthday-this seemed to please everybody. This lecturer CI learned else- where that it was Dr. Stasneyj always laid his notes beside meg it was dillicult to understand him at first but he was likable. The next year I saw these medical students againg they looked a hit wiser. This time they discussed clinicopathological problems under the direction of Drs. Stasney and Scariaco-Scotti CI was glad he shortened his namej. My cousin said Dr. Moon and later Dr. Grady came to a class early in the morning during the junior year to review many more items about disease. He thinks he could almost pass an examination in the subject. Now we move along to meet the inimitable Madame Microscope who was such an important person on the fifth floor, as elsewhere. She and her many relatives were conspicuous all over the laboratory. Just as we arrived she was wincing and rubbing her foot, A medical student was a bit rough taking me out of my case this morning. But I don't mind that if I can be of some help to him. I assisted a couple of them last year when they were learning histology. They never put normal sections on my stage now, though. It was carcinoma, thyroiditis, bronchiectasis and similar types of diseased tissue. I could hear several of the boys complain that they wished all this writing wasn't necessary, but just then there was a sharp cracking sound and my student looked in me CC'ont'i'r1,11crl on Page 3195 McGrew. Now look, doc . . . PHARMACGLUGY In the second year we entered with varying de- grees of apprehensiveness into the course of pharma- cology with its ever-smiling professor and the con- stant threat ol' unannounced quizzes held over us by the entire congenial department stahl. The latter subject was the source of much unnerving propaganda from the upperclassmen. lt was this combination- threat- and propaganda-that kept us up nearly every night trying to decipher the then CPD intricate notes in toxicology, materia meclica and pharmacy in the event of a quiz the next day, said notes having been dictated to us in staccato fashion earlier in the day. But what a whiz bang course this was! According 'to Marshall and Walzl, Wendell and Hartmann, Campbell and Morgan, sulfanilamide and its related compounds were presented. According to Dorsey, Herrell and Cusick, Moyer and Maddock, the subject of nicotine was completed. According to Keeler. Her- Wiek, Rammaelkamp and Bradley, penicillin as used in clinical medicine was disposed ol'. According to Gruber, Bryan and Richardson, the compounds mor- phine, atropine and strychnine were amply covered. Yes . . . uh . . . pharmacology . . . uh . . . was quite a . . . uh . . . course. There shall always remain with each and every one ol' us in every day of our medical practice the fundamentals which Dr. Gruber taught. Dr. Hart, lecturing on' Mondays, specializing in anesthesia, also kept us alert. Well do we remember his lecture which was safe from quizzes-according to our speculations-until the day when all 'the members of the department walked in with blue books under their arms, much to our chagrin. In the laboratory we passed through the mortar and pestle days, the standardization of digitalis, iden- tiiication of unknown drugs, the pharmacological effects of certain substances upon mice, cats, rabbits, dogs and linally ourselves. Equally unforgettable are those quiz kid programs under Drs. Gruber, Hart, and Lisi, including the dose test in which they asked the dosage of erythritylis tetranitras and we had only gotten as far as Eriodictyon. VVe were adequately taught to observe the ellects Surgeons at-work ol' drugs, to recognize the earliest toxic symptoms, to understand the objectives in prescribing a drug and to administer that drug in such a manner that the maximum desired elfect is obtained. The site and mechanism of action ol' each and every drug were shown to be not only ol' pharmacological in- terest to us, but, more important, an indication of what specilic drug is to be prescribed. The essence ol' this course was a systematic investi- gation into the history, chemistry, preparation, routes of administration, mechanism of actions, dosage, bio- assay, absorption, fate, excretion, therapeutic uses, tolerance and toxicity of a wide variety ol' drugs from acacia to zine.': There was emphasis placed on the clinical applicability ol' basic principles and on thera- peutic procedurcs. The entire staff aimed to present the material in a manner suited to us and, although they limited themselves to the discussion ofthe essen- tials, they endeavored not to sacrifice scientific accu- racy and relative completeness for the sake of brevity, HNOW. according to-uh-Gargle, Gilligan . . . As t.he famed United States Marines act effectively over the great expanses from the halls of Montezuma to the shores of Tripoli, so our knowledge of body function-scanty at some pointsvcovers the wide range which includes at its extremes, frog and man. During the first year our greenness demanded that we be carefully led-or shoved-through each phase of our work. But with the advent of the second year all was different, especially in the Physiology Labora- tory. The aim of the students who sat officially in pairs at desks-a step in the gradual transition toward the distant day when we'd have our own desks and offices-was to decipher and correlate mimeographed instructions, equipment and frogsg the object of the department members seemed to be to make themselves inconspicuous. Occasionally one would stroll non- ifihalantly into the lab after a lengthy exchange of cnecdotes with another teacher concerning the recent ashing 'tripg he would arrive just in time to rescue' a Assistant Dean functioning PHYSIULIIGY student in extremess whose partner had attached the cathode to him instead of to the much stronger frog leg. Soon all was well, and, interestingly enough, we learned quite a bit of physiology. Dr. Thomas commenced the long lecture series and it wasn't long before we appreciated the abundance of knowledge belonging to this easy-going professor whose uniquely relaxed attitude when lecturing stimu- lated an equally relaxed state of mind and body in the bleachers. Respiration and heart action were not as simple as they appeared but his talks were clear and he omitted all extraneous ramblings, the lack of which became to our minds one criterion of a good lecture. Dr. Friedman came in one day fwe had met him on the fourth floorj to illuminate our minds regarding gastrointestinal physiologyg we staggered out, drunk from the mental imbibition of too much Enterogastrone, the Nectar of Duodena, and Choleeys- tekinin, the Wine of Gall fwhich we had forgotten to divide into three partsj. Each lecture was a series of peristaltic rushes interrupted by an occasional reverse wave. During the first year we had seen such structures as the thyroid, pituitary and adrenal glands but these were transformed in olu' thinking from cold, em- balmed organs to pulsating, secreting structures which acted together to control om' bodies as a motorist controls his auto. The change was due to the lectures of one man, Dr. Paschkis, whose entire scholastic activity was focused on the study of endocrinology. Our studies includeditlie frog, the rabbit, the dog, and-believe it or not-the elephant. Anyone desir- ing a bimanual explanation of why Lead I and Lead II are as different as the red corpuscles, of, elephant and chicken does not go to Scott Memorial Library but to Tuttle's Ambulatory Bookshelf of Useful for not so usefull Information. Whoever would have thought that such a mild-mannered lecturer with such bulging pockets could possess so much latent energy, indomi- table courage, blindness to empty seats, droll humor and such a fund of knowledge fclassified and unclassi- fiedj as Dr. Tuttle? ' QContim1e11 on Page 3081 Fried man-Sophs Cfreed menj l -4-,K X1-94-31, CLINICAL YEARS Having thus finished mth the prcparatnon we retuxned to continuously hegm . ww fmt - 1 fi? W .ENV N M Q H B my l ss W ss the courses of our clinical years at Jelferson, not Lhe least of which was . ' f .,.,.,. J -. .... - :: .,,.. f .. Am .. .f .. --Mus --.--M--tw. -4 -R - -t-,...sm,,,.?.-v--- . is ,M MY r .VII , S ig n,W.JEQA.mMkM-WWW, Q H Wm -fif ----- f M' E ' s .s M E 5 Q 7 E f 'W -g ' Hi' -. H galax y- 2 fsf ' QZQ E 9210 5:53, K y is 511335, H X :iff 1 Q Q16 as E W- ggjfsgwkiigggf, Z WWE! NPGS? -' fs 41 E jUsi?,n Q js 2 2' After the Hnals in anatomy, bacteriology and chem- ' t is ry, we entered our sophomore year in the fall of forty-four and began our first course under the direc tion ofthe Department of Medicine. Dr. Hodges D was our able lnstructor in clinical laboratory and the course was supplemented by lectures from Drs. Bucher, Cantarow, Erf and Lovingood. Here it was that we became martyrs for medicine stabbin o . g ur- selves and our partners to get blood to perform our first hemoglobin determination to complete our f' t , irs red blood cell and white blood cell counts and to do our differentials wherein a polymorphonuclear still re bl d ' ' ' ' sem e a basoplule. 'lhen came the analyses of the various body excreta. In the beginning this was very tedi ' ous work and who would have beheved that soon we would be analyzing eight and twelve fraetionals d per ay plus our regular class work? COf course Clinitest was still a dark secret to us.j This course was For an acute coronary attack wc give . . . MEDICINE to stand us in good stead for later on in o ' ' . , e ur training, beside the uri 'l ' ' na yses the blood counts would be mounting to one a day per patient-and some of us with ten or eleven patients. The first approach to the clinical side a d ' ppeare in the section of physical diagnosis and symptomatology under the tutelage of the impeccable Dr Char ' h . r wit the cooperation of his beautiful Pine Street patients. There was further elaboration upon his course on Friday and Saturday mornings with section classes in the clinics or wards. ln the third that we were on the medical wards at Jefferson with duties such as history taking, laboratory work, ward rounds, X ray and rrlinicopathological conferences and it 73 posts to attend. Also Dr. Wood capably introduced us to Cecil. T his. too, was the year in which Dr. Perkins and his guest speakers acquainted us with the principles and methods ol' preventive medicine. Also th. H K . . . IS was the year in which rectal examinations were brought to the fore. What then was to us a disagree- bl a e chore was later to become a very important part of our physical examinati year we had actual responsibilities in on procedure, being the source of many valuable findings-not only in medi- cine and proctology, but al so in surgery, urology and obstetrics. Parasitology and tropical medicine were capablv handled by Dr. Sawitz of Ma lay ree a and E I1 doe mee ba fame. The E. K. G. came into being with the advent of Dr Semisch and his tal f M . e o yra and Johnny. Forever afterward our lives were one axis deviation after another with an occasional low voltage of Q-R-S 'thrown in for good measure. Then we experienced the first junior-senior clinic with Dr. Reimann as master of ceremonies. Would he call on me? Just the realization zing in the next section was enough to bring on a case of N. V. D. Student: The hospital with the chief complaint of fever . . . Dr. R. interrupting : What are the diagnostic possibili- ties? Another student: You may think of . . . Dr. H. Cagainl: You're doing the thinking, not I. that he was quiz- patient entered the Dedica tee performing 202 And, of course, who can forget Dr. Reimann's man Friday, Dr. Price and his lecture about Carlos Finlay, JeiI'erson's forgotten man? However, in Dr. Reimann's absence Ccholera in Chinaj Dr. Price presented some very helpful clinics and carried the activities of the Medical Department along in an orderly and efficient manner. Diabetes was still something vaguely connected with insulin M-when we met Dr. MacNeal. Perry, of the mathematical mind, certainly threw around the diets, the patients and finally us, but his lectures and meth- ods will long be remembered as an excellent approach to the many problems of this prevalent metabolic dis- order. Soon afterward Dr. Kramer and his stall' ushered in the peripheral vascular diseases with their plantar ischemia, venous filling time, histamine acid phosphate, oscillometer and skin surface temperature tests. N o matter where we went, the Hematology Departs ment, composed of Drs. Jones, Tocantins, Miller and Erf, was forever sending a delegate into our midst to request the creatinine level, the uric acid level, the plasma cholesterol, the serum phosphorus Cadult and childj and doing their own differential counts, diag- nosing lymphatic leukemia here or pernicious anemia there. Ah, Blood! What crimes have been committed in thy name with the values of your far 'Loo many components. It all became a contest to determine who was going 'to complete medical service without inflicting a hematoma. We neverdid learn who had won. We rounded out our third year with physiotherapy lectures and Out-Patient Department work under Dr. Wizard Schmidt and with radiology directed by Dr. Swenson and his stall. And then in our fourth year, coming back to the medical wards, we learned to our great joy that we weren't merely ulab jockeys any more and that we could actually diagnose more than a case ol' beer. On the eighth floor of Curtis Clinic we discovered that the practice of medicine is not the science of medicine and we had our own patients carefully supervised by Drs. Aceto, Goldburgh and others. The Pine Street service was the next stop on om' medical hit parade. Here, in the place where we had taken part of our practical exams in the sopho- Get it in STAT1!l - as A its more year, we were well grounded in chest diseases about which we had heard so much, and Drs. Gordon, Sokoloff, Cbarr, Flick, Chodoll' and many others pre- sented an extremely illuminating course-concise, thorough and thought-provoking. As usually happens, a studen't's closest associations with faculty members are those among the younger men of the stall' and it is to them and tc the residents that we wish to extend thanks. On we moved with the remainder ol' the year's work, including the continuation of Dr. Reimann's pits and his very famous one-word discussion, Pre- posterousI Nothing daunted, we pressed into and through the finals, thus ascertaining that the field of medicine would now receive a group trained in the fundamental problems ol' diagnosis and therapy and realizing their own limitations. CHARLES B. HANES. One of the Best lectures SURGERY Many of us were first introduced to that glamorous specialty, surgery, not in the stoic confines of a lec- ture hall but rather in stolen moments from the anatomy lab during oiu' freshman lyear. Under pen- alty of severe reprimand we quietly lel't the lab on some Vlfednesday afternoon and shyly crept into the last rows of the pit to watch Dr. Shallow operate after his regular Wednesday clinic. It was here that we first learned of' the romance of surgery, watching flitting sure hands-teamwork to the Nth degree. It was here that many of us in our less serious moments let our minds drift to the day when we, too, might wield the knife with the dexterity and clcverness ol' those we watched, Our first formal introduction to surgery came dur- ing our sophomore year with the lectures by Drs. Behrend and Surver. It was here that we learned that surgery is not all glory, that many hard hours must be put in before we would ever even scrub for an operation. These served as the basic fundamentals upon which we would build our whole surgical struc- ture. It was also during this year that we had to decide whether we would take our instruct-ion under either Surgery A or B. This mattered little during the junior year, for both groups were to take similar Out- Patient Department training, differing only in the group of doctors in charge on that day. - During our junior year we attended Dr. Shallow's' regular Wednesday afternoon clinic. Oftentimes it was an attraction which even rivaled the local cinema in the way of entertainment. Promptly at two o'clock Dr. Shallow would come 'through the door followed by a long train of assistants and the like who quickly took their places in the first row. Then Dr. Wagner, who stood near the door, would read oflf the names of' the seniors who were to assist that day. They would come down rather sheepishly, each vieing for the coveted place in line behind the X-ray viewer. Dr. Wagner then began his history as the patient was wheeled in. This is a sixty-one-year-old . . . Just a minute, Dr. Wagner Cturning to the classj. Now I want you to take notice of the age in this caseg it plays an important part in this disease. All right, Dr. Wagner. This is a sixty-one-year-old white male . . . Just a minute, Dr. Wagner . . . and another surgery clinic was off. Perhaps some ol' the most interesting of such clinics were those in which Dr. Shallow had asked some other department head to assist him on some par- ticular point. It was during these clinics that we learned both sides of the age-old question of Medicine vs. Surgery, and it was Dr. Shallow's quick wit and assuring delivery that settled many an argument regardless of its basis. ' During our junior year Dr. Mueller was in charge of Surgery B but we had little opportunity to gain from his wealth of experiences and his fine teaching ability, for during our senior year he retired to become an Top: De Tuerk extracting Bollom: Carty expounding Emeritus Professor and Dr. Gibbon was appointed to his chair. Also during our junior year we were introduced to some of the surgical specialties. Dr. Eger took us through the intricate treatments of the diseases of bone, while Dr. McCarthy 'taught us of Buerger's and Raynaud's and the various vascular diseases. Dr. Walk- ling cleared the subject of fractures and Dr. Lemmon very aptly discussed the various 'types of hernias. Dr. Willauer brought up the subject of anesthesia and discussed it thoroughly and completely, while Dr. Haskell brought up the end with his discussion of proctology Cno pun intendedj. This is to mention but a few of the many men we met throughout our senior year who all contributed their bit to the whole so that we may more completely understand such an overwhelming subject. During our senior year Dr. Gibbon began his teach- ing at Jefferson. The son of a former Jefferson Pro- fessor of Surgery Know Emcritusj, his wide 'training throughout the world. as well as in the army, brought a man fully equipped for such a job. Dr. Gibbon did much to bring us in contact with some of the prac- tical aspects of surgery and, from what we've heard of his work in the Experimental Srugery field, there is much to be expected of him here at Jefferson. Dr. Jaeger took us through some of the intricacies of that highly complicated field of neurosurgery. His colored movies of operations performed by himself were considered by many better than being present at the operation itself. Dr. Warren B. Davis spoke to us of plastic surgery and showed us some of the wondrous possibilities of such a specialty. Dr. Tour- isch conducted regular weekly quiz sections which did much to unravel some of the problems of practical stugery. Senior ward clerkships on the A service showed us that obstetrics wasn't the only all-night specialty by a long shot. Those three A. M. calls for an emer- gency operation gave us an opportunity -to be second assistant during the appendectomy or relief of in- testinal obstruction or whatever it may have been. During the day Drs. Knowles, Wagner, Manges, and Carty did their best to clear up the previous year's didactic lectrues and took us on numerous ward rounds to illustrate their lectures. On the B service during the senior year there was division of time between Pennsylvania Hospital Acci- dentard Wand the B service wards at J eiferson with time in the operating room spent at both Pennsylvania and Jefferson. After much learning and doing, the time of checking up came around and after much blood, sweat and tears, we found that we knew quite a bit more than we thought we did and it was ail clue to a well-rounded treatment of a vast subject by a capable staff in a method that was clear and casily understandable and yet complete. In the days to come there will be cer- tain ol' us who will take up the subject as a life-long practice and because of our excellent training we will not be found wanting. Top: Now, gentlemen, I want you all to feel this Bollom: Hey, that hurts , S5 ff ef, ist ies-riixqet-i ar - - 53,5 .A --J .5 5 ' at And they twain shall be one flesh. After long years of unofficial cooperation at Jefferson the begin- ning of our senior year found these two inseparable companion specialties oflicially united into the one more effective Department of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology, striving together for the purpose of facilitating childbirth and ameliorating the myriad of afllictions peculiar to the female members of the race. OBSTETRICAL DIVISION We were Hrst introduced to obstetrics in our junior year. Well do we remember those long didactic lec- tures, for all of which the third year was so infamous, when Dr. Clifford Lull faced our class at 5:00 P. M. each Wednesday for the last lecture of the day. We were tired and hot from sitting in stuffy lectures all day. With his heavy raspy voice, Dr. Lull would soon 'take our minds from our self-pity concerning our uncomfortable state and fill us with interest as he spoke of toxemias of pregnancy, threatened abortion, placenta previa and placenta abruptio-and we shall never forget his famous epitaph, Gentlemen, never tell a woman she is pregnant unless she really is. At Monday afternoon clinic in the pit Dr. Vaux, then head of the Obstetrical Department, officially opened the session with, Gentlemen-a ahem--today we have three very interesting cases to show you. It will be many a day-if ever4before we forget the meaning of Caldwell-Molloy, the treatment of post- partum hemorrhage, or the prenatal care of anemic and luetie patients-subjects which he repeatedly emphasized at these conferences. During various afternoons we were quizied by Dr. Tough-But-Gentlei' Spangler, Dr. What-Am-L Thinking Bernstein and Dr. I-Had-A-Patient-Comm Into-My-Office First, who quickly foimd the many loopholes in om' obstetrical armamentarium Cor cre- 'sl 94 All 'ti ci 0lEISTETRICS AND GYNECIILGIGY ated their own loopholesj and attempted to fill these cavities from their abundant stores of knowledge. A review of obstetrics at Jefferson would be far from complete without recalling Esquire-'s gift to the cle- partment, Dr. Mario Castallo-not Costello of Abbott fame-but C-a-s-t-a-l-l-o. Carnation, spats Con the 'cool morningsj, well-groomed wavy black hair accom- panied a friendly smile each Thursday morning at nine. Some of the lore of medicine in the form of brief obstetrical biographies were our weekly contribution to this hour and then we were plunged into the funda- mentals of disproportion, treatment of normal and abnormal presentations. forceps, post-partum compli- cations or uterine inertia. On several occasions the lecturing gentleman in question was seen to plunge into a mannequin belly to Crede an imaginary sluggish uterus or walk out of class wearing a moth-eaten derbyh at, but who ever heard of a baby being born by brow or any other presentation through a derby hat anyway? One thing is sure-we won't soon forget the moral behind each of these pedagogical antics. Top: You better get Dr. Giletto to check her Bollom: Now, Doctor, how would you handle this patientiv' a 3 nv -. . . K I K ' H S8 :fT ' M g . gg an . . we - ' W ' I - s X rw 'I ' W ' ,f s ., if A -- - . . .. was '1 ': ' 'S 5 is AE E . B E ..., , .- sa s- tg V M X if A i f -it if ' W fi H I -: gi s is E 2 ss an 2 I g s a E B gm a ' we ::: , H i if - ' fs s E, E E - , 206 The mechanics of obstetrics were successfully trans- ferred to our cerebral gyri via the able teaching of Dr. Ullery and Dr. Giletto and their cohorts. At a later date many a baby was delivered with the per- tinent words of these gentlemen echoing in oiu' ears as We bent over the hed in a small poorly lighted room of a negro home. The mannequins and imaginary babies that were brought down the arc of Cams and through the halo by which all candidates for immortality must pass were, in the hands of these men, real tools of instruction. .Also during the junior year we were required to observe six deliveries in the hospital-and woe to the fellow who fell short of the requirement-as the exponents of Jefferson obstetrics Cwe learned later that some procedures held in disre- pute in our classes were used with impunity and suc- cess clsewherej performed with the perfection they wanted all graduates to acquire. Here we started to learn the value of watchful, conservative obstetrical practice. At the end of our third year Dr. Norris Vaux closed a brilliant and very creditable teaching career when he resigned as Professor of Obstetrics, much to the regret of all the students to whom he had imparted so much practical knowledge. Dr. Thaddeus Mont- gomery, a Jefferson graduate, then the Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Temple University Top: Gyne O. P. D. Bottom: lst. 2nd, or 3rd degree tear School of Medicine, accepted the invitation of Alma Mater to become Co-Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology in charge ofthe Obstetrical Division. We all wondered what our new professor would be like and waited anxiously to meet him. Then Thursday afternoon, April 18, 1946, when Dr. Scheffey, like- wise Co-Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology in charge of the Gynecological Division, introduced his close friend as our 'new chief tutor of obstetrics, we relaxed because we knew then that Jefferson was to have as successor to Dr. Vaux a man equally great and earnest in his teaching. That afternoon Dr. Mont- gomery stepped in his modest way to the lecture stand in the pit, and, after a few brief words of intro- duction expressing his heartfelt satisfaction at being back at Jefferson, he proposed a new plan for the obstetrical department, that it might keep progress' ing and maintain its place in obstetrics as it had always done in the past. This program was to include for each junior a four or five-day residency at Jefferson Hospital to observe or participate in all deliveries during that time: we were sorry to have missed this valuable experience. NVe seniors were farmed out to smaller hospitals for twelve days and everyone of us returned with far more practical obstetrical knowl- edge than we had anticipated. In the Out-.Patient Department during our senior yeau- we learned proper prenatal and postnatal care under the able supervision of Drs. Carroll, Dugger, Bland, Fee, Goldberger, McCall. Brown, Giletto, Ullery, MacCarroll, Marcnus, Ruppersburg and others. Three mornings a week we were certain to gather good material for the book of humorous memo- ries. Exchanging our semi-professional white coats for the semi-glorified nightgowns we waited while Miss Tebbs-slender, fleet-footed, tireless-gathered the fforztiizllefl on Page 207D With Dr. David M. Davis holding sway, not only urology, but witticism had a grand and glorious field day. It was with little difficulty that he converted urological heathens, ridding us of any undesirable urological' eccentricities and rendering simple the etiology, pathology, mechanisms and other elements present in any thorough coverage of hydroncphrosis, stone, neoplasm, prostatism, etc. The ground work and fundamentals were presented with exceptional clarity and precision in weekly lec- tures during our junior year. However, it was in the Out-Patient Department work and ward rounds of our senior year that the superstructure and all the fine details of a proper approach to an urological problem were very adequately covered. How well we remember the vigorous, monumental and never-to-be-forgotten ward rounds of our senior clerkships. We learned urology in spite of ourselves, always feeling that we were in a sepulelue of dynastic majesty when Dr. The Master' and Smith 0 URIILIIGY Davis, gifted apostle of rhetoric, would prod and provoke us to greater deeds and thinking. How could we forget his 'tirades against fuzzy thinking prompted by cobwebs hugging cerebral hemispheresn and neg- ligence with respect to the profession in general and the patient in particular. Quite easily he could make us feel like mere contingent particles in the outer periphery if we failed in our purpose. Lack of pre- paredness on our part would inevitably bring forth an appropriate retort from our astute professor, who was always hopeful that he might resuscitate one of our number from the depths of incoherent thought or remove from our faces the expression which so resembled that worn by the martyred St. Denis. The gay satellites revolving about the master included Drs. Fetter, Baker, Bogaev, Drake and Kee- sal with Drs. Luhin and Smith residing, each with his own distinctive personality, lacking in neither knowledge nor color. Dr. F etter represented the dynamic, eifervesccnt, ever-moving and fast-thinking plumbing system expert, who would emit cyclonic yowlings that would rupture every ear drum within a thousand leagues if a student was not wholly cog- nizant of and informed about the urological problem at hand. Such exhibitions would leave the student with an expression varying from strangulation to hilarity. In glorious cul-de-sac tradition, sighing like a ferryhoat-often with his stomach out of humor- this gentleman would astound us with his philosophy as he described death as that impefishable lady at one's elbow, the inscrutable one who pounees upon us to exercise a last option, that unseen harlot ever at hand whose solicitations we prefer to disregard. He was no trivial mugger performing: he was a finished product, a fine urologist and a gentleman. Dr. Baker had an extremely kindly physiognomy- the sort characteristic of one who could never pass a beggar of alms without offering some contribution. He could be pictured as -a gentleman holding a coin gingerly toward an explorer of trash cans as if not wishing philanthropy to exceed the bounds of sani- cfl07I,f1.7lIlCfI 071 Page 316D V Uroflow personified .ami i THEBAPEUTICS The maestro mounted the podium amid a storm of applause. As he turned to acknowledge this ovation, his pleasant smile won us immediately. We were merely a large group of amateurs who had come from many parts ol' the country to sit under the leadership and training of this master and others of like calibre. This session was not an ollicial concert but one of the many practice periods which we were obliged to attend if we were to learn the many fine points which we would later use as professionals. This man was the esteemed Martin E. Rehfuss, under whose direction many already trained men worked 'together to produce harmony and introduce us to the art and science involved in a successful pro- gram. We had many rehearsals under the master's batong he always showed the same finesse and ability at handling even the most difficult composition. The Doctor and some visiting conductors spent several sessions stressing the various movements of the Suite de la Gastrique' with special emphasis on one score which had a familiar name- 0ul Cerdi Pepti- que. He had even perfected an instrument to aid in the complete understanding of this selectiong some of us had had trouble learning to use it in one of our basic courses before we officially met the Conductor. Assistant Conductor Wirts quietly increased our understanding of this suite. We could play the whole thing in our sleep before we had finished. Each of us was required to conduct a personal study of a single phase of one of the many masterpieces in the Conduc- tor's repertoire and retru'n it to him in simplified form. He, in turn, made copies of all these amateur works ,for the whole class so we could learn them and use them in future rehearsals and concerts. Or, perhaps, one day we would assume the podium oruselves-here or in another concert hall-and train those who fol- lowed in olu' footsteps. Each winter the Maestro journeyed south for a well-deserved rest. His position, poise and prestige had not come easily. Years had been spent in study. Some of this time he was busy learning in other landsg his favorite rendezvous was the homeland of the emi- nent composer and conductor, Louis Pasteur. Many of his interpretations were enriched by the results of such study and association. Even while Monsieur Prehfuss was not vacationing, he was exceedingly generous with the baton, so that all year we were led by men who were experts in their own section of the' great orchestra. Messieurs La Place and Sernisch were called upon to lead the lovely rhythmic Le Coeur, which composition, how- ever, was confusing because of its many accidentals. It sometimes became entirely arrhythmic, which did not alter in the least the dogmatism with which Semisch interpreted. Dr. La Place had directed many concerts during the war for the benefit of the armed forces so that his keen judgment was mellowed by a variety ol' experience. We shall never forget the occasions when Prof. Kramer's well-trained mind and hand 'taught us the fC'ont1'nz1efl on Page 3075 Carlos Finlay N ow when I was in Paris . . . ' ' ' was swf' ,Q SK 209 .J Say 'eeeeeee,' came the tones of the semi-authori- tative voice of a junior medical student. This request was invariably followed by sonorous guttural tones from a half-scared patient. Such noises as issued from that place! Was it the cheering section at a football gamei' No, it was only the Laryngology Out-Patient Department on a blustery winter morning. Flitting back and forth among the white-coated students were helpful nurse and busy secretary who provided us with the victims for our learning session. This energy was far from persistent in its manifesta- tions. Shortly before we had waited practically indefi- nitely for the appearance of a professor, an instruc- tor+anybody to guide our wandering minds and eyes to the realm of the nasal and oral. VVhen Dr. Wagers. Dr. Fox or one of their colleagues appeared in a ragged, reversed nightgown sort of garmentg we weren't sure that they didn't represent the janitorial staff. One morning after Drs. Kasper and McCallum staged a Foxy A LARYNGOLOGY friendly argument we still weren't sure. But the clinic was a valuable introduction to the numerous disorders ol' nose, mouth and throat which were so common. Ephedrine and its proprietary associates assumed new importance in providing comfort for the patient afflicted with the common cold. Transillumi- nation of the sinuses became almost as routine as history-taking, mainly because of its novelty to us. We had been told that relief ol' human suffering was one of our prime functions as doctors. That requisite was certainly effectively fulfilled when a peritonsillar abscess was incised and drained. Diagnosis and dilfer- entiation of lesions were picturesquely impressed on our minds by Drs. Kustin, Houlihan, O'Keefe and Lott. The first way-stations in the digestive and respiratory tracts were more than merely cavitiesg to us they became cavities with walls, the latter being marred by pus or polyp, diseased tonsil or disseminat- ing tumor. The only trouble was that cavity and Walls together became extremely active and elusive almost immediately upon the introduction of a laryn- geal mirror. For some patients mirror laryngoseopy was as undisturbing as an afternoon napg but from most folks this procedure evoked more gags than come from most radio comedians. In either case it was a satisfying accomplishment so see the glottis and watch the cords approximate-or remain stationary- during phonation. Thus were the early parts of our view of the practical aspects of this specialty. Generally speaking, our maximum amount ol' clini- cal work occurred in the fourth year but we never could understand why some departments provided somewhat of an anti-climax in the form of senior didactic lectures in the 'Kpit Cheld there mainly for atmosphereg the auditorium would have been much more comfortablej. Some of our professors would never realize our appreciation of their knowledge and their desires to pass the same on to us if such -appre- eiation were directly proportionate to attendance at noon lectures. But we had to get the material some- how. Very few of us would ingest Ballenger. VVe fContim:e1I on Page 311D Mirror men: glamor girl 0TOLOGY It all started in our junior year when we were as- signed to the Otology Out-Patient Department. We reported early and eager, thirsting for knowledge of the ear and 'its associates. We were particularly uncontrollable in our enthusiasm to investigate gum- mata of the middle-ear membrane and osteogenic sarcoma of the umbo, mysteries to which our learned professors had only alluded. We waited patiently in the warm, sunny room on the fourth floor of the Curtis Clinic. Some of us did not wait patiently. Others did not wait. Then, smiling cordially as he stepped out from behind a large roll book at 10:43 fwe had assembled at 10:00J, our lecturer proceeded to recite the names of various members of the section in order. Needless to say, all replied Here directly or by proxy. ' Our lectures were given under handicap. Specifi- cally, the speakers had mild voices, two thirds of the audience were asleep, and the passing trolley cars and other street noises interfered with perfect audi- tory reception. For example, we were being told that Shrapnell's membrane becomes inflamed under the following conditions Cand we strained to catch the pearls of wisdomj-but at that moment a safe fall- ing from the tenth floor of a building across the street landed on thc head of a passing policeman. The creek of his shoes was very disturbing. Another time we were to hear of the treatment of common lesions, but we missed that, too, in the general confusion attendant upon a lost pneumatic tube which missed its receptacle and went sailing through the room and out the win- dow to Tenth Street. And so it went. Our notes, for those who took them, were scattered, unrelated words separated by dashes and empty spaces representing pauses. These empty spaces were the bulk of the course. At eleven o'cloek daily the doors were flung open and a stampede of patients overwhelmed us. We were flung upon the patients, some of whom eyed us supiciouslyaothers, less experienced, hopefully. VVell, we tried. We at- tempted to examine and see. Of course, 'there was the usual run of errors. Someone in his haste seized a nearby proctoscope and attempted to insert it in the ear canal. Someone else used trichloracetic acid to wash out cerumen, and a third could be seen every week palpating the abdomens of patients until it was discovered that he was in the wrong department. Life was pleasant in those days-carefree and casual, interspersed with tricklings of knowledge. NVe were called in a group to observe the unusual, but ndth thirty necks craning into a six by four-foot space, the only unusual thing was the fact that we sometimes saw something-not the patient, though. To'make up for this loss, we had the audiometer to experiment with-ever a fascinating pastime when things were slow, that is, when there were only twelve patients apiece for the few men who stuck out the morning. The stall' tried hard to mold us in the otological press, but we were not easily shaped. It must have been discouraging when students used mastitis and fC07Zl'f7l?l,UCZ on Page 3121 Top: Who wouldn't smile? Bottom: Innocent patient: energetic juniors A quartet of white-clad figures stood calmly over a prostrate form on the operating table. Suddenly the silence was broken with the 'thundering clash of steel against steel. One of these figures was a chis- eler. Then all was silence, disrupted only by occa- sional murmurs. One of the hgures straightened his lanky form and called quietly, Abie, Abiel Tell Abie to come in here and Trendelenberg this tablel A flash of white glided into the operating room-but, wait, we're ahead of the story. Orthopedic surgery or Orthopedics and our class were formally introduced on a typical sultry July evening Call classes after live were considered part of the evening schoolj in the North Lecture Room of Dr. Gruber fame. ,Introductory lectures were old stuff by nowg it was Friday, the fifth day of a long week of opening lectures, and we were juniors and knew what it would be like. Dr. Martin soon pre- sented himself for our critical inspection and we were pleasantly surprised that there was none of that Strong arm UBTHIJPEDIC SURGERY professional shell around him which made too many of our profs seem an unapproachable distance above us. Friendly professor and lecture-weary class were soon in the throes of an etymological discussion. But this we took in stride. Words were clear and uncon- fusing to us ever since the course in classical languages which had been the basis of our freshman year in chemistry. Orthopedics was derived, of course, from the Greek or'thos'f meaning straight and the Latin pcs meaning afoot. Now wait, what was Dr. Martin saying? Orthos meant straight but pcs meant child -both from the Greek. Oh sure, we knew that all along. What we didift know was that there were so many disorders of the joints, mus- cles, tendons and bones, most of which had two names: one was descriptiveg the other was our ever-present nemesis, the proper name. As one lecture led to the next, we found we were picturing deformed people we had seen somewhere as our capable professor described various malformations and deformities. Remember that fellow in high school who used to waddle-he must have had two dislo- cated hips. And that man on Market Street with the clubfoot-or that little girl with the wry-neck who lives down on Main Street in our home town. Hereto- fore these unfortunate folks had merely caused us to stare, but now they became also medical entities with long confusing names. Why anyone should want to complicate a simple bunion with a name like hal- lux valgus was beyond our ability to comprehend. Dr. Hand struck a note of familiarity by talking about tuberculosis. Ah, here at last was a disease of which we'd heard before. But it wasn't many weeks before we were again lloundering in a new tidal Wave of unpronounceable names and each of these numer- ous disorders had its own method of treatment. We saw diagrams and samples ol' gadgets which ran the gamut from the first cousin of Dr, Shannon's micro- fflmztinzled on Page 306, 'iNow, Doctor, read this for us, please. PEDIATRICS The account ol' the Bauer Period reads like a fairy tale. For when men ol' Pediatrics felt ready to attack the Dicks in force, they had the advantage of having as their leader one of the most extraordinary figures in history. This was the famous warrior, Bauer, who, like all his cohorts-especially Serge Rye and Mady Son, was filled with the ambition to establish a Jef- ferson Empire. He came with Coppolino and Gior- dano, and with residents and internes. It was in the year of 194-5 that the fighting spirit, which stirred the hearts of the populace, expressed itself at those wonderful meetings-unique in the his- tory ol' nations-the Bauer meetings, with a mixture of pediatrics, politics, life and woe to the detail man. It is somewhat dillieult for us and almost impossible for outsiders to realize that, at each of a series of thirty meetings held in that memorable year, there gathered eighty, seventy, sixty and downwards to numbers countable on the digits until finally the royal roll was ushered in. In the Out-Patient Department the ancient laws were recited and confirmed, formulas given, diseases righted and weights adjusted. And, in accordance with the usual form at all assemblies, the history was recited by S. Tudent, who had many critics attending his every word and who, accordingly, dared not dis- tort one iota. And while plenty of poetic coloring and artistic exaggeration were undoubtedly permitted to the high king, the basic truths ever had to be pre- served inviolate. In regard to the high king, he had his royal seat transported with him and ruled with a steady hand, established his power and authority on a fum basis and dispensed a royal hospitality. Though much of his time was given to preparation of papers, fighting the Dicks and talking of Rheumatic Fever Cwhich he covered excellentlyj, whenever occa- sion offered he always proved himself to be a good fellow and a skillful strategist. Of course he had trouble with S. Tudent and his 'title as king was never fully admitted. At the confluence of Girard and a small street called Twenty-second was a college founded by one called Stephen, of which Bauer often spoke. Then on into the next year, wherein all met Holmes, Kapper, Burt and Burros and saw ward patients. One of the big meetings that year was held at PIT, the scene ol' the famous massacre of Wallace and Laski, still in the time ol' Bauer of Jefferson, but with MacNeill presiding. One hundred was the number said to have assembled there. fOur Army had a stadium war out in West Philadelphia that day.D This was the occasion of MacNeill discoursing on ery- thema nodosum, acromegaly, acromicria and denat- ting, the latter an incident that naturally aroused wild enthusiasm, not only in the huge gathering that watched but all over Jefferson. Finally, near the end of the year, the assemblage stood on tiptoe awaiting the word from Bauer, what- ever that word might be. And tens of tens of eager ones prayed that it might be a bold one. But Peace was the word given by the leaderg the PARTY had won. CHARLES B. HANES. Top: N umher,' please Bollom: . . .which reminds me of the recent administration z. sag 5 N A beaming midsumme r sun cast rays of ultra- violet and infra-red our way with unprecedented gen- ero 't . O ' ' ' A l ' S1 y h, It was great to be alive! Pounding waves, frolicking bathers, hot sands trickling between our toes-all this was the occasional week-end environ- ment for a privileged few of our number who could get away from the swelterin ' g city and the pressure of the freshman year at 1025 Walnut and 11th and Clinton. It was worth a crowded round-trip on jammed trains and buses just for the change of scenery. How we hated ourselves CPD l'or wasting all that valuabl e Llme and money on those week-end excur- sions to the Atlantic Coast when we could have had almost as much infra-red and ultra-violet and much more seclusion at Jefferson' A s own resort spot, better known as Schmidt's Beach. But we didn't learn all this until the junior year, when we spent live mornings in Jelfers0n's ground iloor organization, the Psgvchotherapy si a a vi a E i. W 214 PIIIYSIC L THERAPY Department of Physi al Tl , c ierapy, supervised by Dr. William Schmidt, alias The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, d' ' ' an his capable ass1stants, all of whom had forgotten more anatomy than we had ever known. Although this maze of rooms and machines in the Curtis Clinic basement was not constructed for pleas- ure, our first contacts with it all provided much amuse- ment. Nevertheless, hundreds of patients with vary- ing degrees of pain, muscular atrophy or a myriad of other difficulties were aided on their way to normal healthy living by these contrivances. Concurrently during the first half of the third year, Dr. Schmidt gave us sales talks, recounted personal experiences Qwhich proved to be bedtime stories for many of our numberj, and very reasonably explained the values embodied in the 1 ong-wave machine which every doctor should have in his office. We learned the principles underlying the use of short-wave dia- thermy and also that th ' ' ' e physical therapists coun- terpart ol' the psychothera static spark machine. The scalpel bowed in homage to the electric cutting current. Ridicule as we might during and after the lectures, we learned without hesitation in the previously men- tioned pseudo-resort that there peutic pink pill was the , was much value in many of these measures, especially when we had aching backs, chronic sinusitis or sciatic pain which responded favorably to the magical effects of the short-wave machine. There were ward patients, as well as out-patients, who experienced real comfort during the healing of fractures when their extremities were soothed by the whirlpool bath. Here we bewil- dered juniors found ourselves in the period of transi- tions from war to peace, from pre-clinical drudgery to 1' ' l gthy immo- es to the perlod ol early passive of adjacent parts. This latter was amiable leader in the field of Physi- arguments demanded our serious ClIl1C8 fascination, from the era of len bilization of fractur ' ' and active exercise the doctrine of our cal Therapy. I-Iis fC'ant'fm1erl on Page 305i Friendly Assistant Wizard E : war 1- - za 4 as N me ,A sa,'i'L A :Qi ' 2: -ir3'-5-' -?SEIi5i'3i:iF- N .. zz 1 s 'E 5. - ns :-as . sg... ,.I::z1:-sas:-:,2 - M sa- s- M as -- ,, V ' :its-WE: as fl is 2 s is i 5 . ri? U is ,. g . ,.a,iT,, .: .:, s .. at i an stag -'-- '-1 , ., . i f Xe if M as -. . .es - .... 5 - A s., W K- an B f 11 N i V, - -:- :: 1: .... ....... . M - avg ,Q .i s -'-'- I -1-I-rr nl - EF? F, E' 'i 4: . -:--.-.mai-z's,:Qis::::e5:::::l:-:-MF-'-:Sega-.:.:.:.. nw me - ' M B K t , -:' Q r W ,. as ' ti sa L C . e - if t Q . P W a W- . S H. s . s Eg gs-fm tam , w Q . W U 1 s V ,..,. E E .3 as - Tm 1- - , ,, W E d DERMATOLOGY A handful ol' us trickled into the pleasantly steamed north lecture hall. No thrill of expectation surged through our semi-collapsed veins-only a mild curi- osity stirred us from our shock-like state into the activity of attending a lecture. Today we were to be introduced to the mysteries of dermatology. Hence- forth a skin lesion would no longer be a skin lesion. It would be a polysyllabic word meaning skin le- sion. We eased our weary bodies into the soft wooden seats, curved our spines gracefully as we rested our shoes on the fellow's white lab coat in front of us. Sorry, we murmured, making a pitifully feeble at- tempt to raise ourselves from our restful slouch-to brush the dirt in. Suddenly, as our eyes were just closing,.a pleasant, professional, spectacled man entered. We respect- fully applauded. Needless to say, we were scattered well about the room to hide better the vacant seats. For even at this early date, some men had taken the easy way out. Our thoughts had hardly been brought to a conscious level when Dr. Knowles-for it was he-began to write on the board . . . Erythema ab igne, Erythema intertrigo, . . . Scarcely five min- utes later we were lost in a maze of vesicles, blebs, blobs, rashes, itches, etc., from which we have not yet emerged. Everything suddenly seemed red and macular, or was it blue and papulari' Dr. Knowles seemed to fade into a mist of confluent skin lesions. The blackboard seemed to have scales. Our papers were exfoliating. Then we were sound asleep-with only a pleasant hum of bullae and pustules in our ears. The lirst lecture was over. We were swept out in the rush of students. Dazed, we stumbled into the hallway. Oh, how much we had learned! Oh, how clear all 'those skin lesions were becoming! In fact, we might all become dermatologists. Next week was the start of a new era, however. No simple stories of punctiform ligneous plaques super- -imposed on a calcilic nodule raised above the sur- face of the skin. We dealt only in pigeons' eggs, hens' eggs, termite eggs, platypus eggs-split peas, navy beans-ad inlinitum-all neatly classified and This condition is full of blebs labelled with the name of a disease. Of course, there were overlaps. Sometimes pigeons' eggs and ostrich eggs were found in the same condition. But no mat- ter. Dip the patient in liquor carbonis detergens, or crude coal tar. Everything will slough off, leaving clean granulation tissue and a new lease on life. We studied subsequently general lesions and typi- cal rashes-and atypical rashes and non-general lesions. Nothing confusing-everything clear and distinct. Each dermatitis and eczema fthe definition of which is still somewhat doubtfulj was in a separate category. Each was something on which we could place our finger-which, of course, would require treatment. We studied athlete's foot and jock itch. Lice, crabs, scabies-all were in our domain. And surprisingly, that liquor carbonis detergens, fortilied with Fowler's solution and an escharotic, was hold- ing its own. A fContinuecl on Page 30.4.3 Dermatologists all 1 Neurology is a field still in embryo form. Like a young elm it is still sprouting and is dynamic and yet usually considered a somewhat diiticult subject to correlate. More than ordinary talents are required to render this specialty practicable and to put it on a sound and logical clinical basis. Quite fortunately we were weaned, neurologically speaking, by Dr. Ber- nard J. Alpers, one of the foremost neurologists in the country today. In our sophomore year we were presented with a series of ten lectures which acquainted us with the various types of neuropatholgical disorders, serving' as a background for clinical neurology. Not caring to risk his liberty during a time of bovine opinions and slaughterhouse verdicts, Dr. Alpers presented his course in unequivocal and precise terms. These pre- liminary lectures helped lree us from the kennel known as the Netu-ological Dog House. Under Dr. Alpers' Silence! Neurons at work NEURIILUGY tutelage, which took on a sedate Hsotto Voce type of magnificence, we were given a strong foundation in the pathology of the nervous system. All his classes were permeated with an atmosphere of ecclesiastical peace. This mild-mannered, completely composed professor olfered an interesting contrast with some of his more rabid patients who were quite capable of swearing even more eloquently than an irate interne. The next phase of our course consisted of a period in the laboratory wherein we painstakingly analyzed histologic sections of the many important and common neurological disorders. An air of elegant docility always predorninated in these hours as Drs. Schlez- inger and Forster listened to our complaints with sacerdotal patienceg indeed they had to be astute stoics at times. Many questions were asked of them lugubriouslyg no wonder they were abruptly possessed by glum moods at times. Our skepticism knew no bounds, vagrant cynics that we were. Our efforts proved to be tedious tribulations to our dear instruc- tors. In solace, one of them would occasionally retreat to cavort within the parentheses of Mr. Tolstoy's type of minor delirium. But they certainly were patient with us, until gradually we began to organize and understand these fundamentals of neuropathology. Yes, the weeping, wailing and gnashing of teeth were well worth it. ' During the junior year ten clinical demonstrations on neurological symptomatology without reference to syndromes or actual diseases were presented to us, who were now no longer neophytes. Among other things, the methods of obtaining a complete neuro- logical history and performing an adequate examina- tion were made clear to us. In the senior year we were exposed to ward rounds and patients. To interpret with any degree of accu- racy the conditions present, it was necessary to corre- late everything we had learned in lectures, laboratory and what little reading we had done. Actual contact with the patients afforded us not only the most fruit- ful source of information but also the most interest- CCont'z'mmrl on Page 309D Tumor or disc? 216 PSYCHIATBY As the sun's rays shine down on Philadelphia's pure air and spotless streets and exotic aromas are wafted from the sparkling Delaware, we find our brethren, already fatigued from the battle of the blackboards, struggling gallantly across the alley and wending their way toward the Clinical Amphitheatre. Such a haggard crew includes those of the brethren who, being music lovers, have not succumbed to the lilting strains of the trumpet at Garden State, those who have managed to escape the long arms reaching forth from the lounge for a 'Tourth g those who were not engaged in O.B. or HB. F. g and, not least, those who did not weakly cry, I surrender and crawl into the loving arms of the sack. One by one our faithful followers bravely enter the temperate atmos- phere of the more familiarly and appropriately known pit, descend the carpeted stairs, and gracefully stretch out on the softly cushioned seats. A few stand poised on the top step, toying with the hallucination that Matt'V' has just announced there will be no clinic. Shortly, however, they are brought back to reality as the door swings open and the 400 of Psychiatry enter. Another trip into the innermost recesses of the human personality is about to begin. The breth- ren dispose their arms and necks in various positions on the velvet-covered railings, the air-conditioning system hums merrily, and amid shouts of Beat Strecker and Down with Menningerf' Dr. Keyes steps forward. Exuding his usual calm geniality, the Chief gives us a few words of orientation and the spotlight shifts quickly to Dr. Kaplan. With an abundance of semaphore code and sign language for emphasis, Dr. Kaplan ably presents the history, show- ing us how such a seemingly insignificant incident as an extra helping of spinach during childhood has caused the patient to become an invctcrate Yo-Yo fan who came into the Accident Ward crying because the war had cut the Yo-Yo supply. The ever-fasci- nating story of the development of the normal, che- rubic child to the adult who is the complex inter- Weaving of normal with neurotic, the common yet amazing interplay of the familial, social and sexual Associate Professor YE ii f I . I v, cfii 1 lx 1 e:.::z.1',s:s' ,IT !. 1 factors, the ever-present battle of the individual with environment-form the background and framework found in the history. Then, with a roll on the kettle-drums, the patient enters the stage and the audience interest soars. Dr. Keyes takes charge, always questioning and explain- ing, yet always soothing the patient with his well- chosen words and helpful attitude. In the patient's own manner the important incidents and symptoms are related. The brethren are already analyzing in their minds the many factors making up the sum total and as the analysis proceeds, they are aided by the gentlemen in the front row. With a burst of enthusiasm, widely dilated eyes, and considerable flushing of face, Dr. Matthews adds a pertinent ques- tion or two, always clarifying and emphasizing for the student's benefit. Both learner and learned take part as the patient's every mode of behavior and inner- cC07Lf'ifL7l6lf on Page 2972 I remember a patient out at Byberry . . l teams. 217 Top: Deep thought-friendly Doc Boilom: It's really quite simple 218 oPnTnALMoL0a:Y The romantic history of England has been indelibly colored by the noble King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table. Equally fascinating in the lore of Jefferson Castle is the presence of the venerable and amiable King Charles of the House of Shannon. To his credit, among the achievements recorded in the annals of the ancient stronghold, are the many bands of brave and capable knights who have been tutored by his Majesty in the Ocular Arena, the scene of many exhibitions, duels and contests. Our group of sturdy young warriors had been ad- mitted to the famed teacher's instruction periods only after three years of rigorous preparation in other parts of the Castle. We were first greeted by his Excellency on a spring afternoon in the shining white arena, he approached us dragging a narrow black train and addressed us in booming amplified tones which could be heard for miles around. He wasted no time in lay- ing down a foundation of fundamentals. Early we learned to recognize our enemyg we had to look for the foe carefully because he had many various forms in which he appeared. One very keen detecting instru- ment had been issued to us shortly after our entry into Jelferson Castle but we had had no training in its use and so had iloundered helplessly until we met the man whom we now faced at our sessions once a week. It had been invented by Count von Helm- holtz, a German nobleman, and he had named it the Off Talmos Kopef' We really learned to use it in the foothills of the Curtis Mountaing here there were villains aplenty-Glaucoma, Cat o' Ract, A. Trofee, and the ignoble son of the destructive Arterie o' Scle- rosis family, Betin Al. Week after week, we met our noble tutor. He re- counted to us the sad story of an innocent subject who had fallen prey to the knave, Malignant Exoph- thalmos, and King Charles had been obliged to call on King Rudolph of the House of Jaeger Che ruled in another countryj to aid in relieving the poor fellow ol' his suffering. Many a person had been victimized by the sneaky robbers banded together under the name of Conjimctivitis: Catarrhal and Gonococcal were brothers who were in evidence far too often, much more than their cousin, Track o' Mah. Our leader was jolly. He had been trained in a day when court jesters were seldom seen, so had learned to provide his own humor, which proved to be as rare in quality as jesters had been in quantity. Almost every session was ended with an anecdote or two which set our friendly monarch to laughing with such contagious violence that the whole arena soon rocked with the mirth. A visiting nobleman, Sir Bacon, con- tributed to the ruler's repertoire of stories. King Charles did not try to manage all the instruc- tion alone. Sir Charles of the House of Hunt, along with his leader, showed us the various uses of the tiny swords which were to be part of our equipmentg they were used barehandcd in conjunction with a white coat-of-mail, white visor and white helmet. Many an enemy was vanquished by this arsenal of tiny weapons, ' CC'o'ntin'ued on Page 5293j R DIGLIIGY Now then, doctahs, you'll find your names posted downstairs on the bulletin board telling you when to visit the X-ray Department. So said Dr. Bennett early in our iirst-year anatomy lab course and we didn't object to an hour and a half of variety from the usual three-hour session of dissection to visit the Curtis Clinical Radiology Department. We were all exposed to the field of X-ray diagnosis, but the lankier fellows in our midst enjoyed the doubtful privilege of drinking a glass of barium sulfate suspension Q-very aptly called chalk j so that We chuckling onlookers could view their swallowing functions and Hsh-hook stomachs via the lluoroscopie screen. - By the junior year about all the most erudite of om' number could remember about X-rayliwas the loca- tion of the department. Sections A and B were the first to renew acquaintance, this time in the form of the much more practical and enlightening X-ray con- ferences held in the Pit each Wednesday from 11 to 12 in conjuction with medicine ward service. Now we were beginning to realize how muchvmore can be learned of any clinical subject fin this case radiologyi by correlating the patients as we meet them with their special studies, rather than by seeing, in this case, a disjointed group of roentgenograms. From there on in we were conscious of the presence, value and helpfulness of the X-ray Clinic and its products in diagnosis and treatment. During the third- year out-patient work in surgery and laryngology we saw only the familiar pink typewritten reports of uclouding of left antrum or no evidence of seques- tration, rather than the films. It's easy to ask in retrospect, Why didn't I stop down at X-ray and look at the films myself? when during the year we rationalized, Well, a fellow can't do everything. So we still didn't learn much about this X-ray business. Then about the beginning of the second half of year number three, Tuesday at two found one-half to two-thirds of our motley crew Bling into the bleach- ers of one of Jell'erson's more comfortable steam rooms, the ground floor auditorium, in our usual after- lunch state of semi-stupor. Our previous Tuesday blue-ellluve sessions were being replaced by a series of eighteen lectures by Dr. Swenson with an occasional substitution by Dr. Eberhard. To the sixty or sev- enty fellows who stayed out of dreamland for the whole sixty minutes there was some real value con- tained in these demonstrations, mainly of the various bone lesions and some lung and heart studies. We cer- tainly didn't even approach radiologic excellence but did learn to notice variations in density on a film, in the end, though, we weren't sure which were more dense-the films or our skulls. However, a boot-shaped heart and a fractured skull are only two of many phases of X-ray diagnosis about which we knew a bit more. VVe saw more of these two aforementioned gentle- meng they met us for a couple of hours once a week in JelI'erson's own air-tight demonstration room where, for five sessions, we were led through huge piles of CCont17n11erl on Page SMD ZI9 2' ' --It , Af 521-Liga..- . I ,, , . Y X l 'iw Lv i 5 X35 Q, V. X at fs ' f L f - 1 s is --1' '-jr?-, Qs 5 'i-Ani' . f 5- Q .5WLQg:,. -- g..', ' r:. T-J-1 .. 2- 1 5 , --gee, faq-h - xwseies . . - -we fi ff- , ,.i , , ge- f -- fa.--gnww. :ew ' Z gr . Q 4 QV . 19 fait' , f E1 'wg - In .e,,+1-'4!f15'i- - .1 . -,Sf-if-' we .s-may -.,,.-'F -E fy.-55.1, cs: . 'mfifgfif i' P1 gfifwygziwx . f3fgefgS-'5 i5Vi'ii 1 5l2'f 31-v- 'V-f-3' A jig 5129 , , ef '.r-is-, , ., ',..5A ., ya. ,..'gi:-- 1 f-' A 1-.lx if-1, 2: f . ' N- -.4f :ff'f ' ,5-'fzfiar - if aa.: ,.... . ,- .. ,.- ,eat ef:-M.-ref... -ees.--.--.ft ., ssiizzg' :,t'3:v 2 -1.11 . ' fini-fi, 5' . - Fa' f ' W'.f'v.'J ' is ' fl ,ij '15,-' 33, Sas' V 5452: ,- ei : ' -522-'15, Z1fS5231'fgf, f-: uyxafs-A-w-iif-Yffc,-y, We . -w ww., V. -Q-,K Q ,H .sr ' N f ' ,'4.,f, f':.., fffzs,- :.'r':23 'f 2 wi: :WF J 'EW .- .1 531 0 .515 ' F? T V W : - 'gov .. ... ,.f.. saw., is if p X . 'ffwfif 'A 's I x - X -. ,, was . ,af +L V .t 1 - 312- .1 ., J, f ' Mat' W .Huff ,H ,Ak sfs!5Qf..f,.m-.Q sfef Top: Radiation therapy Bottom: Pit-11-Wednesday-Teplick EDWIN E. GRAHAM, M.D. Emerilus Professor of Diseases Qf Children BROOKE M. ANSPACH, M.D Sc.D. Emeritus Projessor of Gynecology MERIT That time and Wisdom are inseparably re- lated is indicated by King S0lomon's proverbs, Happy is the man that flndeth wisdom. Length of days is in her right handf' We, who are young in years and medical experi- ence, realize that, although knowledge in- creases in its scope, basic wisdom remains unchanged. Men, who disseminated both wisdom and knowledge in these halls long Sc.D. NORRIS W. VAUX, M.D. Emeritus Professor of Obslelrics SOLOMON SOLIS-COHEN Emerzlus Professor of Clinical Emeritus Professor of Surgery RUFESSUB before we arrived, have been relegated by us to the past. We know them only as names, portraits or occupants of the yearbook page dedicated to.Emeritus Professors. This year We honor not only men of Jefferson's past, but also three professors whom we have known, from Whom We have learned and be- cause of Whom the title Emeritus Professor receives more than a passing glance. A P. MULLER, Sc.D., M.S., M.D. JOHN H. GIBBON, M.D. Emerilus Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery FIELDIN G O. LEWIS, M.D. Emeritus Professor of Laryngology FRANK C. KNONVLES, M.D. Ernerilus Professor fy' Dermalology ' JeiI'erson's library was established in 1898 when a reading room was rented on the site of the present Curtis Clinic. It moved into its present generous quarters in October, 1929, subsidized by a gift from the estate of Samuel P. Scott. This gift was in grateful appreciation of the service rendered by one of Jeifersonls professors to Mr. Scott in alleviat- ing him of hay fever. The library occupies the entire east wing of the main floor of the college building, having Samuel Parsons Scott Memorial Library Here in my library I sit, I Amid rare volumes richly boundg A mine of cleverness and wit, Fromauihors everywhere renowned. QUINCY KILBY. its stacks in the basement. It is equipped with the latest in up-to-date library fixtures. The furnishings are in Old English walnut, amid very comfortable surroundings. In this regard a new item has been added this year. In honor of twenty-five years of devotion to the library, the Alumni Association presented the Joseph J. Wilson Table, which will long remain as a tribute to Mr. Wilson's interest and service to the institution. It matches the corresponding furnishings, and is handsomely Am. nonnnr LENTZ Mas. nonsnr LENTZ :vuss MARION Fmrrz inlaid with a silver plate in commemoration of a librarian and friend. The library also houses part of Jefferson's Art Gallery, to which this year has been added a portrait of Dr. J. Marion Sims t1888D. There are over 44-,000 volumes in the li- brary and it subscribes to 381 medical periodi- cals of this country and Europe. Included among its possessions is the Pascal Brooke Bland Collection of four thousand rare books in gynecology and obstetrics. An exhibit, depicting the evolution of infant feeding vessels, from the clay bottles of the American Indian to the tin pots'of the Penn- sylvania German, was on display in the library during the month of November. Among the items included were not only the German pot- tery nursing bottle, the Japanese porcelain cup, and the English silver pap boat but also allied pediatric antiques such as the terra cotta rattle of Greece and the pewter nipple of New England. Excepting the Stone Age vessels, the earliest item was an unglazed pot- tery feeding bottle of Cyprian origin of circa 500 B. C. which was excavated from the tomb of a child. The library has continued to increase its number of early medical books: Dorsey's Elements of Surgery t1813Dg The Family Doc- tor 084555 and it has been able to get very early volumes of different journals among which is the first volume of the North Ameri- can Medica-Chirurgical Review, edited by Samuel D. Gross, then Professor of Surgery at Jefferson. But enough of history and age, for we must remember that this library is modern and up-to-date, not only subscribing to the latest medical journals and offering wonderful serv- ice, but going out of its Way by buying a micro-film reader and putting it to good use. Also in the matter of good books, at this writ- ing, it has come into possession of Brenne- mann's Practice of Pediatrics, Linde's Opera- tive Gynecology, Miller's Oral Diagnosis and Treatment, Fillmore's Clinical Radiology, El- wyn's Diseases of the Retina, and Guthrie's History of Medicine. There is also a library in the Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy with over nineteen hun- dred volumes, ten thousand reprints and nine hundred charts of human anatomy, embry- ology and histology, comparative anatomy, general biology and laboratory technique. The statfs of the libraries have been most helpful to us in our stay at Jefferson, and we, as seniors taking a last look backward, wish to thank them most sincerely. .CHARLES B. HTANTES. ' IN MEMCDRIAM 'GEIDRGE P. MULLEB, Sc.D., M.s., M.D., JUNE 29, 1871-FEBRUARY 18, 1947 Grace Revere Osler Professor of Surgery al J ebferson Nfedical College JUNE 1933 TO INIARCH 1946 Emeritus Professor of Surgery MARCH 1946 TO FEBRUARY 1947 224 rw 1 W J efierson Arlt Gallery All of us at one time or another must have commented upon the portraits which hang upon the walls of the college, but very few of us are cognizant of their historical background, their value, and that among them are to be found the works of some of the most noted portrait painters in the country. ' Of course the masterpiece is the Gross Clinic painted by Thomas Eakins in 1875 and has been the recipient of highest praise at exhibitions in Philadelphia and New York C19+l4j honoring the centennial anniversary of this great artist's birth. This much publicized canvas depicts the famous surgeon, Dr. Samuel D. Gross, frock coated and gloveless, removing a piece of dead bone from the thigh of a young man. Dr. Samuel W. Cross, the son of Prof. Gross, who suc- ceeded his father in the Chair of Surgery, is seen leaning against the side of the entrance way and in the extreme corner sits the mother of the patient, shielding her eyes from the horror of what is happening to her son. Thomas Eakins studied anatomy here at Jefferson, under Dr. Pancoast, attended Dr. Gross' clinics and later taught anatomy to prospective artists at the Philadelphia Academy of Art. Thomas Eakins also painted the portraits of Dr. Benjamin Band and Dr. William Smith Forbes. Dr. Band occupied the Chair of Chemistry from 18611 to 1877 and served four years as Dean. Dr. Forbes drew up the Anatomical Act of Pennsylvania in 1867. Both paintings are considered excellent evidences of his skill. Another valuable canvas, that of Dr. Thomas Dent Mutter, Professor of Surgery, 1861-1866, was painted by Thomas Sully, one of early America's most renowned artists. It was Sully who painted 'Washington Crossing the Delaware. Dr. Mutter's portrait hangs upon the east wall of the library. The portraits of Dr. Joseph Pancoast, Professor of Surgery and Anatomy, 1847-187113 Dr. Samuel D. Gross, and Dr. Charles D. Meigs, Professor of Obstet- rics and Diseases of Wom.en and Children, 1841.-11.861, are all evidences of Samuel B. Waugh's meritorious efforts. Dr. J. Chalmers Da Costa, Professor of Surgery from 1900 to 1933, was painted by Blossom Farley. Due to Dr..Da Costa's inability to get around in his later years, this painting had to be made from sketches of him, drawn in the surgical clinics. Dr. Thomas McCrae, Dr. Albert P. Brubaker, Dr. Hobart Hare, Dr. Bandle Boseberger, Dr. Henry E. Badasch, Dr. E. Quin Thorton, Dr. Elmer H. Funk, Dr. Henry K. Mohler, Dr. George A. Ulrich, Dr. Boss V. Patterson, Dr. B. Howard Band, plus many other portraits in the library, halls of the col- lege, lecture 1'ooms, and entrance to Curtis Clinic tend to bring .leflierson's collec- tion to completeness. This year, the graduating Class of 1947 had Norris W. Vaux, Emeritus Pro- fessor of Obslpetrics, painted. Dr. Vaux was Professor from 1937 to 1946 when he retired. He received his medical degree at the University of Pennsylvania in 1905. He interned at the Pennsylvania Hospital from 1905 to 1907. He took a special course at the Botunda Hospital, in Dublin, Ireland. He became a Fellow of the American College of Surgeonsg member of the American Medical Associa- tiong American Gynecological Societyg and the Philadelphia County Medical Society. CHARLES B. Himns. 226 14 ..f.. vw. J. fu .v.,:w--- uw.,-Q ,I !'E:4i-'g1,g'.5.' g+qw:.H?f,Lg: 1' S? xfwalz-W -' vf1?qHTf A 'fix' LW A-riff' ' 7,-':GrTf + X - LE '31 4 'ff5,f ' , ,mf-alff WI , V 42,151 'fiiif-'f'f2fTl ,W , . 551'-lg-.,. , , ' A 5.13-5 ii! 4 f A , ' W ' -7511 -- , IV, M ' Z ' I 'I lm g U . ffiif' 01+- A .L vl-ygil . f m ,giL41-'mm M m p N I gfggezilmh ggi-. ' , , ' .E f Qgaflfmagkp i ' -1. 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Bs. a a mg an a a -za D1 aa E W WEM- aa a a gs: a Ea aa Wk WR? Q a a mai aijm Ea a agaia --Q-.-an af a a aa am! aa an E'a a a aaa a Va E a axis a ga aa aa a gm :E H a ' aaa aaaam aa aa na aaa a am aa gaaw,-:aaam asesa aaaaa a a a:-Ea PHI BETA PI OFFICERS PAUL C EISEMAN ...... EARL S. MOYER ........... JAMES J. O'CONNOR, Jn .... . GRANT D. STELTER. . . GEORGE J. O'DONNELLl 11' .... JAMES B. LOFTUS ..... CHARLES J. DE VVAN. . JAMES M. MONAGHAN .l . l '.'. ......Arehou . . . . Vice-Archon . .... Secretary . . . . . .Treasurer . . . . . . .Steward House Manager Social Chairman . . . . . .Chaplain FRATRES IN FACULTATE Charles M. Gruber, M.D. Horace J. Vllillinms N. A. Michels, Sc.D. 'George A. Benneu., Andrew J. Ramsey, L. F. Appleman, M.D. I.. S. Carey, M.D. ll. F. Haines, M.D. John VV. Holmes, M.D. F. H. l'lusl.ed, M.D. J. B. Lownes, M.D. P. A. McCarthy, M.D. F. J. Putney, M.D. VV. M. Hari., Ph.D. J. L. Roark, lVI.D. J. Rudolph Jaeger. M.D. , M.D. NLD. l'h.D. C. T. Townson, IVI.D. J. J. De Tuerk, M.D. C. E. Lawson, M.D., A. J. Vllagers, M.D. VV. C. Vllilson, M.D. C. VV. YVirls, M.D. F. W. Ellis, Pl1.D. E. Ross Hart., Ph.D. J. Slnsney, MQD. William Martin, M.D. M. Noble Bates, Ph.D. Thomas M. Sco'l.Li, M.D. Harry J. Knowles, M.D. Francis M. Forster, .M.D. Fred. B. Wagner, Jr., M.D' James Webster, M.D. Carl T. Houlihan, M.D. SENIORS Joseph T. Zukoski Charles J. De lVan - Thomas NV. lVleran Joseph A. Diori Edgar C. Smith Andrew J. Welxler Donald H. NVaI:kins Leo J. Corazza William C. Davis Danle E. Nlarinu James T. Helsper Richard M. Sproeh David NV. Bostian VVilliam J. YVoodward Charles B. Hanes Alfred Broekunier, Jr. J UN IORS . Thonias E. Douglas James B. Loftus Roherl. G. Brown James J. O'Connor, Jr. Earl S. hfloyer Vllilliarn E. l'eLerson Richard J. Potter Paul C. Eisemun Charles G. Franeos Albert J. Fingo George J. O'Donnell Oscar M. XVeaver, Jr. Edward F elder SOPHOMORES Richard A. Carlson Slanley F. NabiLy Charles R. Hamillon Hiehard P. Avonda Henry M. Perry John F. Morrissey Grant D. Stelber Jack R. NVoodside C. Donald Frey George M. Clclan Joseph J. Gormley Park VV. Hunt-ington FRESITMEN Donald B. Lewis Edward H. Bflalia Chauncey G. Paxson, Jr. NVilhur J. Harley Eugene W. Beauchamp, Jr. Theodore B. Thoma Charles R. Heukelmunn Byron E. Besse , James D. Barnes James M. Monaghan Joseph Bla Ma Eta Chapter The history of the Eta Chapter of the Phi Beta Pi Fraternity is long and eventful, dat- ing back to its founding on March 7, 1902. The Hrst chapter was founded at the Western Pennsylvania Medical College, now known as the University of Pittsburgh, on March 10, 1891, by a group of thirteen menwho banded together for the express purpose of protect- ing its members from the evils of the frater- nity situation at that time. I From such a beginning this line fraternity has developed and today is made up of thirty- seven active chapters and over two thousand active members with many thousands more alumni members. The chapter lists in its mem- bership many outstanding men of the faculty. The chapter house is one of the fine old homes of mid-town Philadelphia at No. 1032 Spruce Street. CDBH PHI ALPHA S GMA OFFICERS JUNIORS . JOSEPH ll. GREELEY ....,...... ...... l 'rimarius Robcrl C' Luniug Clmrlcs ph Carson C. F. B. SIVIITH ...,.....,....... ..., S uh-Priinarius ylyimum JA Cassidy John B- Aglkinson RICHARD T. SHAAR .... .....,...... C uslos John IL Grimm, Jr' Sidney Hoy Cable ROBERT C- LANING ---- - - -Assislmll' Cuslos Robert J. Carahasi Theodore E. Patrick LARRY B. GALE .........................,.. Scribufs James W' Daly Donald J. M,,D0,1al,i FRATRES IN FACULTATE C. R. Heed, M.D. A W. B. Swartlcy, M.D. J. L. Richards, IVLD. T. K. llathmcll, M.D. J. B. Montgomery, M.D. J. F. Carroll, M.D. H. S. Harnbo, M.D. C. E. G. Shannon, M,D, E. Britt, M.D. L. C. Schelfey, BLD. li. W. Mohler, M.D. NV. B. Davis, NLD. C. C. Fox, M.D. S. Q. VVesi., M.D. D. R. MacCarroll, M.D. YV. T. Lemmon, M.D. R. Churr, M.D. li. Higgins, M.D. J. McCloskey, M.D. SENIORS Joseph M. Danyliw John J. Gulfney Joseph P. McGee, Jr. Edwin M. Nlszanowski C. F. Brooke SmiLh William L. Fidler, III Joseph P. Greeley Raymond N. MacAndrew George R. Reinhardt William A. Terheymlen, Jr. Richard G. Kirchner W'illiam V. McDonnell Edward J. Meehan Richard T. Shaar 230 Larry B. Gale Edward J. Jahnke, Jr. Charles C. Goodman Ralph J. Schlosser ' SOPI-IOMORES Thomas Piekenhrook Paul de Villors Carl Zenz Edward Chmelewski Thomas Head John Apple Alfred Snyder Robert M. Velto Frank Au Samuel Cleveland Gerard Shannon Leonard Tanner Thos. E. A. von Dedenrolh FRESHMEN Harry Harper John Lopes John MoGuigan Michael Nardi Joseph Tabasco Raymond Tureotle Louis Crews Leonard Erdman Frank Farrell Thomas Gozowski Bernard Hyland Patrick Mazza Fred Fay Albert Foster Delta Chapter The Phi Alpha Sigma Medical Fraternity was founded in April, 1886, by a group of students at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College for the purpose of furthering the social, scientific and moral interests of its mem- bers. Thirteen years later, on April 12, 1899, through the elforts of the fifteen charter mem- bers, encouraged and assisted by Professors George E. de Schweinitz and Hobart A. 1-lare, Delta Chapter was established at Jefferson. Since 1935 the chapter house has been at 313 South Tenth Street. The chapter lists over six hundred Jefferson alumni as its members and looks forward to adding many more. CDAZ Nu Sigma Nu was founded in 1882 at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, Mich. Rho Chapter Was estab- lished at Jellerson eighteen years later. Since that time Rho Chapter has welcomed many E. OFFICERS C. J. RODGERS .....,.......... 'NORMAN J. QUINN ..... RICHARD M. LANDIS .,.. ROBERT D. HASTEDT .... ROBERT S. BRENNAN .... HARRY J. HURLEY, Jn.. . . . . . . . . . .President Vice-President . . . . .Secretary . . . .Treasurer . . . .Historian . . ...Custodian FRATRES IN FACULTATE L. Bauer, M.D. T. A. Shallow, M.D. I-I. T. A. Reimann, NLD. Montgomery, M.D. J. R. Martin, M.D. G. G. Garltuul, NLD. E. B. Hume, M.D. VV. Livingston, M.D. J. J. G. J. I.. R. Hodges, MID. T. Ends, M.D. M. Nelson, M.D. R. Moore, M.D. R. R. Layton, M.D. . S. lN'Ioore, M.D. W. 'l'hu4lium, M.D. Il. Bookharnmcr, M.D. T. J. Costello, M.D. L. R. Llljllilllli, NLD. T. D. Cutlle, M.D. L. Munges, Jr., M.D. W. Weakley, M.D. P. H. Reeder, M.D. M. Hinebuugh T C. M. Spangler, M.D. T. Armstrong R. Bowen, Jr. F. Burkley Lawrence Cahnll D. H. MCG-ec David B. Heller Jeremiah H. Lee J. ' C. M. Barsky, Jr. J. Rodgers SENIORS Rohert BI. Swarlley Arthur R. Vaughn, Jr. John F. Slruvc William A. Phillips W. F. Cox, III William U. Reidt Elmer II. Funk, Jr. John Healey Nathaniel Yingling and, in turn, sent out many, and has always been among the leaders in academic, profes- sional and' social affairs at Jetferson. The present chapter house is at 1106 Spruce Street. ho hapter of NU SIG NU Roburl. A.- Berger Thomas R. Brooks Craig R. Clark Joseph Conroy Alexander Gonlurd, Jr John Rushton, III James Il. Evans Charles D. F'osLer, III Robert. D. Hustcdl. JUNIORS Barrel1I.H Heckler Richard L. I-Iuber James F. Kleckncr Jolm M. Kohl Richard M. Landis Norman J. Quinn Robert. Slnurr, Jr. Curtis H. Swartz David IV. Thomas, Jr. SOPHOM ORES Harry J. I-Iurlcy, Jr. Robert. S. Brennan Robert Taylor Howard Easling Edward F. Purcell Franklin Gilber lson Dnvid J. Keck Frank E. Brown Mark O. Camp William R. Clark Marshall L. Clevenger Thomas J. Dougherty George L. Donaghue John R. Evans Albert. C. Haas NVilliam B. Holman FRESHM EN .Kimball C. Kaufmann Paul W. Luyden James R. Milligan Richard L. Murlland A. Meade MurLlanLl Richard D. Owen William Schmidt Hal E. Sncddcn Andrew A. Sullivan Hugh B. xv00dXVill'll NZN OFFICERS PETER HUNT SHQERSHIN .... WILLIAM A. RANSON ...... DANIEL S. ROWE ........ CHESTER F. CULLENN ROBERT S. LACKEY HAROLD L. STRAUSF1 ' CHARLES A. MILLER RICHARD A. HASTINGS ...... CHARLES W. ANDERSON .... LAWRENCE K. BOGGS L HENRY K. SHOEMAKERV ' ' ' . . . . . .Presiding Senior . . . . .Presiding Junior . ........ Secretary . ..... Trensurers . . . . .Judge Advocate . . . . . . . . .Hislorian . .... Guides FRATRES IN FACULTATE M. E. Rehfuss, M.D. J. M. Surver, M.D. E. R. Miller, M.D. L. LI. Rankin, M.D. B. L. Gordon, M.D. A. S. McCallum, M.D. E. Boyle, Jr. ' W. J. Browning, III L. F. Corley J. H. S. Foushee M. E. Hams R. A. HasLings W. C. Herrick C. N. Hickman P. H. Jernstrom A. R. Jones, Jr. L. E. Jones S. V. King R. P. Alcxunder R. W. Alexander C. VV. Anderson W. H. Anneslcy, Jr. A. M. Lupton, M.D. V. H. Moon, M.D. J. E. Thomas, M.D. A. S. Kaufman, M.D J. H. Dugger, M.D. R. Millibr, M.D. SEN IORS E. J. Klopp J. A. Kolles, Jr. J. J. Molieown J. U. Oliver K. B. Pace J. R. Pender, III J. R. Reynolds A. G. Schran P. H. Shershin T. L. Stokes G. F. Tibbeus E. M. Tbpp, Jr. .IUNIORS J. E. lNIuKinney W. A. Ransom C. J. Rominger D. S. Rowe M. N. Croll R. A. Schofield C. F. Cullen H. Slgenhonse D. M. Feigley XV. B. Shopc R. K. Finley E. Seull J. B. Gcnrren E. C. Smixh M. Hill T. Turner J. E. Hughes W. E. Sheeley J. W. Kress E. L. Webb R. S. Lackey R. C- Willie AD. S. lVIuslaud J. Vlfeyhcr SOPI-IOMORES L. lx. Boggs D. O. Booher W. E. Boyer, Jr. F. VV. Deck, Jr. R. Z, Hurt. C. W. Huff R. Johnkins W. B. Kinluw, Jr. P. J. Kulzz C. A. Miller, Jr. A. E. 0. Orlidgo H. K. Shoemaker H. L. Strause E. Childers L. W. Colfer Lh V. J. Fredrickson T. Forker E. L. Grandon F. Hendrickson FRESHMEN A. S. Rogers J. P. Sargent. D. K. Sass J. R. Titus F. J. Vossenherg O. K. Wilund Chi Chapter C of PIII CIII The Phi Chi Medical Fraternity was estab- lished in 1905 by the union of the eastern and southern Phi Chi Fraternities. Chi Chapter of Phi Chi was organized December 9, 1903, through the efforts of John Warcl., a transfer student from the University of, Louisville Medical School, and Harry Carey. The chap- ter is at present governed by a board of trustees composed of Drs. Rankin, Kaufman and Gordon. The present chapter house is at 1025 Spruce Street. f. Q . .r- Sgse 'ff P! P90 f V ie. Q X QQ THE A KAPPA P I OFFICERS JUNIORS LAURENCE A. MOSIER ........ ...... P resident Leonard F. Bender John G. Jones THOMAS A. E. DATZ ..... . . .Vice-PresidenL Donald G. Birrell Gordon Liu HENRY J. TEUFEN, Jn. . . ...... Secretary Thomas A. E. Datz Charles H Loomis ROY DECK .............. .... 'I 'reasurcr Roy Deck Stephen E. Puseucei FRAT J. Chelenden, M.D. J. O. Cricler, lU.D. H. B. Decker, M.D. 'l'. R. FeLl,er, M.D. R. S. Grillith, NLD. Robert I-I. Baker Lawrence F. Casale Alfred S. Cook, Jr. J. Mackie Corson Byron T. Eberly John li. Helll' Bruc RES IN FACU LTATE C. W. Kissler, M.D. J. B. Lady, M.D. D. E. Morgan, M.D. WV. H. Perkins, M.D. 0. T. Wood, M.D. SENIORS Benjamin Lawrence Gail G. L. Li John J. Meehan Charles E. Miller Laurence A. Mosier Robert, G. Rhoda Rudolph De Persia Francis R. SCllNl'8l'lfZ Daniel L. Shaw SOPI-IOMORES Gerald M.'Brenemun John R. Healy Marvin lvf. Lindell Fred D. Macwilliams Thomas D. Nliehael H. Phelps PoLLcr Robert E. Schulz Henry J. Teufen, Jr. George B. Voight Howard R. Vlfagenblast lllartin H. NVnlraLh FRESHM EN Roberh C. Bair Joseph J. Blake Leonard M. Del Vecchio John C. Frommelli Albert. H. Helm Franklin C. Hill, Jr. Glenn li. Leonard NVilliam B. NIeNamee Ralph D. llloyer, Jr.. James A. Shafer c Van Vranken Thomas W. Watkins , 236 4 Beta Eta Chapter Beta Eta Chapter of Theta Kappa Psi was installed at Jefferson Medical College in 1912 as a chapter of the Kappa Psi Medical and Pharmacological Fraternity. In 1924 through a dissolution of Kappa Psi, Beta Eta was granted a charter in Theta Kappa Psi Medi- cal Fraternity. The fraternity has rapidly advanced until it is nowione of the leading fraternities at J elf erson. The chapter house is located at 919 Clinton Street. GJKXF David Riser Irving Blumlicld Scott Boley C. Harold Cohn Murray Kahn Joshua Fielul AI Gelhs llnul Levy Milton Linuull' Louis Baron Robert. Colcher Donald Franks . .31 . 1- '9' I A U Bel OFFICERS WILLIAM ABRAMS .,........... ..... S enior Couneii RICHARD SMIGELSKY .... ..... S enior Senator STANLEY ZEEMAN ..,,. .... J unior Senator MURRAY KAHN ......, ........,. S cribe MELVIN SCHNVARTZ .... ....... T reasurcr RICHARD ROVIT ...... ......... H is torizzn HAROLD ROVNER .... . . .Sergeant-at-Arms FRATRES IN FACULTATE B. J. Alpers, M.D. B. lVciss, M.D. B. Lipshutz, M.D. J. B. Bernstinc, M.D. D. W. Kramer, M.D. R. Chodolf, M.D. D. M. Brooks, M.D. H. Goldburgh, M.D. A. Copper, M.D. A. Rechtnman, M.D. J. Vifuldman, M.D. N. Schlezinger, NLD. A. Rakolf, M.D. D. M. Farrell, NLD. A. A. Burros, M.D. G. Israel, M.D. J. Aspcr, M.D. A. Brunswick, NLD. A. Cohen, NLD. Ni. S. Sussman, M.D'. S, Kcesal, M.D. William Abrams Alan Blumhcrg Robert. Jaslow David Krevsky SENIORS Melvin Samuels Richard Smigclsky Chester Trossmzun Harold W'urzel .IUNIORS Ralph Lev Alan Michelson Stanley Zeeman Henry Liss Melvin Schwartz Harry Zutz SOPHOMORES William Lincofl' Nlortimer Nelson Samuel Silberg Otto Lilium Le Roy Neurnan Irwin Smurr Gerald Mawks Sheldon Rodnnsky Juek Weinstein Pnnl Mnlly Harold Rovner FRESHMEN A Marvin Goldstein Morton Lipshutz Charles Silbermnn Leonard Grunthal Donald Meyers R0hf'3l'L Stein David Jaffe Morton Roseublatt Arthur Steinberg Robert Kurnofsky Richard Rovit 238 Mu Chapter of P111 DELTA EPSIEAIN Several students at Cornell University Medical College in 1904 organized the first. chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon. Following this many chapters were rapidly formed and in 1911 Mu Chapter was chartered, at Jellerson. The lraternity has always furLl1ered Lhe at tain- lnent and maintenance of a high standard of morality and a high conception of medical and worldly ethics on the part of its men. The chapter has recently acquired a new chapter house at 913 Spruce Slreet.. OFFICERS JOHN J. DOWLING ........... ......... P resident .JAMES J. HUIVIES .,....... ..., V ice-President HERBERT S. BOWMAN .... ....... S ecretary HOVVARD L. SHAFFER .... . . .Treasurer FRATRES IN Arnhnr E. Billings, lVI.D. James Carty, M.D. Louis Clerf, M.D. Sherman Eger, M.D. Kenneth E. Fry, M.D. ll. R. Hamriek, IVLD. Harold W. Jones, M.D. Kelvin A. Kayser, M.D. Willard H. Kinney, M.D. Frank C. Knowles, lVI.D. Fielding O. Lewis, lVI.D. FA CULTATE Charles I. Linhgen, BLD. RoberL A. Mahlhews, BLD Carroll R. Nlullen, lVI.D. Robert Bruce Nye, NLD. S. Dale Spotls, 1VI.D. Harry Slinckerl.. M.D. Charles NV. Semisch, lVI.D Norris VV. Vanx, ll'I.D. John C. Ullrey, lW.D. I-Ierberl. A. Widing, M.D. George J. Willaner, M.D. S ENIO RS John P. Allan Frederick W. Bode, Jr. I-Ierherl. S. Bowman Benjamin F. Burns WVilliinn P. Coghlnn Y Ellwood C. xvllllillll A. Cull John J. Dowling George J. Genserner John E. Goekler Chas. T. McChesnny, Jr. Weise, Jr. JUNIORS Joseph Bartos John DI Bealer Thomas F. Blake Velio E. Berardis Donald Cornley George J. HaupL Eugene P. Hughes, Jr. James J. Humes Howard L. James Kessel Edward L. Lancaster, Jr. Clifford B. Lnll, Jr. Thomas J. Meliride John L. McCormack George .l. Nassel' Clermont S. Powell George Pechstein Shail'er ' SOPHOM OIKES Joseph .M. Chinruvollotli George B. Farrell lVilliarn J. Kuzman Dunne ll. Larkin Benjamin E. Longenccker L. Craig Nlaebeth Hoherl, L. Michael Frank E. llflelllrcc John J. O'Neil Rrlwnrd H. Robinson Henry A. Roman XYilliam T. Sallee Ford C. Spangler George li. Spong John L. lveaver lliehnrd M. Whittington George A. lvineh FRESHM EN John H. Ball Edwin I. Cleveland Cnrler F. Cort Drew E. Courtney Vincenl. P. De Augnsline Richard V. DnlTey William P. Eagleharl. Allwerl. J. Grant James R41-lodge James B. Jamison, II Ernest. H. Jensen Harry H. Kanner Nvillium F. Kraft John C. Lychuk George W. O'Brien - Gerard J. Peters Carl G. Pierce, Jr. Joseph L. Pond Joseph J. Rowe Gerald F. Siznmerxnan Richard H. Smith Aris M. Sophocles Howard E. Strawcutter John F. Thompson Epsilon Chapter of ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA On January 6, 1900, twelve years after the inception of Alpha Kappa Kappa at Dart- mouth College, Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia witnessed the formation of the Epsilon Chapter. Incorporating into it many of the outstanding men of the faculty, it strove to more closely approximate the ideals and ethics of Hippocratic medicine. The present chapter house is at 317 South Eleventh Street. PIII RHO OFFICERS ' SIDNEY M. BASHORE ...... . . . ........ President VICTOR A. BRESSLEH .... ..... N 'ice-President REYEB 0. SWAN ....... ........ S ecrctzxry LOUIS IOZZI. , ......... ..... . Treasurer FRATRES IN FACULTATE Thomas Aeeto, M.D. Joseph Bigley, M.D. Edward F. Burt, M.D. Mario Cas Izallo, lVI.D. John F. Coppolino, M.D. John De Carlo, M.D. Basil J. Giletto, M.D. Lorenz P. Hansen, Pl1.D. Patrick J. Kennedy, lVI.D. Robert M. Lukens, M.D. Clilford B. Lull, M.D. Joseph Aceto David J. Aholofia Sidney M. Bashore Hubert B. Funch Normun M. Macneil, M.D. James F. McCahcy, IVLD. Angelo M. Perri, M.D. Louis Roderer, M.D. Stanley Roscoe, M.D. Richard Srni th, M.D. Paul C. Swenson, M.D. Vlfilliam J. Tourish, M.D. Creighton H. Turner, lVI.D. E. G. Vlfillinmson, M.D. John F. Wilson, MID. SENIORS Ross S. Funch Albert J. Kraft VValter WV. lvloore John Surmonte Robert Yannacone 242 SIG J UNIORS Dennis A. Boyle Menus McGettigan Joseph L. Carroll, Jr. George F. Risi Patrick J. Frank Roberto C. Rodriguez Stephen B. Vassnlotti SOPIIOMORES Victor A. Bressler C. Alton Collis Peter L. Eichman Canzio E. Giuliucci Stanley J. Guseiora Vlfilliam E. Hart Louis Iozzi Carl J. May Emil Capito Maurice M. Meyer Gust Mourut John D. Paul George Popp Northern L. Powers Hector F. Rodriguez Amos V. Smith Reycr O. Swan J uun E. Veve FRESHMEN William A. J oy R. Charles Derrickson Darrell C. Stoddard William H. Wincliell Rho Chapter The Rho Chapter of Phi Rho Sigma was founded in 1905, and has pledged itself as always in maintaining its threefold purpose of promoting good fellowship among medical men, encouraging high standards of profes- sional work, and assisting by every honorable means in the advancement of its members. The chapter lists among its alumni many im- portant members of the faculty. The present chapter house is at 911 Clinton Street. OFFICERS ELLIS SILBERMAN ..... MARVIN RHODE .......... ......,.. AB RAHAM PERLMAN ..,.. .... . Recording Secretary SIMON MARKIND ....... ................Tre:1surer HOWARD J OSELSON ........ Corresponding Secretary FRATRES IN FACULTATE S. A. Lowenherg, M.D, Benjamin F. Haskell, M.D. Abraham Cantarow, M.D. Moses Behrends, lVI.D. Harry A. Bogaev, M.D. ArLhur First, M.D. Marshall M. Lieber, M.D. Mitchell Bernstein, M.D. Martin J. Sokololf, M.D. Leopold Goldstein, M.D. Samuel T. Gordy, M.D. David H. Solo, M.D. Joseph Aspel, M.D. Thomas Horwitz, M.D. Leon L. Berns, M.D. Edward H. Kotin, M.D. George A. Silver, M.D. Ephraim M. Rossett, M.D. Arnold Goldberger, M.D. Samuel E. Bynes, M.D. Jacob M. Cahan, M.D. Col. L. Leland, A.U.S.M'.C. SENIORS David Hausman Herbert Kramer Sidney Lerner David Levin Martin Mandel Alfred Mintz Marvin Rhode Stanely Weinstein Sidney Wolfe Samuel Younger J UNIORS Sol Balis Moyer Edelman Edwin Gordy Paul Lune Ellis Silberman Raymond E. Sylk Emanuel Tulsky SOPHOMORES Jack Bascove Richard Ellis Eugene F eldermnn Norman Fisher Stuart Hamburger Joseph Hopen Howard J oselson Russell Kesselman Simon Mnrkind Howard lvfazer Abraham Perlman Edward Sal Lzman Irwin Smith FRESHMEN Philip Escoll Martin Goldberg ' Milton Greenberg Lester Kaiser Murray Kessler Bernard Kirshbaum Henry Lcsse David Lieberman Edward Pennes Irwin Petr Auron Rosenthal Herbert Scar, Herbert Yantes . ............Presxdent . Vice-President Beta Chapter of PIII LAMBDA KAPPA The Beta Chapter of Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity was the second chapter founded after the original inception of Phi Lambda Kappa at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School early in the century. The fra- ternity has been constantly active at J efferson maintaining an active social and educational program in conjunction with the other Phila- delphia chapters of Phi Lambda Kappa. Due to certain diiliculties the fraternity is without an oilicial chapter house at present but plans to acquire one in the near future. CDAK ' 245 1 DEAN'S CUMMITTEE Sessions 1946-1947 Each year the Senior Class finds it necessary to appoint certain committees for the covering of details related to the eventual graduation and departure. Also the Dean sees tit each year to appoint a Dean'S Committee to help the incoming freshmen with their problems in beginning a new life at medical School. It is their purpose to help the freshmen in getting acquainted about the school, to answer their questions and to help them ,in Ending quarters, procuring books and equipment and the like. A Yearbook Staff and Governing Board was also elected from the class in general. Portrait Committee was appointed to gather information and attend to the details of having the portrait of Dr. Vaux painted. An Invitation Committee, as well as a Cap and Gown Committee, were appointed. During the last graduation two men were selected by the Dean to act as Marshals. PHI ALPHA SIGMA CLYDE FRANCIS BROOKE SMITH PHI 'RHO SIGMA ROBERT BATE FUNOH PHI BETA PI' DONALD RIEGEL WATKINS NU SIGMA NU W ILLIAM FRANKLIN COX, III THETA KAPPA PSI BRUCE V AN VRANKEN PHI CHI PAUL HERBERT .IERNSTROM MARSHALS FOR 1946 COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER ALBERT G. SCHRAN PHI DELTA EPSILON WILLIANI ABRAMS PHI LAMBDA KAPPA IVIABVIN CHARLES RHODE ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA ELLWOOD CARL WEISE, JR. CHRISTIAN MEDICAL SOCIETY CHESTER LOUIS SCHNEIDER NON-FRATERNITY MEMBERS MENZIE MCKIM, JR. JOHN E. GOECKLER PORTRAIT COMMITTEE ELMER H. FUNK, Chairman CHARLES B. IIANES RAYMOND N. MACANDREW ' INVITATIONS COMMITTEE EDWIN M. NISZANOTVSKI 246 ' SOCIETIES There were also many societies, each with its own purpose. Here we f . J-xx , , - 9,1 x ff we .a gy g' .f .5 ffwwfs-'e.fe: 1, r flaky ! '- . , WL: FQ: ifvifg' I . vas- ,.:.,. '.., g- . Sf Q fi H F4 0 iv A , X ,- -,, 5 Q, 1., jr' new 1 5 -if fm w, ,Q mu.. My ka ,A 2, s E 1, W ' nfl' rw ,Q-KM sw +1 f : 1 'fs , , B' ' ff 1.9 Q, 'W 9 335' 7141! H 4, 5'-afgfi P if - My Y, . ff-fr 14, ,,,:2,ff v b,f,yf,g . 4 Gxf 4 gps' ,LL?'Z',vp ,132 2' Wg: fb 3 3' y 'X' s ins? N gf- 1 ,K , ,B ,Rf B if ' - .. ------- ,. , , L :.,.:. .. . : : -', .,,. , j'V,..--sf' ,Q-if A v, . 'HNF ' :-: , :5: . ' i' ' .- Y - ' ' 'Z . 1 T3 .. ., 'W E ' , 4 ' 5 -I Y Swllgi g .gf 5 W 1 if vf f 4 g VN 1:25 'K-ZZ. , If- .1-.aff W A f iff is h B . .ff , ,.- ifgf , .-. :.: - V. ,, fy ., A it if 1 fi .fffa 1. Q U, 2 . .1 ,W ,, I A. , , , U , -'sy' : '.,.: ,, Mfg? 35? 4, 3 3: J ,. ' , , as N, Jghjegyg 'visits' 5. Q 1 ff I Q 1 . 1 , ,. 'M g ' ' ' , f,,ei.Yg'?i?i4h Digg? F I yd gf ,, X if :Q '33 1: fn , W Y ,M ings-' 51, , ,, +L F 9 w 'Q :V Y . 1 k ' rf, L, ff 4WQ,47'VA 'Q.iTu'. 'l 5 K X' fn A4 Zywiff . J' .gif ex ' afwp f,M.4 wif . 4 '- w -by gems? . 2 Q1 ww ' 's ,3f'f f' gf' asv Sv if? ' .9 .vi 3 , ,S if 5 in ,vi i sf-fm ,Q W fllwfif ,I M' 'Q .1 sf 11 fx, N if S- 'six' ' .J ' se Jw Q' , ff 5? as Q f Hare Medical Society D. Aholofia S. Bashore J. Danyliw W. C. Davis C. B. Hanes D. Heller D. Marino W. Moore R. M. Sproch D. R. Watkins R. Yannacone J. F. Lee T. E. Douglas J. B. Loftus R. G. Brown J. J. O'Connor, Jr. E. S. Moyer W. E. Peterson D5 o m m m e W 5 o F 202 S55 ESM zmg Fife?- EQ? E95-3 3FF' px: PFWOUFFFWOWT ?0WFF P. Mayock Cox F. B. Smith Hastings Funk Aceto Burkley WV. Bostian J. De Wan B. Funch E. Haupt Kraft W. Skinner J. Potter C. Eiseman G. Francos J. Fingo OFFICERS SENIORS M. McKim, Jr. T. W. Moran, Jr., J. Surmonte A. J. Wehler J. L. Zukoski N. D. Yingling W. U. Reidt D. H. McGee J. F. Struve J. Koltes P. Lam J. Barsky .TUNIOBS G. J. O'Donnell J. Amadio J. Corrigan G. Risi P. Frank I ........Preszlienl . . . Vice-President . . . . . . . .Secretary . . . .Facully Adviser L. J. Corazza J. A. Diorio R. S. Funch J. T. Helsper H. Kramer J. P. McGee, Jr. E. C. Smith C. Trossman W. J. Woodward E. Babskie J. Gensemer G. Tibbens D. Boyle W. Hughes S. Vassalotti J. Carroll P. McGettigan R. Rodriquez J. T. Helsper . E. Marino . C. Smith GAIL G. L. LI ......... ROBERT G. REINHARDT .... JIM U. Ouvlsix ......, . . . . ELI R. SALEEBY, M.D.. . . . J. P. Allan S. M. Bashore Edwin Boyle W. J. Browning, III Kappa Beta Phi Society :vga . :JUS 3 9, mm? 1 3 259 I Q an-3 - :Mg I '33 T2 fe ' U1 1 UJ ra 2 I-I O H . m I :Jew 14. .gJ.: :Ez- 'ZSYT -Q51 395' WEEE: 2 S-ESS Seas. O02 TI' U FF! L. F. Burkley, III L. F. Casale J. M. Corson C. J. De Wan J. J. Gaffney D. G. Birrell Dennis Boyle R. G. Brown T. A. E. Datz Roy Deck P. C. Eiseman C. G. F rancos W. C. Herrick J. G. Jones Edward Kelly S. V. King, Jr. E. J. Meehan C. E. Miller T. W. Moran E. M. Mszanowski M. Sproch W. A. T erheyden, Jr. W. J. Woodward Robert Yannaccone N. D. Yingling JUNIORS L. B. Gale William Hughes Ralph Schlosser Al Goulard J. J. Humes Edward Scull R. D. Hastedt H: S. Lackey W. B. Shope G. J. Haupt George Pechstein C. H. Swartz H. L. Huber George Risi D. W. Thomas, Jr. E. P. Hughes, Jr. Robert Hodriquez E. L. Webb Bauer Pediatrics Socielty OFFICERS C. J ACK HODGERS .... . . .............. J. V. CoNaox' ........... J . M. :KOHL ............... EDSVARD L. BAUER, M.D.. . . . SENIOBS A. R. Vaughn, Jr. J. P. Greely F. Cox, III L. F Burkley, III A. Pr. Jones N. C. VVomac D. B. Heller D. Yingling B. MCC-urdy J. M. Barsky. Jr. L. E. Haupt E. A. Kelly R. G. Kirchner VV. U. Reidt C. J. Rodgers - JUNIORS J. C nroy J. Loftus R. Sturt J. Kleckner C Swartz C. Francos J. Rushton D. Thomas N. Quinn J. Kohl C. Clark D. Huber 250 k, J1'. . . . . . . .Preszdent . . . . . Vice-Preszdent ......Treasurer . . . . Faculty Advzser D. McGee J . F. Lee C. B. Smith J . M. Koval IV. A. Miller R. Berger ' J . Evans I G. O'Donnel OFFICERS WlLI.IAM J. Woonwnun. . . . . JAMES B. Lorrus. ....... . JOHN M. KOVAL ............ :NORMAN M1tCNElLL, M.D.. . . . D. J. Aboloiia J. M. Danyliw J. A. Diorio J. P. Greeley J. B. Atkinson J. Bartos V. E. Berardis D. A. Boyle VV. J. Cassidy P. R. de Villers T. F. Head H. J. Hurley, Jr. s. F. Nahity R. M. Murphy J. J. John J. D. Rippepi M. E. Narcli C. B. Hanes J. T. Helsper F. Lee 7. J. Lussy J. VS A. J. Cerne C. F. Cullen J. W. Daly B. T. De Persia L. B. Gale N. L. Powers, Jr. E. A. Sehauer C. J. May G. Donaghue J. F. Tobasco L. M. Del Vecchio B. J. McLaverty Pasteur Society . . ......... President . . . . . . Vice-President . . .Secretary-Treasurer . . . . .Facully Adviser SENIORS J. J. Gaffney E. A. Kelly R. G. Kirchner VV. V. McDonnell JUN IOHS J. J. O'Connor, Jr. T. E. Patrick F. B. Schwartz J. H. Grillin, Jr. R. C. Laning SOPHOMOBES G. M. Shannon R. P. Avonda R. M. Vetto FRESHMEN W. B. McNamee R. S. Callista F. X. Barrett E. W. Beauchamp J. P. McGee, Jr. J. J. Mclieown, Jr. R. N. MacAndrew G. B. Reinhardt G. J. O'Connell R. J. Schlosser J. VV. Kress A S. E. Pascucci A. J. Fingo C. R. Hamilton, Jr. Louis Iozzi T. C. Pickenbrock A. J. Grant, Jr. F. S. Fay J. O. Lopes N. R. Turcotte C. F. B. Smith E. C. Smith B. N. Sproch A. J. Wehler D. A. Cornely V. F ederici T. J. McBride D. J. McDonald J. L. Carroll, Jr. S. J. Gusciora W. E. Hart, Jr. E. J. Chrnelewski D. Lewis E. Malia J. Monaghan W. F. Kraft 251 Christian Medical Society OFFICERS CHESTE11 L. SCHNEIDER. . . . . BYRON T. EBERLY. . ...... . . . CHARLES G. STEINMETZ, III .... VVILLIAM A. KIRIEDLER, PHD.. . . . MEMBERS Paul C. Swenson, M.D. Paul Brenneman William Wliiteley, M.D. W. Edward Jordan, Jr. Amos Smith Neil S. Williams Robert Nelson, M.D. 252 ....,.....Presideni . . . . . . . Vice-Presidenl . . . . .Secrelary-Treasurer , . . .Faculty Adviser Robert Critchlow Robert Worman Robert Painter Alpha 0m ega Alpha Society Erudition requires recognition. At Jefferson, as at many other medical colleges, awards are made at gradua- tion to those who have achieved aptitude in the various specialties. Prior to commencement, scholarship in all its phases is acknowledged by election to Alpha Omega Alpha, the national undergraduate medical honor society. Hall' of each year's membership' is elected during the junior year by the senior members. These new members, in turn, elect their remaining fellows from among their classmates at the beginning of the senior year. At the eus- 'tomary all-school annual lecture, sponsored by Alpha Omega Alpha, the society presented Dr. Charles Best., noted physiologist, as its speaker this year. OFFICERS J. MACICIE CoRsoN ...... ............ ......... P r esidenl HQERBERT S. BOXVMAN .... ...... V ice-President MELVIN E. HAAS .......... ..., S ecrelary-Treasurer HAIKOLD W. JONES, M.D. .... .... F acully Adviser SEN IORS W. B. Abrams R. S. Funch J. G. Jones M. C. Rhode H. S. Bowman M. E. Haas H. Kramer B. Van Vranken J. M. Corson D. H. Hausman M. McKim S. M. Wolfe C. G. Foster J. R. Helfl' C. E. Miller N.. D. Yingling JUN IORS J. B. Atkinson A. J. Cerne J. W. Daly Sol Balis C. F. Cullen R. J. Schlosser Moon l athological Society Roy DECK ........... GORDON LIU .... :HENRY J. TEUFEN, J lx. ...... . VIRGIL HOLLAND MOON, M.D.. . . . OFFICERS ............Presidenl . . . . . . . . .Vice-President ' Secrelary- Treasurer . . . . . . .Faculty Adviser SENIORS R. Baker J. Dowling Gail Li W. Miller P. Shershin I-I. Bowman B. Eberly R McCurdy C. Miller B. Van Vranken J. Bowen M. Haas Meehan R. Reinhardt W. VVoodward VV. Cox R. Hastings J. Meehan J. Reynolds N. Yingling L. Casale J. I-Ielil' McGee R. Rhoda M. Mandel J. Corson J. McKeown L. Mosier C. Rodgers JUNIORS C. Anderson J . Carroll. Jr. R. Deck, Jr. R. Hastedb C. Loomis J. Atkinson ' D. Cornely P. Eiseman G. Heckler S. E. Pascucci L. Bender C. Cullen D. Feigley E. Hughes, J l'. E. Scull, Jr. D. Birrell J. Daly J. Frank J . Humes D. Shaw D. Boyle T. Datz L. Gale Gordon Liu C. Swartz S. Cable D. Thomas, Jr. SOPHOMORES G. Breneman S. Cleveland ' R. Schulz T. Michael M. Lindell R. Henderson G. Voigt G. Shannon P. Potter F. MacWilliams J. Healy M. Wakath H. Teufen h 254 Thomas Physiological Society ' OFFICERS THOMAS F. TIEAD ........................, THOMAS C. PIEKENBHOCK .... GEIXAHD M. 'SHANNON ...... Boemm' M. Vnrro ........ J. EARL TIIOBLXS, M.D.. . . .. . . . . . . .Presideni . . . . Vice-President . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . Treasurer . . . .Wloderalor MEMBERS J. M. Apple J. G. Finley F. T. Au F. E. Gilbertson R. P. Avonda' G. M. Breneman R. S. Brennan C. A. Callis E. J. Chmelewski J. M. Chiaravalloti G. M. Clelan S. M. Cleveland Paul R. de Villers P. L. Eichmau J. J. Gormley S. J. Gusciora C. Hamilton J. R. Healy H. J. Hurley C. W. Huff L. Iozzi R. Johnkins D. J. Keck M. M. Lindell, Jr. D. R. Larkin H. Lesse F. D. MacWil1iams J. F. Morrissey J. D. Paul H. M. Perry N. L. Powers E. F. Purcell H. F. Rodriguez J. S. Moliitt A. V. Smith, Jr. A. M. Snyder F. C. Spangler L. M. Tanner I-I. J. Teufen, Jr. J. E. Veve T. E. A. von DedenroLh M. H. Walrath, III J. L. Weaver - R. M. Whittington G. A. Winch J. R. Woodside C. Zenz 255 .-Ed Schaeffer Anatomic League J. M. Apple F. T. Au R. L. Bryson C. Callis S. M. Cleveland J. Chiaravallobi H. Easling P. L. Eichman ALLEN M. SNYDER. . . CARL ZENG. . .... . OF FICEBS PAUL DE VILLERS . .......... JOHN M. APPLE .............. J. PARSONS SCHAEFFEH, M.D .... A. Gelb S. J. Gusciora W. E. Hart T. F. Head L. Iozzi R. F. Kidder P. J. Kutz K. T. Ma MEMBERS L. C. Macbeth C. J. May J. D. Paul T. C. Pickenbrock H. F. Rodriguez G. M. Shannon H. K. Shoemaker E. R. Smarr 256 . . . . . .President . . . Vice-President . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . .Treasurer . . . . Faculty Sponsor S. Smith . Smith . Spangler L. N. Tanner M. Vetto E. von Dedenroth Zenz CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER. . . OFFICERS WILLIALI E. SHEELY ......... WILLIAM J. BROWNING, III: .... STEPIIEN R. PAscUccI. WILLIAM F. Cox, III... ROBERT S. LACKEY. . ....... FREDERICK B. WAGNER L. F. Bender, Jr. L. K. Boggs R. K. Finley, Jr. J. E. Goeckler J. R. Helff ,M.D..... W. C. Herrick J. E. Hughes P. H. Jernstrom E. J. Klopp, Jr. R. H. Lev MBIIQS Glee Club . . . . . . . . .Senior President . . ..... ...Junior President . . . . .Senior Business Manager . . . . . . . .Junior Librarian .... . . . . . . .Senior Librarian . . . .Junior Business Manager . ............. Cond uclor MEMBERS J. J. McKeown T. E. Patrick G. R. Pechstein A W. A. Hanson F. R. Schwartz A. V. Smith C. G. Steinmetz, III J. E. Weyher, Jr. N. C. Womack, Jr. T he 1021 Club GEORGE A. BENNETT, M.D .... F RESHMEN J. B. Limeres Pu. E. Karnolkky D. P. Franks W. J. Jacoby E. A. Everts H. B. Bechtel . . . . .Sponsor R. F. Kienhofer F. C. Hill, Jr. G. H. 'Leonard SOPHOMOBES W. E. Eakin E. R. Smarr B. F. Kidder F. A. Fcddeman R. V. Anderson Pi. B. Crowder . B. A. Smith T. E. von Dedenroth J. E. Vcvc R.. L. Bryson R. E. Stark E. J. Saltzman JUN IOBS G. AM. I'IOll'l11HI1 WI B. Shops: R. B. XVright I-I. F. Starr, Jr. H. R. Liss Pm. A. Schofield L. S. Serls D. S. Masland T C. Turner R. C. Wille , I SENIORS YV. H. Gross E. M. Topp. Jr. J. D. Groblewski N. C. Wlolnack, Jr. P. P. Mayock, Jr. C. N. Hickman B. S. McCurdy B. F. Babskie 258 Alpers Neurologicsil Society OFFICERS JOHN J. IHCKEOWN ..... ............. ......... P r esidenl MELVIN E. HAAS ........ ....... V ice-President LUTHER F. Connex' .......... ..., S ecrelary-Treasurer BERNAHD J. ALI-Bus, M.D.. . . ............ Sponsor A MEMBERS . D. J. Abololla R. A. Hastings J. A. Koltes D. W. Bostian L. E. I-Iaupb J. M. Koval E. Boyle, Jr. J. T. Helsper B. Lackey L. F. Corley M. Croll C. F. Cullen G. D. Dodd R. Finley S. Foushee J. P. Greeley W1 C. Herrick J. Hughes P. H. Jernstrom A. R. Jones L. E. Jones E. A. Kelly S. Victor King R. S. McCurlly J. J. McKeown NV. A. Miller A. M. Mintz J. U. Oliver K. B. Pace W. A. Hanson . Scull W. Sheely P. H. Shershin . F. Brooke Smith H. Stenhouse . Lane Stokes . X. Thomas Turner . Webb Although widely separated anatomically and not necessarily related physiologically, carcinoma of the lung and carcinoma of the prostate gland have a great deal in common. Each is located in an organ composed of a closed system of tubules having only one open- ing to the exterior and through this secretions and sloughed cells that reach the outside of the body must pass. Each is most difiicult to be recognized in its incipiency but each can be cured if the diagnosis is made early. De- spite modern perfections in thoracic and pros- tatic surgery and despite astuteness in cur- rent methods of diagnosis each is attended with a disturbingly high mortality rate. This adds up to the fact that annually in the United States there are about 6,000 deaths from carcinoma of the lung and about 8,000 deaths from carcinoma of the prostate. U If these diseases are to be cured they must be recognized in their incipiency and to ac- complish this a preoperative morphologic diag- nosis of carcinoma becomes mandatory. In cancer of the lung, tissue is secured for his- tologic study at the time of bronchoscopy, by aspiration through the chest Wall or at the time of exploratory thoracotomy. An endo- Cancel' Cells in Bronchial and Prostatic Secretions PETER A. HERBUT, M.D. scopic biopsy is most satisfactory but it is of value only in those cases where the tumor is situated in the main bronchi or their immedi- ate subdivisions and less than half of the lesions are located in this area. Aspiration biopsy through the chest Wall is of no value in early lesions that show no roentgen shadow or in those that are located anywhere but beneath the pleura. Biopsy at the time of thoracotomy is likewise valueless in early cen- trally located tumors that have not extended to the pleura or metastasized to the medias- tinal lymph nodes. In cancer of the prostate gland, the most popular methods of establishing a morphologic diagnosis is hy removing tissue transure- thrally, by enucleating the hypertrophied portion of the gland or by exposing the organ perineally and removing that piece of tissue which is suspected of being cancerous. In addition to these, three other procedures that have been used are punch and aspiration biopsy through the perineum from an area thought to be cancerous, and detection of neoplastic cells in urinary sediment. The diffi- culties encumheraut in these methods are obvious. To obtain tissue from the right area by perineal exposure, or by punch or aspira- tion biopsy, the palpating Engel' in the rectum must first detect a nodule and precisely localize it. By the time this is possible it is often already too late. Furthermore, some some cancers are soft so that localization by palpation becomes hazardous. Transurethral resection and enucleation of the prostate gla11d are likewise often without avail in making an early diagnosis because cancer of the prostate gland more frequently than not originates in the pdsterior portion of the organ and by the time it reaches the Lnethra the disease is usually too far advanced to effect a cure. For the same reason detection of cancer cells in urinary sediment is also of little or no value. In an effort to arrive at an earlier diagnosis in these two diseases we have developed a method of studying bronchial and prostatic secretions for neoplastic cells. The former Was started almost two years ago in close collaboration with Dr. Louis H. Clerf and because of its success the latter was under- taken six months ago in collaboration with Dr. E. N. Lubin. NIETHOD Bronchial secretions are secured from the bronchus that drains the suspected tumor area at the time of a customary bronchoscopic examination. They are collected in an ordi- nary or in a special collector that is attached directly to the end of the aspirator. If there are no secretions present the tumor area is irrigated With 3cc. to 5cc. of physiologic saline and the Washings are then aspirated. Smears are prepared by transferring a drop of secre- tion to each of three slides, by covering each drop with a separate clean slide and, after the fluid has been spread uniformly and thinly, by pulling the two slides apart and immedi- ately lixing them in equal parts of 95 per cent. alcohol and ether. They are then stained by the Papanicolaou technique. Prostatic secre- tions are secured by massaging the prostate gland in the usual manner. As the drops ap- pear at the meatus they are deposited directly upon three clean slides and smears are pre- pared and stained in exactly the same man- ner as they are in the case of bronchial secretions. PA'rHoLoG1c CHANGES Macroscopic: Grossly the amount and type of bronchial secretions change according to the- underlying disease process. In cases of carci- noma they usually va1'y from a drop to two' cuhie centimeters. As a rule they are thick, sticky and are mixed with bright red or dark rig f-F-.-1 ..'.' in I - f-f -1 2421. ' h 'f'- - - '-.. A' -, .:- -. ., 1- -.ffm W' -. ia- . . ,-gi -,gag 45-.-ft . 'i - 3- :SHA Q ' itffi-' W'-i -f ' -jf we .. s ., .... 4 .L .Lia ifggyfi ' 1.1. ily- ' -'2i.14-if 5 .Vw .., Lg. 1 - A 1 '- ,- ,Z .,.,'.,. SExy, . i . We ' .-',',35' 521 aff. , wah: 1 ' A ' 1 Q A -53.539 '53 .. .,.,. V T. i 1' slime-diet' ,L at ev- . rf: qygyzg, i . is eg. . I -4iQg3.B::.i 'g ci' r- -' --Y-35, - 2. .-- 'K ' .3-. , ' -A - v,.i.. .,,,x.1 , V . I . . . L , i'Piilp'g'55 f'h'-'if I , 731 N ' - 4 'F - J ' , 1 .15 - ' ,- 5 i 'mn' - 1' ' 'X -f s ' . Lf -. with U - J' N j ff . .--f s-A Q .Ei '-We ' nap . .1 ,i Y. K 4- S.. .Wm Mm I, 'zi .ev' ' i-...'5??i1.i...-.n.'5lvn1.A-J -- - ' F IGUHE 1 Slllclll' of bronchial secretions froxn u ' proved case of curcinoxna of the lung. There are numerous sheets of thick squamous cells. Papunicolaou slain x 100 brown blood but sometimes they are pearly white and contain no blood whatsoever. It should be emphasized, however, that the gross appearance of the secretions is not pathogno- monic for carcinoma of the lung because similar secretions are also found in other pulmonary diseases and notably in tubercu- losis. In early or moderately advanced car- cinoma of the prostate the secretions are qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those from normal prostates. They are opal- escent and vary in amount from 0.5 to 2 cc. Occasionally, however, in carcinoma and in benign hypertrophy they are grossly bloody. In advanced cases of cancer, when the organ has been converted into a stony hard mass, secretions are frequently scanty and of a poor watery quality or they may be entirely absent. This, nonetheless, is not disturbing for at this stage the diagnosis is readily made by other means. lllicroscopic: The composition of bronchial secretions differs somewhat with the type and severity of the disease process. In non-cancer- ous secretions there may be detritus, fibrin, phagocytes, neutrophiles, lymphocytes, plasma cells, erythrocytes, large polygonal pavement cells, single ciliated cuboidal and columnar cells, and clumps of epithelial cells. The latter are of particular importance for when they are rather thick they may at first glance re- semble cancer cells except for the fact that they are ciliated. In addition to the above, cancerous secretions contain neoplastic cells. Qualitatively these vary considerably depend- ing upon the degree of difl'erentiation or lack of dill'erentia'tion of the carcinoma, whereas quantitatively they are entirely dependent upon the amount of sloughed tumor tissue. In outright keratinizing squamous cell carci- noma tumor cells appear in sheets, singly or as epithelial pearls. The former are usually thick, stain light orange and have indistinct borders, a moderate amount of cytoplasm and large deeply stained nuclei C-Fig. lj. Single cells are variform but in this 'type of growth the most characteristic are round, oval or irregular cells of moderate sizes with distinct borders, orange to yellow cytoplasm and small round or bizarre intensely hyperchromatic nuclei. Epithelial pearls are infrequently present. They are composed of crescentic cells usually compressed about the periphery of a single round lightly stained nucleus. The cytoplasm forms an ill-defined mass that stains orange, yellow, blue-green, gray or various other colors. In completely undiffer- entiated tumors the cells are small, round or FIGURE 2 Smeur of bronchial secretions from nn- other case of carcinoma showing two cancer cells. The borders are irregular, the cytoplasm is abundant and the nuclei are intensely hyperchromatic. Papanicolaou stnin x 400 - U' f .S T 4 .., - ,' ,' . s ,yiagt-Y M 7 sg. , A 4 ri' 5 Y Jw ' sf fi' 'fjgg he . ' , ' 4, . H , ' sh . .. 5, A fy ' . .. . 'li 5 ' ' . f ' I f S 7 . .H A ,I sf if- H Q- ., . f ,Q .- Q -my .Sb .g . Q, A A .M I . x -N. gs -H. -: I , , - M H W we . , 2,55 - -,-. . . .. - A A T ,, ' ' 2' figs? 5 ini fa B Y. f -' . . ' 4 vi as ' S 1 if -ar q . W, .it W 74' . J a K... ,K . .ml- , if X ' sz . 1 4g , R ' ' , 'Q 7 4 11' ,H Q - . I 5 'ifiij L. ' -'f oval, and have a scanty or iinperceptible cytoplasm. The nuclei are round or oval and deeply but uniformly stained. All other varie- ties of carcinoma are represented by single neoplastic cells. These are of every conceiva- ble size and configuration. They vary from 7 microns to 60 microns in diameter. The cell borders are sharp or ill-defined and the cytoplasm is scauly or abundant and stains all colors of the rainbow CFig. 2D. The nuclei are single or less often multiple. They are round, oval, dumbbell-shaped or otherwise irregular and they are either washed-out or so hyperchromatic that no internal structure is discernible. Nucleoli are sometimes seen in the former but are not demonstrable in the latter. As a rule, smears of prostatic secretions are less cellular than are those of bronchial secre- tions. In non-cancerous cases there may be detritus, librin, spermatozoa, neutrophiles, lymphocytes, plasma cells, phagocytes, con- cretions, large polygonal pavement cells with abundant blue-green cytoplasm and small round nuclei and normal prostatic epithelial cells. These are usually single, cuboidal or oblong and have a moderate amount of sharply defined blue-green cytoplasm and round FIGURE 3 Smear of prostatic secretions from a proved case of carcinoma showing u .sheet of cancer cells. The cytoplasm is relatively seunlgy and the nuclei are large and deeply but uniformly stained. Pnpuuicoluou stain x 400 ,M . ..... .ppp .,, t . .. . ....,. . , ,yyy ., .. tta iee . ' 5 ,..: Q .. '-2 t T ' . ., . . - p i r l h' . e, .,, ..rr Q c t r sg W V . .mx L. H. N ' i r , in e f . gf' K 92 -mg Ji ,. li ,Q -arg. we '-1 -V., 1. my sr- ' .si . -. K. ,A ,VA ix, ft W' , . , A ima. I 4 , cfs .. 2 ' e - ' ' f ' fwfr. - 1 0 'fr 5 , , ?ga.,fi Q Q R 4 M' for ' ' - - ei a w - mf f . g 5 is 6 1. I is ' . v , '29 -, 45? 0 'S' s ' ,, if ' - fi- ff I-IS . if-i 'il , A FIGURE 4 Slncur of prostatic secretions fron: au- othcr case of carcinoma showing il group of cancer cells. The borders are scalloped. the cytoplasm is relieulated and the nuclei are intensely hyperchro- nlatic. Pupanicoluou slain x 400 vesicular nuclei. Secretions from cancerous prostates disclose some or all of the afore- mentioned elements but in addition they reveal neoplastic cells. In Well-dilferentiated adenocarcinoma the latter appear in clusters or sheets CFig. 31. The cells are large but their margins are ill-defined. The cytoplasm is moderate ornscanty in amount and light gray, grayish green or red-orange. The nuclei are large round or oval, deeply but evenly stained and may or may not contain nucleoli. Single cells similar gto those from cases of com- pletely undifferentiated carcinoma are also present. In each they may not be larger than normal epithelial cells but their borders are always frayed and indistinct. The cyto- plasm is scanty and light gray. The nuclei are similar to those of the cells found in sheets and clusters. In carcinomas that fill the acini with large loosely adherent cells smears of secretions reveal thin clusters of cells Whose cytoplasm is light blue-gray, abundant and drawn out into long processes. The nuclei are round, evenly but lightly stained and contain round sharply defined nucleoli. Fi- nally, in cancers composed of large cells with reticulated cytoplasm the secretions reveal collections of cells With sharp scalloped mar- gins CF ig. LD. The cytoplasm is abundant and reticulated or vacuolated and the nuclei are large, round or oval and intensely hyper- chromatic. V RESULTS In 89 consecutive cases of carcinoma of the lung cancer cells were present in bronchial secretions in 77 or 86 per cent. In this same group a bronchoscopic biopsy of tumor tissue was possible in only 40 cases or 45 per cent, In another 16 cases there was indirect endo- scopic evidence of carcinoma in theiform of bronchial stenosis, fixation or distortion but a biopsy could not be secured. In the remain- ing 21 cases or 23 per cent of the total, however, in which a cytologic diagnosis of carcinoma Was rendered, bronchoscopic ex- amination for evidence of cancer was com- pletely negative. It is for these cases that this method of diagnosis has been devised. In 100 consecutive prostatic secretions ex- amined, a cytologic diagnosis of carcinoma was rendered 17 times. In 13 of these the diag- nosis Was proved histologically but in 4 others it has not yet been confirmed. 'In 3 cases of known carcinoma neoplastic cells were not demonstrated ,in the secretions. ,In this small series, therefore, a positive cytologic diagnosis was made in 85 per cent of cases. V CONCLUSIONS In carcinoma of the lung the cytologic method of diagnosis is of unequivocal value. With a little practice cancer cells are as easy to identify in bronchial secretions as they are in histologic sections. Since .this proced1n'e has been used We have doubled our preopera- tive morphologic diagnosis of carcinoma and our patients are being operated upon much soonerithan was heretofore possible. , In carcinoma, of the pies-tate gland this method of diagnosis is still in an experimental stage. Here the indentification of neoplastic cells is more difficult because the differences between normal and abnormal cells are less striking then they are in cancer of the lung. With more experience, however, we feel con- fident that our sagaciousness will increase and that soon the diagnosis Will be, made from smears with as much impunity as it is from histologic sections. We hope that thereby the disease Will be recognized in its incipiency and that the cure rate in carcinoma of the prostate gland Will steadily increase. . AIfPllECIATi0-N Among the tasks of the editor of a yearbook is the writing of an appreciation, mentioning the vari- ous individuals that aided him in the publishing. However, in the case of the CLINIC this year, there were so many, each doing his share so thoroughly, that it would be impossible to mention everyone. There are a number, nevertheless, that must be recognized. To Mr. Fred Barnes and his associates at the Westbrook Publishing Company we extend our thanks for his judgment, aid and suggestions in helping us to make up the book and to publish it. We would like to thank Mr. Flammer and his asso- ciates at the Basil Smith System who did our photo engraving and aided us in the layout. We also ex- tend our thanks to Mr. Merin' of Merin Studios, who took our formal portraitsg and to Mr. Twiss of National Publishing who helped us design and provided the covers. To Dr. Perkins, and to the members of the faculty, who became our patrons, we extend our sin- erest thanks To the senior class and the student body in general who aided us immeasurably by being e . on time for pictures and helping with rnany of the small' tasks whenever they were called upon. To Miss Wint, lVIrs. Simmons, Mr. Storm, Mr. Wilson, and to Ernest who all were ready 'and eager to help us at any time. Tdthese and many, many more we, the staff of the 1,947 QLINIC, extend our heartfelt thanks to each of you, and in return we present you a CLINIC, which We hope will remain in the high proud traditions of Jefferson and will serve to bring the members of the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Forty- sevcn closer to their Alma Mater in the years to come. JAMES THOMAS HELSPER, Editor-in-Chief. FEATURES But it was not all wqrk at Jeferson. There were dances mv A if ., 7 , .,5.,. I me W Wg X :-: , .... :,. :: . ,, The BLACK and BLUE DANCE The Black and Blue Dances Cnamed after Jel'ferson's colorsj Hrst started in 1933 under the auspices of the Kappa Beta Phi Society. These dances have been held continuously every year and every one has been a grand success financially and socially. In fact, they have become a tradition at Jefferson, although young in years. The success of these affairs has been due to the hard Work, energy and interest of the men in charge of the various committees and to the support of the student body, the Faculty and the Alumni. The officers and committees have been, every year, of the highest type and it has been a great p1eas1n'e for me to Work with them. It meant a great deal of extra Work over several months and the boys were glad to do it. These affairs were held as Supper Club Dancesg however, this time We changed to a strictly formal dance. This year it was held in the Rose Garden at the Bellevue-Stratford and I am happy to say the dance was eminently successful, digg ? as evidenced by the many favorable reports from those who attended. In 1911-0, with the approval of the Board of Trustees ol' the College, the Kappa Beta Phi Student Aid Fund was founded. The net proceeds every year from the Black and Blue Dance are added to this fund. I am glad to an- nounce that a substantial amount has accumulated up to the present: however, it is not yet large enough to put in active operation. The aim of The Fund is to render direct or indirect aid to worthy and needy students at our institution. I wish to extend my thanks, as Well as those of the past and present Kappa Beta Phi Society members, to everyone for their cooperation and help in mak- ing our task so successful. We welcome the continued cooperation of all those concerned and we hope to be more suc- cessful in the future. ELI R. SALEEBY, M.D., Sponsor. TM- Wi? W ' :,: ' 1 2 Z ms ,Q Q H X .36 , Ni N in 2 X , K '- , , V 1 42 4 Ang! 1 A Hi 5533 EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief, JAMES T. HIELSPER Associale Editors: Others: CHARLES B. IJANES ROY KORSON CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER WILLIAM C. HEIKKICK Pholographic Editor: , DANTE E. MARINO QELLVYOOD C. VVEISE, JR. ROBERT S. MCCUIIDH' Ar! Editor: DONALD R. XVATKINS C. THOMAS IVICCHESNEY, JR. JOSEPH T. ZUKOSKI BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager, IXICHARD A. H:AS'I'INGS Assisianl Business M'anager, W. FRANKLIN COX, III Adverlising Manager, JOHN J. IVIEEHAN Assislanl Adverlising Managers BYRON T. EBIEIIII1' G. Px0BERT REINHARDT Circalalion. Manager, LEONARD IIOSEN Assislanl Cirealuliun Nlanager, FRANCIS X. THOMAS A Parable in Four Convulsions CONVULSION NUMBER ONE 1. And it came to pass that two youths came down from the mountains to Filadelfia, the city of sin and iniquity. 2. One, Jahob, was the son of Bence-Jones, a wealthy bootlegger from Pittsboigg the other, Hasheesh, was the poor but respectable son of Ilam begot by eggs. 3. Now these youths journeyed forth into strange lands, to Jefferson the Insteetoot of Nowledge, to gleam beaucoup info in re, 'the science of medicine. -l. And it came to pass that Jahob was sought by many and divers fraternities. 5. While Hasheesh, the uncouth, did shut himself up in his chamber and applied him- self to Histology and Embryologyg 6. And Anatomy and Chemistry and Bac- teriology 9 7. And Parisitology. 8. And Jahob, the slothful, betook himself to Venture Inn, and Ben Franklin and to Chassey'sg 9. And Ciro's and Arthur's Steak Houseg 10. And the Little Rathskeller. 11. And he did consume great quantities of shellac and emba1mer's fluid and anti-freeze, 12. While Hasheesh Wrote home every week and doiled his red llannels punctually on April 15. 13. And it came to pass that the two youths were called upon to appear at various and sun- dry exams in the summertime: yeah verily, when the sap lloweth the young lamb gambols- on the green: 1,1-. And the eternal flapper makes her ap- pearance on 11l.h Street, 15. Which summons caused the youths. great perturbation, and there was great gnash- ing of the teel.h and tearing of the hairg 16. And passing of great quantities of urine of low specilic gravity and occasional epithe- lial cells: 17. And frequent stools. 18. But Jacobus and Snul1'y and George had 'them where there was a scarcity of hir- sute adornment. 19. And they did take their exams, and verily did Jahob come to be conditioned in Anatomy While Hasheesh was dealt an 85. 20. And Iflasheesh spent his vacation crack- ing coal and .lahob went to Atlantic City for his health. CONVULSION Numxian Two 1. And it came to pass, that as all flying things wended their way southward, .I ahob and Hasheesh did return to Jefferson. 2. And Wilson, the Keeper of the Archives, dealt them Todd and Sanford, and Best and Taylor, and Cabot and Adams. 3. Yeah, even to Sollman and to Boyd. Ll. And Jahob sayeth to himself, Verily this year is a snap, and I will sport myself a fort,- nite at the Bellevue. 5. While Hasheesh waxed studious through- out the year and won the Physiology Prize. And .Iahob got 'through by the skin of his second molars and not without many a trip to see Mills, the Strict or Williams, the cynic. CONVULSION IVUMBER Tunisie 1. Now throughout vacation did .Iahob soliloquize this, Verily I have made a mess of things, I have spent my sire's hard earned nickels and my Uncle SHIIIIICVS also, even as water floweth down a drain pipe, 2. Or beer down the gullet of a thirsty brick- layer. 3. This Bozo, Hasheesh, walketh away with all the prizes while I wax dumber every day. Ali. Henceforth I shall apply myself through- out the years and knock this medicine for a row of proverbial pink lat rines. 5. And lilasheesh sayeth to himself, Verily this game is a big jokeg I could even so get by without Working. Is not .Iahob the Dumb, among us? Jahob, who rrarket.l'1 not a book? I shall go and do likewise. CONVULSION NUMB:-Ln FOUR 1. And it came to pass that in the year of our Lord one 'thousand nine hundred and forty-seven a great festival was held in the city of Filadelha. 2. And all the members of the graduating class invited their entire households to the Academy of Music. Thence came all the fathers and mothers. 41. And the sisters and brothers and sweet- hearts, 5. And aunts and uncles and cousins: 6. And all the kinsmen of each and every man. fC0llfI'7IIlf'1I on Page 2911 Party Night at Jefferson Party night at Jefferson was a combination of cutting loose from the cares of school and mild entertainment. It occurred about every Saturday night during the school year when one or more of the Fraternities would throw a little beer party. It was usually about Friday evening some time that we would begin to think about party night when it would be necessary to call the little woman and let her in on it, too. Then in most instances we would start our own little private party some time Saturday after- noon over at Chassey's or at Curley's. At a variable time after supper, with due prod- ding from fellow fraternity brothers, we would drift over to pick up that certain dolly and then off to the party. After the keg was tapped and a crowd had gathered the songs would begin. It was a funny thing about those songsg you could almost tell what time it was by what song was being sung. A few dances up in the living room, a quick dash over to one of the other houses to see who else was giving a party and then a stop at Chassey's for a hamburger and a cup of coffee and time to take friend date home. After fond farewells too touching to here describe-back to iinish off the keg. It was at this time that those cut-throat games of Prince would claim one poor character and each party night a different confident character. After the last keg had kicked and adequate count of casualties had been taken and fond farewells said, another party night had ended at Jefferson, and as we toddled off to bed we were comforted by the word of some old sage, Laugh and the world laughs with youg cry and you cry alone. . 2 I, gf: A ' 0 W 3 'f.., 4 I I N I I R if-FD DDE, if 5-iflvwff 1 N ,Qlj jwvf'K YN f X N N N ,f fungi K4 igchicgnex i X - drug-J' mlf ' ag: L:-Q5 'fffzu Mgcwy AS XS OUR SENSE OF HUMOR. SO IS OUR FRAC 770.5 Tom McChesuey has been one of the standard-bearers of humor of the A Class of 1947 ever since his first car- toon on anatomy back in freshman year. Since then he has recorded many a situation, some of which are p escntcd here. J 273 1 i .H H V ANATOMY LAB, i'5'f,5jTfmW, WIWIN THE GDNFHVEJ oF , vP +1222-WH! . ws 05.1, of mf ,Mac I HEARD I G01 IT 31512 5325255 1214215 f4.iL'L Z55'1f7lfi - U . N15 ,wyAAl BQDV wvvrfec-01:5 THA, H iganf CUTNH, ms LELTME IASCH gi. A WUUf'V7' cv-Ns Fwmfo wmv Am: H55 Mmnucf uP -DE f'ff'q'V5F 'N 'mm PAST KNOWS ' A Pm QF nu EXAM For. Us - - NX ' f7RcHf7Ec71wE. NOW THEN. DOCTAH! G2 f11N W 1,22 FRIDAY ANYWA-f, My pw,v,-l 'vf i, i,,?fE E ' WHAT HAVE WE IN i,?'gdQ1g 'T5 WE pyigswn I fmvaw ALL Ffa NESS. T!-H5 AREA . AH- 751-L - GRMAIAL ' U f vu up g IF N some I evfhl Mmxulg Q52 my Egggggjggfw HH ' W NYT 5 A B y up ,N EC E ONI:1'g! ' ,NDRTISP xx ,K N N , h CADVE YESTERDAY- Bun' mL13fv,vKi1KE 1' on ww? Yov YPUNG M!-'H NOW! DE5QElBE LE-F3 GE? ,pELI77moN TLQIY au- I '-19,7 Wm, HAVEN: BEEN . 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N' I h 51-Ti 1.557 WE FORGET- Aer ME HAvE mme lmfurfwu i, - -'1'L'-' 'V PLEASE! 51062-rHoDY 5ToP wveh' --sf' ' - 1 , , AMD .lun Avon' AT THIS MAN Few IYAIE kv 'H T Hfweo vw y - A L wus .' - ear mf TUBE Dawn RIGHT -JJ' E ' , - 55,145 - fl - les A .1 zwW3:i5aa.'i: BW, ,f,mf,mz,? gm ,f:,:m:f1,,,,c, W, , 'm H 'f AT TDDBAD' 'Q5 'E'5 id Y fyigyffff 9,1 LM rc Al D 1 fa f f '-..,.l i,':,ff,ML5L.,,-T75 lgI?0lZSWIN.9TE:lf'0F N'?'n ' Vw 3 2 ,N Youll Tl-IMEE.61lE5S Zu q L' VFW SPARE 'rms YEAH-AGvESs HE 'U' TD '6 7- 2 Q K. jh,,0'Hv C'f J gowns: Amen me cwnmsen X J ' f :i'ff'0 , vwfnmm vow:-mn we wnnus Au-W-swf-fvfKf wocgg H UF THESE SYM, wumow- sA-D HE 'rwww You DOCTOR- 7 HAVE BEEN - WASWT 5 pE7'n'T'D 5 'N 'Lf ,YD'2'f : f ' '?'AlflN6- Mons THAN GE: .ws . F N f Two sf-agen up ' lirifih W JL A A SP 1 2 A was - M 1 PAPE2 ur. DT , o Cum V Q EMTEEDNER DIZ. , ii' 1 I ACK 0 J ' I Y LA V ' ' 'x - J-, 1 ff'ifX 'HN - I X as 91: xfg '- , X' 5 ,O ,iv r' Q L X571 Q- wr - G7 E 1 1 1 0 K I - V sf, A 5 V' U5 AA ggi K lf! 1 4 1 xl 1-A - . .-5, fx .. Yxg , K -1-I - X E' Fvgzr .lu 1-W9 YA ' N M , QQ f - , wg ,A - E 1 1 I W Doc,I DQ FEEL I il 55x35-,.::l 2: - i I '-X 1 igxfcgwlnwnnus ,EJ -- f ' g KZ Ae vpnvs I V1 X' IF: 41:5 n + . 1-Y X ,.. gg N Q2 -. ff: W ,E 9 .mnmn A Q i 5-2 I-so ' Ak I . K Q. ' ': wmv. 1. ig tw E ZVQSTEQ? ND . 117,15 fgF,uEN N Q A . T 1 g fm N K 'QCLIGSMF rf M 1 r eds' .MN gi W wx--f -4 N 274 1 1 PHARM,f1r010cy - Mg. - .,.N-T,--,x,1-ll-f-- MZ! 1 lf!!!-,J 1 f- 1 2' 7111- THE wumf In OF GLAS5 Ag Mytjfc AH-WHAT-AH Q J.-gf ,mmf i A ,541 s . fs YUURMH -fi 1+ we 1 K1 'W 70 R 1 ,e v ?fd1P'-Ur S' fi f 5 gyE,QYTl-llN6 ull HERE NUMBER, YuuN6- fm 1 Wm 1 P 105 AS HH MAN? Yvv - ,J 11111 , N ' M 5 f jj HAS fl R' , - ,C K ART . I - YU!! 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'minus U N ' Huw Fog-f 1.11.1115 IN TRACTION ANP . 452513321 17:1 f 12012 THIS 1.3115 ,I i,225fJ,.,2E,C'55SEl'if fe Pu1.Lz:Y! GAZL THAT WEF f.L1.-Q4,g,gTW'-Q,-SPIE A I C FWE HER W 1 W' ia 5 O' - ' 5'rEAnY As 1 ' g HT THIS- EARLY 0 h - X I 'NW AffE5THt:H IN A l:u1iES-254553 Y-1oEURG1l?w7g3Mgf1L1np13 4 1 Fcw YEARS we CAN, 57411-ID xf- X ,WD 57-ART EES To lx , 4 FUSE THE new OF ,?,'gf,,'f' ' 13111111114 up QEGQBOARD 1, f N55 HW ' ' VHOSE BDUS mm. 1 1 I QQ., A is Q, F 1119 1 X ,N . N . gm 1 gg 111 11 4 11 1 , E : I NEVEP- USE 50 MUCH NEWER lk?-34' T' N Nd CY R t V -46-ix . CglT1::kiXR'F?f?22iESl5 Q R J 2 , 6, 5 J-ff '-' ' , - ' 1 3 , , 11 T , 1 aaf1s1,1:J5,,1ifsf1' - TEE M U V I 1 . LLX1, . dx A l ' ll- f 04 t i FLA!! 1 1 - 1 f 6 - ' ff ff X NN 111 :X 513 V N5,fL f N, ,- A X- 1 Nr 3. fix Q - QI! f ' 11 L 2 1115 X35 V iw MQ L f 11? N NN Jsgy win 0 1 ' t X -f-.Aa u X X f.f.f 0 f,1i'g-1:41 E366 L5 A J JS-f X L, I Nix Z NLD CL- Q ,, PLASTER. ' .Q JK, qw FN 'I wtf-' ft-Ie 1' TE 1- - . f - - ' fr. LS , X A '1 - 1 , xPL HS Taz .. C N gg. ef, GTXCLHHY Q xxM.Tf-Dt R mf QCAESHEU W1 J 1' A J,-,1 1 +Eif.Lll'1Lf M- 33, O 1 - K :VX t-.gl'f'Y -L b HQ' .1 - 1 - - w wi' L 11 , 1- 275 JUNIORQ YEAR AAU? Tafjs' 2 B , WHAT A T gumwssu AND THE POOL' THIS SAKZZLIY Lm'2T2'mE END ' E-:Hg-L5oRRWggnE MAP-1,DOCTOP,? f DON'T FOR: gig X BLOCEP,?Jf R 'Y , f ' f .,..., . ..,, ' ..,,.... rggfgxlf' 254W ,-A, V X ' b QR A Q M YEA.. , fm xx 7 Q Ny, E ii E X lx 'li' Z9 l 1 X5 z , j f L W ' I- In . M Q XFXJXS -fdQWfWWfwf - X D L' aa X! R A W WQMQ f 'J E rw i M k ' IJ Q-3- 'A Q - - t - L H ff , i if' , fair MseAe V 4314053 HOUR GENTLENEN. DUE To THE JBFCENT leEPw3Lfc'AfV 1f1c'ra1eV. I MN FXP1-:cr fl NUC!-I 557758 Pfpgfyaffy ,Cafe TMSSE 6'flf1.p,f5,V Nfx-f P A,-'JK RXWQ fi fx Fix, 1, 5 51? FL ., A ' f Mvxjmf sh A if-1-' H I V ' HHH-'izzmi ' F X , 1 V K X415 , 'lggi nnl gglq '!NHX x I V 57 , f I3 ai ,.: f-Q, V Pwfg gd X, A r ,af ESQ, 2 5 73fgfL.,gxf2.9f? 1 in ss, .zz ' ,-,J gr-XFN' j - f-T WM X I V W ff W3 ggixnzfw-Q 5555 I-U L ,4 xx l j?f9:57' Q 276 ENNSYL VANIA HOSPIML - OLDE-97 Twfve OF 175' ITMID M1 AMERICA, f N , J'- ?21 --t- rj im 7 f QENTLEMEN, You ARE WW ., - -6-A f f- ,FX H: Xxx: KP 7 m5:c1,s.Az'z 12250553 1 ww ' AN? Hfffpfffc- ff f,k,f ff,f,D H M 1 V Jimi, .Jun 0 gffiA'rv'Z'5,fZfLf2v QQMPANIJDN. 1 IA' Y I l I A7371 V fm 1 gn 1. N ,ff yi '5 K' ig-Q2 gQ f-yi ' any 'f W W Nxt HHN X' fd x 5 13: nl- ' ,: 1 f f 1 1 5-irq! fl xx Q Q22 NS' ! l'lU,,,1uf, w1xMmIWmm'M ,: 'i-'V 'Shia JL 1 U ' NF X fb v5 W 1' 11 Nl l HW WA CJCJ Lggho, X b x 1 0 J ffm!! 1 ,,. : wh' WDW! NDF ' Hi-TIP! N we fy W Eff. mlff i f pa df 714: N g mL X gl 5 W 'S a Q B Q U if 1 T! 1 GEORGE ' 'E .. ,QJQM If M y .1 -me 1,44 X15-,I Lg - I H af v ,5.'-',ZL-,lja T W 5. w W Kiki? W. -- WI U FV X I' Y I I? FI 'Ishii ERE I 'XS s f'QK X eg? ' AM f- 'll' JN , l X '-AMW--if f-'-' ,aqrgxom l it X X L f 1 j' IJ Q 19 X f f x'f' in Y HT77 X XL f f -r' f YV V1 - gf , Q 7 , 4 by 7 mfr-ufmcfl J ,ff f ff -S17 giazggxx, 'f glffv 59553 gif 'S , K X tip' 2. 4 V We Kg ffgytalf f7.wE--.,- Mgfzgm UE Mfpfcnvf PRIJCTICAL Exfv-1 ' f ' ' How MANY EPv1m2ocv1Es FEDICUI ou5,' wHo CARES? BE SPECIFIC' I5 THIS PATIENT LOSING- EVER-r DAY? wfL4TLf H15 WHAT DoY NEVER MEAN CDRPUSCULAR VULUME? KNOW ABOUT DID Y GAN5?-WHAT L,yfE THAT rms PA-rpgm m0'5 if PMP HAF vnu -rf-ns 7H1s-f1z- PAYIEAIT 5 vm' ,n ' QS j'l 'lTg9 ' HAS MHS? FATHER! L mqs Hnonurfs' of l 5 M V. X 'fjzfZgf?Q1n11gY721ji5gA- N 7 ' X X N Ty W I If R JH . an - l i. X x jg Qllyy W f W w Q 55- , aw Mai T j new rs . , W L ffxgrzxq czAr1f1fvol'RggfA 1 LM X I in , fx Qx 1 ' f 1 A3 cib N: If ' I U 1 N I Q X -HM ' 1 Q g l ' lu rigid vi I- SJ I H 0 L, fc AQXG ,im a f V U l ! N d i L E T- , I , V:-' 7ff:ff'X' fx . X . hgh , You -?IlQDOc- - QWX' 1 sf'-' -l q,-L ofpfvf -rg-,LL I y p YE! 1 ga LQ HIT! v w. S 1 1, Y Lmfiffff01 Ji f l fix f XXII! H V X , -129A X ff fl I, L - I ' x 1-Rf' if X eg, X I 1 ,Q ' Qehgsnev ig ,If Qi.'g.5,L:a M' ff-'fp 277 I 4AsT MAN Af mf TABLE 776' H HAHE PRIVILEGE. ffvnsfo, W Fwe wwf 70 HAVE H19 Pf7.esFfvcP ,yfy nw! wfmfs wwe fumg Em ' f ns 011153750 nv we a.,e.- me ,vawr rms cfvsf? on wwe ,aff our pig, ARRIVFS SCEUBBED, nfl,lAzAf6- fwfve AND flZ:FP ww? ,MND5 ,Af THE ,L-,Hog A ,UHF mmf 'HND AGLE 10,2 S0 HE ffgfggfjfvfg ,5Z1,fPf6ff'f,Z'!fF0rfofe ! WHAT: me fvAi,1ZS7e-wfnfr? fffwmf' ' N Half? ff v A wt' ' of 6 pu '- My 5 .. 33735 ,,ZfQj,'f,E7f2fZEf army Afvfwfm off 5vf,:,s'f'2JvZf-asf' ,STu0ZV7?1f' gmm ,4,,myN GOWN spmff-' wf 'M ' !2f'ZfL'ZfZZ! 51235-35 LVHNT 7175 DDKTDHU . Q ' Q Foo- TD SL pg V, HN, 'mm' I '- f'-51355 QJ -' l .4 I I 3 Q, ,Mgk rig, T f ,RMB s L -- X 1 I x S. ' fb 2 I Q Po? 5 I-3 55 XF' 3: - ft 7 x 1 fr 'g w f N W 3 - R: fy 3 'Qfg I ff C I Tifjgx Abliffl VJ j A - J XH X Iggy,-ff 0 I ' 7 . .2 fi 77 ,, ' -V J k'9'.:2n IH fx- ,W- I 1 .555 66 Y f f, N ,v f 1 NA x X M' L 7 ' l ' fqtly f' lj M I K 3 C ' I 5 0-X Q QQ , ' - X - - 'I ff ' '- P 1 s wx, - , ' I I i Mwimfwm 44 Q 0 W if! if-HSN M f .UN .6 'AWK-,wg X f f K N --awww -.'-- I ,fgyq , 'Q- X - eww Cff? .o 's 32-2 'E QQIQP: Qxi 2 1' ech-We M K J, QHOLOGY WARD CHHT5 f1HEH.4l'DUAllr MAN- you oofwr sfsm ro lmpw WHAT-5 GMM UN HRRE. THAT LAST S1ATEMENT Proves vnu .Dam-'r :mow ' TH,S,ER,F,F.,Y I ANYTHING ABQ-11 THE cwse. My BoY,jHE5E msss .une MEAN mmf YEAR aw vom Tfvnaowfs ! usp THEM! :wwf some To of ' PATIENT WAS ADMITTED PHVSICIAN5 IN A I-'Fw MQNTHS .' I7'1 .4loT annul, To Tn fr: w:TH CHIEF coMPLNNTS V You BY THE HoT LJTTLE HAND fulo ,Lggp fav Dnwhl HERE. 1, mwmww WWWWMWMWWW Fsmusncfr. ND!-Tv,HlA, me wsnpemwne H127 f:, ,f,q ,fS7f2i,,El i,-,igi:2y WNW, I ' -l PA:J'1'l552.:RNg, f,ff4mb IN HERE Muff BE Gurrslefue osufzemmssf Z 'U-4Hl:1Ks:5-:Twp-NL1M'y AND 5'rK'x.K,1'- 4750 VH NEW-50 H'- gui, f ,.H.HfH.NW,.f 'T X M f , ns, 5 fn 'rf wx 5 : .b ivgffjlgffa ,414 TH: AH-U Xggqsne GNX MW X, J X fl f fix 77443 553453476 is f if 9' 167535 ' - ffggxica' E 55:51, ' Q iff M' FJ i , f ' 7 f' ffi H1 ff of fd af Q fz -, Lf V, U I J j 'xg ,ff I I f, ' '55 .- ..X X Nl X PK XIVN LF! ffiyiff 2 M lf. 0, 1 - 4.---N .' . Wx f i A Q ' . N l I K' f Vi-v K f J 1 K ' I W A 1 K -1 ffr I 8- N wx 4 T 1 ' ff'-- wfrw W. f f ffxssf-wlllifw JN f ,ul , ,, I ' U W- ,- rf N M X f J-, 1 Y I 4,,, ,,' N, is 4, a,W I , -M 9 2 lg' X NWO ' -f - - W I x pu I Q5 x W! xx ! X WM W .. . f ff , f 1 1 '- 25 ' f'1 Www x f- .'-Q ' - M'f6'4fW - P an I ' H k X f ' ' f' 1 1 R N x 'Lf -. My 4' X l 7 QM ' qw. I 5 278 MEDICINE - SHQHT COURSE XN LAB. 7EgHNfQ UE. UN, 'I' 'f CH LJ? 6, . .5 M me CHIEF Jun sem- 'NSS Qfgfgeurr A s saws un ' A - 1 - Q55 INTUVQBR swim I f !I7w?'1IZ5I57f'Z'?IISE'IiI,Z5 1151 NDT 4595 TALK BEFORE DAY 'U Yuma ouYs WI'-L I K ' HAD E ' who EYCEP gmac- I,Ag, -fstkg WILL caves HAVE TD 5,41 on -I-gg. Z IN TlEo1ZMEMQ'Csg1.?-PAII: tif NME SWDE T SHORT-EDMPHG 5,41-L,N0 MOIQE 7ALff. ' NEED NSDME- STUDENTS MEAIQUML GE,-,Mg Qglcgsgglixgs gzi':l??l 'NG AWD HO WWE JDE. Do you WANT THE ,L,Tff! ' wu.L BE 7IlKElJ. ALL 3Moh'lNG.' I'M MAYYM-llr FUN gp QFLEAKING lggliggfg Igfgfifae vv A LIST'-QF GUYS . 'rmsm ow How ma WAIT -rn. L GIT -,,..... wrao Don r SUIT ME. so, -mv TO sr-Jean DUT ,?I'nAL5AXp4fE, Vgflqug Me HANDS on . BY THE WA-r, INTO THE WARD?-YOU ' ' v . THE wise Smp ,rr W HE' WHY gl:g:'N'ITo?'1i'E:?J00M E133-EZJQQURNDW YVNDNZV BFTTE-B THAN M5-:f1gMSEEg.T56n THAT CALLEU En: I, I n . ' THAT.- N - IIII IIIII WI-lEHIgMwA5 .II .II I.I.?.'2g,'3..gv'1I'1'5,,iS ,WI I - 2j',j'E0QTIjjQg b-' RME STARTED THE 'L Y' ' AND VIQINALYSES esters 7253 I ' HERE WHEN I ' I I 1 Lose My Timpani ?QL' wav LAID we :N-,., I 1 CDRNEKZSTOAIE DF IM? 5F,,,,I,G IUJQIII il Z 'rms .sown X4 7 4 N 'lT 'I NH r l w I ' A 1- ' .7 . 753 by Wea f -rv M' I '59 .Wf f If Buf I 6 fy I I .52 fri! g, lfm' -'1 . .jj ' 'I!IfIiWI3'5IQ.Lf-III I I ' I 'N 4 j f.y,si ?3iQL,xfL.L J 'Z Q 'I ' L I . X ' r I N XJ! i1z2'2':2.If'LL 'W I A I ' ff I .Q .IW mme CLEAM X I U ,,,,, '- OR mmm THE I No,I:arl'T mr A I j I Awvms MAI it-ax NE AGAIN--s-me ' N x 5 . ff I 'N XII I I .44 -.J I' 4 0 .4 fy fax: 3. 'IHIJQJ III W I I I x I 1 QF - Wm I I UAUYWCQ I I ,, C .. 5' X -4 5 A . I' W Ziff ,IJ 4 MLA? WE 1-AME-THE H41-T1 AND THE BLJND- SCENE: cufews emvfg MKS- GL UT2., UH: HRS. OWEILLYI IT: You SURE' Ana BEEN HARD DN ME- I A Smrrr Fon TKYIN6 T0 KEEP MY 'T' -+- -aans ewes. HAVENT TEN mm tween Paz II SEEN You 5moE THE AND cIz:TT1u1I To FWF ' ',I I our nfws AT s'nmAcH CLINICS A Ween-.MY lin!! WWIIIIIIIIII . I D 1 SA-D om.-f Cl-INIG. Haw I5 THE VLCERS ARE STM- A I we mme mf GM, AT PERIFEHAL THRKWNG- IU sms WISH ous N I fn MSIE GE YA 'LA'2- I KNOW oF IT ALL-THANK avg. 1-wane cumc - aj: You I-,long Aqua lgrlf,-nlggn HAVE JUST f DONT KNOW How WUULD STARTZ I i, IF THE IDEA TELL ,ws:,5aT4-Z.1'f-rf. To ELTTELSTO Aww THOSE ,YVREII 4-AN 11h 5 CvoTTA I J 7 Dwwif APPEAL 2 ,I f I fX no FINE wma- EE l'1f1 lBwrFE mf? 'CO uYf'Yj'HY ff. fx N, Gul our me ce-mu BZLZZZES I I ?i 0 ,Ig-gs If MQ ?ZTWI1iJ'2Zi?3' 0 IIIIIIIIIIII 1 Ig C- . J F., Jah I4 Q I I., If If ME. I 2 .km 5-' U H .E ' I I, V--7 Q! I AND HIM! lj' X' Q r '7,' .-I X 'I Q1 3' Q01 I l V U. . ' .AL-.l,, I A Q J ,f fm? U ? I 3 1- If f6f 24 . I,-5 XJ Iffmfg ffl QW- T 'W .,fj'gR,I LE 5 25 nfl ff? w - gm, L,,. wr-mv THAT ff: N X5 ' '3 ' p j 4 4 'M I 'K L I H x 'Q' If WI. f I QJQU-llykg' 7 7:?Cg5SLJ I Tgfxmj ' - VT :If 'A ' A K D h WI if I I K NYJ f I-X f 1 I. xl' 3 ff 1 ,JE Mg., gh-SETN QIEIL ukp- VJ A I S1x0vH' Q3 I I iff II -I I. ,Ii I- ,Y f I-7 I A XI xxx 7 5 XXI! I Q .I I. X1 7 j II ,XFX rv ix fI ' ' .f -'N W Nix 1 'L UWM -I ' U mf Lf , bv , QQFQI I ' ' I Bi- I f I II I Q VI I I J2 f f I fp 12-X IQ' 0.4 We- YK -f g ' 135 6' 7 X W' J :Q.7h.5 F5171 WL!! 'tiff' J! IQ , f f II . .3 N 'bif fx-- 5 , jqf ff I QII f Q I swrffffu - gfkagw zfx RN- Y fw., f 4? v f AefffZ'5' x., I f ,A , LLQX 4: jxnjlpfl l 279 -THE Houfz ol? g,q,4RM.. ---ii...i.... , rf vf wx6w Now, asfvnsf-15N r see you wwe sms f .V VEIAY 6100.0 Devo: THFRE BW THH73' Nur Ss 0 f ' Exf-lcvzr me WAV IZD wmrs 11. 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III5 CASE I5 'I'RvLY AN EPIC IN MODERN r'IgnICIfoE, ONLY HIS SUPERIOR 'INTELL- IGENCE CAVSED HIM To SEEK MEDICAL AID AFTER UNLV, FIVE' YEARS OF SPITTING- B'LODD.' APPLLIIAE PLEASE ix '55 N573 f f 'f , f' r , I If '..-I ', 'Fi-'TT , L' I ,,-. gTTjiL-7-up GE,-.7 A L K, ff MI I If WW V'IIQ fmf,I,I, If lA . - if '-z'- I If I c' 'AK5 - T--A f in -I .- -IVE I 54 I I ,ff XJ fy-LL' Lf' REV QI I WI Im fk I vm L T' ' 'I I - ' f'-if ALJ M.,.m, Nfj' .x R fifvfiill B X V 'QIQZ If xx I I , ,-- ' N Ix-JA' ' 4, T- Lf A V :il ' x xfwffr 1 I lx., 4 ' 1 -lr P ', Sitxxly, I' if AW A5-'f Y xx, X X X f II-JL! ex EI L 'Q X1 XLIFIQ-W,-tvi.iFTX ,V X N vlfgyx fax KW ff-Ps-k5XIq i5Wx M fff WIL52! IJ II' I li ' -T . - W- I X 211-I Yff X. i- VIII!! I 'lui V .QQ It'TE l:-Q S4 N X IIV! Lge . WN? 64 KITWUWQII 'JKDI I 'W ,gif lf.,- , I- 'Q If A, . 14- H I NA ' 1 ' X I p , ' ' , ' ' J-6 ' J ' - 411 .: . 5 1 ' If f A , I - I Q- ,ff-1147- If :- 5:1 ff Xx ffff F? 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AFTER I3E1NG DLINPEP RATHER UNCEf?EMoNfou5LY HECUIWBENT Ivosfffolv, H1-' DIMPPEAR5 Fx?of1 IN THE IIFPER HEACI-IE! or THE PIT, om mme 'THE' .SACRED THREE FRONT Hows 'ro THE UIVDERMES A FIT or D1.fPRE.5'.S1oN,Ifowfrv62 REVEAME fffofofv off Mom? FAMILMR FfIfE5',fVoNE or ON ALL SENfaRs AND SHYIN5 WAIT 'm IM wfnffl Snow H7 f7'll5' wma, .s'lGN5' +sI'MPTaM-f A SENIDK, IZA sffaw xL1M! ANo sa IT 0055 OF Miner-- .Qi Q K' Y rw X QE I 7 Q fX ff'! I ' 11 ,A AL I ' ,4'b'I5fIn-r ,Lwmv HARL ii IIIIT I I fff fhff xxx ff .M J :V L I A IIB' .ffl 5 I. lx D A.: , - ., '- g':LilE1,..,- QA VIQCL? 28l 4 xo PATRO Bernard J. Alpers Brooke M. Anspach Walter W. Baker Moses Behrend Robert S. Bookhammer Abraham Cantarow Lawrence S. Carey Mario A. Castallo Louis H. Clerf Edward F. Corson Arthur J. Davidson David M. Davis Warren B. Davis John H. Dugger Francis M. Foster C. Calvin Fox Kenneth E. Fry John H. Gibbon, Jr. Basil Giletto Harold L. Goldburgh George A. Hahn Ralph C. Hand Benjamin F. Haskell Mahlon C. I-Iinebaugh J. Rudolph Jaeger Samuel J affe Harold W. J ones A. Spencer Kaufman Baldwin L. Keyes U Frank C. Knowles David W. Kramer William T. Lemmon Benjamin Lipshutz -xm-sux1vxarsn--snsavxnn-un-saws..-1nx4vxnns4ns4vsuxns4vs.nnx.a1-sms. NS Samuel A. Loewenberg Clifford B. Lull Donald C. McGrew James R. Martin Robert A. Matthews Franklin R. Miller Roy W. Mohler John B. Montgomery T. L. Montgomery Karl E. Paschkis William H. Perkins Sidney G. Radbill Abraham E. Rakoil' Martin E. Rehfuss Hugh Robertson Harry L. Rogers J. Parsons Schaeffer Lewis C. Scheffey William H. Schmidt Thomas A. Shallow Charles E. G. Shannon Martin J. Sokoloff S. Dale Spotts Abram Strauss Paul C. Swenson Leandro M. Tocantius William J. Tourish Charles E. Towson Norris W. Vaux F. B. Wagner, Jr. Adolph A. Walking George J. Willauer Horace J. Williams -snnsusnx.nxag-xv-s-nsnvsn-snx.4vs.u-xnuxarxnnxnnxarxunsl usa,-xv-sn-xarg ?ZeafrMMW.1 By DEAN CORNWELL, N.A. Oliver Wezzrlell Holmer, 1809-1894, reading his celebrated emzy entitled The Contezgiozzmerr of Pzzerperal Fever be- fvre the Barton Sociegf fir Medical Izzzprovement in 1843. OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES was a young man thirty-four years of age when he wrote this famous essay on childbed fever. He had ob- tained his M.D. degree at Harvard Medical School just seven years before and in the in- terval had been for two years professor of anatomy and physiology at Dartmouth Col- lege. How he came to write it he tells in the preface to a monograph entitled Puerperal Fever as a Private Pestilencenand published in 1855. These are his words: A discussion arose in a medical society of which I was a member, involving the sup- posed cause ofa disease, about which some- thing was known, a good deal suspected, and not a little feared. I felt that it would be doing a good service to learn what experience had to teach in the matter. His celebrated essay was the result of this searching inquiry. It is at once a model of cold scientilic reasoning and of impassioned pleading. Even today it is impossible to find in it a statement which is false or an argu- ment which can be refuted. We can still profit by his plea never to neglect anything, whether through ignorance or prejudice, that can make childbearing safer for women throughout the world. 'zhffzeem nr , We wfzkfzvz tlaiizhze The reproducti0zz That Motherx Might Live, on the opporitejmge, is the sixth in cz .rerier of original oil Aprzizztizzgr hy nz flmzozzs Amerimfz artist dqbiftizzg hirtoriml :tener in the lines of great American phyriciazlzf and Jzzrgeozzs. AMERICAN Pi-iYsrcrANs and surgeons have contributed greatly to the advancement of medicine. They should be better known to their fellow countrymen, who have benefited so much by their works. To accomplish this purpose, a series of original canvases entitled Pioneers of Amer- icrm Medicine was conceived by Wyetli Incorporated. An outstanding American illustratorand muralist, Dean Cornwell, N.A., was commissioned to execute them. The re- production shown is the sixth in the series, which was inaugurated in 1939. WYETH INCORPORATED The months of painstaking research that are necessary to insure accuracy of detail limit additional canvases to one a year. The original paintings are constantly being exhibited under the auspices of medical so- cieties and universities throughout the United States and Canada. It is hoped by Wyeth Incorporated that the series Pioneers of American Medicine will contribute in some small measure to the history of medicine and afford a clearer recognition ofthe achievements ofAmerican medical heroes. PHILADELPHIA 3 0 PA. e Meet file Boys Ea1f..'. 1 LYLE'S EMBASSY JEFFERSON 131 s. 10th STREET ' 127 s. 10th STREET 1 ill.-l-l , DONATED BY THE MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES J. M. C. 284 I-sd if M' W if' i 5 C- ' -J J f I u f 2lX ,, -. ll: , - f J l ' ' , I .... f NV f L- X Xlf ra -1 X tv.. xr,- L' v p W L-1. , arf' ,. ii A X 'r f 2 ' , 2? ' f 1.2' X5 2 f .5 -i 14.P Q., l Married Men Because the married men are in a definite minority among the staff of the CLINIC this year, as Well as among the class in general, we hereby dedicate a page to our downtrodden espoused victims of society, here written in a lighter vein than might be expected, had the wedded mem- bers of our Staff had their way., Statistically speaking, there are at the time of this printing forty-five members of the class who have taken the great step, with three sons and nine daughters now evident. Dutifully, we extend our congratulations to the husbands and to the proud fathers. We were a young crowd back there in January, 1944, practically untouched by the Goddess of Love when we first entered medical school, but it seems that before long many of our number were succumbing to the arrows of Cupid and, what with the services and the allotments, it almost turned into an epidemic. The search for a nice little apartment became a favorite pastime for many a love-struck lad. The frequent arguments as to the advantages of the married opposed to 'those of the so-called less blessed became quite popular. As graduation approaches, the ranks of the Benedicts will again undergo an increase in num- bers, but to those who have suffered through the joys of wedded bliss during their sojourn in Medical School, we respectfully and sincerely dedicate this page. Harold A. Wurzel John A. Surmonte Byron Thomas Eberly Charles B. Hanes Harris G. Fister William D. Coghlan Menzie McKim, Jr. William B. Abrams John M. Koval Lamar E. Haupt William J. Woodward Albert R. Jones, Jr. Walter W. Moore Robert I. J aslow Edgar C. Hanks Joseph T. Zukoski V Joseph N. Aceto Francis X. Thomas Donald H. McGee Gerald D. Dodd, Jr. Alfred S. Cook,'Jr. John F. Struve Roy Korson Ellwood C. Weise, Jr. Joseph M. Danyliw Robert G. Rhoda Robert H. Baker John R. Reynolds Leonard C. F eldstein Bruce van Vranken 285 Walter L. Cahall, Jr. S. Victor King, Jr. Herbert Kramer Albert J. Kraft, Jr. William J. Lussy Edgar C. Smith Leonell C. Strong, Jr Andrew J. Wehler Richard A. Hastings Noel C. Womack, Jr. Dante E. Marino John J. Meehan John A. Koltes Herbert C. Bowman Robert N. Swartley FACULTY1' EDSVIN E. GRAHAM, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Dis- eases of Children SOLOMON SOLIS-COHEN, M.D., Sc.D., Emeritus Pro- fessor of Clinical Medicine JOHN I-I. GIBBON, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Sur- gery and Clinical Surgery F IELDING O. LEWIS, M.D., Emeritus Professor of 1 Laryngology , BROOKE M. ANSI-ACH, M.D., Sc.D., Emeritus Pro- fessor of Gynecology GEORGE P. MULLER, Sc.D., M.S., M.D., Emeritus , Professor of Surgery M NOIXRIS W. VAUX, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics WILLIALI HARVEY PERKINS, M.D., Sc.D., LL.D., Dean and Professor of Preventive Medicine, Jefferson Medical College J. PARSONS SCHAEFFER, A.M., M.D., PH.D., Sc.D., Professor of Anatomy and Director of the Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy, 11th and Clinton Streets EDWARD L. BAUER, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics, 1609'Spruce Streetw: ,. ' J. EARL THOMAS, M.S., lM,D.,,Profcssor of Physiology, Jefferson Medical College , VHKGIL I'IOLLAND MOON, A.B.,q Sc.D., M.D., Professor of Pathology, Jefferson Medical College CHARLES E. G. SHANNON, A.B., M.D., Professor of Ophthalmology, 1930 Chestnut Street LOUIS H. CLERF, M D., LL.D., Professor of Laryn- gology and B.oncl1o-Esophagology, 1530 Locust Street THOMAS A. SI-IALLOW, M.D., Samuel D. Gross Pro- fessor of Surgery, 1611 Spruce Street CHARLES M. GRUBER, A.B., A.M., PH.D., M.D., Professor of Pharmacology, Jefferson Medical College D.AVID M. DAVIS, M.D., Nathan Hatfield Professor of Urology. 255 S. 17th Street HODART A. REIMANN, M.D., Magee Professor of Medicine and Acting Head of the Department of Experimental Medicine, Jefferson Hospital MARTIN E. IKEITFUSS, M.D., Professor of Clinical Medicine and Sutherland M. Prevost Lecturer in Therapeutics, 131 St. Georges Road, Ard- more, Pa. HORACE J. VVILLIAMS, M.D., Professor of Otology, 5908 Greene Street BERNARD J. ALPERS, M.D., So.D. CMed.j, Professor ol' Neurology, 111 N. 49th Street 'Names in the Faculty list, with the exception of the the basis of seniority of appointment. JAINIES B. MAIITIN, M.D., James Edwards Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, 1503 Medical Arts: Building LEWVIS C. SOHEFFEY, Sc.D., M.D., Professor of Ob- stetrics and Gynecology, 255 S. 17th Street BALDWIN L. KEYES, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, 2031 Locust,Street IIAROLD W. JONES, M.D., Sc.D., Thomas Drake Martinez Cardeza Professor of Clinical Medi- cine and Hematology, 1930 Chestnut Street PAUL C. SNVENSON, M.D., Professor of Radiology, Jefferson Medical College A. CANTARONV, M.D., Professor of Biochemistry, Jefferson Medical College JOHN I-I. GIBRON, JR., M.D., Professor of Surgery and Director of Surgical Research in the Depart- Inent of Surgery, 4035 Pine Street TIIADDEUS L. MONTGONIERY, M.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Director of the Division of Obstetrics, 2031 Locust Street KENNETH GOODNEH, PH.D., Professor of Bacteri- ology and Immunology, Jefferson Medical College RESERVE OFFICERS' TBAININ G CORPS FLOYD JOHNSON PUTNEY, Major, Medical Corps, U. S. Army, Professor of Military Science and Tactics CLINICAL PROFESSORS CHARLES Pi. HEED, M.D., Clinical Professor of Ophthalmology, 1205 Spruce Street TARTHUR E. BILLINGS, M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery, 2020 Spruce Street WARREN B. DAVIS, M.D., Sc.D., Clinical Professor of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 135.S. 18th Street SAMUEL A. LOEWENTBERG, M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine, 1905 Spruce Street QQJOHN B. FLIOK, M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery, Pennsylvania Hospital .ARTHUR J. DAVIDSON, M.D., Clinical Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Northeast Corner of 20thf and Chestnut Streets EDWARD F. CORSON, M.D., Clinical Professor of Der- matology, 136 S. 16th Street JOHN B. MONTGONIERY, M.D., Clinical Professor of Gynecology, 1930 Chestnut Street BURGESS L. GORDON, M.D., Clinical Professor ot' Medicine, 1832 Spruce Street Emeritus Professors and the Dean, are arranged on Tliesigned, February 7, 1946. 5Iiesigned,,Novemher 25, 1946. i 'Died Feb. 18, 1947 Iliesigned, April 8, 1946. 1lLeave of absence. QCLIFFORD B. LULL, M.D., Clinical Professor of Ob- ' stetrics, 807 Spruce Street GABFIELD G. DUNCAN, M.D., Clinical Professor of Medicine, 1930 Chestnut Street Ji RUDOLPH JAEGER, M.D., Clinical Professor of Neurosurgery in the Department of Surgery, A 442 Warick Road, Wynnewood, Pa., ROBERT A. MATTHEWS, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, 111 N. 49th Street ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS N. A. MICHELS, A.B., M.A., Sc.D., Associate Pro- fessor of Anatomy, 11th and Clinton Streets JOSEPH O. CRIDER, M.D., Associate Professor of Physiology, and Assistant Dean, Jefferson Medi- cal College BENJALIIN P. WEISS, M.D., Associate Professor of Neurology, 250 S. 13th Street WILLIALI A. IQREIDLER, B.S., M.S., PILD., Associate Professor of Bacteriology and Immunology, Jefferson Medical College ' Y A. SPENCER KAUFMAN, M.D., Associate Professor of - Otology, 1923 Spruce Street CREIGRTON H. TURNER, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, 1713 Pine Street NORMAN M. MacNE1LL, 'M.D., Associate Professor of Pediatrics, 5807 Chew Street LORENZ P. I-IANSEN, PLLD., Associate Professor of Biochemistry, Jefferson Medical College LEANDRO TOCANTINS, M.D., Associate Professor of .Medicine, Jefferson Medical College FRANKLIN R. M1LLER, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, Jefferson Hospital AUSTIN T. SMITH, M.D., Associate Professor of Laryn- gology, 259 S. 17th Street ANDREW J. RAMSAY, A.B., PI'f.D., Associate Professor of Histology, and Embryology, Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy, 11th and Clinton Streets VVILLLAM J. HARRIsoN, M.D., Associate Professor of Ophthalmology, 135 S. 17th Street WRTILLIAM H. SCHMIDT, M.D., Associate Professor of Physical Therapy, Medical Arts Building DAVID R. MORGAN, M.D., D.P.H., Associate Professor of Pathology, and Curator of the Museum, Jefferson Medical College GEORGE ALLEN BENNETT, A.B., M.D., Associate Pro- fessor of Anatomy, Daniel Baugh Institute of Anatomy, 11th and Clinton Streets J. BERNARD BERNSTINE, M.D., Associate Professor of Obstetrics, 2001 Delancey Street HENRY B. DECKER, M.D.,. Associate Professor of Dermatology, 327 Penn Street, Camden, N. J. ARTHUR J. WAGERS, M.D., Associate Professor of Laryngology, 14-29 Spruce Street MARIO A. CASTALLO, M.D., Sc.D., Associate Pro- fessor of Obstetrics, 1621 Spruce Street IJEINRICH BRIEGER, M.D., D.P.H., Associate Pro- fessor of Preventive Medicine, 58 N. Lansdowne Avenue, Lansdowne, Pa. ADOLPH A. WALKLING, M.D., 'Associate Professor 'Of Surgery, Medical Arts Building' fr' Wfll.-LIAM T. LEMQMON, M.D., Associate 'Professor of Surgery, 1930 Chestnut Street - I PAUL W. HAVENS, JR., Associate Professor of Pre- ventive Medicine, 300 Cherry Avenue, Wynne- wood, Pa. AssIs'rANT Pnornssons ' LUCIUS TUTTLE, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology, Jefferson Medical College CHARLES W. BONNEY, A.B., M.D., Assistant Professor of Topographic and Applied Anatomy, 255 S. 17th Street H. H. LOTT, M.D., Assistant Professor of 'Laryn- gology, Medical Arts Building ' DAv1D W. KJKALIEII, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, 2007 Pine Street BENJAMIN LIPS!-rUTz, M.D., Assistant Professor of Neuroanatomy, 1007 Spruce Street ILOBEBT M. LUKENS, M.D., Assistant Professor of Bronch-Esophagology, 1923 Spruce Street HARIKY STUCKERT, M.D., Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, 248 S. 21st Street J. ,HALL ALLEN, M.D., Assistant Professor of Proc- tology, 1426 Spruce Street SIDNEY L. OLs1IO, M.D., Assistant Professor of Oph- thalmology, 1235 S. 15th Street WILLIAM P. PIEARN, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery, 2119 Spruce Street JOHN WILLIAMS HOLMES, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, 819 N. 63rd Street J OHN T. EADS, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, 2029 Delancey Street C. CALVIN F ox, M .D., Assistant Professor of Laryn- gology, 350 S. 16th Street I. CHARLES LINTGEN, M.D., Assistant Professor of Gynecology, 1930 Chestnut Street BEYNOLD S. GRIFFITH, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, 269 S. 19th Sheet ARTI-IUR FIRST, M.D., Assistant Professor of Ob- stetrics, 1714 Spruce Street IQENNETH E. FRY, M.D., Assistant Professor of Sur- gery, 1611 Spruce Street MARSHALL M. LIEBER, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology, J elferson Medical College J. Scorrr F RITCH, M.D., Assistant Professor of Oph- thalmology, 269 S. 19th Street CARROLL R. MULLEN, A.B., M.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Ophthalmology, 2025 Locust Street ROY W. MOEHIER, A.B., A.M., Sc.D., M.D., Assistant Professor of Gynecology, 1806 Spruce Street E. Ross IJART, PrI.D., Assistant Professor of Phar- cology, Jefferson Medical College FRANCIS' Mi'iFORSTEl1, M.D., Assistant Professor of Neurology, 26 Berkley Road, Devon, Pa. JOSEPH STASNEY, M.D., Assistant Professor of Path- ology, 13th and Chestnut Streets JOHN F. COPPOLINO, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, 1807 S. Broad Street GUY M. NEIJSON, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medi- cine, 255 S. 17th Street M. H. F. F BIEDMAN, M.A., PH.D., Assistant Professor of Physiology, Springton 'MauOr, Upper Darby, Pa. WILLIAM GEORGE SAwITz, M.D., Assistant Professor of Parasitology in the Department of Bacteri- N ology and Immunology, 250 E. Johnson Street JOSEPH WALDMAN, M.D., Assistant Professor of Oph- thalmology, 1930 Chestnut Street MARTIN J. SOKOLOFF, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, 255 S. 17th Street SHERMAN A. EGER, M.D., Assistant Professor of Sur- , gery, 2029 Delancey Street GEORGE J. WILLAUER, M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery, 1930 Chestnut Street AARON CAPPER, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pedi- I atrics, 2054 Locust Street ROBERT S. BOOKHAMMEIK, M.D., Assistant Professor , of Psychiatry, 2031 Locust Street ALISON H. PRICE, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medi- cine, Jefferson Medical College HUGH G. GRADY, M.D., Assistant Professor of ' Pathology, Jefferson Medical College THEODORE P. EEERHARD, M.D., Assistant Professor of Radiology, Jefferson Medical College LEON LEE MILLER, M.D., Assistant Professor of' A Biochemistry, Jefferson Medical College WILLIAM H. PEAIILINIAN, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Biochemistry, Jefferson Medical College KARL E. PASCHKIS, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine, Jefferson Medical College LOWELL ADHTON ERF, M.D., Assistant Professor of' Medicine ABRAM STRAUSS, M.D., Associate in Dermatology JOHN B. LOWNES, M.D., Associate in Urology JAMES L. HICIIARDS, M.D., Associate in Gynecology CHENEY M. STIMSON, M.D., Associate in Gynecology JOHN DE CARLO, M.D., Associate in'Applied and Topographic Anatomy HAROLD L. GOLDBURGH, M.D., Associate in Medicine JAMES F. CABRELL, M.D., Associate in Obstetrics WILLIAM J. THUDIUM, A.B., M.D., Associate in Gynecology THEODORE Pt. FETTER, M.D., Associate in Urology CLYDE M. SPANGLER, M.D., Associate in Obstetrics WALTER W. BAKER, M.D., Associate in Urology CHARLES E. TOWSON, M.D., Assocate in Otology CARL J. BUCHER, M.D., Associate in Pathology PATRICK A. MCCARTIIY, M.D., Associate in Surgery LOUIS B. LAPLACE, M.D., Associate in Medicine ROBERT BRUCE NYE, M.D., Associate in Medicine I'IOWELL B. PEACOCK, M.D., Associate in Laryn- gology A LAWVRENCE S. CAREY, M.D., Associate in Medicine JAMES M. SURVER, M.D., Associate in Surgery ARTHUR G. PRATT, M.D., Associate in Dermatology M. NOBLE BATES, A.B., M.A., PH.D., Associate in Histology and Embryology NATHAN D. SCHLEZINGER, M.D., SC.D. fMed.j, Associate in Neurology f OSCAR T. WOOD, M.D., Associate in Medicine WILLIAM HAIKDING KJWEEDLER, M.D., Associate in Medicine MOSES BEHREND, M.D., Associate in Surgery DANIEL LAMB TUIKNER, PH.D., Associate in Bio- chemistry ROBERT C. HUTCHINSON, A.B., PH.D., Associate in Anatomy KARL E. PAscI1KIs, M.D., Associate in Physiology JOHN LAWRENCE ANGEL, PH.D., Associate in Anat- omy and Physical Anthropology KELVIN A. KASDER, M.D., Associate in Laryngology DAVID M. FARELL, M.D., Associate in Gynecology HENRY O. SLOANE, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology RALPH C. HAND, M.D., Associate in Orthopedic Surgery ROBERT CIIARR, M.D., Associate in Medicine BENJAMIN F. HASKELL, M.D., Associate in Surgery CPrOctologyJ JACOB HOFFMAN, A.B., M.D., Associate in Gyne- cology DAVID R. MERANZE, B.S., M.A., M.D., Associate in Bacteriology and Immunology PETER A. I-IERBUT, M.D., Associate in Pathology WILLIAM T. HUNT, M.D., Associate in Ophthalmology GRANT O. FAVORITE, M.D., M.P.H., Associate in Bacteriology and Immunology WILLIAM J. SNAPE, M.D., Associate in Physiology FRANK F. ALLRRITTEN, JR., M.D., Associate in Sur- gery and Research Assistant in the Department of Surgery IHVING HENIXY WAGMAN, PH.D., Associate in Physi- Ology ABRAHAM HAROFF, M.D., Associate in Obstetrics and Gynecology GEORGE H. STRONG, M.D., Associate in Urology FLOYD JOHNSON PUTNEY, M.D., Associate in Laryn- gology and Broncho-Esophagology WILLIAM GEORGE SAWITZ, M.D., Associate in Medi- cine WILLIAM WALLACE L. GLENN, M.D., .Associate in Surgery and Research, Assistant in the Depart- ment of Surgery WALTER P. IIAVENS, M.D., Associate in Medicine DEMONSTRATOBS I. GRAFTON SIEBEIK, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryn- golosy W. B. SWARTLEY, M.D., Demonstrator of Anatomy MAUIXICE BROWN, M.D., Demonstrator of' Derma- tology HZENRY G. MUNSON, M.D., Demonstrator of Derma- tology LOUIS CHODOEF, M.D., Demonstrator of Bandaging LYNN M. RANKIN, M.D., Demonstrator of Operative Surgery STANLEY Q. WEsT, M.D., Demonstrator of Urology LEOPOLD GOLDSTEIN, M.D., Demonstrator of Ob- ' stetries D. RANDALL MAOCARROLL, M.D., Demonstrator of Obstetrics HR. MANGES SMITH, M.D., Demonstrator of Radiology JAMES F. MCCAHEY, M.D., Demonstrator of Urology EDYVARD F. BURT, M.D., Dernonstrator of Pediatrics MAHLON C. HINEBAUGII, M.D., Demonstrator of Obstetrics THOMAS J. COSTELLO, B.S., M.D., Demonstrator of Gynecology S. DALE SPOTTS, M.D., Demonstrator of Surgery DAVID H. SOLO, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryngology PAUL H. ROEDER, M.D., Demonstrator of Obstetrics ROBERT P. STURR, M.D., Demonstrator of Physical Therapy ELI MARcowI'rz, M.D., Demonstrator of Neurology MAX LUDWIG WEIMYXNN, M.D., Demonstrator of Pediatrics FLOYD JOHNSON PUTNEY, M.D., Demonstrator of Otology WILLIAM J. HITSCIILER, M.D., Demonstrator of Otology THOMAS ACETO, M.D., Demonstrator of Medicine HARRY A. BOGAEV, M.D., Demonstrator of Urology THOMAS LAWRENCE WILLIAMS, PH.C., B.Sc., Demon- strator OI' Biochemistry HYMAN E. YASKIN, M.D., Demonstrator of Neurology JOHN C. ULLERY, M.D., Demonstrator of Obstetrics JOHN EDWVARD LYNCH, PII.D., M.D., Demonstrator of Gynecology GEORGE ALAN HAHN, A.B., M.D., Demonstrator of Gynecology and Clinical Assistant in Radiology SIDNEY G. PLADBILL, M.D., Demonstrator of Oph- thalmology LOUIS A. KUSTIN, M.D., Demonstrator of Laryn- gology ' I WILLIAM J. TOURISH, M.D., Demonstrator of Surgery JOHN F. AVILSON, M.D., M.S.,, Demonstrator of Dermatology ALBERT M. LUPTON, M.D., Demonstrator of Phar- macology ANTHONY F. DE PALMA, M.D., Demonstrator of Orthopedic Surgery PERRY S. MACNEAL, M.D., Demonstrator of Medi- cine HENRY A. DAVIDSON, M.D., Demonstrator of Psy- Chiatry CONSTANTINE R. ROSCOE, M.D., Demonstrator of Pediatrics INSTRUCTORS HUBLEX' R. OWEN, M.D., Instructor in Surgery ARTHUR R. VAUGI-IN, M.D., Instructor in Medicine THOMAS R. MOIIGAN, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology ALBERT A. BURROS, M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics P. A. MCCARTHY, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy ELI R. SALEEBY, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy HAROLD S. RAMBO, M.D., Instructor in Urology JOSEPH ASIIEL, M.D., Instructor in Urology FRANK J. CILIRERTI, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy I. GRAFTON SIEBEII, M.D., Instructor in Otology JOHN H. DUGGER, M.D., Sc.D., Instructor in,Ob- stetrics RAPHAEL H. DURANTE, M.D., Instructor in Neurology GEORGE W. BLAND, MID., Instructor in Obstetrics ALAN'PARKER, M.D., Instructor in Surgery HEIIBERT A. AVIDING, M.D., Instructor in Surgery ELI R. SALEEBY, M.D., Instructor in Surgery JOHN D. REESE, M.D., Instructor in Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery RAYMOND B. MOORE, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy HENllY SIGMOND, M.D., Instructor in Orthopedic SIu'gery NEDJIB M. BEIQIR, M.D., Instructor in Pediatrics V. WILLIAM WEAKLEY, M.D., Instructor in Gyne- cology CALVIN SEARLE DRAYER, M.D., Instructor in Neu- rology JAMES J. RYAN, M.D., Instructor in Neurology KENNETH M. CORRIN, M.D., Instructor in Psychiatry THOMAS J. LEICHNER, M.D., Instructor in Physical Therapy JOHN J. 0,KEEFE, M.D., Instructor in Otology HAYWARD R. I-IAMRIOK, M.D., Instructor in Medicine CHARLES W. SEMISCH, III, M.D., Instructor in Medicine , PETER A. THEODOS, M.D., Instructor in Medicine LOUIS G. FEO, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics LEON L. BERNS, M.D., Instructor in Anatomy CLARE C. PIODGE, M.D., Instructor in Surgery DAVID NAIDOFF, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmology J. WOODWARD SAvAcoOL, M.D., Instructor in Medi- cine GEORGE KENNEDY, M.D., Instructor in Radiology GEORGE- A. PORRECA, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology, ABRAHAM MYERS, M.D., Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery ALFRED G. LISI, PH.D., Instructor in Pharmacology ARNOLD GOLDRERGER, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics BASIL GILETTO, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics T. BURRITT MERVINE, M.D., Instructor in Anes- thesiology in the Department of Surgery CLARENCE C. BRISCOE, M.D., Instructor in Obstetrics HUGH ROBERTSON, M.D., Instructor in Operative Surgery EDWARD H. BISHOP, M.D., Instructor in Gynecology FRANK BRIDGETT, M.D., Instructor in Ophthalmology ARTHUR S. MCCALLUM, M.D., Instructor in Laryn- gology g CARL T. HOULIHAN, M.D., Instructor in Laryn- solvsy THOMAS M. SCOTTI, M.D., Instructor in Pathology IIWVIN J. PINCUS, M.D., Instructor in Physiology EVAN B. HUME, M.D., Instructor in Dermatology and Syphilology SOLOMON M. LIAIMES, M.D., Instructor in Psychiatry ASSISTANT DEMONSTRATORS EDWARD CARRIE THOMAS, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Pediatrics LOUIS A. KUSTIN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Otology MIIITON HARRISON, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery ALFRED E. BBUNSVVICK, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Surgery ALDRICII C. CROWE, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator W of Pediatrics SAMUEL JAFFE, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine 1 IEDVVAIKD I-I. IKOTIN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of ' Medicine JOSEPH D. BROWN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Operative Surgery IIOBERT ERNEST IMHOFF, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator ol' Dermatology ABRAHAM COIIEN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine ALBERT VVHEATLAND BROWN, M.D., Assistant Dem- onstrator of Obstetrics IEDVVAIID T. LITT, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of l Urology CHARLES H. IIARNEY, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery JOSEPH J. CAVA, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine J. J. KIIKSIINEIK, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine ' EDNVAIHD J. MOOIKE, JR., M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Pediatrics BERNARD B. STEIN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Pediatrics CARERS B. ONVINGS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Otology DARIUS G. OBNSTON, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Otology CHARLES H. LACLAIR, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery ' RICHARD CHODOFF, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery EDWARD A. Y. SCIIELLENGEIX, M.D., Assistant Dem- onstrator of Gynecology A. E. RAKOFF, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator OI' Obstetrics S. VICTOR KILXBIEN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics PAUL IEBNER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics MSARCEL STANLEY SUSSMAN, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Obstetrics JOHN C. UIXBAITIS, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Psychiatry JOHN CHELEDEN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Proctology ' .NICHOLAS P. A. DIENNA, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Obstetrics GEORGE A. SILVER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Bacteriology EDWARD C. BRITT, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Laryngology ROBERT S. GARBEII, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Psychiatry LEONARD W. PARKHURST, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Medicine JOHN A. MCCORRHCK, M.D., Assistant Dcmonstrator of Obstetrics , JOSEPH L. FINN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator Ol' Obstetrics GLENN S. DICKSON, B.A., M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Gynecology - JOHN J. O,KEEFE, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Laryngology and Broncho-Esophagology LEVVIS C. MANGES, JR., M.D., Assistant Demonstra- of Surgery ROBERT H. LAYTON, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery FRANKLIN BUTBERG, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Otology J. ZAKRZEWSKI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Gynecology AMOS S. VVAINER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics EPHRIAM M. ROSSET, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator- Of Obstetrics THOMAS VV. CLARK, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine IZYDOR :EDMUND IVIIKOYVSKI, M.D., Assistant Dem- Onstrator of Medicine JOSEPH LOUIS NOCENTINI, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator Ol' Ophthalmology MILTON K. MEYERS, M.D., Assistant Dcmonstrator of Child Psychiatry JAMES D. MAIIONEY, M.D., Assistant Deinonstrator of Psychiatry C. BALCOM IVIOORE, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator ol' Urology ' PAUL M. PEOAU, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine ARTHUR G. BAKER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of lVIedicine JOSEPH IIICCHIUTI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine ALEXANDER SOOIIAOKI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine ARTHUR BOLDEN, M.D., Assistant Demonstratcr of Medicine JOSEPH THOMAS CADDEN, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Medicine SAMUEL E. RYNES, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine JACOB M. CAIIAN, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine FREDERIC KRAMER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Psychiatry EDWARD L. LIPSIUS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator ' of Ophthalmology JAMES B. CARTY, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery HARRX' ROGERS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine CHARLES W. SEMISCI-I, III, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Pediatrics NIAX JROSENZNVEIG, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Urology CHARLES J. ZINN, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Orthopedic Surgery GAETANO BIHNDISI, M,D., Assistant Dernonstrator of Medicine IIARRY J. IQNOWLES, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery, and Boss V. Patterson Fellow in Surgery FREDERICK B. WAONER, A.B., M.D., Assistant Dem- Onstrator of Surgery SOLOMON ZKEESAL, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator Of Urology . M. ROYDEN C. As'rLEx', M.D., Assistant Demon- strator ol' Neurology MILTON L. MCCALL, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics JOHN IIENDIIICKS HZODGES, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator Ol' Medicine JAY T. S'LlU.I'KLEY, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Psychiatry JAMES S. D. IEISENHOWAIER, JR., M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator Ol' Medicine FRANK .ROBB ICINSEY, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator ol' 'Radiology J. BOBElX'l' Fox, M.D., Assistant Dcmonstrator of Laryngology BEIXNAIRD J. MILLEIK, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Surgery WOODROW W. LINDEMUT1-I, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator ol' Surgery LOUIS H. PALMER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy NVINSLONV J. BORKONVSKI, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator of Neurology, and Ross V. Patterson Fellow in Nerology RUFUS E. PALMER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Pathology JAUGUSTIN T. GIORDANO, M.D., Assistant Demon- strator Ol' Pediatrics ALBERT JOHN BLAIR, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics JEDVVARD B. MARENUS, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Obstetrics EMANUEL SUFRIN, M.D., Assistant Semonstrator of Medicine D. ALBERT IQAPLAN, M.D., Assistant Dernonstrator Ol' Psychiatry IRVING L. FRANK, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Gynecology AVILLARD E. IQNOWLES, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator Of Medicine GEORGE HAGER, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Psychiatry LEIB GOLUB, JR., M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Gynecology ARTHUR J. YVINTLUNI, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator Ol' Radiology EDMUND L. LHLOUSEL, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Medicine IAUSSELL WIGII, M.D., Piacliologist to the Department of Anatomy MECHANICIAN TO ORTHOPEDIC DEPARTMENT OF JEFFERSON HOSPITAL G. EMIL GEFVERT Manufacturer of H SURGICAL and ORTHOPEDIC APPLIANCES o TRUSSES o CRUTCI-IES o ELASTIC HOSIERY o SUPPORTERS, etc. WALTER B. McCARTY Bell: Rl 6-5989 241 North 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 29l H. PERILSTEIN MIRRORS A 524 Lombard Street Philadelphia 47, Pa. L IN T0 N ' s FRIENDLY I RESTAURANTS THE MEDICINAL OXYGEN CO. OF PHILADELPHIA I DIVISION or NATIONAL CYLINDER cas COMPANY Philadelphia, Pa. Sales Office Executive Offices 1614 Summer Street 205 W. Wacker Drive Phone RI 6-0497 Chicago, Illinois Compliments of I ORTHOPAEDIC SHOE SHOP Apecuniosis fAn-Argentia-Auro Priva- Students' Disease 'J Definition: A state of lack of money or fluid assets. An endemic disease, occasionally epidemic 119295, which exists in a great variety of forms. May be congenital or acquired. Pathology: Few lesions found at post mor- tem. Emaciation in extreme cases. Atro- phy of the bank account which may be so small as to escape detection. Chemical analysis shows small amounts of copper, traces of silver Cin conjugated formj and complete absence of gold. Incidence: Universal in infants. Tends to become modified after puberty but after marriage acute exacerbations recur. Preva- lent among medical students with remissions in summer. Usually ends by lysis some years after graduation. After sixth decade the disease assumes a malignant form or else disappears entirely. Etiology: Occupation plays an important role. Strong familial trend. The hereditary form carries a guarded prognosis, although spec- tacular recoveries may take place. Males more commonly atfected than females, and in married women the disease is usually secondary to the husband's condition. Metabolism: Commonest cause is faulty assimi- lation of current assets. Diabetes of liquid assets causes chronic depletion. Obstipation of accumulated assets is a third form-here there is failure of mobilization and excre- tion fpseudo-apecuniaj. Symptoms: Behaviour disturbances: tendency to solitude and avoidance of places of public entertainment. Preference for beer rather than spirits. Intractable cases have itching of the palm. In milder cases constant tend- ency to borrow from friends-e.g., Bum- matione Cigarettorumf' Acute episodes percipitated by situations such as paying the dinner check. Here there is transitory hypermotility of hands-successive obtua- tion of the pockets Cdiverticulae vestisj, blushing, stammering and a tendency to stand behind other people. At this point, the patient may vanish. Indecision over purchases, and upagamentus 1entus are common. Astute patients may completely mask the symptoms. Signs: Inspection: Cafe-au-lait color of the linen Cvesta maculataj. Fimbriosis of the euil's with attempts at repair. Trouser legs show obliteration of the longitudinal sulcus and sacculation at the knees CPresser's signj. 'Shoes of dull lusterless appearance with Wedgings of the heels Ccalcaneus cunieformisj. Porridgia of the coat and vest, especially in Scots. In severe cases there may be lacunae pantalunae buttock- orum with considerable areas of denudation and even penetration of the underclothing. In extreme eases the patient may be subject to legal detention until repair is affected. In the pockets the coin test is diminished or absent. Palpation of the wallet shows the walls to be in apposition and crepitus absent. Diagnosis: Usually easy With careful history and physical. Dun and Bradstreet test can be applied in doubtful cases. If this is nega- tive, the local credit association should be called in consultation. Treatment: Increased physical and mental activity, change of occupation are safest. The prognosis is guarded. Transfusions on liquid assets are to be avoided since they tend to be habit forming. Occasionally mar- riage leads to a complete remission, but it is important to be sure that the bride does not suffer. from the masked form of the disease herself. Abstract of original research done by .Iohn Lansbury, 'M.D., when attending Queens' University School of Medicine CCirca 19265. OphthaImolggy-fC'onlinue1I from page 2181 enemies which had no respect for nobleman or peasant- Sir Charles of the Hecds and Sir William, who came from a long line ol' Harrisons, were immediate subor- dinates to the king and we met them in the Ocular Arena as well as on the Optic Plateau in the Curtis Range. Many more houses of nobility-Mullen, Wald- man, Radbill and others-contributed members to the great array of senior knights who trained us in vari- ous places of the great Jefferson Castle. Our course of instruction under King Charles ended. He tested us carel'ully in the recognition of enemies and the techniques for elfecting their defeat. We were knighted and departed the Castle well equipped for om' errands ol' mercy. THE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HOTEL FLORIST Corsaqe Specialists 9th and Chestnut Streets Phone: WA 2-5544 Open Evenings 9 P. M Y WA 2-8600 Saturday Midnight VICTOR V. CLAD CO. I Manufacturers of Food Service Equipment CHINA-GLASS-SILVERWARE Kitchen Utensils l17-119- 121 SOUTH 11th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. SA 7-0500 WEST DISINFECTING COMPANY Q 49th Street and Grays Avenue Philadelphia 43, Pa. Compliments of THE ANDERSON A HOSPITAL Compliments of HHARRY R. RUST, Inc. 19 S. 8th Street Q Philadelphia 6, Pa. BROTHERSTON SURGICAL C0. SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS , Of Quality and Distinction STAINLESS STEEL-CHROME PLATED Hospital Equipment Physician's Supplies 2214 CHESTNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA, PA. The Gross Clinic, 1875 by Thomas Ealrins Large, iull color reproductions of this famous painting, owned by Ieiierson Medical College, Will be sent without charge ii requested by any student or alumnus oi the College. ETHICON SUTURE LABORATORIES New Brunswick, New Jersey J. B. 8: J. H. IVIEARNS HEATING, ROOFING and PLUMBING 'V 245 SOUTH TENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA '1, PA. A Parable in Four Convulsions fC07Ll'I:7l'llU1l from page 271D 7. And .Iahobfs family was among them. And the heart of .Iahob's family did swell with pride. 8. And he did abandon himself to his emo- tions when his son's name was read from the lists. ' 9. And .Iahob Was summoned to the rostrum to receive the Alumni Prize and the Surgery Prize and the Medicine Prizeg 10. And the Obstetrics Prize and the Therapeutics Prizesg 11. Yea, also, in Pediatrics. 12. And there Was great rejoicing in the House of Bence-.I ones. 13. But the name of Hasheesh was not among them. 14. For he had procrastinated. 15. In fact he had the wrong idea in think- ing he was brilliant. 16. And he ilunked Shallow and, Gibbon, and Reimann and Piehfussg 17. And Scheffey and Montgomeryg 18. And Davisg 19. And Pine Streetg 20. And Bauerg 21. And he did proceed to wail for seven days and seven nightsg 22. Which availed him nothing for he was done for. MORAL: A bird in the hand makes Jack a dull boy. ,1,..L,1- Anatomy-CContinucdf1om page 1951 Each man in the department tried his best to bring the subject up-to-date by incorporating new knowl- edge into his asides to us and strove to develop within each student the desire for more acciuate investigation into scientiiic matters. The second year course in neuroanatomy showed us the tediousness, accuracy and understanding with which we would have to meet our patients and evaluate their symp- toms. The third year Continued to tie all the loose ends and to further advance practicality. It was here that we could look'back on the other courses served to us at Daniel Baugh Institute, estimate them and attempt to gain whatever was 'lacking in our knowledge of anatomy. To the edifice outdated in structure but peerless in profcssorial content, abound- ing in knowledge, rare in lore and tradition-to which is inseparably attached the name of friend and donor, Daniel Baugh-farewell. CHARLES B. HIKNES. Obstetrics ancl Gynecology CC'o7Lti111lerIfroni page 5907, patients of varying rotundity who had been waiting outside for at least an hour. They iiled in for blood.- pressure readings and routine weigh-ins before the morning fracas. Then our dynamic nurse friend wolud burst into a lazy group of sleepy seniors and gasp- ingly ask, Who would like a patient this morning? The reply varied from nothing to a grunt so that she settled the matter by handing the history to the most eager looking beaver , nobody-not even the most surly of us-had the nerve to refuse. Oil she trotted for another history While our colleague Cwhose slight eagerness had rapidly wanedj drooped oil' in search of his patient. Later in an examining room, How many babies have you had? Well, Doc, Alfs been fragrant six times. Dis am numbah'seb'n an' it's goin' to be de last. Oh, how often we heard that story, but we knew that one of our successors would hear the same words from the same lips a couple of years later, the number being one higher, of course. Then began the wrestling match with pelvimetcr and speculumg the pitiable mother-to-be usually lost out and wriggled helplessly on the table while we rookies learned. lvho can forget Nlondays and Thursdays- anti-luetic bargain days? It would require a dia- bolical sadist to get any joy from jamming vicious needles 'two inches into gleaming black buttocks Cwhite ones were in the minority by farj so the bis- muth could do its part in making bad blood good but this 'treatment minimized the possibility of 'the helpless offspring suffering because of the iniquities of one or more of the branches in :the family tree. This was, indeed, obstetrics in the rawl Home deliveries-what two words in the vocabulary of the recent graduate from Jefferson could arouse more vivid memories? Hot summer nights-cold blus- tery afternoonsg the eternal wait for a street car-the bumpy ride in a squad car, dirty stinking hovels- the more livable project apartments, all of which were called home g screaming women in labor- quiet groaning soldiers more accustomed to the ordealg never-will-dilate cerviees-squirming, bawling B. O. A.'sg bug-infested rags for baby-neat layettes for long-awaited Juniorg a cup of coffee at 3 A. M.- Miss P1ummer's hard-to-beat meals-all this and classes, too. These women delivered healthy babies in spite of usg this was the practice of obstetrics in its most rugged form. Obstetrics embodies art as well as science and we completed om' course with the full realization that we had tasted, enjoyed and digested most of the funda- mentals of both phases, without either of which no man can claim to be a well-trained obstetrician. Of course we'd add much to our knowledge from our future experience but we were grateful to these men- scholars and gentlemen-who laid the foundations for our later work in collaboration with the noted Di-. Stork? DIAMONDS--JEWELRY-WATCHES J I W ' KLERS SINCE 'yas M 9 l RADIOS and ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES 29 S. 11th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Bell Telephone: PE 5-2925 Est. 1890 THE ORIGINAL JEFFERSON BARBER SHOP 5 BARBERS 129 South 10th Street A Scalp Treatment Manicurist a Specialty Bootblack A. Vasile RICHARD'S BARBER SHOP 260 S. 10th Street Philadelphia, Pa. A The Shop of Satisfied Customers Always LIACOURA,-S MARKET Prime Meats-Fancy Groceries Fruits and Vegetables 53 Spruce and 10th Streets Nlllll BUIVIPANY UF PENNA. 1006 Filbert Street WA 2-1740 Philadelphia, Pa. For Prompt Service Call PE 5-7266 CLINTON PHARMACY Prescription Specialists Luncheonette and Fountain Service 1000 SPRUCE STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. CLINTON HAND LAUNDRY 334 S. llth Street PE 5-5169 Prompt and Efficient Work at Reasonable Pr1ces Catering to the Medical Student Sincel1925 Phone: PE 5-1845 L SAULL'Sd FORMAL WEAR RENTED Tuxedos-Cutaways-Full Dress Complete Accessories lei 11022 WALNUT STREET Philadelphia 7, Pa. GYNECOLOGICAL DIVISION It was during our sophomore year that we were first introduced to gynecologyg heretofore it had been a small fragment of the vast clinical Unknown with which we were faced. Dr. J. B. Montgomery and Dr. Lintgen alternated in two brief sessions in our path- ology recitation hour and discussed with us the path- ology of the common gynecological disorders. Those crocks always had been the pathologists' jackpots and this time they yielded fibroleiomyomata varying from the size of a split pea to that of a dinosaur egg, uterine carcinoma, ectopic pregnancies and many other interesting specimens, all of which emitted the inevita- ble odor of formalin but managed also to bear some unforgettable memory pictures our way. Throughout the junior year the stern but genial Dr. Schelfey, then Professor of Gynecology this later change of title has already been explainedg if not clear, refer to a recent cataloguej, guided us carefully and sometimes 'teasingly over each phase of his fa- vorite subject. As oin' friendly white-haired teacher was met with the usual applause each Friday at five, he parried with the familiar and appropriate, Good evening, gentlemen. Tonight l'd like to direct yom' attention to a very important phase of gynecologic disorders. That introduction was followed by dis- cussions of such subjects as fibroid tumors and their various types of degeneration, differentiation between carcinoma of cervix and fundus, diagnosis and treat- ment of P. I. D., menstrual disorders and many other subjects, some of which were emphasized because our capable professor was well aware of the many pitfalls of the general practitioner. His experience had been vast and we were profiting by it. A The eternal recitation was our continual portiong this course was no exception. But we really did learn much from Dr. Montgomery CJ. B. in this casej in our occasional quiz sessions with him wherein he prac- tically obviated group cooperation by the straightfor- ward look from his kindly, untiring, scrutinizing eyes into our ever-weary, questioning faces. We realized the truth of the suggestion that one of the basic requi- sites of successful pedagogy is repetition. Gynecology, like every other subject, can't all be learned from books and lectures. This we appreciated during year number four when we personally met, questioned, examined and observed patients in the clinic and wards where such notables as Drs. Mont- gomery, Nlohler, Farrell, Rakoff, Lynch, Thudium, Hoffman, Hahn, Porreca and Bishop assisted Dr. Schelfey and his friend-of-the-student shadow, Dr. lVebster, in 'teaching us the proper techniques for extracting histories and inserting specula, both of which were' found indispensable to correct diagnosis. Obtaining urine via catheter, taking cervical and urethral smears and performing himanual examina- tions became easier with practice. VVe continued to appreciate the necessity of vigilant and helpful stu- dent and graduate nurses in the optimal comfort and proper treatment of hospital patients. VVe vividly recall with mingled emotions an airless cubicle on floor two of the College Buildingg it was labeled Demonstration Room. Our survival of the many sessions there demonstrated that we were equal to the degree, Doctor of Medicine. But more essential to this treatise is the fact that in that room Dr. Hoffman, condemned by some with the title, Therapeutic Nihilistf' refreshed our dimming memo- ries regarding gynecological pathologyg Dr. Rakoff, the Hormone-Eater, introduced us to the fundamen- tals of his pet subject, Endocrinology: Normal and Abnormalg Pregnant and Non-Pregnantug it was rugged but lucid. Dr. First waved vigorously the flag of sterility, entertainecl us with anecdotes and cau- tioned us with Never tell a woman she can't become pregnant because that's just when she will All this practical knowledge was sorted and sifted at various conferences, both with the whole class, in conjunction with the Division of' Obstetrics, and in sections, as part of the five weeks' ward service. We left the halls ol' Jefferson to face the rest of the medical world with many lessons having been well learned. For that knowledge representing the fields of Obstetrics and Gynecology we are grateful to our colorful ex-professor, Dr. Vaux, and our extremely competent co-professors, Drs. Scheffey .and Mont- gomery, and their capable subordinates. WILLIAM C. Hmnmcx. Pgyqhiaffy-fC'onti1LuecZfrom page 2181 most emotion is scientifically analyzed and labeled until finally the human being is placed in a category. Then, as the heads in the top row nestle into crooked elbows and the waitresses enter with Scotch and Soda, the drama takes a new turn. What about treatment? somebody asks, and the discussion gains renewed vigor. Theories are propounded, experiences related, and dominating mothers slandered, until finally a plan is evolved whereby the patient may be coaxed, stimulated, and guided out of his shelter of neuroticisin into the stream of life once more. Thus, though many of us are confused and some of us sleepy, the light gradually becomes brighter. Words take on meanings, terms become realities, and crazy people become understandable, preventable conditions. Most important of all, as the clock nears five, we realize that something can be done to help the mentally sick and that the solution is not simply to make more Yo-Yo's. With a few final words of benediction from the Chief, wc leave our 'tropical paradise, bidding adieu to another Freudian fiesta. Hastening down Elev- enth Street with visions of foaming brews in the distance, we eagerly admit that under the excellent guidance of Drs. Keyes, Matthews, Bockhammer and Company we have gained a knowledge which, no mat- ter what the chosen field ol' endeavor, will prove to be one of the valuable and useful therapeutic agents in our armamentarium. ROBERT S. MCCURDY. 297 1VIURRIE'S TAILQR and DRY CLEANING 269 S. 10th Street LO 34060 KI 5-9750-51 PE 5-2095 The 01.-1 Reliable KF.ESAL'S LUNCHEONETTE 262 SOUTH TENTH STREET Breakfast-Lunch-Dinner A We carry e fun line of Cigars, Cigarettes, Fine Candies, School Supplies and Magazines JEFFERSON PHARMACY 10th and Pine Streets Prescriptions A Specialty Luncheonette and A Fountain Service KI 5-9546-7-8 FRANKLIN X-RAY CORP. X-Ray Equipment and Supplies Q Fifth Floor, Maule Building 2100 Arch Street Philadelphia, Pa. 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HAMILTON MODERN MEDICAL FURNITURE WAPPLER SHORT WAVE DIATHERMY Write us for Location Data and Office Planning Service RI 6-3613-3614 , 1717 SANSOM STREET Supplies for the Medical Student THE PHYSICIANS SUPPLY CO. OF PHILADELPHIA 1513-15 Spruce Street PHYSICIANS and HOSPITAL SUPPLIES I SHORT WAVE-DIATHERMY MACHINES PEERLESS X-RAY . A PE 5-3980 Philadelphia 2. Pa. 299 Q9 COMPLIMENTS OF P r THE ATLANTIC REFIN IN G COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, PA Q PETROLEUM PRODUCTS HETTWER BEDDING CO. Sprung An' Mattresses and Box Sprmgs ri 166 W Columb1a Avenue Phxladelphla 22 Pa PHIL S MARKET Wholesale Grocer Fresh Meats and Vegetables 239 SOUTH TENTH STREET Estabhshed 1925 PHILADELPHIA BEST WISHES FROM A FRIEND Ask for Ell Dee Dee Hair Tonic 1 G. A. LUONGO'S r HAIRCUTTING l - Most Popular Among leff Men Since 1908 l - , 203 S. 10th STREET S. E. Cor. below Walnut - ac.-. , J TETLEY TEA Makes Good Tea a Certainly ir 119 SOUTH FRONT STREET PHILADELPHIA 6, PA. CLINTON HOTEL l 303-09 S. 101:11 Street A Historical Corner of Old Philadelphia l Q i l Air-Conditioned Cocktail Lounge l . , . Y. . ,,. ,El BROWN 'S SELECT FROZEN 'FRESH Y FROSTED Fooos l I Brown's Frosted Foods, Inc. . Christian and Howard Streets I Philadelphia, Pa. New York Lemoyne, Pa. Washington l l H W' ' fi 1 ' ,. K 117+ ag l I 1 I 1 i 4 I I 3 TOM CURLEYS ' I 1 i 275 South 11th Street BEST I 1 BEER FINEST j I LIOUORS, WINES O FOODS SERVED DAILY Toast, I-Iost and Boastfwhere Friends Meet the Most in Our Spacious Dining Room Ba cteri 0 I Q 9 y-Cfbnlinuacl from page 1961 The course was now directed by our former professor's capable associate, Dr. Kreidler, whom we knew well already as occasional lecturer and laboratory director. He worked hard to fill the recently vacated chair and was eminently successful. Directly proportionate to his waist line were his helpfulness, jocundity and sin- cere efforts to teach us what we hadn't yet learned about racquet-shaped spore-formers, gram negative intracellular diplococci, acid-fast baccilli and hosts of other subjects to which we were later referred by such notables as H. A. Ptcimann, D. M. Davis and M. J. Sokoloff. By the end of the year We had been trained to near-proficiency in six culture 'tubes in each hand, a petri dish under each arm and a wire loop in our teeth. Even the great Thurston would have had to acknowledge our juggling ability. One day we blundered into Blundell. Our greater mistake was to spell inoculation with two n's, along with other misspellings of less bacteriologic conse- quence. His rantings were entirely well founded. I-Ie could ill the three boards in the auditorium with complex charts and graphs as well as another faculty member could completely occupy the same space with structural formulae and fine script. Rickettsial dis- ease, heterophile antigen, .the virus Ca newly identi- fied problem childl were just a few of many dillicult phases of bacteriologic and clinical research with which we became acquainted. In the library of famous last words, Dr. Blundel1's contribution, I'd like to think that you fellows will leave this class today hav- ing learned something, is a classic. But it wasn't long before this astute young Ph.D. likewise joined the ranks of the medical students and commenced plying his way toward the coveted M.D. for which we, too, were striving. Of great importance in our stay at the establis- ment of Bugs, Inc, was a diminutive figure Cin physique onlyj with pate of red and heart of gold. Dr. Meranze didn't lecture more than 'two or 'three times-the subject was Blood -but he taught us a vast. amount of bacteriology beside the microscope and during the post-mortem examinations of mice and guinea pigs, never tiring of explaining minute details. of technique or morphology to one man after another as 'though each were someone significant, rather than a mere freshman in medical school. A gifted writer could probably use this gentleman as the hero in an essay entitled True Greatness or some similar subject. Toward the end of year one we met Dr. Sawitz of parasite fame. During ten well-organized lectures we received the groundwork in the increasingly impor- tant field of parasitology. Here at last were a few organisms we could see dimly with the naked eye. In more microscope work our untrained eyes soon learned to differentiate the many kinds of ova, all of which had assumed greater significance during World War II. This brief descriptive phase of parasitology served well as a foundation for our more comprehensive third year session in tropical medicine. The field of medicine is no exception to the general rule of the world, namely, change. New members have been added to the department whose central office is on the sixth floor of the college. Dr. 1Varren, lanky and friendly, came to Jefferson when we began year 'two and we met him olhcially in a preventive medicine lecture later on in our course. Dr. Grant Favorite came soon afterward. During our last year the chair of Bacteriology and Immunology, which had been vacant for two years, was filled by Dr. Kenneth Goodner who came to us with a long and enviable record of bacteriological research. His investigative habits continued unabated when the new position was assumed. We'll spend the rest ol' our lives attempting to over- come those microscopic fellows we first met on a microscope slide in the sixth floor laboratory. One of the maxims of successful warfare requires knowing the enemyg we're destined to frequent victories-relative or absolute-as a result of our very adequate intro- duction to the world of microorganisms during our freshman year at Jefferson. Chgm igtfy-ff'011t1'n11e1l from, page 1071 Our coaches got most of us to the semi-finals. We made a poor showingQ but won and Bancroft was patient. Remarkably enough, he worked with us, filled huge blackboards with plays written in his typical longhand, constantly referred us to rule books and at last got us 'to the championship game. All year we had struggled toward this end and finally, like a nightmare, it was all over. Most of us came out of it with a few bruises and scratches. It had been close, but victory was pleasant. Unfortunately, the manager asked some of the boys to turn in their suits because they just didn't have what it took to win. But Coach Bancroft wasn t as young as he had once been. He decided to retire the year after we fin- ished playing under him. The whole outfit staged a pep rally on the practice field. Uncle George gave a speeehg the boys gave him a watch. There was plenty of cheering and confetti, and the old Coachleft. It wasn't very long before the manager invited a new coach to till the vacated position. We had heard wonderful reports of Coach Honest Abe Cantarow and ever since he came, the teams have talked about the excellent way he runs things. We did have some contact with him when he coached us a few times as a visitor on a later team with which we played. He certainly knew how to direct the game then. He wasn't new around the place but had never directed play up in the stadium before. Cantarow turned out some excellent teams. A So goes the game. It's not easy to playMthat's certain-but despite all our criticism of the old Coach, he worked hard and 'taught us how 'to do the same. CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER . You buy the Best when you buy VVILLIAIVIS' INTERN SUITS tailored to YOUR measurements of quality materials COATS, GOWNS, OPERATING SUITS for your particular needs Send today for Samples and Prices C. D. WILLIAMS 8: COMPANY f Designers and Manufacturers Since 1876 246 S. 111:11 Street Philadelphia Y, Pa. 303 Bell Phone, MA 7-3400 HENRY SAUR co. A ORTHOPAEDIC APPARATUS and APPLIANCES , SURGICAL BANDAGES 515-511 North 8th St., Phila. 23, Perma. JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE CLASS RINGS Made by WILLIAM C. MARTIN 908 CHESTNUT STREET - AIIP .2 zz' a-, fir ,E ta-, . ,,., .. ,.. . , .... .0433 ,.,.. A .,.. .. . ,,.. -'-' - g y. -':' ' ' f . K l iii? 355 'Q R i t ig. s e . a:?5g.'25. 5, L , zz- ' it at fi Ee E W ig? . Xi if .... , ,, . . , ig ,v w ..,. A Av g ,Q iz, 5 rf A ,M If ,, ,. 1' - . ,gpg ' 2. ----:: f '1 -. '-:1. '-:- , f' . 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J ig .- E 'Q ,2.g,fi .i, 5 1 'gf' 5 gif -f-A is s A I is .a, .f 'fn -ff- - we-1 fs Q f 5.5-1 .3 4 igg r i ,L n , Qi 5221 3 'Wei ,5. ,, ... :g3 1 1 .,.,e:a.?' f'Lew 'ig yea?--sa. 5 , s 1 as ,, ,: .I if-1 a.fs5. .:.. f , it s 5.. E21?. i W J W . 522555 F ' - i- 2151 il ' f::i..IIEf. Ne ff . :,,.Z5...,,m.'fQ2 2 Q Sim 'M MW. wt 2 f ' ' 4. Nazi W -1-H4 - i- l DgfmatgIggy-f0oniinuedfrorn page 2151 Suddenly, one day, we were shocked: no more Dr. Knowlesg no more scabs and sebum, pus and cracks, fissures and blobs. A new topic was illuminating us: syphilis, as set forth by the pipe-carrying Dr. Decker. Naturally we were interested. The incidence was supposedly one in ten, and we had a hundred and fifty men in the class. But we didn't have it, for we put paper on the seats. The lectures were illuminat- ing, though. We don't remember much about the primary and secondary stages or neurosyphilis, but after all, that is still in any good text. Ask us any- thing about Johnny Hunter or Jerry Fracastor or a few of the other luminaries in the Gumma line. And where else would we get such material indispensable to the well-rounded practitioner if not in such an earthy, concrete subject as dermatologyii After all, assume that you're stranded in the country with no laboratory, no texts, nothing medical or surgical of any sort and your patient has general paresis. Who's going to bother with diagnosis and treatment. You exchange a few good stories on medical history and everybody's euphoric. But we're leaving out the best part of our associa- tion with the department-the clinics: that welter of walking, oozing patches, fissures, cracks, blobs, and blebsg two days a week of ,fascination by moving ulcers. Who, indeed, was not amazed by the lesions lurking beneath the vestments of the average patient! A man took oil' his shirt and half his back came with it. Lice were rampant. Scabies infested the place. We found ourselves scratching, writhing, itching invol- untarily as the histories were recited and the patients demonstrated. Hand-washing compulsions were the fashion of the day. A squirming mass of students was seen elhowing its way to the sink as each patient departed. Drs. Corson, Wilson, Hume and Pratt smiled knowingly. Then they walked to the sink. Acne flowed freely, and so did lotio alba. Boric acid was raised to new prominence in our eyes. Who would have thought it could be used for some ninety- odd lesions? The smells and sights were novel and informative though, and we soon felt that we could tell a mosquito bite from a blastomycosis. But as we rose to the heights of astuteness, we were suddenly dragged down to earth by the call of the secretary for two men to go to special treatment clinic. Into the maze of chancres, hard and soft, we wandered as babes in the woods. We examined, felt, looked, nodded, and stroked om' chins wisely Cor not too wisely, consider- ing what we handledl. Then as ever we called for help in identifying the symptoms of the great imita- tor. We were really seeing life in the raw-pulsating pathology-skin that wasn't skin and grotesqueries we could hardly have imagined. And what was it all leading to? For what were we preparing? The idealists among us said it was for our life work. We were being trained in the art of recog- nizing diseases of the skin. Not that we would ever he as good as our professors whose quick diagnoses 9 secretly impressed us, but we were tryingg we were learning. The more practical and materialistic ones among us smiled their usual smirk, as they pawed over well-thumbed old examinations. They warned of being prepared for the final day of reckoning. Most of us were blithe and gay. We would remember the common things. We had seen them often. And we would study hard the night before the exam. We would breeze through Knowles, Corson and Decker. We would assimilate our notes. We would become conversant on lues via a quick digestion of Stokes' Syphilology. Anyway, we could prognosticate most of the questions. We knew the high spots. Disappointments are common in medicine. Failures are common, too. We had ample evidence of both. We had seen examinations that missed some of the high spots. We had taken some that favored mostly the intermediate ones. But for one that dug deep and dragged out the low spots-?well, the dermatology final was in a class by itself. Fracastor is no friend of ours. And our minds wander 'to disseminated lupus when- ever we see a rash. After all, it is burned in our memories. And what does it all mean? A hot summer, with Friday siestas at twog sometimes in comforting dark- ness as a wonderful series of slides was showng a win- ter of morning clinics-watching the oozing lesions of Philadelphia: some enjoyment, some interest and, above all-a profitable experience. Rox' KonsoN. Phygigal era py-fC'ont4in'ueIl from page 210 consideration in regard to all causes of muscle atrophy and joint stiffeningg some excellent results acted as circumstantial evidence in his behalf, which could not be gainsaid. Paraffin bath, infra-red, ultra-violet, rowing machine and numerous other exercise devices- all under the supervision of fair white-clad therapists and less fair embryo doctors-provided comfort, strength and quicker, better healing for many patients. The static machine, a grotesque and grim remnant of the Middle Ages, was an amazing curiosity. It was a full-sized toy department incorporated into about a hundred cubic feet of wire, metal, glass and wood. But what a toyl Its accessory hooks, rods and chains were ominously diabolical in appearance to the new- comer. Woe to the patient who entered the basement of the Curtis Clinic with generalized complaints sug- gestive of a psychoneurosisl His doom was sealed. The experience was shocking. Perhaps it helped himg it certainly removed any waves from the hair. Therapeutics is a broad field, one in which all must tread to a greater or lesser degree. We do well to enter medical practice with a constant recognition of the value of physical therapy measures in helping many sick people return to normal health. CHEs'rEu L. SCHNEIDER. L MILLER, BAIN, BEYER 8: CO., Inc. 1025 Arch Street Philadelphia 7, Pa. Q Bed Linens Spreads Blankets ' Towelinq Gauze Unblea. Muslin Phone: WA 2-3095-6-7 WAY E V. POTT Wholesale Meats and Poultry ' '93 NL! Y39 Reading Terminal Market Philadelphia Y, Pa. THEODORE MEYER EST. Pest Control since 1899 X 213 S. 10th Street Philadelphia, Pa. Atlantic City Trenton Baltimore Washington KI 5-1833 I. Meersand Barney Comisky CUSTOM TAILORS O 1033 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. I' nr 49' A GREAT W5 ap, name P -15535555 . Symbol of Philadelpliitfs Hospitality Excelling in Cuisine DINE and DANCE in the . GARDEN TERRACE l Nightly from 7 P. M. The KITE and KEY Room Smart Cocktail Room is THE Place to Meet The enjamin franklin CHESTNUT STREET AT NINTH l IOSEPH E. MEARS, Managing Director Compliments of ci Friend Orthopedic Su fgery-CContin11edfrom page PZIQJ scalpel to a steam-propelled crane, without the steam. Maybe all those laws of force, energy, mass and their associated pulleys, weights and ropes we had met in our college physics course were of some use after all. Perhaps that summer I worked as an auto mechanic had more value than merely earning tuition. It wasn't long, though, until the heat of summer had yielded to the cool of autumn and our third-year lec- tures had been completed. The final examination had become a memory. Oh yes, we must get back to the drama of three 0.11. in which our diminutive but energetic friend, Abie, helped capably in finishing the cast. One more poorly united fracture had been repaired. Also in the small operating room was the usual group of nurses plus a band of twenty or more restless figures likewise clad in caps, masks and gowns. These turned out to be two sections of seniors who were assigned to ten weeks ol' orthopedic surgery. The operating team, which we watched week after week, was captained in turn by Drs. Martin, Davidson and De Palma with assistance from Dr. Stein and our non-smiling but helpful resident friend, Dr. Tom Armstrong. From the third iloor we usually made our way at varying rates of speed to the sixth floor of Curtis Clinic where we heard such sounds as, Doc, my feet hurtsg dey burns awful, or Hyah, Doc, what you tink's da mattah wit' my a back? or Hello, Doctor, I came in to have this cast removed. Such were our introduc- tions to the more common orthopedic problems such as we would be seeing some day in our oliices. Re- laxed arches, osteoarthritis, fractures and post- operative visits kept us busy. It seemed unfortunate that we couldn't see all these same patients again in six weeks or so after they had gotten the corrective shoes or braces but, as in most clinics, some of the people would never returng others we would miss because wc would be on another service or vacation. Many of these instructive experiences were crystal- lized for us in the Tuesday noon clinics during the senior year where we pondered the problems of frac- tures, abnormal spinal Cl1I'VH'l1l1I'6S or osseous tuber- culosis and saw how many of these situations were met adequately by keenly thinking professors and keen-edged instruments plus a great deal of assistance from orthopedic surgery's indispensable handmaid, plaster of Paris. We concluded that Orthopedics was a very appro- priate name for this branch of surgery which really did help to convert many wry-necked or clubfooted or severely scoliotic yormgsters into straight children so that lives of discomfort, limited activity and self- consciousness would be obviated. Many of these hitherto incomprehensible operations and devices were really quite simple when we could actually see them for ourselves. Our contacts with fellows who had passed this way but a few years before and had served in the khaki or blue or in civilian hospitals as ortho- pedic surgeons made us realize that, whether our future paths would lead us in the ways of peace or in the shadow of war's gruesome specter, most of us would make practical application of much that we had learned as onlookers and participants in the brief but helpful sketch of orthopedic surgery at Jefferson. CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER. Thgrapguticg-fContin11erl from page 2099 techniques necessary for the production of pulsating harmony. He was very capable at detecting scores which lacked the proper strength of pulsation and converting them into vital, useful parts of a composi- tion. He had several disciples who were equally com- petent in the use of the various instruments essential to the restoration of warmth and vitality to an andante which had been cold and apparently lifeless. Soothing were the strains which rose from the orchestral pit under the leadership of the serious and astute Professor Duncan and his understudies, Mac- Neal and Carey, whose favorite selection was from the pen of Herr Dr. Banting, entitled Nicht zu Stissef' Duncan and others occasionally met us in smaller practice rooms to stress the intricacies of various phases of the aforementioned work. We had heard that some of our predecessors were capably conduct- ing the same composition in other places because of the effective instruction they had received earlier under this sage. Our Maestro had certainly provided for us a well- rounded training at the hands of his associates. This also included several sessions with the leadership of Jones, Miller, Tocantins and Erf who all played in the same section of the great orchestra. Their speci- alty was the famous composer, Haem, whose works were in another vein but were, nevertheless, complex. From the lore-filled Old World came the well-trained Sawitz and Paschkisg their interpretations were precise and their teachings unforgettable. The former artist tutored us in the pieces which were popular in the warmer climesg we had never heard of many of these works before but they soon became familiar. The latter of the above-mentioned duo was extremely ver- satileg he had taught us some of the basic concepts in the previous years of our training. Even during our two years of advanced study the Maestro and his associate, Prof. Grillith, refreshed our minds in the fundamental methods of dealing with the problems of interpretation, composition and discord which were the inevitable lot of every ardent artist who desires successful conduct of the concerts ahead. We satisfactorily completed our dress rehearsal after two profitable years ,of arduous and extremely valua- ble training under the supervision-direct and indi- rect-of Dr. Rehfuss. He declared us ready for the ranks of professionals. There would be concerts for us now in which we could use the ability we had acquired through practice. We would be on our own in the interpretation and successful treatment of the many problems before us. CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER. 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A P h yg 0 I Q 8 y-fllolztinllefl from page 2001 Laboratory work became much more intriguing when we took our tLu'ns as surgeons at complex opera- tions. We hated to have to cut open some of those lovable hounds, but we had to learn somehow and it didn't hurt the dogs. thanks to anesthetics. CS. P. C. A. take noticej Kymograph records increased in num- ber in our still unwritten notebooks. Naturally, we experienced the ever-present oral quizzes, the most potent and nerve-racking weapon in the pedagogical arsenal, especially the Dr. Crider variety. Demon- strations and observations by Drs. Thomas and Snape, conclusions and confusion by us-all these were part of our fourth floor experiences. When the Function Crew pulled the final exam out of the proverbial hat, we were satisfied that we had learned some important fundamentals of the course but quite a few of our members, much to everyone's surprise, found themselves dealing with that entirely unphysiological entity, re-examination. Everyone came through fairly well but grades weren't the important item: we knew some physiology. CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER. Path Q I Q 8 Y-1cC0flt7llI uerl from page 1981 more often and quickly wrote what he saw. I learned from my brother who was on a desk near the front of the room that the noise had been Dr. McGrew crack- ing his whip for action. Occasionally the fellows would leave and seem glad to get away from us to go to an autopsy. It gave us a brief rest, too. Later on they came in for a while in the afternoons to study sections from diseases of the nervous system. I can remember when several of us were chosen to hold slides for practical examsg I would like to have told the fellows that mine was a suprarenal tumor but I had laryngitis that day. What a versatile lady the Madame proved to be! Just across the hall we heard loud rumblings and walked into the demonstration room to hear Mr. Pot- tery Crock bellow, Will they ever stop dumping organs in me? I'm full already. He soon calmed dovsm and leaned back to tell us Cwhen he found we were visitorsj how he and his pals were ransacked several times a week to find the right material for teaching morbid anatomy. He boasted loudly of how a great surgeon had once learned about intestinal cancer from him. Quite an eccentric but helpful fel- low-this Mr. Crock. Our exclusion now took us to a dark smelly hole in the basement of the hospital. As we turned on the light, there was a stir and Monsieur Table d'Autopsie opened his bleary eyes. VVhew, I must have fallen asleep. VVe had a hard day yesterday-four post. mortems done on me. The sophomores watched ea- gerly as each cut was made and each organ exposed. La ry n 9 0 I 0 S y--QC'ont'inuerI from page 2105 decided that it was with this motive in mind that We were given weekly talks on some phase or phases of Rhino-Laryiagology. Dr. Wagers took up where Dr. Smith had left oll' in 'the discussion of problems and tonsils-large and small. Dr. F ox's lectures were the instructive results of sincere elforts to make miscel- laneous subjects ol' varying importance seem interest- ing to usg they left a pleasant penicillin-predominated taste in our mouths. We had met the accomplished professor, Dr. Clerf, only once at a lecture on The History of Foreign Bodies in 'thc Trachco-bronchial Tree. His laryn- go-, broneho-, esophago-, and gastroscopic reports had appeared on the charts we had read in the wards. It was good to meet him in the last trimester and learn the fine points ol' this specialty in whose practice he was such an expert. Final examinations? Of course, and after it was all over we could gargle, breathe, swallow and cough much more intelligently. Who knows but that 1960 may find some ol' us busily engaged in the active prac- tice ol' Laryngologyp 'Who- ls It? 1. Believe me, gentlemen, there is no safe period. 2. W'oe 'to the man . . .H 3. This class begins at two o'cloek. N ow then, Mr. Doe, give to me the origin, insertion, nerve and blood supply, and relations ol' the Gluteus Maximus? fl. Medical timber, bahl' 5. I may as well go down and urinate in the Delaware. 6. Preposterous, next man! 7. Now that's a very nice prescription, but I would write it this way .f . . 8. Roosevelt, 'flill 'W'-Sift Tk. 9. How many R. B. Cfs in New York City? 10. Take your hot little hands out of your pocket and feel it. 11. SulIice to say . . . 12. Let's stop there a second, I-Iarry,. while I break the case down. 13. You chaps ought to know this. 14. 1Vhich brings us back to om' old friend, heh, heh. . . 15. Size ol' a split pea . . . 16. Gentlemen, don't forget the derby hat. 17. Now boy, remember this , . . 18. Two sheets ol' paper only . . . 19. Snill', sniff. . . 20. If Penn had a man like Carlos Finlay, you'd have to chive around his statue on Chestnut Street. 21. According to ahh, Gargle, ahh, Stelligan, and ahh, Blumgart, ahh . . . 22. Thank you for your kind attention. 23. You know you're not allowed on the wards after nine o'cloek. Compliments of Ull TRAL LU Clllllllll 'l l'll 11th and SPRUCE STREETS PHILADELPHIA, PA. Your Home While Away from Home HOTEL COLONIAL SPRUCE AT ELEVENTH STREET PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. PE 5-1747 Compliments ot TILLES RESTAURANT X 1110 Sansorn Street EUGENE G. WILE Radio-Television Electronic Supplies 10 SOUTH 10th STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. WA 2-5683 PE 5-6380 PICTURE FRAMING DEVELOPING and PRINTING .IOH H. ITAW CO. PI-IOTOGRAPHIC APPARATUS I and SUPPLIES - 1037 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA '1, P'ENNA. Iohn I. Kelly, Proprietor Compliments of National Academic Cap I' And Gown Co. 821-23 Arch Street Manufacturers and Qutiitters Ofg I Q 8 y-CC'onti'm1e1l from page-211, masLoidi'tis interchangeably. But patience was a virtue exhibited by the entire staff. Drs. Kaufman, Towson, Hitschler and their colleagues smiled toler- antly as we adjusted our head mirrors in the eyes of patients and proceeded to explore the ear with our shiny, twisted, sharp little probes. How were we to know to put cotton on the end? It had been 'too noisy in the demonstration room when that topic was discussed. Nor did we know to wash off the lysol when we poked through a perforated membrane. Again it had been too noisy in the demonstration room. Those things came with experience, however, and 'soon we came to realize that we should never have poked through the membrane in the first place. We became proficient, too, in administering the standard hearing tests, though it was somewhat con- fusing to have a lower score than a patient who had been stone deaf for twelve years. We dispensed soft- ening drops by the gallon, for regardless of the condi- tions a little softening was never amiss, we reasoned. Indeed, softness appeared to be a greatly desired state. We ended our clinical work inauspiciously, merely by walking out one day and not returning. Since we had a year of lectures to look forward to, such a mild climax to the past year of study was not too disturbing. Ah, the senior lectures! Mondays at noon in the amphitheatre. Lectures that were meant to inspire, to thrill, to challenge, lectures intended to effect a comprehensive survey of the ear fromrevery possible angleg lectures supposed to please the ear of the lis- tener with weighty medical lore. That is what they were supposed to doA-let us not discuss too ener- getically what they did do. We were forewarned by a series of lectures review- ing auricular anatomy. They were given hy Dr. Wil- liams. We harked back to our dissection ol' the ear- 'to the detailed study we made of that appendage. How masterfully we had chiseled out and exposed the 'tiny bones-some of us gainingttoo much exposure and finding our bones on the floor. The sparkling clarity of Jacobson's nerve. Oh, it all came back through the mists of time and forgetfulness. We once again saw the ear in its glory. We again knew those D-' 74426 fbecacfed. of Qfinicaf gxpefzience THE use of cow's milk, water and carbohydrate mixtures represents the one system of infant feeding that consistently, for three decades, has received universal pediatric recognition. No carbohydrate employed in this system of infant feeding enjoys so rich and enduring a. background of authoritative clinical experience as Dextri-Maltose. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. l Cwith 257 sodium chloridel, for normal babies. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. 2 Cplain, sah ireeJ,.perrnits salt modifications by the physician. Tg32ZF:Hif'g::'i:fe DEXTRI-MALTOSE, No. 3 Cwith 301, potassium bicarbonatel, for constrpated babies. DEXTRI-MALTUSE Please enclose professional card when requesting samples of Mead lohnson products to cooperate in preventing their reaching unauthorized persons. Mead Iohnson dt Company, Evansville, Ind., U. SL A. elusive facts as we had known them before-very poorly. Then into the meat of the course. We plunged reck- lessly into a study of the ear's pathological states- recklessly indeed, for one's very life was in danger at the Monday colloquia. It was not uncommon for an eager student to nod his way slowly into sleep. And it was quite understandable that he be weary, what with writing so quickly to preserve for eternity the jewels dropped from professorial mouths. Often, as this unfortunate dropped his tired head, he might strike it against the iron arm rests, 'thereby causing untold damage to metal and skull. The latter often sustained typical fractures through the mastoid area, such cases being the topic of the following week's discussion. For prophylactic purposes, therefore, and for sundry reasons which need not bear discussion, many of us found it advisable to absent ourselves from the Monday morning sessions. Not that any one of us would not have been delighted to attend. Indeed, we all made efforts, however feeble, to do so. But -other obligations, coupled with a strong desire to maintain our hold on sanity, seemed to deter us. Slowly, as the year prog1'essed, as we moved deeper into the ear, and as we slumped deeper in our seats, as the pathological conditions merged and fused into a hazy mass of knowledge, the attendance seemed to dwindle. Fewer and fewer members of the class were noted as Dr. Kaufman continued. I-Iis voice became resounding in the great hollow that was the amphi- phitheatre. Sadly, doggedly he lectured to the men in the first two rows and the small overflow-one man in the third row and three men in the last. In the ensuing weeks, twenty per cent of these were asleep. Then mastoiditis and otitis media were too much, and the earnest students, too, l'ound duties elsewhere. At length, as the 'term neared completion, one could see Dr. Kaufman sitting and chatting ear- nestly with the half-dozen scribes who remained. A short while later he was having intimate tete-a-tetes with one person It was discovered subsequently that he was a pre-medical student desirous of making an early start on the road to A's. VVhen last seen on Monday at twelve, the clinical amphitheatrc was dark. The doors were shut. No one was present, save a lone figure-lecturing to mute seats, the end in sight and his duties nearly honorably' discharged. Needless to say, before the ,final we all borrowed copies of previous examinations. As a consequence, there was a one hundred and fifty place tie for the otology prize, a remarkable monument to that inde- fatigable department. ' ' Rox' KonsoN. BLEECHER DRUG CO. PRESCRIPTIONS Ampules-Surgical Supplies-Biolcgicals N. E. Corner 11th and Locust Sts., Phila., Pa. PE 5-2839 GLAD TONE HOTEL 11111 aaa PINE STREETS Single Rooms Double Rooms Three Room Suites Special Student Rates 300-ROOM FIREPROOF STRUCTURE RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE C . J. RAI EAR Sz CO INCORPORATED C. W. Rainear H STEAM and PLUMBING SUPPLIES 'lf 210 N. Zlst Street Philadelphia, Pa. SKF S PRODUCTS- outstanding among which are Dexedrine Sulfate Tablets, Benzedrine Sulfate Tablets, Benzedrine lnhaler, Eslqay's Oralator, Feosol Tablets, Prag- matar, Eskadiazine, Par-Pen and Paredrine- Sultathiazole Suspension - reilect a single consistent policy. We purposely limit the number ot our specialties and never offer a preparation unless, in our judgment, it constitutes a thera- peutic or pharmaceutical advance which Will make it a leader in its field. pSMITH KLINE 8: FRENCH LABORATORIES ESTABLISHED 1841 0 PI-IILAIDELPI-IIA1PA. Ra diolggy-fC'ont'im1erl from page 219D films. These meetings were far more educational, mainly because they occurred in the morning and we met in smaller groups. Here we considered the gamut of radiological findings, including G. I. series, barium enemas and other phases of the subject which were not dealt with in the Tuesday-at-two classes. When the faculty agreed that we had become sen- iors, who of us was not surprised that we had actually learned how to read some X-ray films? All those piles of films had taken some effect. This was, in truth, a sound argument in favor of visual education. But also with the advancement to year number four came the realiiation of our proximity to graduation. VVe mused, VVhy, it seems like only yesterday we entered here as very green 'frosh.' It won't be many tomorrows before we're out in practice-most of us. Suppose I'm a country doctor in U. S. A. or Africa Cthis became more personalj and have to diagnose something important and have the only X-ray machine around- and I don't know how to use itll At this point panic became converted into action. The next time one of our patients went to Curtis X-ray we decided to go along and learn something. Yes, we'd been here before, but that was a long time ago. Such a maze of small rooms-and smaller rooms, large machines-and larger machines, grotesque Martian creatures wearing red goggles and thick aprons-attractive creatures wearing white uniforms. Once inside, though, we began to unravel this confu- sion. The department was now an orderly arrange- ment of X-ray rooms, fluoroscopic rooms, reading rooms-dressing rooms, control roomsg X-ray ma- chines-fluoroscopic tablesg friendly radiologists wear- ing the protective goggles and aprons-eflieient nurses and technicians wearing the white uniforms. Who would have thought that Drs. Guare and Teplick, 0'Neill and Dorsey and the many other staff men spent so much time and energy and used so many gadgets taking a G. I. series on one of our patients when it took us only thirty seconds to read their report three days later? We mused again, I'll proba- bly never use one-tenth this much equipment unless I become a radiologist, but all this is rather fasci- nating-the time was well spent. Wait-11:55l Better hurry so I won't he late for Otology Clinic. This X-ray diagnosis was really important! Satur- day morning's eleven o'clock conference usually in- cluded a radiologistg Dr. Shallow sometimes included an X-ray man in his Wednesday afternoon show. Drs. Davis, Reimann, Gibbon, Sokoloff, Montgomery and Martin-all wanted us to interpret X-ray films at some time during the year. And during internship- well, that was still fut1u'e but we felt we had a fair acquaintance with the salient features and phases of X-ray diagnosis. Radiotherapy existedg we once saw a door that announced in bold letters Radiothcrapy and we had had gynecology and surgery patients who had been there, according to their charts. But we didn't know much more about it except as the treatment of choice for carcinoma of the cervix and several other inoper- able entities. We were aware of great future possi- bilities ,lfor radiation therapy, though. There were several notes ol' finality regarding our radiology courseg together they caused discord. We had so many final examinations those last two years that one more didn't phase us. We'd touch the high spots of Dr. Swenson's booklet and get a good sleep the night beforeg all those lesser details weren't im- portant-to us. However, the next day we eouldnlt tell the difference between light rays and sun rays- or onion skins and German radiologists. Our grades must have ranged from minus 150 to minus 30. And yet a few of our number would eventually be- come full-time radiologistsg more of us would read the Iilms for our own patients. The majority of us would merely read the reports ol' the goggle-clad, apron-bedecked men who spent their days describing shadows as their part-a most important partkin helping people live more healthy lives. CHESTER L. SCHNEIDER. SOLOT'S - DRUGS N. E. Corner llth and Walnut Streets fhfyiazy .7t..i.f. We invite you to visit our Restaurants throughout the city and suburbs, Where you will enjoy the tine tood prepared at our Commis- sary located Within a tew steps ot letterson. 01:14 63 ygdtfdtf The Public Appreciates Quality ANGVIAQS Famous LUXIDR ALPINE LAMP The Most Etticient source ot ultraviolet o .--e 1 ..': . ,....., , 3 is approved by the American Medical t ---,- - A, Association and is used 'by most doctors and nearly all hospitals. For complete details concerning this lamp and other important medical equipment write to HAHCWA CHEMICAL and MANUFACTURING CC. Newark 5, New Jersey Philadelphia Showroom 130 South 19th Street CRittenhouse Plazaj Other Hanovia showrooms in New York, Boston, Detroit, Chicago and San Francisco. Hanovia ultraviolet lamps may also be seen in most smcu. T at V 'Vi I A -1 ' ' Anrmcua i 'A L ss F I mn 1 .i'L',27lI i Eli - : :fn lss ' . - E-55555: it 7f':: ?f,. - . E , . medical and surgical supply shops. flanovia io' the wor.'d'.r larger! manufaclurer of Ullraviolef equzlarnenlfor ihc filedical Profe.r.rz'on 3I5 Urglggy-fCont'inua1l from page 2085 tary precaution. Dr. Bogaev represented to us the polished, respectable practicing M.D. facing every problem with equanimity, poise and self-assurance. He embodied the practical aspects of urology, making future general practitioners aware of important uro- logical problems and suggesting how they should be met successfully. Dr. Drake gave us the uroflow. For some intangi- I'Iow mortally depressing it was to learn that our patient was scheduled for the Thursday noon pit where we would hear ourselves recite with the sad modulations of a groaning sofa. Usually we did not present our case-we assaulted it. Instead of a per- formance it was an impertinence. Often we would terminate our presentation feeling like a soulfle that had been out of the oven too long. Dr. Davis always welcomed a presentation free of the traditional bar- nacles-one with zest, precision, accuracy. In the ble reason he seemed to impress one as somewhat of a Bohemian, even though no one could accuse him of rocking of turpentine or suffering from starvation. Nevertheless, there was something of the artist within his soul. He and Dr. Lubin, along with Dr. Burt Smith, constituted the youthful element in the depart- ment. Dr. Keesal was well adjusted 'to his work and a very capable urologist, but he left one speculat- ing at times, due to the expression on his face- middle of that wide expanse ness assumed the proportions tial hair on the jagged scalp tain, everyone proceeded to grandiose projects in mind success materialized with an the hatching of porcelain eggs. the pit, one's loneli- ol' a single inconsequen- ol' infinity. To be cer- the amphitheater with but such delusions of infrequency peculiar to Because of the mahy efforts of the well-qualified usually one of ennui-that perhaps like Melisande he was not happy in his job. Miss Kutz, that indefati- gable, artful creature, will always he remembered as the nurse with face of a Romney portrait and the spirit ofa U. S. Marine. It was always an experience-a source of liberal education-to make ward rounds, each trip an unique drama including the overheard conversations of stu- dent nurscs, patients and classmates, all adding some spice to our dull lives. V men directing us, our tenure on the urological service was unusually well spent. Ours was the acquisition of a working knowledge of the fundamental principles of urology. 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Aside from its health-aiding properties, Dolly Madison ice cream is a most delightful dish for enjoyment's sake alone. Try a portion for the most convincing Cand pleasingj proof that deliciously different Dolly Madison IS America's Outstanding Quality lce Cream. PHILADELPHIA DAIRY PIIDIIIIGTS GD., IIIU. 317 We gathered at the Academy of Music C? Jie eeee+ eeee 1 1 1 M Q Q 5.2. ,kg . . -' .8 1 ' X 1111111fy1111l111 g3g:X'52'g'3 ,4L,,C,fX'reJi5'.'aY!151C 11111 071211111 fhlhwfi 111 11111 iff 111111711112 1! 1irf1'11111f1111iWWW10M1v1W1' 1r141r:1171171111111011' If 111 M2711 ' l ' 1 I I A . . . . 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A'1Q11111111 .11Z. - , - ' ' . b ' , 1 ' V 1,,1,,,, N, f 111, f k,,:f,,,,,1 I I W,,1oW.,Q, 1',a'gu1g1'.rJf1,.11ua:,1'11fl..1. ' . 'lifr.:,'.'m.v. 1 3152 -141111 141 ' ' ' Y W , 112111111' 4151421Ykgfih,iI3 Q'KN14'l1 ,T 612127111 N , ,, ' Y W M , ,,,!!1 N . , N, V N l t X -Zan 'WA' A f5I5r:cpNus.l nrp Puixrlfssonlnrls , ',',,,,, fAJ,,,,,,,, 'Zau12a: 5 L ,:-.e.. .. . , ... fl Mg, 4 on May 23rd, received our degree 1 X ? i l W I fl Swore to the oath of Hippoerates 'lllll thus we end the record ef four years at Jefferson Fortunately my valet, John, cleans me carefully after each autopsy. Incidcntally, I just received a note from my uncle who lives out at old Blockley. He has life easier because he alternates duties with several friends. I-Ie mentioned that he saw Jefferson juniors quite regularlyg they were' distinguishable by their sleepy facial expressions. Now, if you'll pardon me, I want to catch forty more winks because I may have to go to work again soon. So olf we went, having ended a fascinating visit with a few of .lefferson's inanimate, indispensable and unsung heroes and heroines. Our conclusion from this tour was that the students couldn't help but learn plenty about pathology. - CHESTER I.. SCHNEIDER. Neurglogy-ff'rnldirmerlfront page Qlfij ing. All sorts of people with neurological disorders were represented. Many were psychically affected as well as organically encumbered. One patient, infamous for Ins frequent bronchial dcbaucheries-indulging in numerous lung-foggersf' would conceal from the world'his sensitivity and daydreams by assuming an ebullient facade galvanized with a prussic acid humor. Another morbid character would retreat into an ossiiied cocoon and glower whenever any doctor en- tered 'the Wardg occasionally he would smile with the sincerity of a mortician. However, it was such eases that required extreme patience on the part of the department, comprised of such helpful teachers as Drs. Ryan, Yaskin, Schlezinger, Forster and others, for 'these individuals were sick and needed a certain degree of sympathy as well as medical and surgical care. NVe were shown everything from migraine to brain tumors, encephalitidcs and herniated discs. Upon entering the ward one gay morning we were greeted by a paretic whose tongue hung out like a fireman's shirt tail. One of his eyes was closed in a perpetual winkg the other was a moist onyx knob. Flatulent and stiff with the years, he growledappre- hensively, then lay back like the lion of Lucerne. Om' gentleman patient then proceeded into an attack which was more violent than the most spirited parts of a Russian piano concerto. He was last seen unreel- ing a prodigiously long forefinger, heckling us with alcoholic advcrbs as he wobbled on his Charcot joint. In retrospect it can be said that it was only because of the crystal clear lectures and demonstrations by Dr. Alpers and his associates that we were able to pass on from the course with a firm foundation and the ability to diagnose and interpret neurological problems. The many interesting and fascinating cases kept us constantly anxious to learn more about these individuals and their underlying organic conditions. They were just as human as we and were valuable sources of inspiration and information. DANTE E. M1SllINO. WALNUT GRILL BAR-RESTAURANT 'A' CLUB BREAKFAST SPECIAL LUNCHEON 117-19 S. 10th Street FULL COURSE DINNERS Philadelphia, Pa. KLEIN 8: GOODMAN, Inc. Cameras and Everything Photographic 585 18 S. 10th Street Philadelphia Y, Pa. THE ALCOVE The Little Store tor Your Convenience Ieiierson Medical College Hospital It's Always Right If You Buy oi White H. T. WHITE 8c COMPANY Printers and Stationers A 126 S. 11th STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. Compliments ofa Friend Of JEFFERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE ..! N- A , t A , .f ,.,, -- . , H ' , ,li -. 4 . N f lu J V X.. I., , 'J ' ' ' ' ' .. 1 11 N V fa i ii ,a ' -' V, l i, ' .. . AV: M 1 , 5 Y! - Y It It ifii ' w :J . :mr - W ii ' ' ' X 1 ' in ' '- c ,Q ' 'ji X .YW . 1, , - ' ix . 'Nag , ,Ei . -H r X , 1 W 1 J ,H ,Ei 5. x , ,V .- fig .. ,.- I , ' ' .' -, . . ga 1 ' N - ,. TI , Q 1 1 N 1 . X 'I sa Q , , ., W1 f: V N -. A ,, W I' X A , V 55, - ., . . N : ' ' , 7 5 ,fi 'W if .- ,!, F 6 4 V, I, . LII: V g 1 2 - ' A r-gui-2' 'Eli lgx , v 1,1 r X I H . 1 V l


Suggestions in the Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961


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