Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1969

Page 1 of 292

 

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1969 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 292 of the 1969 volume:

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HHV'n9 gmy, Hutch SPE subject. The mit today are those mented as a fort In the words 1 department heat positively with p of his research rected toward g iects in chiidre gtovvth. Further, send Christmas notices that the to aid pediatric indeed, few it as Dr. Hutchins the welfare of auempiiiig to i anatomic minu' overviews. in contrast Ziihiiis his . e s 4 Viet Nam. Hier detects in the June he W Suggs 'OIR and is Will bg Ahhough inviti mum father life, He and hi HTBH gf Terms gn aside. in if bm StudenTS: Ui not beter moved in Yet. Contact is DEDICATIGN Few students realize that Robert Cranford Hut- chinson, alias Hutch, received his formal educa- tion in zoology-not human anatomy. He received a bachelor of arts degree from Ohio Wesleyan in 1926, and a doctorate from Yale four years later. ln the interim he studied for a year as a teaching assistant at Johns Hopkins. From 1931-1943 he conducted extensive research in reptilian embry- ology as the Research Associate in charge of the Springhouse Laboratory at the Morris Biological Farm of the Wistar Institute. When the tentacles of the U. of P. fell over this facility he deftly es- caped and came to Jefferson as an instructor in Anatomy. Having little background in human anat- omy, Hutch spent several years learning the subject. The mnemonics and concepts he uses today are those he himself invented and imple- mented as a forty year-old student. ln the words of Dr. Andrew Ramsay, Anatomy department head, Hutch identifies strongly and positively with people and their problems. lVluch of his research since coming here has been di- rected toward gaining insight into orthopedic de- fects in children through studies of cartilage growth. Further, he and his wife Dorothy did not send Christmas cards last year. Instead they sent notices that the money saved had been donated to aid pediatric bombing victims in Viet Nam. indeed, few instructors are as student-oriented as Dr. Hutchinson. He is totally concerned with the welfare of each student and spends hours attempting to tie together the endless bits of anatomic minutiae with broad and most useful overviews. ln contrast to Hutch's unassuming, patient manner is his social and educational progres- sivism. He speaks out strongly against the war in Viet Nam. He is so concerned with some of the defects in the Jefferson educational system that this June he will submit a detailed letter of opin- ions and suggestions to the executive faculty. This will be Hutch's last year at Jefferson. Although invited to stay on in the department, he would rather escape the impositions of urban life. He and his wife will be moving to a pastoral area of Tennessee to pursue interests too long put aside. ln leaving he offers a warm invitation to his students: Please be sure to come see us: but not before September-we may not be fully moved in yet. ti ' .F dl .4 To callfortlz cz concept cz word is needed: to portray cz plzenornenon, concept is needed. All three mirror one and the some realzyf LAVOISIER DEAN To the new Jeffersonians of 1969: The custom has developed at Jefferson and many other medical schoolsufor the Dean to present a message to the members of the senior class as their final year draws toward its close. I have done this for a number' of years and each time I have tried to give thought to a pertinent issue which might be emphasized. Speaking candidly, I find this more difficult this year than heretofore. Perhaps mounting years are starting to show their early effects on me personally, but I prefer to think otherwise, and so I have decided that the emphasis which our society is placing on the generation gap nowadays is giving me a a handicap. I I continue to believe that when a patient meets a physician for the first time he forms an impression which either may be helpful or harmful to the future re- lationship of the two individuals and, more importantly, to the future health and welfare of the patient himself. If this impression if favorable the patient is more likely to have confidence in the physician and to accept the advice which will be offered to him at the conclusion of the examination, even though it may be con- trary to his pleasures and comforts. A patient is not likely to stop smoking, to lose weight, or to adopt a troublesome routine when so advised unless he is confident that the physician who is making such unwelcome recommendations is a wise and thoughtful person and dedicated to the best interests of others. If one were to agree that there is some validity to this concept, he would do well to give thought to the factors which form a patient's early impression of a physician. Factors which have led to judgments about you as a student have in- volved primarily your knowledge of the medical sciences, your ability to exercise certain technical skills, and your quickness of thought during a conference with a member of the faculty. I submit that such factors will play a small role in your patient's early impression of you as a physician. Patients have no basis for judging a doctor's medical knowledge or surgical skill, and so their confidence is more likely to be based on the physician's demeanor, appearance, language, and dress. All these are personal issues which students may overlook and faculties any- more are afraid to judge. A generation gap indeed does exist in matters of attitudes, style and opinions on many issues. Physicians, young and old, are agreed, however, on our basic objectives in life. All of us recognize that the welfare of the people who place their health in our charge is our prime responsibility. Discharging that responsi- bility involves multiple aptitudes-diagnostic acumen, therapeutic knowledge, and the ability to establish rapport with others. Failure in any category causes total failure. In this event, the loss is bilateral. The physician loses an opportunity to serve another. The patient's loss may not be recoverable. As you prepare to take your leave from Jefferson I urge you to assess your- selves from all standpoints. Consider what talents will be important to you in the practice of medicine beyond those which have been emphasized by your col- lege and medical school faculties. Go forth and be a total physician to all your patients and to all their needs. You have the best wishes of all Jeffersonians, present and past, for your suc- William F. Kellow. M.D. Dean and Vice President cess and happiness! PR To Mem Conga Yours have be toward man an Now in the me, I a, YOU lor heavaj- Society. volves PS0ple Let E DEAN ical schools for ss as their final years and each : be emphasized. 'etofore. Perhaps personally, but l hasis which our i a handicap. or the first time to the future re- uture health and f patient is more ce which will be h it may be con- smoking, to lose s he is confident ms is a wise and apt, he would do ' impression ofa student have lin- bility to exercise conference with small role in YQUV basis for lUd9 l9 nfidence is more guage, and dress. .nd faculties GUY' tyle and Opiniorfs fer, gn our basic ae0Pl9 Who pm? ing that reSP0f'SL c knowledge. an, my Causes TOTE gn oPP0Vtunity to Ul- yo J to assesS . portant Toolzfucoli sized wt I our Sl Gian to al Y UC' asf, for yours I w. M' :nvEeKi?:ezld9 t D. PRESIDENT To Members of the Class of 1969: Congratulations and the best of everything to each of you! Yours has been a long road to this turning point in a long career. Your studies have been deep, intricate, and seemingly endless. But they have been directed toward making you a better person-a person better to understand the nature of man and his place in our Universe. Now you have the means, the knowledge, and the wisdom to involve yourself in the vast opportunities that symbolize and epitomize our times. If you doubt me, l ask you, for a moment to pause, to observe, and to harken. lt will not take you long to be reminded that we are living in the midst of an explosion-an up- heaval-a revolution. The detonation involves all segments, and all phases of our society--science, knowledge, education, philosophy, religion, and politics. lt in- volves industry, government, and institutions of higher learning. lt involves all people. And it most certainly involves you! Let us hope, therefore, that each of you will brace yourself to the tasks before you, that you will alleviate human suffering to the best of your ability, and that you will make this world a better place in which to live. Sincerely yours, 1 Jie Peter A. Herbut, M.D. President EXECUTIVE FACULTY EXECUTIVE FACULTY Seated left to right: M. H. F. Friedman, Professor of Physiology and Head of the Department: Russell W. Schaedler, Professor of Microbiology and Head of the Department: Paul H. Maurer, Professor of Biochemistry and Head of the Department: E. Harold Hinman, Professor of Preventive Medicine and Head of the Department: Robert l. Wise, The Magee Professor of Medicine and Head of the Department: Her- bert Alfred Luscombe, Professor of Dermatology and Head of the Department: Peter A. Herbut, Professor of Pathology and President of the College: William F. Kellow, Dean, Professor of Medicine,and Vice President of the College: Anthony F. DePalma, The James Edwards Professor of Orthopedic Surgery and Head of the Department. Standing left to right: Carl L. Hansen, Jr., Associate Dean, Director of Jefferson Regional Medicine, Professor of Radiology: Samuel S. Conly, Jr., Associate Dean and Director of Admissions: Richard A. Chambers, Professor of Neurology and Head of the Department: Julius M. Coon, Professor of Pharmacology and Head of the BCARD. CF TRUSTEES TRUSTEES EMERITI LIFE TRUSTEES J. Howard Pew Percival E. Foerderer Lessing J. Rosenwald Brandon Barringer William Potter Wear Joseph L. Eastwick D. Hays Solis-Cohen, Esq. James M. Large Revelle W. Brown Albert J. Nesbitt Richard C. Bond R. George Rincliffe Gustave G. Amsterdam, Esq. William W. Bodine, Jr. William P. Davis, lll Department: Joseph S. Gonnella, Assistant Dean: Jay J. Jacoby, Professor of Anes- thesiology and Head of the Department: Robert P. Gilbert, Associate Dean: John H. Killough, Assistant Dean for Continuing Education: Gonzalo E. Aponte, Professor of Pathology and Head of the Department: Philip J. Hodes, Professor of Radiology and Head of the Department: Thomas D. Duane, Professor of Ophthalmology and Head of the Department: Paul D. Zimskind, The Nathan Lewis Hatfield Professor of Urology and Head of the Department: Robert L. Brent, Professor of Pediatrics and Head of .the Department, Professor of Radiology: Roy G. Holly, Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Head of the Department. not pictured: Andrew J. Ramsay, Professor of Anatomy and Head of the Department: Fred Harbert, Profes- sor of Otolaryngology and Head of the Department: John Y. Templeton, The Samuel D. Gross Professor of Surgery and Head of the Department: Floyd S. Cornelison, Jr., Professor of Psychiatry and Head of the Department. TERM TRUSTEES Dr. David B. Allman lAlumniJ Frederic L. Ballard, Esq. Dr. Henry L. Bockus lAlumniJ Dr. William W. Hagerty Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr. Walter A. Munns Harry R. Neilson, Jr. J. Warren Brock, Esq., Secretary The First Pennsylvania Banking and Trust Company, Custodian EMERITUS FACULTY J. Parsons Schaeffer, A.M., M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., Litt.D., Professor of Anatomy. Emeritus. David M. Davis, B.S., M.D., Professor of Urology, Emeritus. Charles M. Gruder, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., M.D., Professor of Pharmacology, Emeritus. Louis H. Clerf, M.D., LL.D., Sc.D., Litt.D., Professor of Laryngology and Broncho- Esophagology, Emeritus. Lewis C. Scheffey, M.D., Sc.D., L.H.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Emeritus. J. Earl Thomas, B. S., M.S., Sc.D., Pro- fessor of Physiology, Emeritus. Edward L. Bauer, M.D., Professor of Pediatrics, Emeritus. Baldwin L. Keyes, M.D., Sc.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Emeritus. Henry B. Decker, M.D., Professor of Dermatology, Emeritus. Thaddeus L. Mont- gomery, B.A., M.D., LL.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Emeritus. William T. Lemmon, B.S., M.D., Professor of Surgery, Emeritus. Nicholas A. Michels, B.A., M.A., D.Sc., Professor of Anatomy, Emeritus. John B. Montgomery, A.B., M.D., Sc.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Emeritus. Bernard J. Alpers, M.D., Sc.D. lMed.J, Professor of Neurology, Emeritus. Abraham Cantarow, M.D., Professor of Biochemistry, Emeritus. William A. Sodeman, B.S., M.D., Sc.D., L.H.D., Dean, Emeritus, and Professor of Medicine, Emeritus. John H. Gibbon, Jr., A.B., M.D., Sc.D., The Samuel D. Gross Professor of Surgery, Emeritus. ffm, uw 573 A ffvggf-n,.ffw - -. ' Mm, , f mf. 1 , , .,, f N , ,. 3 . , . ' M L :il 'T A -7 T7 f7'Qfkf7i3?QQf1f fw -M 1 awww fan M wmwnwrwk f aux? Abfifnffwrhl Www 4fg,4qf-fp , , M WU Q QA54-i,lll5.,f3k5f-yifg, ' ' ff' ' 1: nam-w 4 44 qyanfvgiufo 49 94 nw vguwuwe- ,w 'mffff - vp, . , , f 14 1 I C1 . A X f f Qziilif 9573! K .- 0,1 ,, -ng. , ., ' A f , ww? - fir' Mf ' vyQ www X TZ' 4 5 2 U 525 ww A ww Yff?f'9e ,.L56Y?:'s:v, - . V'-:If 1-fk ' fl? ., 44751: fif- T .xaaiii-. - ' ,gigs A ,X---,.1,-41. mx gl- Ji, ij Q' xgf.-Lf. ' 514 'ff'.i'If v2y.Zf2 24' ' 1'-if '??W:,'. , 'UTY TLS' , x- ,?:5.Na,:l, ., -wifi, ff Ffv ' 1' fin? Z s John H. Killough Wd Joseph S. Gonnella Assistant Dean ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF Harry B. Storm I Nancy S. Groseclose Marie Carter Business Manager Exec Sec Alumni Assoc Director of Public information QQ' Dean for Continuing Education Hyman Menduke Coordinator of Research l . 2. , -3- i I - asia Robert P. 1 Associate George Treasur N. Ram Vice Pr Harry i Medica Thoma Direct Clara Cashi Gail l Medin X fi iw 4 'Sit Robert T. Lentz Robert P. Gilbert I Associate Dean Arthur R. Owens Registrar Not Pictured George M. Norwood, Jr. Treasurer N. Ramsay Pennypacker Vice Pres. for Development Harry W. Unruh Medical Center Controller sqm- Q1 fi Thomas R. Murray ,gfgyxrfm . . . . . vifzfpigf Director of Business Administration kmtzfef 4.4. Clara B Gillard Cashier Gall P. Richter Medicare Coordinator Samuel S. Conly, Jr. Associate Dean Director of Admissions Librarian Jane A. Lutz i Assistant Registrar A ww.. mv s .mm f um. 5 for mm 'r W I+: E In H X I Er. in Q 5 I -JIM, . nuff' sg v Q U up Q 9: sf' is n N xr, hi 'mms mm -1 4 'ms x. o,Qg,N4 PP Each y larger a Neither would br quiet pe your de problem IN APPRECIATICDN Each year the Jefferson complex grows larger and the Clinic more ambitious. Neither of these inevitable phenomena would be possible without the aid of the quiet people. Words are small thanks for your devoted help with the scores of problems that plague these undertakings. 4 A Q ' f., i I rf, 6 'I J ' I X' Q' I ' '9 ,, J I, y gl 'A in ' F In M M r I V IWW: 4 4' u v ., J 1 A L' ' ' , -1, sf' ' 'L F -ff, I' Z. f ' f My V, ,. , - , - ftp 5' I Y ,I . a. 6 . fx A ' ' ' 5' V f - 4 f, , K V . .4 ,, , , I f 5 5 i , 4. -- AA H , f , 'Z . 1 ,- . . 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I C , , .5 I- -an janv Q74 ,Q-2' I wx 1 1 f wwmwwwmwm iqgswwwwwwwym x x- - ,Sak-X' ve 21 . is .Q -'R 2 ?S 55 fin- nf ' .M 5 .X , ggx N 64 5 X ye X N w , e X - flex vw-f f, A, X ., , . 4 -4 , YSTEM fu v wfhsw' iq: f' X X. 4: . f A s wx 17 be-in Q we 1 mf .1 , ,fe Q ge fkifffefix x X 5' 013, fx ' i yi-SX X ' xi- is 2 'wie , if f si , , A . A e ' wwe xg-yt ,IM Qsqjfl R55 f -'Xi ly . .,!,,,Q ,, . Qi li x .W , x ix., x Q, 5QSWQQQSW msmgfis if f' N ix Q wP,QM,elQ f'ff5L':,1'f'-Q ti, .'EJ'1Q'X'1iY 2 '14 f 'f fvffx K wfwvikynfiNg1,f:g.,X jug 5 11136 is ' X X J s 'My x gg el f O 2 X as ,, i E +1 Au ow clzeeifulbf he seems to grin, How neatly spreads his claws, Anil welcomes little jislzes in JJ With gentbf smiling jaws! LEW u IS CARROL -sv V N, Lindelifm G, Ginsberg Brubaker, C 15,1 B. BIDS N wiiz. G- Ma Beckerman- S. Naulfy- 'l- S. Jaeger' l L, Blaum. Jr ski' W, Wix Castle. M- l Left to right: 11.1 A. Fornace, L. Schiller, A. Juhasz, R. Shiroff, J. Gardner, F. Lublin, P. Hoff man, 12.1 R. Fieo, J. Cossrow, S. Fitzig, R. Marinari, C. Bekes, C. Zaret, G. Zlupko, P. Flanigan 13.1 S. Slade, B. Skeist, J. Rodzvilla, Jr., A. Rooklin, M. Roth, J. Brooks, T. Mahoney, W. Huhn C. Silberman, 14.1 J. Roberts, A. Ehrlich, M. Josephs, J. Haltman, J. Rosch, M. Lewis, G Speace, M. Golden, I. Hollander, 15.1 R. Meyers, H. Caskey, P. Cohen, M. Baron, A. D'Arcy P. DiGiacomo, F. Braconaro, L. Bernstein, 16.1 R. Edwards, A. Nespoli, S. Strum, J. Blore, G Edinger, R. Steward, M. Fliegelman, B. Grumet, R. Greenberg, 17.1 S. Flynn, P. Fitzgerald, A Calabrese, D. Cleri, R. McKay, R. Donner, B. Saltzman, R. Andries, S. Ager, S. Ackerman, K Moss, T. Mackell, 18.1 D. Hughes, J. Hay, G. Nye, A. Lenetsky, H. Caplan, R. Kabler, L. Olsen M Connelly R. Catanzaro R. Dorand R. Zuna 19.1 G. Zabielski G. Goldberg G Hager Ill wi Benjamin, H. Ochitill, ,J. Levinskyl, R. Doeiling, R. Niemeyer: R. Borlandoe, D'Anlico, M. Fenster. Not pictured or not identified G. Abelow N. Bancks R. Bell G. Ber er R. Bonanno W. Boswell 1 1 1 g 1 1 V C. Brown, D. Burket, J. Carson, S. Dowshen, S. Edwards, R. Fiorucci, M. Fleishman, R. Good- man, S. Greanoff, K. Hirsch, W. Huhn, W. Hyde, L. Klein, E. Mannering, S. Moss, S. Muller, M. Rayfield, F. Redo, M. Shapiro, J. Tyler, S. Volk, J. Wall, T. Wolfgang FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS John Robert Tyler .................. ....... P resident Marsha J. Meyers . . . .... Vice-President Glenn Nye ........ .......... T reasurer Marc Shapiro .... ..... S tudent Council 11,1 J. Miller, Jr., J. Laskas, M. Krieger, E. Russell, J. Milander, P. Dainer, 12.1 M. Eisemann N. Lindenmuth, M. Weisberg, H. Cooper, M. Salkin, M. Connelly, I, 13.1 R. Wapner, R. Levine G. Ginsberg, C. Marder, B. Gewertz, A. Gilleland, W. McCoy, R. McCurdy, 14.1 B. Fowble, W Brubaker, C. David, A. DeNoia, G. Braverman, W. Bressler, J. Redka, S. Deglin, R. Fiorelli, 15,1 R. Rinaldi, G. Gauvin, R. Garnet, T. Zukoski, G. Carson, A. Friedman, Baskoff, H. Liebo- witz, C. Marco, J. Fticsar, 16.1 C. Riley, N. 0'Shaughnessy, C. Haytmanek, R. Goetsch, R Beckerman, A. lnterdonato, S. Fremer, M. Meyers, F. Hryshko, R. Brennan 17.1 S. Judson S. Naulty, J. Horstmann, L. Howard, A. Kunkle, S. Smith, A. Sonstein, R. Jacobs, J. D'Amico S. Jaeger, N. Jarmoszuk, A. Behrend, 18.1 C. Gordon, L. Pietragallo, E. Wynne, H. Pitchon, L. Blaum, Jr., P. Andrulonis, C. Lewkowicz, B. Schneyer, L. Chaffzin, W. Thomas, T. Szydlow- ski, W. Wixted, Standing: R. Sussan, G. Tenikat, M. Buechler, W. Rensimer, C. Rhodes, J. Castle, M. Dotsey, P. DuPont, T. Sunder, W. MacDonald, C. Seiler, J. 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Tw, -Q, f:f,: f 'A 5 55 fijfil' 1 , . ze f I if 'H 4 ,AN ,iq -cawfhf ., I 4' . ,, f '5- , K Q, 15 3 14 7, , 5 3 1 fe i f v A x P, NX x X W M f f 4 1 w ' 3, 7 A ff M i .Xin ? iii Nev FF Im, ,, V I 6 3 . f , fr K . f Z N W , N, f W7 Nw x. QYA if , 1 54 ff 7 f f 1 . 4 1341 fl 2, Z ' X 5 z A ' 7 f ' X ' ww wk ,J '5 M ivy fa 5 , 2 E S E THE NEW PHYSICIAN AS ACTIVIST The New Physician As Activist Student activism is only one facet of the spectfe of revolution which haunts the Establishment. Yet the fact that it is beginning to touch upon the medical Establishment in a significant way' rs perhaps m0?t surprising and important. The physician, saYS Martm Gross in his well-documented book, The Doctors, has changed from a societal leader, intellectually and humanly . . . to a man of mediocre intellect, trade- school mentality, limited interests, and incomplete personality - the contemporary Non-Renaissance Man. lf this is true, and it is to a very large extent, one must suspect that the nation's medical schools are major accomplices before, during, and after the fact. That medical schools seem expressly organized to stifle independent thought, limit student contact with the outside world, and channel the interests of their increasingly restless inmates through the application of a kind of intellectual straight-jacket of poorly-bal- anced expectations is no longer a matter of serious debate among medical student activists . Of course, all institutions which seek to socialize their heirs to the values which have maintained their social power, employ the practices of isolation and rigid social control in their training. This is as true of Medicine as it is of the primitive tribe and the U. S. Army. But the doctor as projected by Gross, and the medical schools which produce him in large numbers, neither defend the best traditions of medicine nor insure its future as an institution. That many students view their activist colleagues with the annoyance and fear which is common to those who have been cowed and de-humanized by our educational institutions may be one indication that it is too late to change. Individuals who have been made to feel like cogs in the machine, notes John W. Gardner will act like cogs in a machine. They will not produce ideas for change. On the contrary, they will resist such ideas produced by others. ln the same essay, entitled The Renewal of Organiza- tions , he points out that institutions which cannot change are doomed at best to a comfortable and de- clining irrelevance, at worst, because of the human cost involved, to destruction, sometimes violent de- struction, by the forces which they have not the character to resist. The Medical Education Establish- ment is guilty of not only the active destruction of that.spirit of inquiry which is vital to the future of Medicine, but also the default of paying less than lip slegvicre go the values and traditions which distinguish tinkepy :clan rom a kind of highly-paid biological What then, in this context, is a medical Student activist ? He is simply a student of Medicine who will not allow himself to be forced upon a Procrustean bed of expectation which is irrelevant to or destruc- tive of his development as a Physician. His task is to define for, himself and meet high standards of scientific excellence and human understanding, to ac- quire a demeanor of equanimity, devotion, and human warmth. Activism is resistance to models of behavior which include coldness and indifference to patients, inadequate or outdated scientific skills, and irrespon- sible principles of narrow self-interest in dealing with legitimate demands of the community for a reason- able level of care. Activism is resistance to the exploitation of students on the pretext of education, from clinical clerkships to internships and residen- cies. Activism is the inquisitive search for scientific excellence, social responsibility, and the sensitivity and idealism which distinguish the Physician from the doctors . Student activism in Medicine reaches its highest potential when it is effectively organized. lt was easy for the Medical Establishment to dismiss, in fact destroy, the first responsible, but weakly organized, group of activist medical students, the old Associa- tion of Interns and Medical Students. lt has been a little more difficult, but still possible, to dismiss as insignificant the important and creative activism of the Student Health Organizations, with their virtually non-existent national organization and substantial membership of New Left radicals. But it will prove singularly difficult to ignore the speech of C. Clement Lucas to the AMA House of Delegates, which effec- tively identified the Student American Medical Asso- ciation with student activism in medical schools and universities both here in this country and abroad. lt is clear that our older professional colleagues are listening. They are listening partly because the voice which they hear reflects their best teachings. and partly because they must realize that it is the voice of the future. For it is the activist above all who lays claim to the title of the New Physician, the physician of the future and the demands of that future UPON the present. lt is the activists, the New Physi- cians, who will save Medicine from the image pr0- jected by its critics like Gross, from its irrelevance to the needs of the community, and from its political incompetence. Activism is the product of those quali- ties of inquisitiveness and courage which Medicine must have. Medicine needs and will have its student activist, and its graduate activists for that matter- its New Physicians. Arthur W. Douville, Jr. Executive Editor, The New Physician Sept., 1968 Editorial 'ff xl 3 l lf ll i la 38 A ill I , W W W f 7 V 1 ax X 2 A f if' W 3 i M gf f 47,6 Z ig-Wy! pf' T31 'Wil if -N ,. 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Meg, 1 '-H wa -X . f . ,. . rf'-1 0 tw,.:1.,5zs:,g-fQf,6'bZs4, vxgs- in :: it . .t ' ' ' V ll I , 1 Yeh, lm confusing, arbitrary, and misleading: but lm still Department Head and DON T YOU FORGET IT Z X, wmv-mf Wl ft + 1 it ,, V f .ww 5f 'V'i1 'WW f ZW, ' . 1? fl I W Q X I M Z W X N wf Y Q X vxf W W x. M., X W x f wymw ff' df- 1: .-mx. .AN 'QN DA .wr Q'2fQ'mmP ' - ,fx ii. x ww ' , U ,Wf ff aff ff 4' f wwwwh-ww., , ms , , K I V K i ' ! s . ' , al' M,..Wf,, W,M.wm-uwu.- ,A-ummm. , .I f f Z f Z? , t 1 , K aiww-ww,,a4.wmrvl'QvW 'W 'M SQ W ff 5 -' .nifzyf f A , 1 Jw f , 4 . -Z i vf 1 WY ,' ' E53 9, .,,..,,,,...mewnwWfw.f f 'Wflwmk l --Q 313. Ili 'bw-w.,...,,,mWw ,,,,,, W X WX! JW Z ,ff W ,WMWW M f ,,,, l WE'-COM 47 Interview: DR. GONZALU APONTE Dr. Gonzalo Aponte is one of the youngest men to earn a permanent place in Jefferson legend. As one ' on the path- story goes, he received a perfect score ology section of the National Boards when at Jeff. The board examiners were so nonplused that they invited him to an oral examination, whereupon the young man not only answered every question they asked, but launched a few of his own that stymied the panel. That student, now the forty year-old head of the Pathology Department, has yet to verify the story. Truth or fiction, it says a great deal about the doctor and about the students who faithfully transmit the tale to their freshman listeners. Above all it shows the enormous admiration his students have for his knowledge and dedication to teaching. The following is the essence of a conversation with Dr. Aponte and perhaps does more to illuminate the character of this man than would volumes of description. There are very few students l do not like. To paraphrase a man named Socrates 'There is nothing like a good teacher and a good student'. And that will always exist irrespective of the different approaches to medical education. The student should ask three questions: First, does the individual who is teaching know more about the subject than I do'?: second, ls this fellow or woman interested in teaching me?: and, third, ls he or she an intelligent person?. lf he can answer 'yes' to all three he should accept what fthe teacherj gives him to learn. Discussion then turned toward Dr. Aponte's ap- proach to research. I could never be Lstrictly a re- searcherl because l like the application of research to biology very much. Of course one goe's as far back as he must to get the information. But l remember some 'fellows who went to the Federation meetings to deliver a paper on how a diet deficient in manga- nese decreased the alkaline phosphatase activity of the distal ileum in the hamster. lt doesn't cease to amaze me that this is their life and they are so happy liagtaess its-on't 'belong in that sense. On the otha? 1 any Ing t at concerns ' ' - - luclilnhk is vel? fascinating' application to medicine en as ed his im ressions c ' curriculum he replied? l think itoqgebrasfgahhe gcc? l went through the old method-class nine 'txo ZAXQ 2:22 :..':.n2.V::,2.W5':.:ir..Ff.afL. at think the Core Cu 1 I ere seventeen' exams. l rriculum is better for the interested student because he can pursue more actively parts of medicine that he-likes. Medicine is so complicated and everything is so specialized and subspecialized it is obvious that the student also will be. Therefore, we might as well give him a chance to begin to mold his interest in medical school. That does not mean that he should be a one-channel man from the beginning. ln the last decade Jefferson has changed more than in the past hundred years. lt has changed in out- look and in the closeness of the students to the professors . . . and in the formality of many of the meetings: lt used to be stiff. lt's still conservative but not too conservative. Dr. Aponte sees the present plight of Jefferson in the following terms: We need more teachers and patients for you people-the main thing we need, however, is money. l don't think we have done a good job in getting the private monies. This is necessary. When we go through a crisis like this one can ask our men to wait for a year-maybe two years-to get the things they need. But they get tired. There are many tempting offers from places like lVl.D. Anderson that have the money, or from industry-and they 90. Not only do we fthe facultyl lose but you people lose. The competition is too great. lt is the sad truth. but it is true that without money you cannot run a good school. l guess we'll get more benefactors. We've had quite a few already. But considering that Jefferson has trained more physicians than any other school in the country, and particularly more for Penn- sylvania than any other, it just hurts me to see what is happening. All medical schools need help fl'0m different sources. They have a very limited exchequel' and cannot subsist without outside help. ' Un considering the direction of Jefferson m the future, one must bear in mindl that different sch00lS have different purposes. Jefferson should never 'for- get that its purpose is clinical. lt should be clinical, lhoweverl, in a very sophisticated way. The sch00l has a very glorious history. Students very often do not realize the role that it has played and the bril- liance of its physicians. Progress has been made. l sometimes wonder if Dr. McClellan could see what Jefferson is now-these buildings from the little room he started with .... He'd be very proud. Aristotle Sophocles. '70 l i l l l l l l l l I actively pans so Complicated I Sbubspecialized J be- Therefore, dolfgm to mold S not mean man from the Changed more Changed in out- tudents to the Qf mam' of the rll conservative Of Jefferson in P teachers and hing we need, ve done a good s is necessary. is one can ask o years-to get ired. There are M.D. Anderson r-and they go. nut you people s the sad truth. yr cannot runa 'e benefactors. onsidering that than any other more for Penn- ne to see what eed heFP from tited exchequef Ip. Efferson in the fferent schools for- ould never- uld be clinrcalr , ,The sch00l agen! Often 40 d and The bmi been ffladit ould S59 we rom fe t pr0Ud- e sopheclesr '70 You have to stuabv a great deal to know cz little. CHARLES de SECONDAT A mt y SZ Takes more than one shot through the heart to keep me off the battlefield! Its about these cheap American scopes . . . 'X .,V Q 4 uf' V A stroll down memory lane Dr. Schaedler, may I be excused? X I nterview: DR. RUSSELL SCHAEDLER Dr. Schaedler, who is Jefferson's newest depart. ment head, revealed a rather interesting character and one which I am sure places him in the forefront of modern medical education. While he would insist that his attitude was one of careful conservatism, the interviewer sees a healthy progressivism which is rare in medical education today. As chairman of a rather important basic science department, that of Microbiology, Doctor Schaedler enjoys being both teacher and researcher. He thinks that research should play an important role in the life of each medical student. Research is more challeng- ing than most students would think. The students at Jefferson, while better equipped intellectually than in my day, seem to lack the intellectual curiosity so necessary in the modern clinician. I am often chal- lenged by the student on marks or some minor point about a question on an examination, but never about the concepts or principles which should stimulate a truly inquisitive mind. One of the problems often encountered by the Jefferson student is that of faculty-student relation- ships which are often called impersonal due to the large number of students. Doctor Schaedler thought that, each student, sometime in his four years lin- deed, in his basic science yearsl, should be known by at least one member of a department quite well. l, as chairman, would like to-and do strive to- know each and every student. The Jefferson student has often been tagged as a different kind of medical student. Dr. Schaedler was asked his first impression. I think that the Jeff students are just as intelligent as the medical stu- dents in other schools. However, they seem to be stifled culturally and in some cases intellectually. Many are not as expressive as they should be, and seem to lack the well-roundedness or savoir faire that one would expect to see. This is, of course, a broad generality and each class has its own person- ality. The Sophomore class this year is a very delight- ful class. They are good students, amenable, and easy to work with: moreover, they are not averse to criti- cism and are found to be well-meaning in all of their activities. l couldn't ask for a better group from mY first spawn . Doctor Schaedler is a graduate l'53J of Jefferson. DLER est depart. tl? Character . e forefront .Would insist ?erVatlSm, the 'Sm Whic b tor Scha d 6 Ier 'ef He thinks Ole in the it fe nore Challeng. le Students at lfctuani' than I CUl'i0Sity so 'Tl Often chat. 'B minor point if never about -d stimulatea h is asic science tered by the dent relation- al due to the tedler thought nur years lin- uld be known nt quite well. o strive to- 1 tagged asa jchaedler was that the Jeff medical stu- ' seem to be intellectually. hould be, and ' savoir faire of course, a : own person- very delight- hble, and easll verse to criti- in all of their fgup from mil of Jefferson, and the question of inbreeding-that is, choosing faculty members from among past graduates-has often been considered as detrimental to an institu- tion. When asked for his opinion, Dr. Schaedler had this to say: It is true that I did my training down here, and had a very excellent one at that, but I was away for thirteen years and during that time had very little to do with this institution. I do think that inbreeding in a medical college is bad, and I am happy to see that it has, for the most part, ceased. I came back fresh and found that this entire institution had a new face. Almost all of the department chair- men had changed along with the physical appearance of the school. Doctor Schaedler is a chairman with an M.D. in a department consisting mostly of Ph.D.'s. Many students say that the Ph.D. degrees often deprives one of a clinically oriented outlook . Dr. Schaedler was asked to comment. The initials after one's name are often misnomers. There are many Ph.D.'s who are better clinicians than some M.D.'s. I would rather have many of the old greats like Avery, Dubos, or Pasteur work on me than many a modern clinician. One's training does not count of itself, it is the man that counts and what he does with his knowledge. Feelings of academic separatism are sheer rubbish and should be discounted. Asked what he thought of the Ph.D.-M.D. program, Dr. Schaedler had this to say: It is an opportunity which has been sorely neglected by the students. No one should be pushed into it, but the student should want to enter it of his own accord. Granted only a select number can do it, but the opportunity does exist, and anyone who is capable of taking advantage of it and claims lack of time is apathetic and does not see ahead. The same apathy exists in the student who fails to apply for internships in prestigious schools. He has a self satisfied attitude in applying to a community hospital for the minimal internship. After all, the Jefferson student is accepted to the large teaching hospital on the basis of the perfor- mance of his predecessors. Realizing that many clinical teachers are needed today as well as clinical researchers, Dr. Schaedler was asked whether he thought that more M.D.'s should go into research, teaching, or both, in pref- erence to general practice. Of course it is a luxury for an institute to have pure researchers, but, frankly, the money is not available. There are many academic physicians who, on the other hand, should be inter- ested in clinical research, but are doing basic science research for which they are not prepared. It is rare to find a good clinician who is a good teacher and also fluent in clinical research. The happy medium of clini- cal researcher and clinical teacher is a necessity in the clinical years, just as a basic science teacher who is a basic researcher is also a necessity. Microbiology has been under fire by the students, as have many of the basic science departments, for emphasizing the academic and not the clinical as- pects of the subject. Dr. Schaedler was asked if he thinks that the student is justified, and how the microbiology course should be presented. The best way, in fact the only way, to start the medical student off in microbiology is to present the student with the blocks on which to build. One must learn the funda- mental actions of the host and parasite. Again the students tend to be memorizers and concentrate not on the fundamentals but the trivia. They dem- 9 onstrate that they lack an intellectual curiosity. I would, on the other hand, love to have a course called infectious disease, the knowledge of which seems to be sorely lacking in the clinicians of today. This is not just here at Jeff, but throughout the entire country. The gap in knowledge mainly exists because of the lack of time afforded the subject. In the area of infectious diseases and all of its ancillary sciences there seems to be less and less interest and more and more demand. Contrary to what Time magazine says, in the year 2000 we shall still have infectious disease and perhaps fewer trained men in the area. We need more clinical people trained in immunology, virology, and infection in general. The demand in- creases and we are not preparing them. Microbiology and biochemistry have made the most strides in medi- cine in the last few years, and get the least amount of time allotted in the curriculum. Anatomy hasn't changed since the time of Vesalius, and yet the time allotted it is totally fantastic. What matters if the student knows every bump or cranny of a bone, when he forgets it two hours after the final exam and never uses it? In pathology and microbiology again the emphasis should be on giving the students a basic knowledge of disease, not making them tissue histologists or microbial gene- ticists. The enlarged views of these sciences should come through the elective program. Changes are long overdue, and much more correlation particularly at the interdepartmental level is needed. Jeff and most other institutions rate a big zero in this aspect. Physiology and pharmacology should be combined for teaching pur- poses. Emphasis should be placed on a dynamic ap- proach to both life and disease. To make things more meaningful later in the clinical years. We have changed a little bit since I was a student at Jeff: we used to get two cadavers and now you 'only get one. I also think that the student is in too great a rush to get to his clinical years, where unfortunately 40- 500!0 of his time will be wasted. In many instances medicine is learned in the first two years, and it is then that we underemphasize that which is most im- portant. Time doesn't mean much to me, as a matter of fact it might even be bettter to have the students exposed clinically first and then teach them the basic sciences: this would get the wasteful apprehension out of their systems. I think that the curriculum com- mittees are now tackling many of the problems which I have elucidated, and will certainly have some inter- esting changes in store for the future Jefferson. Robert Lahita, '71 X N X' N' Sfsfi X X S' ,ig xYX Y5x -- f xr W fv Q X A X XM, , N M Q ...X x X wb Who doomed to go in company with pain, Andfear, and bloodshed, miserable train! Turns his neoessily to glorious gain. WORDSWORTH ' , Ufrfo' ff, i Zrf 9 X 5 4 ' SQ f 'l 249 W' xx 2,4 Q SQ-xv. N A X. Y, Aww X : gif X ' '-w.,,,, 3' E E F. Y, v, ,- ,, 94 a. , as , 1 lt's all here in b lack and white , D . r Kraatz-Berry has a real problem 'Il I it .-Disgusting-,, Theglutual G ir -'c3l3CllVltl?S I polm I medicinal d tl dual air it probably son' lrom lacllf lllll . merhalsf the ld ' I oncerns utside 0 gavage to his stu need onll to po which is concerne human bein9S- ol , and learn lrom lil ot be a medical n imagine the cor staunch souls it medical student has become sul tively with the on behall ol thi this argument, should be sull maiority it is t ticularly an ir allairs as a ct sentative ol t ln light olt conieoture as rejected as ln student by g Physicians. 1 :N-D-2 Q9 ultvs true I S ... aw him do It m Yselftt' N0 lem . lust checking for leaking CSF! ltungue in -SSLQ x is-Q , v4I I I it t I t THE NEW PHYSICIAN IN POLITICS-HIS IMAGE . . . The Mutual exclusivity of medical studies and political activities in the eyes of members of the Old Guard in medicine is a sad but obvious fact. The rea- sons for it probably comprise a spectrum of concepts ranging from facile to insidious. On one hand there is, perhaps, the idea that the medical student with outside concerns does not have sufficient time to devote to his studies. To refute this argument we need only to point out that medicine is a science which is concerned intimately with the everyday life of human beings. The medical student who cannot live and learn from life as well as from textbooks should not be a medical student. On the other end we might imagine the concept lundoubtedly held by a few staunch souls in the medical professionj that the medical student should stay out of politics until he has become sufficiently dehumanized to deal effec- tively with the public and with his own conscience on behalf of the entrenched social order. To answer this argument, setting aside our initial contempt, it should be sufficient to reply that having reached majority it is the responsibility of any citizen, par- ticularly an intelligent one, to participate in civil affairs as a citizen and not necessarily as a repre- sentative of the medical community. ln light of the spectrum it might be interesting to conjecture as to why the beard is almost obsessively rejected as inappropriate to the image of the medical student by many liberal as well as conservative physicians. The beard theory of history, proposed ltongue in cheekl by Penn State Professor Ari Hoogenboom, suggests that when mild-mannered men grow beards they become belligerent. lWhen beards became the fashion in the mid-nineteenth century, the Civil War resulted.j As a logical corollary to this theory the beard is a symbol of activism. To quote a junior high school principal who gained notoriety by cutting the locks of recalcitrant long-haired students: lf you look right, you'll act right. To the facile conservatives, therefore, remaining clean-shaven im- plies not even thinking about getting involved. To the self-interested conservatives it means maintaining the long-cultivated image of the physicans as a whole- some saint too busy to be bothered by currents in the temporal sphere. To the liberal, it is simply an in- grained vestige of the conservative medical education. Society has invested more money in a medical doctor's education than in that of almost any other citizen. The physician is better equipped than most to be a progressive force in society because the physician is more highly respected by the layman, as a result of personal contact, than is any member of the academic community. It is, therefore, a solemn obligation of our profession not to remain aloof from political concerns but to work toward the curing of our society's massive ills, sometimes to our own slight economic detriment if necessary. Perhaps it would help if our entire generation grew beards. Arthur Tischler, '71 from an Editorial in The New Physician, October, 1968 VW' Left to right: C11 B. Tenney, F. Reale, E. Rosof, M. Starrels, 121 S. Silver, M. Lechman, E- Langan, W. Forbes, C31 S. Klinman, B. Salko, D. Jones, S. Monk, R. Grossman, lStudent Coun- cil Rep.1, R. Place, U11 J. Ferguson, L. Guzzardi, J. Julian, D. Davison, G. Borkowskl, C. Christian, 151 M. Posner, C. Lehr, D. Case, R. Hoffman, H. Sasken, D. Gould, P. Fernhofl, l6l B. Forrest, G. Klein, G. Brundage, W. Hendrick, S. Brown, I71 C. Dolinskas, B. Braid. -l Eccleston, A. Segal, C. Lynd, E. London, lSecretary1. A. Lombardi, P. Macy. l8l M- Bflnnef W. Appleman, A. Brown, A. Heller, F. McBrearty, W. Chollak, L. Borucki, W. Fiss, J. KOZI6lSkl Back: M. Chepko, D. Cooper, F. Speckler, P. Glass, A. Glaser, B. Fishbane, E. Fleishman, Nl Blecker, J. Kelter, D. Cooper, W. Ratchford, M. Pryor, N. Wilson, T. Orvald, R. Waterlnouse R. Goldstein, R. Lahita, T. Mebane, J. Smith, J. lacuzzo, T. Fetter, J. Nocon, M. Margulles, 3 ?0r:I1nellY, J- Bloom. T. Starz, S. Gray, F. Casaday, lTreasurer1, M. Geha, J. Belis, J- N0She . 00l16. Leff lo Davidsltllilfg mer5, 1, ufbansk christian. 1 Hnlzager. l G, WinebU Sommer: ll Hamilton. ' not identif Blumbergv winie. E- G J, Maas. l Rubin. E- F A. Tischler hman, E- nt Coun- wski, C. hoff, l6l Braid, 'I' Banner. lozielskil lmanr M' erhouse. lulies, 5- Noshers SOPHOMORE CLASS Left to right: C11 M. Schnieder, S. Jacobs, J. Trachtenberg, B. Penchansky, I2J T. Probst, R. Davidson, G. Spigel, J. McBride, J. Barone, lPresidentl, l3J V. Brodhead, H. Cramer, A. Som- mers, H. Feder, S. Mandel, 141 J. Motley, L. Chase, T. Borthwiek, M. Stock, J. Guralnik, S. Klinman, R. Read, l5J R. Keene, J. Brittain, D. Hennessey, S. Frost, G. Freeland, T. Mullins, T. Urbanski, l6l F. Garcia, R. Falk, R. Hirokawa, P. Raymand, P. Caravello, T. Brasitus, C. Christian, A. Atkinson, E. Ewing, l7J N. O'Conner, J. Kambe, T. Dmochowski, J. Seltzer, D. Holzager, D. Riff. Back: P. Pomerantz, D. Danoff, T. Bryan, R. Falk, G. Buffington, S. Margolis, G. Wineburgh, R. Hellman, N. Edwards, J. Dooley, R. Johnston, H. Mettler, G. Becker, D. Sommer, H. Doyle, A. Schwartz, W. Fell, J. Van Bavel, J. Nogi, H. Goldich, D. Callahan, W. Hamilton, C. Dolinskas, D. Clemmer, R. Sussman, A. Baskous, A. Kontrick. Not pictured or not identified: J. Agnello, R. Altreuter, R. Bagge, C. Balkany, D. Bergman, A. Bescher, M. Blumberg, T. Carden, R. Chandlee, C. Crawford, G. Dennish, A. Ehrlich, J. Gardner, W. Good- willie, E. Gormally, D. Hennessey, S. Jacobs, R. Jambre, J. Jordan, M. Kale, B. Klein, W. Light, J, Maas, M. Margulies, J. Rakoff, J. Read, J. Rhoda, W. Ritter, H. Robin, R. Rosenberg, J. Rubin, E. Ruby lVice Presidentl, S. Scherr, R. Schwimmer, P. Silbert, R. Snyder, G. Speace, A. Tischler, W. Topper, J. Weiss, R. Widdowson, L. Winans, H. Zeligman. fi7 , ff 5 A f f X A 7 Z Wt A ga I f X XX X X ix XXX. XS X f X X X X X, X X YQ 0 I 1 if Y H 3 I K I V ' N N F i I l 1 i l l X ,xx ,i1 , ,W 62 S.E. Abram, A.J. Anderson, B.W. Anstadt, J.A. Azzato, W.J. Bainbridge, E.J. Brarylak, T.L. Baxter, III, B.A. Berger, B.A. Berger, L.F. Berley, B.L. Bernini, G.S. Besses, D Biddle, B. Blofstein, W.D. Bloomer, R.l. Blum, E.B. Bower, J.W. Breckenridge, J.A. Breslin, Jr., H.N. Brown, B.J. Cac chione, J.W. Carlton, J.B. Carty, Jr., L.J. Cerullo, R.H Charney, M. Clancy, L.S. Cohen, J.A. Comfort, Jr., T.R Connelly, P.M. Streletz, R.W. Cox, R.D. Davenport, A.B Davis, T.J. Devers, J.F. Dmochowski, P.H. Douglas, J.H Dovnarsky, M.D. Ellis, M.L. Evitts, M.K. Farrell, R.M Feldman, J.S. Fisher, J.W. Fox, A.P. Freedman, L.A. Free- man, C.M. Furr, A.M. Gardner, J.M. Gerson, B.S. Gingold S.C. Glassberg, C.B. Geoggel, A.M. Gold, H. Goldman L. Goldstein, R.H. Goodwin, Jr., A.J. Green, D.B. Hagen F.E. Hampf, Jr., I. Ingwer, G. Isajiw, B.L. Johnson, Jr. R.P. Johnson, W.W. Judson, J. Kallipolitou, R.C. Kane P.D. Kautz, T.R. Kay, W.A. Keel, R.P. Keifer, W.M. Keiserl man, J.W. Kendig, R.M. Kenny, G.W. Kern, G.H. Kershner S.A. Klein, J.M. Klick, J.A. Kline, J.R. La Morgese, Jr., E.M. Laska, M.D. Lauria, B.A. Leff, H.B. Lefton, W.J. lewis. W.G. Liekweg, Jr., D.I. Lintz, T.C-M. Lo, N.G. Loberant, R.M. Lumish, J.R. McCloskey, J.F. McCormick, JUNIGR CLASS J.B. McGovern, FLD. McLane, B.J. Make, S.A. Malin R.J. Malovany, P.C. Marshall, R.E. Martin, J.T. Martsolf S.A. Mersky, F.A. Mettler, Jr., J.K. Miller, J.A. Miller L.S. Miller, P.T. Miner, A.M. Monkowski, J.B. Monroe W.M. Murray, L.S. Meyers, B.L. Nemiroff, J.M. Neubeck W.E. Noller, J.N. Nutt, Il, M.V. Olivieri, R.J. Palmieri, J.A Parker, D.B. Pashman, J.F. Perry, Ill, W.J. Peters, Jr. M.c. Pilot, P.D. Pizzuullo, H.s. Polsky, M.s. Pruss, c.Ef Qua lieri DJ Randell J Reichel lll AC Richmond g , . . , . , , . . , C.C. Rose, M.D. Rossman, R.l. Salasin, C.B. Schleifer, G.D. Schneider, P.V. Scoles, P.M. Selinkoff, P.M. Sey- mour, J.M. Shovlin, J.S. Skoloff, F.C. Skvara, A.K. Smith, P.M. Smoyer, A.M. Sophocles, Jr., R.G. Sowden, Jr., B.W. Spears, D.M. Spiegelman, K.E. Starz, J.W. Stayman, Ill, B.A. Stein, M.B. Steinberg, M.S. Sundborg, S.A. awlewicz RFC Ta lor Jr RL Terr N0 Thomas Sz , . . . y , ., . . y, - - 1 N.0. Thompson, M.A. Tobey, H.D. Toff, D.G. Tolley, Jr., C.0. Tomlinson, L. Vignati, M.B. Vizer, S.C. Voron, F.G. Wakefield, J.P. Walheim, C.A. Walters, D.J. Weber, F.R. Weiner, C.L. Weisberger, A.C. Wells, D.G. Wetterholt, J.V. Whitbeck, W.E. Whiteman, C.F. Wolfer, B.L. Wood- ley, S.M. Woodruff, V.L. Ziegler. -YA wh, ,, vw... CW: ,.,,, r 7 vu- .1 2 if 11 5+ E r gfqaaipmw 4 Charts- aa'vice frvrn seniors- real live patients- real live nurses classes onbr twice a week. This is the Third T ear. f'Nn, ,oh A0 . , .,. ,, M. ,-Q, -, .wi I S , v ,p y,,,,n W 5 . ,N K 'i ,, W' ,- Aj ,MZ ff fw WV, ,f W fo ff 4 3 QQ f V' f .L 5, , s M wfvwwn- Mfhwra fix ax 1 E 71 i 2 5 X1 , si f il i. Q 4 f E Q no-M Q,-1 ms 'f I Q ff' gg W! Ga , W . F 25' s 5 ,fy .x X , , Wi , ig 'sf I f , ?x Intervz'ew: DR. HERBERT GGHN The traditions of Jefferson are many and Qfandi 'fh9Y are foundations for the Jefferson medicine of today. The department of surgery perhaps best exemplifies the grand traditions. Since the time of Samuel D- Gross, the department has been chaired by great clinicians who have vastly influenced the development of medicine over the years. The principal result of this surgical tradition has been the development of lmany. less publicized, fine physicians who have delivered the best surgical care to Philadelphia and America. Tradition has helped to sustain the institution that is Jefferson Surgery. But today's student does not re- spect tradition as his father did. lt is nice, but ,it cannot be equated with the sole good. Many of today s students cannot excuse the shortcomings of Jeffer- son simply because they are traditional. Rather, they demand change, pertinence, and social awareness in- stead of blind tradition with its irrelevance and ex- clusiveness. These two contrasting philosophies have just begun to confront each other at Jefferson. The outcry from our generation of students is merely the rumble before the quake: the immediate future will undoubtedly see more friction between these two factions. There will be a need to resolve the differ- ences of opinion and to glean the best from both sides to enable Jefferson to prosper. We have chosen a man who is well qualified to appraise some aspects of Jefferson today. Herbert Cohn, M.D. is of the Jefferson surgical heritage. He was graduated from here in 1955 and was a resident in general surgery and thoracic surgery at Jefferson from 1956 to 1962. He has since been on the surgical staff and is presently Assistant Professor of Surgery. While his perspective is primarily that of Jefferson, the institution, he empathises with the students, and his teaching has established rapport with many of them. His ambitions, quite sincerely and spontane- ously expressed, To practice surgery as best l can . . . that some of what l know may rub off on the young men l teach, reflect the best part of that tradition. While he draws upon tradition for direction, Dr. Cohn is intimately concerned with those values pre- eminent in the minds of many students today. Most significantly this is born out in his expressed concern for the training of black physicians-immediately. He believes that medical schools are not primarily responsible for the small number of black physicians. The problem, he feels, lies in failure at the public school and college level. However, he does not use this belief as an excuse for procrastination. He does not abdicate his responsibility to the community, as by I e medical school level. Rather he feels the medical schools should, in spite of a lack of culpability, admit black students in sizeable num- bers and, further, train them according to their needs with-a new curriculum especially designed for their requirementsfeven if training requires six or eight years. Most importantly it should be done now- Dr. Cohn's interest in students is demonstrated by a clear understanding of their attitudes toward the study of surgery. He sees a broad spectrum of student attitudes toward the subject. He is pleased by the bright and inquisitive students who are interested in surgical careers: however, he is disappointed that S0 many students approach the field with disinterest. He feels that, they have a closed mind on the subject of surgery. Having already decided to enter another specialty, they feel that they do not need to learn even the basic principles of surgical diagnosis and treatment. This attitude, which is fostered by other factions in the Jefferson community, is considered most harmful by Dr. Cohn. All specialists, as well as every general practitioner, must know the alternative types of therapy available so that he can make enlightened recommendations to his patients. Such knowledge can only come from adequate exposure and insight into both ends of the therapeutic spectrum. Dr. Cohn's concern for the teaching of patient care as the most important product of a medical education is reflected in his concern for the type of physician teaching students. One of the most distressing prac- tices at Jefferson is that . . in certain departments, volunteers with good clinical skills have been re- moved from teaching .... These men have been re- placed by academicians with little experience in the care of patients. ln many universities during the last decade, the 'publish or perish' hatchet has removed fine teachers from faculties without regard to their teaching abilities. With the advent of federally funded research projects, one of the oldest traditions of Jefferson-the great clinician-teacher has been lost. Dr. Cohn here draws upon this heritage and is joined by the students in demanding that the clinical instruc- tor should primarily be a first rate clinician. This concept is reinforced by Dr. Cohn when he describes the type of man which he feels should next chair the Department of Surgey: The chief must be a clinician first. He should surround himself with good researchers in order to maintain a contemporary department, says Dr. Cohn. The most important cri- terion, however, must be clinical competence. One of the most exciting aspects of Jefferson is what Dr. Cohn calls the forward thinking administra- tion. A recent change has instituted a physician as President of the College. Furthermore, the alumni are now represented on the Board of Trustees. This has partially removed control of the College from the hands of businessmen and has allowed physicianS T0 have a voice in future developments. Although some may say that Jefferson is being strangled by her traditions, certain of her ideals are as applicable today as they were in the time of Samuel Gross. We must incorporate those values of heritage which have strengthened the institution, and we must reject those values which hinder her pr0Q' ress. There are forward looking men within the Jeffer- son community who can best make this distinctleli- When students search for the purpose of medicine they must allow men of tradition, who are yet DPT fettered by tradition to guide them. Herbert Cohn IS such a man. James Heckman. '69 tr another ' to learn nosis and by other onsidered iS Well as alternative :an make nts. Such osure and spectrum. tient care education physician sing prac- iartments, been re- t been re- ce in the 3 the last removed i to their ly funded itions ot teen lost. is joined al instruc- when he ould next nust bea vith 900d gmp0I'3l'Y rtant cri- nce. bein!! Jeffef' 79 Hey man, get me outta here' x , 4 'T Ns. hw sb xv W - fix My IM, ' 522 f 5 shy S f x A Q f 5 5 ,W- Ma f 3 , ,f Q, iff 'Af' j E ,f X , . 4 5 5 v if 1 Q f X 9 z Y v I Ez R Q1 f f 4 , Af, Q f ' W fi ww Y Z W if Uh oh-mo' water pills. 752 7 Z' W Mx. 41 ' Q' 3 f 4 Z f 7 f f ,, ff nz , , ' 122 X, i f f X 7 fn W7 x Mn f in 7,9 MQ, ' W xi f ia AW, if 1 ff W 2, ' f fl Q! 25 if ,. li L L f f Z , f 'f f , V ' X x I f '2 -vw, www , , ,, if QW' f W? an ,,,, V7 1? X4 w'W m-.,, p, ,, I f M W A 'M f fl ' A MM: 1 Xu X ,V-.ic 5. f, -f ' fff if ,, k 4, f, mf ff ::.i't,'f if I F4 ff ,-7 Z F? ' , 1 A: AQ. .Wm ,iv k ' UW Ni f, Wim 1 , M if , Av. '.: ff X I fi CE f ww M y ff gg: - f wr , 2, I 4' .,, i ff M Q ,-fi : ff -X '5 4 - f- f f A., , , N f , f f i ff M X z ff ' 2 61- 13 f X f ,' V , F S ' fi-2. f 1 X 7, ' ff ' fl 4 Wig f W I X f , -f Z- A 4 ,gf 0 Ci , 4 4, Q wi -Sw v V A QL 4 if av fyfiv ff . , .,, f f f, A f , , I XSVA - ' X 5, rf- .f x ' ' ' W , W , 45 lj:-'H 5 '5 Z? f f 'W f vu ,fi ' x , ' y yy 1 v 0 , W. ' ! JWC ,g w 5 I N yy, X - 1 31.2 iff K i 5 p K w g 5 , fa Q f ' f , ., f,i1 i MW: .:'4 f', .xv H K f f U j - ,,f -,Vx f:, M f - f , .. Y. 2- ,f f . K by Z7 AV W. J , . 6 fa ,AH f 75 s EQ -1 Q 4 'I 1, 51 u' d k X' I 1 'Wi 1 X f if v A I 5 I Y 'm 2 1 N i 5 w 4 ,J V JJ 1 I V f -' if . f Y . 1 ,qv 7 R , X X Intelnic When li ser oi Mt enterol09i Centerlil Basically with thel to change ness, frui rest of i developir bythe at this ent faculty a Dr. Ko' tial for ' leading begin to that Je as to its that tas study t change- One letter- decide makin ment, Of bu rierlll He st from ere, Stude as th betw Clnne facul 9021! Dr The stud Interview: DR. O. DHODANAND When listening to O. Dhodanand Kowlessar fProfes- sor of Medicine, Director of the Division of Gastro- enterology, and Director of the Clinical Research Centerl, one gets the feeling he is a frustrated man. Basically an impatient person, he seems frustrated with the Jefferson system, frustrated by the resistance to change, frustrated by the lack of clinical scholarli- ness, frustrated by the lack of competition with the rest of medicine, frustrated that Jefferson is not developing as a major diagnostic center, frustrated by the absence of pride, and, most of all, frustrated by this enormous communication barrier between the faculty and the students. Dr. Kowlessar believes that Jefferson has the poten- tial for fantastic greatness, to be able to be the leading medical school, at least in Philadelphia. To begin to develop this unrealized potential, he suggests that Jefferson in this century must make a decision as to its objectives in medical education. He believes that task forces should be immediately established to study this and make concrete recommendations for change-changes that will have to be sweeping. H One of the major obstacles, he goes on, is that Jefferson has a lot of traditional concepts. We must decide what our objectives are, and then set to work making Jefferson a comfortable, exciting environ- ment, stripped of fears, stripped of animosity, stripped of bungling. and stripped of the communication' bar- rier. The latter, he feels, greatly hinders improvement. He stresses the need for teachers to have feedback ff0m students to know where they are going as teach- WS- Dr. Kowlessar points out that at the end of the Student's four years here, he has the same degree HS the teacher, and suddenly there is no difference getween student and faculty member. What should be ICONS. Dr. Kowlessar believes, is that students and aCL:'TY Should develop a partnership towards a common 9037319 lmprovement of Jefferson and of medicine. the aesfmlessar views his te-aching role as guiding students hgvsn future physicians. He- believes that Whatever du minds that can be be finely turned in irection the faculty wants to put them. KOWLESSAR I , , ' X50 - ,, fi., Wd., , ,I . Z 1 ff ' iz Ph0L2fia?lUZxl2::Lvg?:1en, that the admissions commit- the substrate on whicsflmxthlmportant we In provldmg I U e faculty will have to act. lt IS. fair, however, to not simply demand that the admissions committee perform the difficult task of providing the most capable students, but to also evaluate whether or not we havejthe enzymes and catalysts within the faculty to act on the substrate. He calls for a faculty of clinical scholars rather than clinicians: the difference being the ability and willing- ness to impart to the student information concerning pathophysiology of the patient's illness- to use the hospital bed as a research bed-research in its very broadest sense. And to these clinical scholars, Dr. Kowlessar would add a group of distinguished re- searchers to help develop a perpetual stimulus to seek knowledge and exchange ideas. He suggests the researchers could also serve as visiting teachers in other institutions in exchange for their top people. But, he points out, the clinical scholars are the key to success-the same type of men whose pictures hang on the walls of Jefferson, having made their mark on the national scene in the past century as clinical scholars. This type of clinical scholar would help make Jefferson a real university hospital with leadership-Jefferson the diagnostic center, with the ability of sending patients back to their physician. Jefferson, Dr. Kowlessar fears, may be reaching the stage of do-nothing: a little snowball rolling down- hill without picking up energy or mass. He feels the trend must and can be reversed so that Jefferson will be able to capture the imagination of bright young talent and move forward as a leader of American I th t it is a very difficult road medicine. He realizes a i 1 as we are enveloped in tradition. There is a lot of petty jealousy and a lot of inertia. He believes, how- ever, 'that we must make the commitment anddrelagry believe that there is room for improvement an participate in the destiny of trying t0 Change- Jay skyler, '69 -Sig-N . ',6,,.xQ P9 Mach have I seen ana' knozvng cities gf men Ana' rnanners, cliniates, councils, governments . . . Ana' drank delight qt battle with my peers . . . ! I 'ff f,, f 7 ' I ani a part if all that I have nietg Tet all experience is an arch wherezfhrough Gleanis the untravelea' world. TENNYSON Wg' we a, W ,iff Z Z EDI' During place HT ning i012 of our inf concept examinat cal pr0Q' only pr0' ior the i focal po coniribui viously l olastur voice io exciting appropri medica Nevei begun. in concn tratedp previou anumh rely hp, stimuli tellect still p Wards due cr educa If sity, ours an in Cendi EDITORIAL During the past two years changes have been taking place at Jefferson Medical College which are begin- ning to alter, in a fundamental way, the atmosphere of our institution. The acceptance, in principle, of the concept of a core curriculum has initiated a re- examination of the subject matter of the entire medi- cal program. The opening of Jefferson Hall has not only provided new and excellent laboratory facilities for the preclinical departments, but has supplied a focal point for faculty and students alike, thereby contributing to a growing sense of community pre- viously lacking at our institution. The establishment of a student newspaper, with its potential as a public voice for the student body, is an encouraging and exciting event. All these developments are particularly appropriate in terms of the goal of transforming our medical school into a medical university. Nevertheless, it is clear that this process has only begun. We have adopted a core curriculum more in concept than in fact, largely substituting a concen- trated program of required electives for some of the previously required lecture time. We have eliminated a number of written examinations, but nevertheless rely heavily on the coercion of examinations as the stimulus for student learning, rather than on the in- tellectual stimulation of the subjects themselves. We still practice a kind of institutional paternalism to- wards the medical student that does not give him due credit for a maturity consistent with his age and educational status. lf we are truly to attain the ideals of the univer- Sity. we must start with a faith in the maturity of our students, recognizing that the learning process is an interaction between teacher and student far trans- cending the mere transfer of factual information, fundamental though this may be. Medical students should have enough free time not simply to study, but T0 contemplate their studies, and to develop and pursue interests of their own throughout their medical school careers. Making time available for such re- quires a total reassessment of the medical curriculum. We perhaps have misled ourselves, because of his- torical inertia, in our analysis of what constitutes a basic medical education. A significant amount of material currently required could as well be left for elective teaching. In addition, we fail to make efficient use of the preclinical years by dividing subject matter into departmental domains that are possibly no longer appropriate in terms of present knowledge and tech- niques. Indeed, the separation into clinical and pre- clinical departments, which is still maintained rigor- ously with but few exceptions, fails to take account of the highly sophisticated basic scientific training and interests of many members of clinical depart- ments today, a failure which prevents more efficient combined teaching of many subjects. With improved efficiency of teaching, and a true core curriculum, the medical student should have available at least one quarter of every year, as well as a minimum of two full afternoons a week, for pursuit of his own inter- ests, whether clinical, biochemical, sociological, or otherwise. Although a major effort must be made by the faculty to achieve this type of program, medical students must realize their right, and indeed obligation, to par- ticipate in the decision-making processes concerning their medical education. From this standpoint, too, we have taken significant first steps, by including stu- dents on curriculum review committees, for example. lt is insufficient for a few students to take an active role, however. The student body as a whole must develop a more active and concerned voice. lt is impossible for a teacher to assess the effectiveness of his teaching without some response from his stu- dents. Examinations are a poor substitute, in this respect, for dialogue. Comments from individual students, are useful, but more useful still would be a continuous concern, on the part of students and faculty, for the quality of the educational experience. The continuous reassessment of the educational proc- ess is, after all, one of the hallmarks of the univer- sity. The student body has a major role to play in this process, and it is my hope that they will exercise this responsibility constructively and actively. Sandor S. Shapiro, M.D N EXT N ' , ,wW Ax N x X , XX, Q 5 NYM' man , I f '51 Nr' 7' , Hn' 'Q Pf'l'1fw-o,,,. 1 E l I gr 3 r 2 i X i I I f ff J If ?3?a ' cy? NEWT' ff ,Z uf i f K ' N Q ex Freud ? Freud who ? Now, what else is the same about a woman and a salami sandwich? xml., Pj . . . - k .f.,,'f' an . ,jx ' L-9 f w . f If . ,' 'e6. 1 f.,':. 'C 5, find - - 'lik : gl .,,.55j'-if '.-. tQfZf:f2f?i'1 1 -9.'f,Tf1'z'. . ' :ff '5' ,re 'HF 'HP ,gags M Q If -1 , . 75,1555-k': ., ,-:.3:,f-'ln 2 f 59 ,-,f , ' -- 'KILL-:1-aff' f 'lg1'r Af: I, J- ' 'dlfzlffn f, ltg v,-. ' ' . ,'i' f' F V2 321454 A '1' 'rs W, f .mr-cg: .A L -1'-7-H r-I I. S-.1295 jg1.1I'rw Lf - KJ., ,ff if-F . lv .' 'f .iw T-+21 6' 554' 55.3 hw V P, ,., -M . . 514, 3 in-'f 1g.1-' HM Z I ' i As' 1' I ,,. Y! I pf 3 lx fx :ww k xl wi h X X NS x -X vw 1 . 'IEFQT' My 3 Q5 3 5 -' 5 1 S X . XX., . Aviv... x xx . '-'im'-N'-f.IfI1'.I ' um-...au x nk. '1T.1.T '3 ...... 's.... .4 An.. :-x. J J Hwy up please its time. T. S. ELIOT 25 ff' if .5 we :JL ft? 51? :cj ff f F2 ifi 1 all A , Ji 1 v 1 I f F X wx NY . x x fx - ' x gay fx S 113' , f SSG 4 'si-no M, 'N ,,-3, 'B 'W' ....... W,MQ,W. 1, , yffz fa fffyfz 1, , WM, x wa! ww s x I f a j Z 4 11 T 5 . r f, f , 'when ' Z' '- is r ei ii ' 'i Wfffffiniwavwepfs i Sure tastes better than shoe leather EDIT Since C nhhhed itself he svhoolsi Board exam oi the AMA dures. ,rim e his have i assessmengl rhiS appligct these PV' the acadeu st SU on , ghnths nah' 5ociefYfW't bearing the student' their iorffh ngtquestro commonli' rejection 0 mation for his atrend: eitect prei usurps The does not. his standr and encot suspicion encounter Thus, ti dens teac points ar society i apparatus problems tention. The re the teach oi himsr obliged however his parti IhLlS dot inteiiect 0Wn sci his pt-31-5 he knov Teacher tion. Hr The this nj the ba: 3YSTem mitthe Cannot T0t's 0 iecreu H Ash IS a p fllturg future led to he is The S, arm EDITORIAL Since the Flexner report ended the era of diploma- mill medical education, American medicine has prided itself on the standardization and upgrading of its schools through programs such as the National Board examinations, the Council on Medical Education of the AMA, state licensure, and formal accreditation procedures. Though the efforts of reasonable and able men have been thus employed for many years, an assessment of the educational systems deriving from this approach does not fill one with confidence that these principles have struck order and relevancy into the academic process. There is sufficient discord amongst students and faculty to suggest an erosion of the traditional instructional basis of our academic society, with its disciplinary and hierarchical bulwarks bearing the brunt of the attack. Student criticism of the new mills is directed at their form, content, and legitimacy. The student does not question the relevance of medicine in general, but commonly excludes various of its parts in an agnostic rejection of his teacher's ability to select valid infor- mation for presentation. If the student thus qualifies his attendance to a fraction of medical education, in effect presuming a tutorial capacity of his own, he usurps the role of the teacher as now accepted, if he does not, the system continues into irrelevance from his standpoint. Faculty position shifts from interest and encouragement of the student opinion to deep suspicion as the invasive nature of grievance is encountered. Thus, the problem of academic reconstruction bur- dens teacher and student alike. Basically, their view-. points are the only legitimate levers the general society has with which to influence its teaching apparatus. Therefore, in the arbitration of educational problems, their opinions should be given careful at- tention. The reality of current educational practice defines the teacher's role as that of training replicate images of himself and his society. The teacher is indeed obliged to pass on to the student his knowledge: however, his information is a unique description of his particular curiosity, intellectual or otherwise, and thus does not bear on the needs of an independent intellect. Further, if his knowledge is the result of his own scholarship, it was acquired in the interest of his personal refinement. Then, to teach the facts as he knows them is only a gross approximation of the teacher's desired function in the process of educa- tion. He must also represent the light of academia. The student's desire for an education goes beyond this training obligation of the teacher also. This is the basis for his dispute over the guidance of the system: within its structure the teacher cannot trans- mit the inquiry that led him to his position. The student cannot accept a perspective of the past as his men- tor's only legacy, but must depend on his own pro- jected requirements to orient his study. A student is the embodiment of a point in time. He is a product of the past, but owes his loyalty to the future: the student accepts the obligation of the future, but is indentured to the past. This position has led to a disenfranchisement-for his past dependency he is denied voice, for his destiny he is allowed only the security of the mold. ' If society wishes only to perpetuate its knowledge, It may assign the responsibility for this to one in possession of, or one seeking this knowledge. It rather seems that the former assignment reflects only a desire to train, and assumes the teacher's duty to be one of adequate preparation or programming of the student. However, a training program does not sup- port.the spirit of inquiry an educational exposure requires. Herein lies our intellectual despite of the technician, who readily accumulates while rarely cre- ating: his function is to answer the questions of others without question himself. A true education will not produce a technician alone, whereas this is the only accomplishment of training. I One cannot deny the need for an element of train- ing in his schooling. Who would attempt his first thoracotomy without supervision? We can recognize, however, that the best training available will not support adaptability. The basis of training is the predictable, a quality not prominent in our knowledge of the future. Education, in contrast, depends on an active search by the student and is his responsibility. It is a function of inquiry and an implicit recognition of future needs. Inquiry is the student's raison d'etre, and seems, in this regard, to be vital to society's well-being. Society looks to the student, then, as the prime mover of its fate. Indeed, to leave his past, the student must incor- porate inquiry into the mortar of experience or suffer his place in the brick outhouse of social amenity. The artifice of category is one means of impressing order on those who would enter the educational system. Authority and discipline descend from the teacher's category, while the student most closely resembles a receptacle in his supplicant's niche. How- ever, if this categorical nature of the community is taken as its homeostatic mechanism, category will subvert the logic of the situation. Thus, in a reaction to stress, the teacher assumes the role of interpreter of the environment and furthermore is in the position to enforce his particular interpretation. His authority is not constituted on this basis: the only legitimacy apparent to the student is that which may accompany his position within the academic process itself. This legitimate academic influence becomes specious when the environment interrogates the academy. Indeed, the environment seems to be supplying great stress through the intransigent position of its students. They are its direct line, albeit subcon- sciously, to the administration of its schools. Society, through the office of its latest crop of students, will sculpt a relevant educational form. The American school has cultivated a system of training and a technical institute mentality in the face of a revolution. The student interprets himself as more than a cog in an inadequate, rigid machine-a machine which is not responsive to its own future. let alone his. This machine demands the mastery of one who is committed to its principle butuseeks new application. The student is without the bias of time in this process of redirection, andlalertito .current social potential. Accordingly, his opinion is vital and usable, though it is necessary to render him respon- sible for his education and future to realize his true influence, which is essentially provocative. I The constant interest of the institution of higher education is to facilitate the students exposure tot a body of experience: the constant interest of t e S u- dent, on the other hand, is to apply thIS GXPGIISUCG to his own future' Edward Ricketts, '69 ,ff Sorry, Doc, but this just ain't my bag! fa L 1 OWU When Undw Stiff ' v is er' M 2: r Iii f . 9 . N -,J'w 'T.'f5' n , ..5d2?L,E- if fr' ,A?,1:x3x: g. V jjrifgl-Us -I, 511,41 f-I . ' Virgil 5. far- - lx y '.'l1f3i51iF .' ,Q ,' f .. gs-'gfxhga ,. , f ., ,Q L im -952'-fi. 4 I 1.111 R 'izjffif 1 if ff- gf ' if-'T gli ' 5 95 EY ft g ggg 'fi xg '15 V,-,..'3.1 4, 'QQ-gi.. J: rpgzf fl-I, , -nl ., H: ' A Q: 1 f-,, ff,- f l I? L ,, wwf: - ' A-t-wwf i i l i EDITORIAL Protected by private status from university-con- ceived educational foment, Jefferson Medical Center has felt little pressure for reform in either medical or pedagogical spheres until very recently. Ability to attract adequate numbers of applicants to the medi- cal school and to grind out yearly quotas of respect- ably competent physicians has been interpreted as evidence of successful service to the health and social needs of a rapidly enlarging population. A self-satis- fied Jefferson Medical College has considered that its educational facilities, hospital, Ancillary Services and related institutions do indeed constitute one of America's most important Medical Centers. One requires no great experience in evaluating edu- cational institutions, however, to perceive that Jeffer- son Medical Center trails the most important Medical Centers at a great distance and has only barely begun to narrow this gap. Jefferson has been forced to recognize that a tradition-bound educational system has long been irrelevant to both student and public needs, that a personality-dominated organization is susceptible to potentially lethal indecision and over- sight, and that temporary discomfiture is trifling payment for the benefits to be derived from a re- working of educational aims and the means for their implementation. The Jefferson medical student has received more- than-token assurance in the form of a new curriculum that administration and faculty have been made aware of the need for change. The optimistic individual may even convince himself that this early move is suf- fcient evidence for more fundamental and thorough- going reform to follow. Replacement of retired old school department heads with young, vigorous, and scholarly individuals, attempts to enlarge a full-time faculty nucleus, a significant move-apparent in the elective program and in student membership on cur- riculum evaluation committees-to allow the medical student a hand in determining his own educational direction, as well as the emergence of a surprisingly outspoken and activistic, albeit small, student faction all promise a perpetuation of the youthful reform movement. A more disturbing indicator of Jefferson's difficult birth into the New Age of medical educa- tion, however, is the prevailing school attitude toward scientific investigation. Jefferson has made startling little use, either for fund-raising leverage or for instructing medical stu- dents and house staff in a scientific approach to medical problems, of the tool employed at other insti- tutions to elevate medical investigators to the status of New Brahmins. lt is ironic that many of the men from whose work Jefferson has gained national prominence are graduates of other institutions and remain unknown to that great body of alumni on which Jefferson prides itself. Only recently have the contributions of these men been a serious considera- tion in Jefferson policy-making decisions, although their research awards account for significant fractions of various department budgets and their presence assures Jefferson of the continuation of funds for such facilities as the Clinical Research Center. Even now the medical student is relatively unaware of the im- portance of these men, and only the student already committed to a research interest finds his way into a laboratory during vacation periods. The Student Research Society's membership is small to non-exis- tent, and Student Research Day-an ill-attended de- spondent session--exhausts the supply of presentable research papers. The plight of research at Jefferson, however, cannot be regarded as a strict function of administration and faculty failure. Rather, the role of student dis- interest can be perceived more clearly in this area than in most others. The Jefferson student is certainly a major factor in the school's traditionally reactionary response to reform stimuli and particularly in its lack of commitment to medical investigation. This student is a moderately bright Pennsylvanian whose interests are chiefly practice-oriented and whose aspirations to medical school achievement manifest themselves in the acquisition of clinical rather than academic skills. He regards basic research undertaken by physicians as a luxury not completely justified by hypothetical future returns. On occasion, he even considers such research immoral, for it deprives the medical-aid-seeking community of the services of able-bodied physicians. He seeks clinical rather than research electives while at Jefferson and chooses community hospital house staff appointments after graduation. He is often disappointing to con- cerned faculty members, for he is far more interested in the what than in the how or why, and his few questions are concretely directed. He responds to aridly objective testing procedures with early panic and later apathy, finding his concrete expec- tations reinforced by unimaginative questioning. Rarely asked to consider and discuss a medical problem in depth, he regards mechanism-directed thinking and the experimental systems derived there- from as extraneous, even distracting. He rejects research-oriented papers in his reading of the medical literature, complaining when the more popular clinical journals include basic science papers or seminars. What is to be done with the problem of research at Jefferson? ls such a problem of any significance, or does it have substance only in the mind of a malcontented minority eager to impose its will on the remainder of the medical community? If Jefferson will allow itself to be judged by the standards of those schools it acknowledges to be pre-eminent in present-day medical education, then the investiga- tional deficiency at Jefferson must be said to be both real and serious. Its existence is by no means a simple function of faculty reluctance or student disinterest, although both contribute to worsen itS effects upon the Jefferson graduate. lt is m0rS likely a symptomatic by-product of a dangerous QCD' eralized disorder of the Jefferson educational system. lt seems somewhat improbable that the student 2 3 inf o that Jeffers ti e Educ? . th 5tOlldl in the seal Theiess, Je breed of St he COU iical in l One cannot intelligence and faculit partlTl6iitS academiC l The st6P ficiencv iii nor inconSI improveme tion of the solution iS attempt T' science, C enhanced a of the Je teaching o effort to 4 and to ot change: ar procedure required l basic scie prived of present B The Stl time, if does not disease-pi Slational s eventual be made Practice i of Pathol. 3 store i lTlLlSl2 be problems When th himself? Pmblemg be perm many WI Within Seems IS not- WOYSCH lr is more 9 geroU5 tem the S Esence Ol' Such an n0w the im. already al' into Student On-axis. ded de- Selliable V' Cannot llSljrati0n ent dis. hlS dent., ditionally rticularly stigation, Sylvaniarr 'lied and lievemem i clinical research ompletely occasion, al, for it ty of the is clinical erson and rointmenls rg to con- interested and his responds Nith early ate expec- uestioning. a medical m-directed rvedthere' -le rejects he medical liar clinical 5emlll3lS- ,f research rgniiicanctr mind of 3 its will Oli If Jeltersnll ,maids Qi eminem 'H rnvestitli' to be said I no mean Student or its Gil' tuddll described above can readily be brought to appreciate the intellectual satisfaction or the practical value of medical research. It seems even more improbable that Jefferson is wholly responsible for his attitude- the educational experiences productive of such prac- tical stolidity could almost certainly be documented in the secondary school and college years. Never- theless, Jefferson not only attracts and accepts this breed of student, but does little to alter his thinking in the course of its four-year influence upon him. One cannot help feeling this a sad misuse of student intelligence, extant despite its apathetic presentation, and faculty ability, for there are few Jefferson de- partments in which the capacity to generate student academic excitement appears to be totally lacking. The steps toward the correction of Jefferson's de- ficiency in research education are neither difficult nor inconsistent with urgent demands for educational improvement in other areas. They include: a recogni- tion of the problem and an acknowledgement that a solution is of importance to Jefferson's futureg an attempt to improve communication among basic science, clinical, and clinical research facultyg an enhanced appreciation of the abilities and limitations of the Jefferson studentg a thorough review of teaching objectives and methodology-with a sincere effort to encourage and reward teaching excellence and to open new avenues of faculty-student inter- changeg and a complete overhaul of antiquated testing procedures. The era is long past when Jefferson required National Board corroboration in arriving at basic science course grades, and students are de- prived of needed exercise in cogitation by the present Board-simulating examination format. The Student must be made aware-for the first time, if necessary-that the practice of medicine does not preclude intelligent speculation about disease-producing abnormalities or about the investi- gational systems which may lead to definition and eventual correction of these abnormalities. He must be made to believe that the quality of his medical practice is primarily dependent upon his understanding Of pathologic mechanisms and only secondarily upon a store of facts assimilated by brute memory. He must be encouraged to seek faculty opinions on problems which perplex him, to doubt faculty opinions when they are delivered ex cathedra, and to find for himself the basic source material dealing with the problems in which he is interested. Finally, he must be permitted to carry his questions into an intellec- Wally well-equipped laboratory when they transcend the scope of the existing literature. Although the mechanical possibilities for such improvements exist Within the present Jefferson educational structure, the change in attitude necessary to effect them often fel?-'ms discouragingly far off. One must hope that it IS not. Judith Cooper, '59 Multitudes in the vallfgf 0 decision. M -x,ffsgXw,.,,., , K W . . 'V Mx Qrl zlgfgmn HSN, X ' 16559 S , 1 wwf ff f fu wif XQ X g C 2 Wx n .,.,- ff' . 'ff , I M ..,. , W ,I W- .L 'ff f , ? 7 , sf W X . . 1 ..:,: .,.: .,,., , . .'. ...Z .Wy . 7 1 I 9 C fx f f 1 1 f f ...A . 9 ,Q ,i , . ,ik-I 'W 4924452 V, IQ -43 100 N., 'www W ' , X, qspglmf M, v. Wxw . N-nw dia: If phil woL treo T firn var it I per the Jef Il, u Q .W ,wr- ,.,,4-0-911 ,L 922359, ' ?f?f '1 ' 1139.1 lf. tiff? 5 ' :,:' an-I J ,yanidj 3 12 ' EDITQRIAL lf one were to attempt to describe the Jefferson philosophy, the word most consistently used, l think, would be Tradition. Above all else Jefferson is a traditional school. Tradition, when viewed in perspective, provides a firm basis for development-a theme upon which variations may be improvised. At Jefferson, however, it is too often revered for its own sake and the perspective is lost. Tradition is nothing more than the sum of all the achievements and developments in Jefferson's long history. When it is not set aside after its usefulness is exhausted stagnation is inevitable. ln approaching a method of progress the traditional or conservative view is no more an answer, no closer to ideal than is the totally revolutionary or radical view. The final solution lies somewhere in compromise. Progressive improvements usually come in large jumps-like evolutionary waves. These seem to come very rarely in conservative institutions, because of the inertia of the status quo. The evolutionary waves are initiated by the so-called radicals winning some concessions from the con- servatives. The net result is a change, which like any adaptation, remains if it provides a more ex- pedient route to the desired end. lt, in turn, passes when something more efficient is found, and when once again the inertia of tradition can be overcome. lf we would believe Turgenev's hypothesis of per- sonality change, today's radicals will be tomorrow's conservatives : we may accept that today's radical concepts will be traditional tomorrow. lt follows that the more imaginative and visionary our new concepts of today, the richer our tradition tomorrow. For Jefferson to maintain the honor of her tradition, we must be far-reaching in our vision and action. The latest opportunity for improvement was the recent evaluation and revision of Jefferson's curricu- lum lessentially unchanged since 19101. The efforts produced a new curriculum which, disappointingly, was not so much new as rearranged lessentially unchanged since 19101. lf one looks at the total time the basic sciences took before and occupy now, he sees essentially the same initial two years. The valid concept of elective time-time for the student to explore specialized areas in depth during his four years of medical school-has not been given more recognition than a utilization of vacation time for electives. None of the more recent imaginative and well-thought-out modifications in medical education were incorporated in Jefferson's new curriculum- ironic after the long fight to overcome the inertia in the traditional gluteus. The new curriculum does not offer such acces- sible opportunities as 11 patient contact in the first year Ito maintain the vital humanism with which most medical students begin school1, 21 a totally free senior year for electing courses of individual interest, 31 encouragement to take an extra year lbetween the sophomore and junior years1 for independent research, or 41 real coordination between the clinical and basic sciences. The point of all this lofty rhetoric is really just to say that Jefferson is behind. A hard-won change has just been made but the Jefferson adoptions were obsolete before they were adopted. The therapy didn't go far enough, the ills of medical education remain incompletely treated. The lecture is still ubiquitousg the labs still irrelevant and extremely time consuming, the conference a monologue, and the clinical experiences too impersonal, too limited, and void of much real teaching. The only solution to this problem is continuous action and re-evaluation. The changes effected so far are in the right direction, only they are much too conservative. lf Jefferson seeks leadership status, it must act like a leader- that is, with a sense of confidence and a visionary, adventurous spirit. We need more changes and re- vision as new techniques appear and the demands upon graduates change. Jan T. Raynak, '69 X 'gf 7, g H1 QM 4 A ,qmlik Fyf A W Sir 1 ,iff f J hc, Z UWM, WW 4 l ilu -V . .,,, .M , 52053 7.1, ,, g Q, -'ff we f. IC-nj Interview: DR. WALTER M. HERMAN Doctor Walter M. Herman is the father of four, runs four miles a day, and, in his spare time, dabbies in the stock market. He received both his under- graduate and medical school training at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating from the latter in 1959. This was followed by internship at Mt. Sinai Hospital, New York, and two years of Air Force duty as a flight surgeon. He then completed two years of residency at Mt. Sinai, the first in Medicine, the second in Cardiology. In 1964 he came to Jefferson for a year of Medicine residency. He spent the follow- ing year in London as a Fellow in Cardiology at the Chief Medical Resident at Jefferson. He received Board certification in Internal Medicine in 1966 and in Cardiology in 1967. lAt that time he was and perhaps even today is the youngest boarded cardiologist in the United Statesl. He is, at present, an Associate in Medicine at Jefferson, and Assistant Attending Physician at both Jefferson and the Philadelphia General Hospital. Personally, he is a dynamic indi- vidual, deeply concerned with his patients and stu- dents, as the following interview discloses. Some people here have commented that the Jefferson students lack depth. What, if anything, is your impression after your contact with them? Well, l think that when the Jefferson student starts out he has the intellectual capabilities and collegiate attainments equal to those of students entering any other medical school in the country. The question is what happens at Jefferson such that, when I see students in their third or fourth years, their attitudes are different from those of their contem- poraries at other medical institutions. l think one of the big factors is that the school is too large. The student to faculty ratio is not really favorable to encouraging independent thought: however, it does have the capability of generating a lot of anxiety, a lot of tension. lf, in fact, the student lacks depth as has been suggested, it is, l think, directly related to the small number of faculty in relation to the student body. Students do not get nearly enough personal contact with the teachers, and the teachers in turn don't have the opportunity to see students in a casual situation. lThis may often put the student in jeopardy.J For example, say a given student is serious about his work and does it regularly but lacks interest in a specific area. If he sees teachers often enough they are going to take this area of weakness into account with respect to the student's overall interest and ability. On the other hand, if the teacher sees the student once in a great while, and just happens to ask the wrong question on the wrong day, then this is 'very bad for the student's record'. Many students operate under fear of this, particularly at the beginning of their clinical years. They are overly embarrassed, tremendously ill-at-ease, much more than l would think necessary for their first experience with clinical medicine. This anxiety actually partially paralyzes their ability of relaxing, enjoying, and learning medicine. lf there were more frequent contact of student with his teacher, he would, as l myself did as a student, realize that he was being judged on a day to day as opposed to an examination to examination basis. The anxiety level might be expected to fall and the man to become a true student motivated by the stimulation of the subject matter. Great effort has to be made to increase the number of faculty slots. With this, there has to be a great deal of effort to organize the pre-clinical and clinical years such that a certain degree of intimacy is attained between staff and students. I don't think there is any place in the United States for a medical factory which turns out men and women with M.D. degrees who are only narrow practitioners. They need vision and concept, and they only get this by contact with learned men and cultured people. Speaking from a student perspective, there seems to be no real Division of Cardiology at Jefferson. Perhaps you, as a cardiologist, would care to comment. ln terms of a program it seems to me that there might well have been some better effort to organize the Cardiologists at Jefferson years ago. The exact politics and intricacies are not all apparent to me, so l cannot knowledgeably say why it didn't happen: all l can do is tell you that it has not happened. Approximately half of the deaths in this country are due, in part or in full, to heart disease. One of the problems at Jefferson seems to be the inadequacy of developing funds to equip laboratory and patient care facilities commensurate with many community hospitals in the area.'This is not to say that the physicians who work in the area leave anything to be desired-they are excellent cardiologists. But the equipment is often out-moded and it is difficult at best to attain new apparatus. The result is that the pr09rf pafi6ll The traditi teach. all lil tical 1 pafleil medic can ll funclin pyggrf 9ff0I'f time. areaf the T' medic seem that 2 unless to bui in ter care. teachi both how r date, have . areas agree: built j builtg have collus respo thata It to b proba- that Seco can alwa 6 gr happ give One beca beca othe Prim behi adm Hlixi The exe Whe W0u Suc Sur fix , f ' K , W f 4 ,,42,,f mbgwy 4 .W ,, 1 ,f . f ff, ., ' 61:55 V - ff: wa- , ff , 1' ff' Wy- V74 W' ': 71 ,QNX 5' ' if f, .. f Q0 -Q x -'f , aff , X I . , ,f fm f .x ,r ' mln, - JAY- ' ' mf 1 52 - fr ifx f J431 , ,Q , . J. f, f f 221, - - W W f x '52 if Y ,4 ff x 1 , ff! Z7 f Mi' f 1 f f x f 'Q ffx, f':?,' jTw::f, M x nf, lifbfi' ff 7 ' dw f I' v WEA by e Au heal as syggd ability 8 j pul who taught t xiii? plus 8 Health ordmg to my ISJBATH ers S ouT FEE GR STIP I y y e pt,lecture S every other mode of instruction. I will -i nowledge of the Art to my own sons, S those of iny 'I equal-ly dear 1 Q29-'W -w ' is f -,YIII11 8 relieve his r mefootingas l p p rn it l lto disciples bound by a stipulation S oath ffm. 'IS I I t,,. V 'wif V -,L , . i ,Yr , ,. , ., .1.m I if ,I ' Y , 1,1 ,ii rf' -4. : I ,I iw. -- ',M. 1 . fi,-f. if-1 .' ,g',f,q .I . , ffl- . .f , will ,ii I 3 i 'JM1 .frf -15111: J I 41' V ggi.-r,.' .I - I -4. 4 21fTQ'f ,524 in I , 1f I y V, y ,V I, I Q y pt t B ayhystain from ssde f1 1 ff I i pgs i flikefmainnercytlyx not giveto . is 'MY 123 'f:N', if ' ' , : I, I 6 5 N m 1 - X-. - fr wwf, 1 t ,M-sscw, we 1' ti , .-- ,, N West-r - W vm.: SW, ix X s Q I x, M 1 I .I . ,XV .M . UF MY PAT hievous. I w'rLlt,Igive any such counsel 8 in to produce abortion. ts :Jin if zz g.,+f,q It ,I-,,,,c-:f,,,-ai, , 4 1 1 5Q,5'- R'3'I--5I,1:,' ':-:','!--- .- . L, f ,i,y1'f'Q,3.11,ff1j 'J ' 15' 'T' lfllf. v, '1f-- ', 'if' 1' L Q ,if,.s'j -f'-:5-139'.1,.,g,i,.':i-1:gm , . - , f q V' 17: l- f-'ff '73-'A ',L-fr'-'l iff'-I-'-w'L'57 if ii? 'f4if+::S4Q,f:-,Qzymgnv. pfllflzf if -Jn' l 'j' ' Milf. 'flI,f'1'1' it f 'f': ,','f,1! .f 'N ., Sig 'f'-'Vfifar -'f4,4Li':f4qfI'f1.3'.' - , fra 'rg V, 1,54-,I-gL1',-,.'v,'fwLr:f.f1 - , .V ' .flbf .3 gf '.ff'n1i',' 'iff ' '- f I .gggl y V3 C U li pe YS O I1 S :fb I .K ' -' f.-.,t- Y - HOLINESS I ,PRACTICE MY the stornfel butwill leave th rs aofthls work. Into what ythehlgyenefit of the sick, S will a ,W- by men W I enter, I wil 'stain fr from the y Scorruption. And Furthe ales offreemen 8 slaves. Whatever I practice or not in connection ich ought not to be spoken of 1 uld be kept secret. While I continue y it be granted to me to enjoy life 8 the the peqgd, by all men in all times! I I ass S this Oath, may the reverse be my I WILL NOT DIVLILG f iff Ak . Q 'mf' -lvlgfig f h-A Qs -w ff' 1 1' we A Fw A? B 'idk X ,wsu- v b '2'i,n r K t , wx t fwfzfg 5 im F55 I xx-,gh 1 E, 1 lffbg 1 if 1 ri X, 2- 4 ' --rm, 4-. ---,.. y ... -A-. 1 Y 'I v 'x .A , W I' Bw I 'hy -Q 1 I 5-It Riff, As it should be, the student government of our college is not a body of supreme power. Any student ' to government in a post-graduate school is not meant be such, or even to be a voice for student dissent. lt ' t the is meant only to be that body which represen s interest and attempt on the part of grown profes- sional men and women to share along with the execu- tive faculty, in all phases of the responsibility for their professional training. Staying true to form, this year's Council plodded through endless committee reports, discussions, and counterdiscussions. The end result again was near total dissipation of energy in running the machine, with a minor legislative output. Exceptionally, the work of the Student Curriculum Committee did a great deal to bring home student views to the College Administration. Hopefully, there will be equally active leadership and action from this group in the years to come. OFFICERS Tom Connelly .............. .......... P resident Jim Gerson ..... ........... ..... V i ce-president Ken Tefkelsen ---- ........ S ecretary Harvey Lefton ............... ,,,,,,,,.. T reasurer Fred Harbert .................. Faculty Advisgr Samuel Conly, Joseph Gonnella . . . ..... Faculty Advisors ALPHA STUDENT COUNCIL Richard lnsel Jilin Kaplan Richard Fire: Thelhlpha among Ah JeHel'S0n 1 land Charl today is 01 of well QV The S06 members who HTS 5 Shlll and t0 alumn achlellem The Q Wills 01 Wollhv i lefftures ihip are ennslh O Pl'6Sldent resident ecretary reasurer Advisor Advisors rw -1+ . 43 I1-1 ni! if ij.: A1 D .1 .ig ', fa ,. .. 5 ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA I OFFICERS Richard lnsel ............... .... P resident John Kaplan ...... . . . .... . ..... Vice Pres. Richard Fireman .... ..... V ice Pres. The Alpha Omega Alpha Medical Fraternity is unique among American medical school fraternities. The Jefferson chapter, Pennsylvania Alpha, was the fifth land charterl chapter founded in the country and today is one of 86 chapters with a living membership of well over 30,000 students and physicians. The society itself is comprised of three classes of members one of which are the undergraduate students who are selected on the basis of scholarship, leader- ship and personal integrity. Membership is also open to alumni and faculty who have made distinctive achievements in the practice of scientific medicine. The Greek letters AOA are the initials of the words of the motto the society has adopted: To be worthy to serve the suffering. A series of medical lectures and the annual J. Parsons Schaeffer Lecture- Ship are given each year to foster the goals of Pennsylvania Alpha. HARE MEDICAL SGCIETY Jay Skyler ......... Stephen Abram .... Judith Cooper . . . William Heim ...... Dr. Robert I. Wise .... Dr. Joseph Medoff OFFICERS . . . . . .President . .Vice-president . . . , . .Secretary . . . . . .Treasurer Faculty Sponsor Faculty Sponsor A well-established Jefferson tradition, the Hobarf Amory Hare Honor Medical Society, found 1968-69 an auspicious year to re-evaluate its function in the life of the college. ln addition to the customary joufnal clubs, symposia, guest lectures, and CPC, the Society arranged informal beer-and-pretzel roundtable SQS- sions with interested faculty members: diSCuSSI0f' topics varied widely, from An approach to the patient with renal disease through Experiences with erY' thropoietin to a series concerned with the opportun- ities in academic medicine, private practice, and medi- cal education and administration. Joining a large group of distinguished predecessors, Dr. Halsteud Holman, Professor of Medicine and Department Chair- man at Stanford University, addressed the Hare S0- ciety's annual spring banquet and received honorarY membership in the Society. Judith C0 Lowell Kl Dr, Allan Dr' Cllafll pf,JoS9Pl STUI SOCI In an tioning J Socieiy r medical SAMA IV financed research did the r search o son or a by the r presenta speaker. fidence Researcl thusiasrr llell to lHahnem i OFFICERS Judith Cooper ................. Co-chairman Lowell Kobrin ...... ...... C o-chairman Dr. Allan Erslev ...... .... F aculty Adviser Dr. Charles P. Kraatz ........ Faculty Adviser Dr. Joseph Gonnella ......... Faculty Adviser STUDENT'RESEAROH SOCIETY In an attempt to resume its existence as a func- tioning Jefferson organization, the Student Research Society mounted an attack on student apathy toward medical investigation. A trip to the Mead Johnson- SAMA Medical Student Research Forum in Galveston, financed by Jefferson, for the winner of a Jefferson research competition gave impetus to its efforts, as did the publication of an information manual on re- search opportunities for medical students, at Jeffer- son or abroad. Student Research Day was enlivened by the combination of impressive student research presentations with an address by an excellent guest speaker. Newly elected officers and a renewed con- fidence in the value of its aims enable the Student Research Society to face the year to come with en- thusiasm and optimism. lLeft to rightl Mrs. John Lucy lWomen'sJ, Mr. John Lucy lHahnemannJ, Roger David fTempIeJ, Brent Spears Ueffer- sonl, Rich Bananno IJeffersonJ, Jim Gerson Ueffersonl. POOL The Student Steering Committee for The Philadel- phia Pool for Medicine, was organized in November, 1968, by medical students from all the Philadelphia medical schools. Specifically, the Committee pro- posed the establishment of a central independent agency lthe Pool properl in Philadelphia, to coordi- nate and expedite the admissions to medical school of students of disadvantaged background. To date, The Philadelphia Commission on Higher Education, the Deans of the City's medical schools, representatives of our Committee, and others are working together to establish such a Pool in Philadelphia. Our Committee will continue to work beyond the admissions' process. By September, 1969, we expect to establish or coordinate student-for-student tutorial counseling programs in all the medical schools of this City. In so doing, we mean to assure the success in medical school of all accepted students, and to pro- vide the further assurance to the community that uni- formly first-class physicians are graduated from schools in Philadelphia. S.A.M.A. The Student American Medical Association at Jeffer- son has begun to progress away from the stagnant, inactive organization it has been for the past several years. Although the past year has brought only a very few activities to the general membership, it has seen the advent of our liaison with various medical organ- izations on a local, state and national level. We have sent representatives to Detroit and Chicago to com- municate with national SAMA leaders for ideas to bring back to Jefferson. We hope that next year's officers will be able to use these new ideas as well as the resources of the medical profession for the benefit of the student membership. Officers fleft to rightjg Stephin Flynn, Robin Ed. wards, Marilyn Kershner ISec.-Treas.J, George Kersh. ner lPresidentJ. fNot pic. turedl Ron Blum Nice Pres.J. WOMEN S' AUXILIARY S.A.M.A. Meeting monthly and working hand in hand with the students, hospital, and community, the Women's Auxiliary to the Student American Medical Association has as its purposes HJ fund raising for the benefit of group needs, T21 to form friendships with each other and the members of the medical professiong f3J to educate members to accept the responsibilities of a physician's wife. ln addition to lively meetings, monthly coffee-hours and the annual Christmas Party highlighted this year's activities. CHR SOC1 The C organize common iaith to The Jef M.D.'s z general meetingr Dominic Orthop nesday, andfor Problem member the loc: Dr.J,Wr Edward Thomas I 0 r' . lobirlghgiz Kershne, '96 Kersh. WOT pic- 'm lVice and with Women's sociation ienefit of ith each Jfessiong isibilities heetings, las Panty CHRISTIAN MEDICAL SOCIETY The Christian Medical Society is an international organization of doctors and medical students whose common endeavor is the application of the Christian faith to their everyday lives and medical practicest The Jefferson chapter meets monthly, with local M.D.'s and Jefferson students presenting topics of general interest to the medical community. Recent meetings include Medical Group Missions in the Dominican Republic, Brain, Mind, and Spirit, and Orthopedic Surgery in the Camerounf' Every Wed- nesday, interested students meet for Bible study andjor discussion of relevant problems, e.g. The Problem of Suffering and Faith Healing. Faculty members who provide support and inspiration to the local chapter are Dr. William H. Whitely and Dr. J. Wayne McFarland. OFFICERS Edward F. Dziob ................... ..... P resident Thomas E. Sullivan .......................... ,. .Vice Pres. Si OFFICERS Neil Thompson .... ......................... P resident James Garner .... .................... V ice Pres. Jane Brittain .. ............... Secretary Paul Kantz ...... City Representative PASTEUR SOCIETY The Pasteur Medical Society had its beginning when the Guild of Saints Luke, Cosmos and Damien was founded. This organization was a city-wide Catholic physician's group with affiliated chapters at each of the Philadelphia medical schools. ln 1930 it was decided that the medical schools would be served more efficiently by a separate and distinct student-faculty group at each school. Hence Jefferson's chapter, under the aegis of Saint John the Evangelist Parish, became known as the Pasteur Society. 17500 11120 VM gf as-I '-I PEDIATRIC SOCIETY OFFICERS Paul Weinberg ................ ..... C o-chairman Kathy Swiggan ............ ..... C o-chairman Carol Hersh .... ..... C o-chairman The Jefferson Medical College Pediatric Society was first founded in 1965 under the faculty guidance of advisor Dr. Morton Rosenberg. The Society is composed of members of every class who are interested in pediatrics. The general purpose of the society is to foster interest in, and add to, the knowledge of pediatrics, especially in areas that are not touched upon in the regular medical school curriculum at Jefferson. The Jefferson Pediatric Society is not only one of the most active added sources of medical education at Jefferson but also a well recognized forum of student opinion. The J. Marion Sims Society is the undergraduate Obstetrics and Gynecology Society at Jefferson. The purpose of the society is to present informal programs in fields related to obstetrics and gynecology. Mem- bership in the society is not limited to students planning to practice Ob-Gyn: on the contrary, pro- grams were selected so that they could be of great educational value to members of all medical specialties. OFFICERS Steven Schwartz .... ............ ...--- P F esidenf Jay Skyler ........ -.-.- V ice Pres- Linda Weinberg ..... .... S GGFGTBTY John Frantz ........... ---.-- I Veasurer Alvin coldfarb, NLD. ........ ...-- A dvisof .XN SIMS OB-GYN SOCIETY A .-fff f V . 4 lim Heck Norm 30 Mark Nig J- J- Gart Respc SIUKISHIS Pedic Sn WHS V3 bHCkbre applltian CYCIe Pedic' LIC graduate son. The rrograms y. Mem- students iry, pro- of great medical 'resident 'ice Pres. Secretafl ireasurer .Advisor MTG? IW ,A OFFICERS Jim Heckman .... ............... ..... H y sterian Norm Sokoloff .... .,......... .... P r esident Mark Nissenbaum . . . ,,,,, Vice Pres, J. J. Gartlahd, NLD. . . ,,,., Advisor Responding to a kneed voiced by the many senior students interested in orthopedics, the Student Ortho- pedic Society was reorganized this year. The Society was very selective in admission of members. A backbreaking examination, for which all interested applicants boned up, was administered. The test HJ required the applicants to be able to handle large sums of money T21 demanded proficiency in at least one expensive hobby C31 evaluated manual dexterity lihrough a surgical instrument throwing contestl, and I-41 most importantly, quantified the student's aversion to the field of internal medicine. Once admitted, members enjoyed a great variety of Programs. There was a humerus talk on shoulder dislocations. A student workshop entitled, Motor- Cycle safety: the use of a crash helmet , was Conducted by senior Alan Baron. The majority of the PVOQYHITIS, however, were centered around ortho- Pedic's interrelationship with other academic fields. Two programs coordinated orthopedics and religion: The church as a crutch and Ecumenicism: a study in nonunion. ln the realm of economics, The kickback as a cause of orthopedic problems was discussed. And, Dr. l. lvl. Nale discussed athletic medicine in his paper, Casting for trout. The annual banquet, sponsored jointly with the Student Rheumatological Society, was held at the Hotel Gemellus. The highlight of the evening was the first annual Norman F. Sokoloff Memorial Lecture delivered by l. Wise Roberts, lVl.D. entitled lVlima and Herellea as etiological agents in Colles' fracture. The speaker received little attention, however, be- cause due to the high quality of beverages served at the hotel's lVletatarsal Bar everyone was plastered. ORTHQPEDICS SOCIETY l w ,iff r , 1' gf, N, ., if .QNHQYQQK X N4 X , . , . .ex , 4 'Vw X R 25 -a' 1? X 2' i M53 is , S Nw My .I K kllkgg T8 'X 5 xkyrxxg i N' , 3, - X . KK Q 4 Q W as .hi I :,.as'A , xi Y Qwgvw, ' ,. i?.5.Q-Q as fy .jx N X, As Q3 yy R - R was y y .. 'M x HS f 5 x ' '-X , 5 N, fs' ' it 2 ' 'ff - QE fin Q-5,.gS'f...f :Xgf f . - WN - ' xy il 1 ff . vi l M7 W ,J . ', K i A r I l X J X I 2 553: -'x if gf sw ,,,,ff X , AA Km w,,Q,q,N 5 an if f 5 x all, M farme- Fkman l0Vel-n B- Ne Mk, J Wein. ner. E. -Hrlton llurr ' hel, llll'ISOn l0l'lt0w: 5- Chol- Hlly, R. lein, B :on, M T- Fiss. iker, T, rerg, D, l0ward, Hay, A. Kay, S. homas, esident esident easurer lanager Ianager teward iairman cretary cretary iairman I 1 ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA We knew it was going to be a vintage year when the lid blew off early in September. We gave the cook a vacation rush week so we'd have something to do. By week's end we'd acquired 30 pledges who were too malnourished to try Nu Sig. The AK football fortunes, starting out kind of slow, faded, and then kind of stopped. Featuring a nifty backfield and the heftiest line ever assembled, the stalwarts from 11th street were steam-rolled early in the season and hung up their jocks mid way thru the campaign. Using an orphan offense and the peek-a-boo defense, Nodose Nelson, the Mod Greek, Flaming Arrow, and the Utility Poles managed to confound the opposing forces as often as their own, but the Great War was lost. Socially however, the campaign was hard fought. Traffic was heavy in the cloistered halls of old AK, and reached its pinnacle at the Christmas Party. Santa arrived to find drum- mers drumming, pipers piping, and his elves drunk and wenching. The Ghost of Christmas past even stopped in, still smoking Corona Trentons and de- manding protocol in the dining room. The house father returned from the wild West with a sun burn on his head and a holster burn on his gun. Smiling Ed went down for the count in November and flew immediately to a self imposed exile. Shortly thereafter the King chose a Queen and proclaimed marriage to be ln g The Outs have regrouped however and vowed to carry on the noble ideals of old AK-Lives to be saved, Liberties to be taken, and the Pursuit of Happiness above all else. A vintage year indeed. X' x '69: P. Geeter, A. Gellman, J Kaplan, M. Kavalier, C. Lambert, R. Lustig, T. Millington, T. Carrig M. Ginieczki, R. Gross, B. Gross T. Kain, D. Kinsey, R. Allman, '70s M. Farrell, A. Davis, A. Gold, F Hampf, I. Ingwer, R. Kane, S. Glassberg, M. Lauria, J. McClos- key, J. Miller, P. Miner, R. Stein, R. -Neimeroff, H. Lefton, W. Keel, S. Woodruff. '71: J. Barone, A. Bescher, D. Cooper, J. Dooley, S. Davison, J. Dmochowski, G. John- ston, J. Julian, L. Langan, J. Nos- her, J. Seltzer, A. Schwartz, D. Sommer, R. Waterhouse, R. Wid- . dowson, B. Wineburgh, T. Orvald, M. Chepko, H. Doyle, B. Atkin- son. '72: R. Fioralli, J. Fticsar, B. Grumef, W. Hyde, P. Fitzgerald. C. Leucowice, J. Mahoney, W. McCo A M ers T Sander W Y, - Y , - i - Wixted, J. Behrand, R. Brennan, P. Dainer, F. Hryshko, J. Doyle. E. Ezrailson, P. Fredberg, E. Man- nering, B. Spearce, J. Wall S. Whitenack, W. Huhn, S. Mac- donald. Nv Slgmf 195969 Sej pr6Sld9nt treisul il gg the I 15 ii my U, kenauf Fei who Mllle his mother evefibody 5 Jefferson discovery before all es gl the bea this award gf half eatr The TUflli Slowesi HU way Oil 5 i winner Jam of over 40 oraftily P30 like a blur. winded Hyr after his u The crowd him with roi The Nu seniors. Gr Big Piciur Y lan, J. mbert Jarrig 'irossl n, '70: Jldl F' 1e, S. :Clos- Stein, Keel, ie, A- leyu S' John- Nos- tzv D' wid rvald. Atkin- iafv B' erald, Y' W' lr: W' nnallu ygylel Man' all 5' M30 l l 1 l of Nu Sigma Nu was ably commandeered during the 1958-69 season by Captain Bob Waterhouse, vice- president Jack McCloskey, secretary Irwin Ingwer, and treasurer Gus Schwartz. Highlights of the year are the following awards which were presented on March 15 in a dimly lit room in the Hotel Colonial: Lucky Luciano Award-to Mike On Call at Lan- kenau Farrell. The smart man at Nu Sig finds out who Mike has wagered on, and then proceeds to bet his mother that the opposite will occur. So far, everybody still has his mother. Jefferson Jagger Award-to Joe Julian for his discovery of Julian's Rule: The number of days before an exam is inversely proportional to the length of the beard. We attempted to present Joe with this award at 6:01 p.m. but all we found was a plate of half eaten chicken. The Turtle Trophy-to Frank Hyrschko, the World's Slowest Human. Held on the Nu Sig Memorial Race- way on a bleak yet sunny day, Frank and ultimate winner James icrazy legsl Ftiscar thrilled the crowd of over 40 track enthusiasts. Ftiscar, the overdog, craftily paced himself for the first 90 feet, and then, like a blur, streaked the remaining ten feet past the winded Hyrschko. Jim, never at a loss for words, said after his upset, lt was a great day for America! The crowd cheered derisively and proceeded to pelt him with rocks and bottles. The Nu Sig A Trophy goes to our graduating seniors. Good Luck now that you are a part of the Big Picture. f ,, wifi 'wx A fy if ,Q R. Waterhouse A. Davis ..... I. J. R R A1 J. S L. A Ingwer .... McCloskey Stein ..... Gross .... Bescher . . Dooley .... Davison . . . Langan .... Schwartz . Wineburgh NU SIGMA NU OFFICERS .......Steward . . . . . . .Secretary . ...Vice President .....Social Chairman ... .Alumni Secretary ............Historian . . . . .Student Council .. ...Student Council . . . . .Asst. Steward . . . . . . .Treasurer . . . .House Manager At the close of her seventieth year at Jefferson, Phi Alpha Sigma has once more fulfilled her promise to produce a thoroughly educated physician. ln the shadow of All-Heal and under the protection of Aesculapius will set out men who are not only outstanding physicians, but also highly trained and experienced roofers, plumbers, carpenters, and bar- tenders. Jefferson and Phi Alpha Sigma have complemented each other in the training of the Class of '69. Our seniors have been trained to pass a Foley and a tap rod with equal rapidity. The men are skilled anes- thetists both with ether and alcohol. They wield an axe as easily as a scalpel, a crowbar as well as a OFFICERS J. McCormick .... ............... ........ P r esident P. DiGiacomo .... ........... ..... V i ce President G. Anstadt .... ........ T reasurer P. Scoles .... ,,,, 3 ecretary PHI ALPHA SIGMA Dever, and roof tar as readily as iodine. The wiring of the house electrical system is only slightly less complex than that of the central nervous system. Living-in has prepared members of the class for whatever hardships they may face on foreign shores. From the murky depths of the basement to the frigid heights of the fourth floor, the house has provided the experience they will need in the service of their country. ' We the undergraduate brothers of Phi Alph wish our seniors the best of success. As they pass through the doors on Commencement Day, may the spirit Of Phi Alpha Sigma look down on the men of Delta and smile proudly. if 1 taxi Z , 'T -4 l 1 T l l 'l 1 H . 1 '69:.l. Frar lianpazzo, '70s L. Cel stein, T. ll A. Monko Wetterhol man, A. Bl inlilon, P. Ku i K, ' 1 5 F . ,E l X ,l 3 i . wiring Hy less system. ass for shores. to the use has sewice gh wish throU9ll spirit of elta and le Good. Old Days '69:J. Frantz, B. Heim, M. Pang, J. Shigeoka, T. Sullivan, V. Ranpazzo, B. Smith, B, Spahr, J. Wright, K. Wible, V. Tuma '7O: L. Cerullo, R. Charney, T. Connelly, J. Dovnarsky, L. Gold stein, T. Kay, G. Kershner, J. Klick, P. Marshall, R. McLane A. Monkowski, B. Noller, C. Rose, P. Seymour, D. Tolley, D Wetterholt, '71: R. Altreuter, D. Bagge, G. Becker, D. Berg man, A. Brown, T. Bryan, D. Danoff, R. Schwimmer, G. Buff- ington, P. Caravello, G. Dennish, S. Duffy, D. Gould, J. Maas Y 7 if S . 15' P. Pomerantz, T. Probst, B. Ritter, B. Topper, H. Zeligman. '72: T. Andrulonis, R. Bell, L. Blaum, B. Bressler, J. Brookes, C. Brown, D. Burkett, T. DeNoha, P. Flanigan, R. Greenberg, S. Dowshen, K. Hirsch, S. Jaeger, N. Jarmoszuk, L. Pietrogallo, B. Rinaldi, T. Szydlowski, G. Zlupko, S. Fitzig, B. Skeist, E. Wynne, F. Braconaro. Associates: M. Kershner '70, B. Tenney '71, L. London '71, C. David '72. 4, ,KW Ye, X- I 375 -W xg m .S QS if QM! Qi .- 1 -A W Q f 1: X L' '71 X if w gqgy x. 'Q Eff? x 5 is , S Q Q X vw- -Hs.. Fifi 2 if x . 4 if. X wa- W X g tix 'Z AQNQ W7 Aff ,!., .,,EA 5 .Aa A 'ww wa: Y i as 1 ' 3 X -fs 8 Q N14 ' r an, em, ow. ane, i N, I B. r, Al is, D, fi. H. legal. W. N. Belis 0. R. arcia. willie, H. D. -Holz- .l.ynd, .Place, l. Read, Ubv. s. rbanski. H. Cas- 'Pen li. Edinger, llman, S, ordon, A. M. Krie- evine, F. Bayfield, M. Roth, l. Shirolf lward, sf Terry ...... Chandlee . . . Green ..... Davidson . . . Garcia-Torres Ruby ........ Hirokawa .... Gonasun . . . Frost .... OFFICERS ....Presiding Senior , .....,..... .... P residing Junior .........Secretary .........Treasurer . . . .Social Chairman ............Steward .House Manager ..........Bookkeeper Alumni Chairman PHI CHI This Phi Chi. The past traditions of the fraternity have been Earrigd fon, and new traditions that nobody had ever ear o were observed. Our athletes have risen to a pinnacle of power on the Jefferson campus. Our all-night card players are second to none: our boob-tube advocates have fought valiantly against the shadows cast on the screen by Jefferson Hall. In short, the men of Phi Chi spent this past year working hard for the fraternity. So far we've come through the '68-'69 athletic season in fine shape. The softball trophy, thanks to Bill Leikweg, was hotly followed by the grid iron crown for an unde- feated season behind Stu Scherr. Presently Ned Russell and Dave Jones are spurring the basketball squad on to repeated victories. Our Social Schedule has been highlighted by banquets featuring such notable speakers as Henry L. Bockus, M.D. receiving the Phi Chi Alumnus Award, Dr. S. A. D'Angelo accepting the Phi Chi Professor of the Year Award, and Stuart Scherr delivering the Football Address at the Christmas Party. Even our regular weekday dinners are enlivened by frequent impromptu speeches by Social Chairman Bob Chandlee. ln addition parties, outings, and other scenes of mass revelry have dotted the social calendar. As in previous years, the Wives' Club worked hard to make the Christmas Orphans' Party a success. Our steward, Frank Garcia, has lent a definite Caribbean flavor to such specialties as beef stew and tuna sand- wiches. House manager Ron Hirokawa has done a fine job although he has not been able to cork the perennial fecal fountain in the basement. We all eagerly look forward to the biweekly fraternity meetings, where house matters are discussed and decisions made in a most logical and democratic manner. Luckily, the meetings are always followed by Laugh-ln , and the brothers leave the house secure in the knowledge the Phi Chr traditions will remain secure for many years. year has been outstanding for the brothers of 'nr J qi lr rl Al PHI DELTA EPSILON Mu chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon has had another banner ear After a successful rush the led es P. Douglass L. Miller .... M. Vizer . .. L. Winans .... J. Rosch ........ D. Fried ......... M. Tobey, S. Silver J. Guralnick ..... L. Guzzardi ...... R. Lumish ....... J. Skyler, B. Make OFFICERS .President . .......... V.P. . . . . . . . . .Treasurer ...,Recording Sec. .....Alumni Sec. .....House Mgr. .....Jr. Senators . . . . . . . .Historian ... . . .Parliamentarian . . . . . . . . .Sgt.-at-Arms Student Council Reps. y . were initiated at a dance held jointly wah ihe Hahnemann and Temple Chapters. Other social functions included a Hippie Party, Valentine's Day lce Skating Party, a full-length movie at the house an outing to the 76'ers, several theater parties, parties at Alumni's homes, mixers, and an exciting closing affair. At meetings speakers spoke on topics such as How to Collect Debts, Medicine and Surgery in Vietnam, and latrogenic Pediatric Diseases. The annual Aaron Brown Lectureship was given by Dr- Roman Vishniak, a medical photographer, who is famous because of a national T.V. program which covered his works and a feature article in Life Magazine. Dr. Vishniak was honored at a dinner by students, faculty, and numerous alumni. Mu Chapter hosted ODE's Regional Convention held March 28-29 at Jefferson Hall attended by physicians and students from the eastern U.S. The highlights of the convention was the Regional Ball which followed various scien- tific meetings, a fashion show, and several scientific exhibits. Again, ODE had a well-rounded social and educational program. I 0 '69:M. l Nl. Goo Kravitz, W. Shi Dmoch ll. Mar kous, l another pledges vnrh th 9 r S0Clal DS'3 Day exllltlng Such as rgell' in S. The bl' Dr, ivho is 11. which .ln Life lllllel' Chapter ch 28.29 students Hvention VS Scien- cientific cial and '69:M. Ebel, G. Edwards, R. Friedman, L. Glassman, M. Goldin M. Goodman, R. Insel, R. Jacobson, L. Kleiman, L. Malit, A Kravitz, P. Rosenberg, A. Schein, S. Schwartz, B. Seltzer W. Sherman, J. Skyler, P. Weinberg, J. Winter. '70: J Dmochowski, P. Douglass, A. Freedman, R. Lumish, B. Make R. Martin, L. Miller, M. Tobey, H. Toff, S. Voron. '71: A Bas kous, B. Forrest, E. Fleishman, R. Goldstein, J. Guralnick, L. Guzzardi, S. Jacobs, R. Keene, S. Klinman, M. Lechman, M Posner, R. Rosenberg, M. Schneider, S. Silver, R. Sussman M. Vizer, N. Wilson, L. Winans. '72: M. Josephs, J. Baskoff L. Schiller, S. Volk, B. Schneyer, A. Friedman, L. Schafferzin H. Crissinger, R. Beckerman, C. Riley, M. Lewis, J. Rosch S. Deglin, J. Castle, A. Fornace, B. Saltzman, C. Zaret, J Haltman, L. Kobrin, D. Fried. X git lb ,7........,,. . gr M. i'.' in , 'I ' ! 5 2 t 'N. QQ-th... Q., V, -3 I.. . si. , ' Y- -t . ' - 5w+,,:gg .-vw , f .mris -wyys, x ' f. .A 7.4 ',z',. rf- X' - .- 4. 'rm 'ia-1 JiPf.f'.w- t Z- f,S,rf3f75U Top left: Aw, you burned the steak! Top right: Not everyone minds burned steak. Above: Philadelphia Fats demolishes another challenger. '69: A. Walker, T. McMahon, D. Forkin, A. Metz. '70: C. Leung, T. Baxter, D. Hagen, T. Lo, J. Kendig, R. Cox. '71-: R. Read, J. Noone. '72: A. D'Arcy, F. Redo, M. Fenster, R. Seller. e .t.t, W. Nt wr v m N wr' TheL another ment A have cl the hon new pa neglecl the lil Baxte team l of the are co Squall citinggl Our whic 5 lf! . -fl d J ,Nh 5.1. 70: C. 71: ll. eiler. 3, l l 1 1 4 fl .i fi- i i Pl! , ,ll 1 ,A The underrated Theta Kappa Psi marks with pleasure another year of staying ahead of the Blue Redevelop- ment Authority Meanies-our 6th straight year! We have continued our aggressive war on decay within the house, and soon the exterior will sparkle with new paint and clean bricks! Meanwhile we haven't neglected our social and athletic schedules. With the likes of Stilts McMahon, Wings Hagen, Baxter the Bomb, and Peril Leung, our basketball team has been a force to contend with-well, most of the time. And with our fine freshman squad we are confident that next year's football team will be equally devastating. Well, would you believe ex- citing ? Our intimate atmosphere is garnished by the re- newed pool table, cosy bar, backyard barbecue, and frequent social events. We also have quiet rooms which are great for studying and what have you. Don't think for a minute that our size is any reflection of our enthusiasm as we congratulate the senior class: GOOD LUCK 69ers! l , X 1 F, E52 Well-rounded THETA KAP! OFFICERS A. Walker .... ............... D. Forkin ...... C. Leung .... .............. T. Lo ...... J.Kendig... ................... THETA KAPPA PSI ..........President Social Chairman T. McMahon .... ........... ..... . . . . .Vice President .House Manager .Secretary T.Baxter... .................. . . . .Student Council Representative Treasurer f 1 7 ,A .ww M3 ,, ,li ww Ak i . f X159 ,Ji ' ' L1 .Q -. Q X ' ' X , . ,, 0 X XX J. .- X13 L1 x w x 3 'SS R NX QW x A.,-an 1 n v 7' . mf ? P , xi X j - 1 1 4 i l JEFFERSON HALL COMMONS Jefferson Hall was designed to serve as the focus of social and educational fellowship for all Divisions and Departments of the institution, but in particular to provide a modern teaching facility and a cultural- recreational edifice in which students, faculty, alumni and others can meet and mingle, exchange ideas, and share the common bonds of college and profession. The Jefferson Hall Commons structure has been adequately and specifically planned to provide the facilities and areas required to achieve the objectives of total education. The administrative process now in motion is a well organized plan to achieve these co-curricular goals. The physical assets of the Commons can be divided into three major categories: recreation, service and cultural-educational, each fulfilling a basic function separately yet so interrelated that a variety of activities can be held simultaneously without interfering with one another. 4 4 Somehow it was rather pleasing to reflect upon the Rugby Club's Fall performance. lt was the ninth consecutive winning season and, from looking at the defensive record, possibly one of our best. Only two games were lost, and there were four shutouts. To enlighten a seemingly disinterested student body, the Jefferson Medical College Rugby Football Club does exist and it does not play in Argentina! The Ruggers or jocks, as they may frequently call each other, play in Fairmount park every Saturday afternoon at 2:00 p.m. for ten weeks during the Fall and Spring seasons. MEMBERS Kneeling L to R Charles Sherman Dan Sommers Brian Donnelly Walt Gadkowski lGame Captl Dick Gross Van Batchls lTeam Captj Jan Raynak Tim Wolfgand Standing L to R: Paul Schlenker, Bill Sherman, Ned Russell, Ed Jabosh, Jim Noon lMatch Capt.J, Al Baron, Jay Whit. beck, Harry Doyle. RUGBY ls urns: r-, C I 'man, Walt Dick EPT-J. ding man' Noon Whit- F GOTBALL g i'.4'X'gf a4'f.ff,g.,- 'l-i f 'Q Il Q xl Q. 'L ,. Yi While football fans across the nation were assessing the attributes of Southern California and Ohio State this season, two of the strongest football teams in recent league history met for the championship in early Decem- ber at the Bainbridge Stadium. Nu Sigma Nu, featuring a devastating defensive two- some of Farrell and McCloskey, and unstoppable offensive display, including the Unitas type passing of Tod Orvald, met Phi Chi with its relentless imperturbable defensive alignment In a truly historic game Roberts Rooklin Wampner and Grossman thoroughly throttled the offensive timing of Nu Sigma Nu Orvald showing an allstar passing ability threw beautifully but one of his touchdown passes was recalled and he later was caught for a safety The final result was Phi 14 Nu Sig O Phi Chi regained the championship after many fruitless years lt was a very interesting year featuring new and better playing fields and such unbelievable moments as the per ennial champ AKK unable to field a team against Nu Sigma Nu For the first time The Clinic has selected the first annual Jefferson AllStar Football Team and offensive accolades were accorded to Ron Hirlkawa Todd Orvald Mike Hammer Farrell Alex Gellman Jack lVlcCloskey and Bill Wlxted The defensive stars included Jim Roberts Jerry Zablelskl Ron Grossman Bud Nelson Tony Rooklln and Ron Wampner The dribbly ball season was contested on the new palatial court of Jefferson t in the Marian Anderson and Lombard Hall after deserting the old league cour s Street Gyms this season. Phi Chi annexed a second league championship with an attack featuring Mike ll d Dave Jones They completely over- Steinberg, Dave McConnell, Ned Busse , an . powered all lesser opponents until the championship tilt with Nu Sigma Nu. Nu Sig had unveiled the premier round ball star, Bill Wixted, this season, and was undefeated until the Phi Chi game. Wixted had presented himself at this ' ' ' ft tissue structures, game with a gel cast on his right ankle after tearing various so l f Nu Sig. The final result showed Phi Chi the and was, therefore, unable to p ay or winner of the game, and of the season, by fifteen points, in spite of a close half- time score. The Philadelphia All-Star Medical School Basketball Tournament was to have been contested this year in Jefferson Hall with teams from Jefferson, Hahnemann, Temple, and Penn. After the first round of play the tournament was cancelled and a champion was never determined. A very special dribble to Mike Steinberg for his handling of the league and tournament play. BASKETBALL Q -X x l The 1968 softball season was contested with the usual degree of enthusiasm, but the final league standings revealed Phi Chi the winner, as the house gained its first leg of its triple trophy year. The team was led by its outstanding pitcher, Bill Liekweg, who displayed fine composure throughout the league play. Liekweg continued to rattle opposing hitters with his fastball and finished the softball season with a mark of 7-0. The men from Phi Chi met Nu Sigma Nu during late lVlay for the title game in Fair- mont Park. Liekweg continued to baffle Nu Sig with his pitching, and the power hitters, including Dave Holtzager and Dave lVlcConnell, never relented. The final score was 7-1 Nu Sig not scoring until the final inning. Ed McGovern and Pete Gehret's AKK softball team finished with a mark identical to Nu Sig with two losses each, but AKK had lost to Nu Sig earlier in the season and thus never reached the championship. The All-Star Team played the Jefferson Doc's, who were led by that fine young pitcher-surgeon, Gerald Marks, lVl.D., later in the summer. Both teams finished with a 1-1-1 mark against each other. The Doc's, however, finished out the summer with only one loss and had even beaten Arlen Specter's District Attorney Team. BASEBALL 7 ' L 'af'-'iP ,' ,4 ' xi PF-7. I1 . rg- , ,, , ,.,,, . , I Jan Raynak, hot on the trail of new ad contracts. Judith Cooper, behind every Groovy there is a Judy. : 1 E l Bill Keel awaiting renewed inspiration. i STAFF l .X EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ..........,.... JOHN H. IVIACINDOE, '69 il BUSINESS MANAGER ......,..,...... JAN T. RAYNAK, '69 ij ', Proof reader ........,................. Judith Cooper, 69 pl i Photographers ........ Bill Keel, '70 lChief Photographerl l Jim Cooper, '69 Bill Judson, '70 Al Nlonkowski, '70 Steve Smith, '72 F Bill Brubaker, '72 'ell Special thanks to John Van Allen for his ln Memoriam edt and Student Companion color shots. exq EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTORS: Sandor s. Shapiro, NLD. ale 3 j Judith Cooper, '69 Edward Rickets, '69 pg' ' ' Jim Heckman, '69 Jay Skyler, '69 ha, is i ' Bob l-ahlfa, '71 Aris Sophocles, '70 V Stl 7 4 , Jan Raynak, '69 Art Tischler, '71 ul sporns h, Bud Nelson, '69 bl S1 TYPlNG: Debbie Freeman Q Gloria Mancine Q Jill Orvald X X 'Q-. S' ,, X 5 wxi -X ,W h Q ,, H w.,,'Q N. 4 , f, , 1 V, A2 f i' as 1524 ,J 51,233 N . N f Q f x Q Z, ,, F X - - V . we X x v f,- n , Q. xx ia . 4 i .3- x ,,,..-1-K D -1 YROGH 1 1, SW. mms V 3 Nhfw am taken hom W M' .cching Ywglar-' X mmsmp 10 W m me hosvufmicannox 3 member oi NW? asc. i X Jon have 'Qslx WSYWX 'fo Migiicanloo . our mancmni, Us du Your dew. or AeaS2 C095 V dow min e. W39 Skwwxomw. im WW KBS? 1 R Y M HISTURY GF THE CLASS OF 1969 PART I: Howard Finkle PART ll: Jay Skyler PART I Labor Day of 1965 was an unusually pleasant day. The Margate beach was crowded with young people taking advantage of the last weekend of the summer. I found it hard to accept the reality of having to start medical school at Jefferson the next day. During col- lege, one usually had a week of reprieve after Labor Day before starting the semester. This year I had to miss the late jam session at the Elbow Room to return to Trenton at a reasonable hour. I had a lot of trouble sleeping that night. I had to be at McClellan Hall at 10:00 a.m. for registration. The trip on the Reading local seemed endless, and I wished that it could have been. I was not up for starting medical school that beautiful morning. During the train ride thoughts of cadavers, filthy Philadelphia, rote memory, the end of long college weekends, and Paris during the past summer fleeted through my mind. I regretted not doing well in biology during my freshman year at college so that I might have been riding to Boston or New York instead. I was about to start at a school where Ivy Leaguers made good trustees but poor medical students. The foyer of the college building-a jaundiced-ap- pearing monolith-was cluttered with apprehensive students of all shapes and sizes. Some appeared pre- cociously professionalg others appeared precociously pubescent. I tried to pick out those who might dis- tinguish themselves and those who would not. I met a very studious looking, articulate, English major from Penn. I thought that there was the fellow who would lead the class-his name was Mike Epstein. I met another fellow from Seton Hall who seemed be- wilderedg here was someone who was going to have trouble. His name was Walt Finnegan. Al Baron looked like one of the maintenance men, and Donna Cooper looked as though she were here to study anthropology instead of medicines Chris Briggs seemed to belong twenty blocks west on Walnut at Penn's Zeta Psi house. The Eakins masterpieces were the only things noticeably impressive. Registration was laborious as registrations usually are. We were greeted by Deans student council officers, and S.A.M.A. representatives with their trite words of encouragement. There were many forms to fill out, and the fellow sitting next to me finished them so quickly that it seemed as if he had been through the procedure before. His name was Rich Carmosin. We had to complete a psychological questionnaire on our attitudes about Jefferson. The questionnaire was tedious and seemed pointless. Dr. Gottheil promised the class that it had no bearing on our record and that we would never be bothered with this same test again. These formalities ended, and Rush Week was about to begin. Rush Week-nightly parties, backslapping brothers, after-dinner speakers, and free meals. For many of us fraternities became an integral facet of life at Jeff. Although not nearly as time consuming, detri- mental to education, and discriminating as college fraternities, they provided many highlights-theatre parties, Roman Toga parties, hay rides, and AKK-Nu Sig contests. No one can forget the open parties with nurses and nursing students, their sisters, lab and X-ray techs Iwho vacillated between parties at Hahnemann and Temple Medl, secretaries, and girls from colleges ranging from Harcum Junior to Holy Family-but never Penn or Bryn Mawr. Beer was free and the bands made noise. The girls outnumbered the guys, and it was never too late for a pick-up. People were exhausted by Friday after a three-day-and-night marathon. By that time, everyone had made the crucial decision of buying Grant's or Woodburne's text, found a room, and pledged a house if they desired. There were no vacancies at Hurvitz's, Freedman's, Fuiman s. or Shusterman's-housing approved by B'n-Bi Bfifh 'f not by Jefferson. Most of us left center city f0l' 3 restful weekend before classes began on Monday- On a downcast Monday, Dean Sodeman welcomed us as members of the most dedicated profession-I am glad he did not say the oldest profession. DI'- Ramsay reviewed the ground rules of DBI. Evf2rY0ne paid attention when he pointed out the fire exrts. H6 apologized for the milieu and promised that we would be the last class to use DBI. I met a student smoking a cigarette outside. He held an M.E. from RPI- and? B.E. from CCNY. I was glad to hear that he lrved IH my building because I thought he would be a 900d scholastic influence. His name was Bob Diakun. GroSS anatomy began with dissection of the fetal pig. Then. we turned to the superficial back of the cadaver and the posterior triangle of the neck. After the throes Of the hrst incision: did not take lonQ surgeons from I were h0Q99d do' taneous lat. Oil brachial pl6XUS became acquaint could cut gr0SS tures demanded thing presented quizzes were hr irerger was the Dr. Hamsay's op atrocious and cr hook notations We had a lor stench sat on Oh, ihose da academics-Pa head and neck Ph- D. pedan sarcasm, M05 told it as it vu US H true gm were son? 'eil name, related, If d'aElIl0Ses embll'0iilc lliil Count llr first llfillillcal llffllllltje We Were fated by H90 to erkiin' I9 was logical 11. The ss. Dr, tearing thered ended, Ethers, ny of life at detri- :ollege theatre IKK-Nu aarties rs, lab ties at d girls J Holy is free ed the People d-night crucial found There man'S. Frith if for 2 lay- zomed aionfl ln, DI'- ar 0119 ts? H9 would nokillg andlfi ved III Q00d Gross Then, ar and 965 of -the first incisions, we began to cut right in, and it did not take long to separate the butchers from the surgeons from the pertepual Coke drinkers. Many were bogged down in superficial fascia and subcu- taneous fat. Others had already cut through the brachial plexus and the scalene muscles. We soon became acquainted with the rules of the game. One could cut gross anatomy lectures, but histology lec- tures demanded anal compulsive note-taking levery- thing presented was fair gamej. Dr. ZitzIsperger's TV quizzes were helpful but weren't graded. Dr. Haus- berger was the prime prosector-one should not cut Dr. Ramsay's optional lectures. Saturdays at EPPI were atrocious and could be pre-emptedg Dr. Brown's black book notations never went any further from there. We had a long Indian summer, and the phenolic stench sat on the humidity like a cat on a cushion. Oh, Those damn flies! We struggled through the academics-Parke's one hour lecture on the entire head and neck, Hutch's mnemonics, James O. Brown's Ph. D. pedantics, Sedar's microvilli, and Master's sarcasm. Moskowitz was confusing, and Rosa never told it as it was, but as it wasn't. Coach Moore gave us a true gross anatomy work-out. In addition there were Monday mornings at the pit and darkness-at- noon sessions with Dr. Hodes, What's your name, son? Dick Grunt. Aw come on, song what's your real name .... The exams were ABCDE, either-or, true-false, and related. If our patients were to give us a choice of diagnoses we'd be in good shape. According to the embryonic New Curriculum some of the exams did not -count, but we regarded all news from the adminis- tration as examples of the nationwide credibility gap. MY first mistake was to miss Dr. Hausberger's practical review session. After all, Rich Carmosin's Dl'aCtiCe practical should suffice. During the exam We were policed, and the various groups were sepa- rated by Dr. Merklin who acted as a traffic cop. I had to 90 to the lavatory, and I was escorted by Dr. Merklin. I wasn't sure if he came to hold my hand or Qlade my urine flow. lAt Jefferson, everything one does Qets gradedl. Marks were posted by a code WhICh was easy to crack. Bob Shack, Fred Sherman, end Gall' Poupko of Hausberger's retinue were 0ne'UP . Dave Essick was bitter, as usual, and Carol R gf Rokui was giggling, as usual. Okulski and Penta did well. The first histology exam was another debacle. The boys from Rutgers, St. Joe's, and Temple had textbooks which looked like telephone directories found in a frequently used phone booth. While I was still learning basics, Bob MacMillan, Vince Randazzo, and Tom Rizzo were concentrating on fine detail. John Keveney and Don Tomasello were cocky because they had embryo and histo in college. Neil Schwalb and Sandy Levinson had files of exams back to 1952. I received a microscopic grade on the micro-anatomy exam. The seniors comfortingly said that I could always sell drugs or enroll in Podiatry school. How- ever, I was not alone. Jan Raynak and Gary Edwards could drop out to attend Philadelphia College of Art. Larry Berman, who moonlighted at ChiIdren's Hospi- tal, began learning to salute, and Bob Meringolo inquired about law school. Dick Gross was set to return to Penn State for graduate work in English. We were told that everything was down hill after the head and neck. Our Christmas play, a spoof on the Anatomy Depart- ment, could compare favorably with many of the musical comedies performed down the street at the Forrest. Jay Skyler, Pete Gehret, and John Maclndoe produced some real show Stoppers. Carol Hersh's piano accompaniment was of Lincoln Center calibre. Vocalists Barry Smith, Judy Cooper, and Sue Springer provided fine, full octave ranges. The satire was Isophisticated and poignant. Clement, Schiro, Schein, Rosenberg, Maurer, Gadkowski, and Raynak performed well. Lowell Kobrin-noted slide projectionist and puppeteer-showed a penchant for ballet. Upon return from a short but timely Christmas recess we were faced with exams in Neuroanatomy-a course which nobody had paid any attention to thus far. Our auto- nomic systems worked overtime, and we all got through. As lab attendance diminished, so did the remnants of the cadavers. Happily, the first semester at DBI ended-never to return again. Biochemistry and PIWYSIOIOQY held at the HBIQ d'd not start off with a bang Dr- Abraham House I ' '. Cantarow-the revered and feared chairman -of the Biochemistry Department made himself inconspicuous. His slogan was the material may be found In mY text . Dr. M.H.F. Freddy Baby Friedman, The Physiology Department chairman, was ubiquitous. His slogan should have been you'll never find my ma- terial in any text . The exam dates seemed ages away-giving us more free time. ln physiology we had special research projects. l worked under perpetual graduate student Zalman Pober. Zal, a fine example of the Jefferson Graduate School, is destined to be a footnote to a theory that is proved wrong. Our class began to enjoy the liberties provided by the schedule. Gross, Millington, and Schiro watched every one of Hollywood's Best. McGovern flicked out three times a week. Maclndoe spun tales of Tarleton at the Venture lnn. Diakun, Farmer, and Essick became well-known at Biff's, Richie's, and Streets of Paris. Batchis sipped ouzo at the Tip Top, and Jesse Wright downed draughts at Frank's. Others spent time at the Academy of Music, the Art Museum, the Forrest Theatre, Pep's, and the Zu Zu Club. Our class con- tained athletes in wide variety of sports. Ned Yellig and Bud Nelson ran at the Franklin Field track, and Bob Shack wrestled at adjacent Hutchinson Gym. Tom Carrig, Walt Gadkowski, Dean Kinsey, and Mike Giniecski played rugby for Jefferson. John Penta and Dave Katz played golf. Rich Lepie leaped, and Al Baron surfed. Tom McGlynn, Jim Mackell, and Gary Busenkell went hunting and fishing. John Bussard flew, and Mitch Weinstein sailed. Pete Anson boxed, and Anne O'Neill dived. Marv Cramer and Bob Meringolo played lacrosse, and Chris Donoho played squash. Pete Farmer rowed for Vesper, and John Del Giorno played slow-pitch baseball. Stan Benzel won master points in bridge games held in the Jeff lounge. People settled down to work a few weeks before the mid-terms. Positive exam results were not posted -only negative results. To the dismay of about half the class, Dr. Cantarow made the rest of the spring uncomfortable-a real trudge through Milt Toporek's Vitamin Land. However, for the other half of the CIHSS April and May were very enjoyable. With the help of a biochem compendium, and M. H. F.'s ben- Ienity fto compensate for his lectures of mass con- fusionl, we finished the first year. lt did not take long to get tired of the sec . d of medical school. Dr. Gonzalo Aponte--a piiihdizegs well as a true pathologist--became chairman of the Path0'09Y Department. and the chan e in the course . 9 became evident. Dr. Davey Morgan-a truly remark- VWAQYM able teacher-no longer made up the gross pathology practical exam for which he so kindly prepped Us Kodachrome slides supplanted Davey's paleontologie specimens. During the lab session, Dr. Aponte was the razor and Sarge McCloskey was the bludgeonj' The examinations were esoteric, and one did well to learn the exotic, and choose all of the above . The phrase remember the blackboard pictures replaced the Alamo as history repeated itself. The microbiology course and Dr. Kenneth Goodner provided quite an ordeal. No student knew what to expect-neither did the instructors. ln fact, Dr. Zajac knew less than the students. On the first day, K. G. circulated, philoso. phized, and made cryptic remarks. K. G. told Nelson to maintain his sense of humor. Finnegan, when asked what he wanted to do when he grew up, replied, I want to be a fireman. Dr. Goodner was unhappy about complying with the rule of giving only a midterm exam and stopping daily quizzes. However, his exam was surprisingly fair. l received an LLP flow, low passj. This LLP was worse than a low pass but better than a high flunk. Those who received LLP's and flunks were exempt from writing term papers-a real blessing. However, we were required to attend K. G.'s skull session. After a preliminary hour with Dr. Mandle fan hour which could try the patience of a vegetablel, K. G. would take over. His diatribes covered every- thing from Onyong-Yong virus to botulism in Gefilte fish. He damned our complacency, but admitted that we were better than some foreign medical personnel purely because we could speak English. Brand and McConnell 'did not know much, but what they knew, they knew well'. K. G. had us so befuddled that easy Ed McGovern had to stop and think when asked, who was buried in Grant's Tomb? . The semester ended amidst practicals, unknowns, and K. G.'s ultimate lecture. The first month of second semester was cake and the last month was hell. We became stenographers for the endless afternoon lectures. We encountered Menduke's probability, Kraatz and Manthei's ribald humour, Rieder's toxic lectures, and Koltes' psycho- analysis. Who can forget Dr. Niyogi's lecture on venom and poisons? The labs were dull except for the alcohol experiment-Paul Weinberg became tipsy on 8 placebo. Clinical John and Clinical Jane exposed us to Clinical Medicine. The exam materials came from inconsistent mixtures: the exam answers - from heaven knows where. With our black bags SUPPl.'ed by Eli Lilly we began physical diagnosis-our flrS'f exposure to real live patients. lf the P. D. instructore were excellent like Dr. Richard Field they received Courvoisier Cognac: if they were poor, theY Were lucky to receive a six-pack of Bud. Snape succeeded Gellman as class President. Student activists Abel. Chodoff, Terkelson, and R. H. Friedman fought the Establishment. Class intellectuals-Snape, Duden- hofer, Kaplan, Fireman, Finnegan, Grunau, Cooper, Bur- dette, Henderson and lnsel-were guests ei Df- Aponte's elite cocktail party. The bottom contingent thought of a similar party and inviting Dr. Riedb0l'd- When Dr. Coon explained his anti-flunk fudge faCT0l' and Dr. Berry, while showing a neuropatholoQY Prac' tical exam slide of tuberculous meningitis, told US to note the red bacilliform organisms, W9 kynjew that the year was over. Exams became formalitiee only. Classmates complained that Jeff was a trade sch00'- ani been Obffj ever' in t a lot of fat rirh in fhf au, we h' clinical Ye The fal clinical 3 time VN sch00l5 ' the H1051 time Of' 10 show made al of its Ol lectures Saturdal rotation: day-Frldi for elect One Medicin the prof desire 1 of my week l that de weeks Jeffers Our pr reside: manag complr tives- the pa was ii charg. sundr Chief was z hour week assig inslri lusty. privi of u Mag our Werr revi of tl whe use dep Whr ll ten Tea exj H0 SVI H i w Well to than the Pl1ll0S0. Nelson H asked lied, I unhappy midterm is exam OW, low If better -P's and -a real d K. G.'s .Mandle getablel, d every- I Gefilte tted that ersonnel 'and and ey knew, that easy ed, who ar ended ultimate cake and rgraphers ountered 's ribald ' psycho- in venom e alcohol y on 3 posed US ,me fl'0m .. from Supplied our first lSfl'UCt0r5 received re were uggeeded sts Abel' aught the Dudeil' J er, Bur- 5p3lI Dr' onringelll dbord. rav 095' P Us told we knew rmalitiee a , a trade school, and that our education thus far could have been obtained through correspondence courses. How- ever, in the final analysis we were forced to amass a lot of facts. lt was no surprise that we had finished fifth in the country on National Boards Part l-after all, we had been prepped for two years. The pre- clinical years were overg we had had enough. PART II The fall of 1967 brought us to the start of the clinical years of our medical education. lt was at a time when throughout the United States medical schools were revising their curricula-curricula for the most part which had remained static since the time of Abraham Flexner in 1910. Jefferson, in order to show that it too was keeping up with the times, made a token gesture by instituting a new curriculum of its own. For us junior students, this meant that lectures would be concentrated on Wednesday and Saturday mornings instead of every afternoon, clinical rotations would be four days lMonday-Tuesday-Thurs- day-Fridayl, and Wednesday afternoons would be free for electives. One quarter of the class started the year on Medicine Block. Led by promises of beer and pretzels, the prospect of a clean modern environment, and the desire to avoid contact with certain professors, many of my classmates rushed to sign up for the twelve week Lankenau rotation. Many have lived to regret that decision. The rest of us split our rotation-six weeks at Jeff and six at Navy, Cooper, or PGH. At Jefferson, we were assigned to the private floors. Our principal responsibility was to watch the intern, resident, and various attendings manage or mis- manage cases. We were, of course, required to write complete histories and physicals, including all nega- tives-pertinent and otherwise. These would be put on the patient's chart to be ignored while the patient was in the hospital, and discarded when he was dis- charged. We were required to attend various and sundry conferences-Medical X-Ray, Ophthalmology, Chief Resident's Conference, Grand Rounds, etc. There was also a list of optional conferences-one for each hour of every day. Three of the four mornings each week, we would present our cases to a preceptor assigned to hear them. Depending on the assigned instructor, this could either be an exciting or a lack- lustre experience. The fourth morning we were privileged to present on Professor's Rounds. For half of us who started at Jefferson, it was indeed the Magee Professor himself. We would carefully prepare our cases for him, being sure that all Gram stains were in order and that we spent a couple of nights reviewing basic high school grammar. After six weeks of this frustration we rushed off to affiliated hospitals where, for the most part, we felt somewhat more useful. The block ended either by crisis or lysis depending on where one had his practical exam and who was giving it. Meanwhile, we were busily attending-or not at- tenfllng-Wednesday and Saturday lectures. We soon realized these were for the most part meaningless experiences: either repetitious or poorly coordinated. However, some hours proved interesting. Who will ever forget that day when Tough Tony stormed out in a e9e because Dick lnsel thought Perthe's disease was fo - - und most C0mm0nlY In Sixty year-old femal s? Wh ' of imhtgvilltlever forget the ENT lecture on the workin s - e-whatta you call it-that ma h' t . I c me that Aiggclleelllng? Who will ever forget the Preventive me ectures on the organization of various d e- partments of health? And Rudy Camishon's classic ecture on diseases of the esophagus? IHOW can ou forget lt-lt 0nlY took 54 SeC0ndS.J As promised, thxere were some worthwhile lectures. Swami told us about Eli mY'steries of the G.l. tract, something which Freddy H felled .to do in our preclinical years. Remember the five minute standing ovation on when Joe Rupp reached orgasm-ie his final lecture t th I - - 0 e cass after three years of memorable performances Here is a man worth his weight in gold land that's a lot Of 90ldl-a teacher who we promoted to Professor even if the school would not-a man who's door was always open no matter what the problem. Does a lecture by a Swami or a Joe Rupp happen acci- dently? l doubt it. Hours of preparation go into each lecture-no matter how many times previously de- livered-every slip of the tongue planned, every slide carefully selected for pertinent illustration. Many others of our faculty would profit by sitting in on one of them. Our group started winter quarter with three weeks of in-patient obstetrics-the thrill of bringing a new life into the world is unforgettable. fDuring this time, John DeFrance was privileged to participate in the delivery of an anencephalic baby destined to be the donor for the first heart-transplant attempt in the United States.J Then a two week respite in Miami, L.A. or Mt. Snow for Christmas vacation. Return brought OB clinic under the tutelage of John Franklin and Ben Kendall, two of Jefferson's finest. This was followed by pelvics ad nauseam. in Margaret's Gyne clinic-then Friday quizzes on gamma-roentgens, the middle name and spelling of George Papanicoloau, and other pertinent topics. lWhat was George's middle name?J The two guys who ran the clinic Monday through Thursday were the highest paid, nonfunction- ing Jefferson employees fwith the possible exception of a couple of well-knoirvn elevator operatorsl. It was during this time that Margaret hid Marc Ebel's black bag so nobody would steal it-if only she hadn't neglected to tell him she'd hidden itl. ' The next six weeks meant Pediatrics. Those who stayed at Jefferson were conferenced into knowledge -no patients, just conferences. But these were most informative, being taught by the eminent Drs. Olshin, Gottlieb, and Soentgen. For the rest of us it was many patients and few conferences. We experienced the extremes-either ghetto patients at PGH or suburban peds at Lankenau. My only question WGS how DI'- Olshin knew the first names of everyone-even those of us at out-lying hospitals. Spring quarter meant surgery. l cannot help but wonder how much I could have learned during the many hours l spent holding retractors without being able to see the operable field. Fortunately, only three of the weeks were in-patient. The other three were s ent in the Emergency Room where one Gould at P , , last see acute illness. Ill never forget the lools-32 the face of the policeman assigned to Mlsercor ' Accident Ward when the intern rushed up and asked What are you going to do about the patient who just stabbed our nurse? lf this description of surgery leaves something to be desired, so did the block. The Psychiatry block petitioned down from twelve to six weeks was next. At Coatesville, we had golf courses, tennis courts, bowling alleys, and quarters across from the student nurses. The latter, when given a choice preferred to be chased lthough not chaste1 by the medical students rather than the patients. The block ended with a motion picture examination- questions based on films of psychiatrists interviewing patients for vice versa1. The principle'purpose of the exam was, l suppose, to demonstrate that the depart- ment owned expensive television and motion picture equipment. Summer quarter brought elective block for our group. There were fascinating elective choices-such things as Pediatric Dermatology, Advanced Mycology, Research Problems in Urology, or one of ninety-two different Psychiatry electives. We were fortunate in that by the time our elective block rolled around, others proceeded us and hence we profited from their experiences or mis-experiences. The result was real enjoyment of one of the high-points of our education. Oh yes, speaking of electives, I mentioned earlier that we also had them during the year on Wednesday afternoons. These were varied to include everything from seminars in Enzyme Cytology to lonizing Radia- tion to Clinical Problems in Hematology to CPC. They were offered from various approaches, e.g. Renal Physiology courses were offered both by the Depart- ment of Medicine and by the Department of Physi- ology-so one could choose whether he wanted to learn fact or fiction, respectively. Unfortunately, the designers of the new curriculum required that electives have numerical grades. And for many of us this meant more examination. Uefferson persists in ignoring William Osler's observation that Perfect happiness for student and teacher will come with the abolition of examinations, which are, stumbling blocks and rocks of offense in the pathway of the true student .1 One prominent faculty member, how- ever, solved the examination problem by asking three questions of Walt Gadowski lthe last person to arrive at his elective the last day1. When Walt answered all three correctly, the faculty member announced that everyone would receive a grade of 95. When asked why 95 when all questions were answered correctly, the instructor replied that Walt had hesitated on the third question. tThe question was, Name a hormone produced by C11 the thyroid l21 the adrenal I31 the testes. 1 Speaking of examinations, we had them at the end of each of our regular lecture courses, too. These consisted of either l11 material fed to us over the ten or so lectures twhich we were to feed back as given, even if the material was different from that in the current literature1 t21 material in which the correct answer disagreed with what was given in the lecture teven where the latter was correct1 or l31 material which we were never exposed to unless we had been reading the self-quiz in the Annals or the New Zealand Journal of Medicine. When we asked Dr. McKeown, the surgery exam proctor, where the an- swers would be posted Iso we could use the exam as a learning experience1, we were gruffly informed that they won't be posted because we have to use the questions again' next year. End junior year-a year in which Jefferson had formally affiliated with the Franklin Institute and the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science. Can Philadelphia Textile be far behind? The history of the senior year might well be elim- inated, as might the senior year. Many of us spent months selecting internships, which meant traveling up to 9,000 miles looking at programs. The dean's office finally became functional during our year. Dr. Gonnella filled a much-needed post providing information about internships. llf you were not interested in a straight internship at a uni- versity hospital, heaven help you.1 A nice thing about internship interviews was the excuse they provided for skipping out of our blocks. What would we use for an excuse after the matching deadline? Our senior rotations included all specialties not covered junior year-with the exception of ophthal- mology. I guess Dr. Duane is the only one who really believes in the official policy of a core curriculum. lOh, yes, we didn't go to radiology either but for another reason-the department-except Dr. O'Hara -doesn't seem to believe in student education1.'Of course, the rotations were squeezed into a meantn9' less week or two so we could have twelve whole more weeks of elective lThank goodness1. Don't both- er to mention that most medical schools have the en- tire senior year as elective. We spent two weeks on urology passing cath6'f6l'S and going to lectures where attendance was taken. On anesthesiology, the anesthetist-in-charge signed our work sheets for each operation attended-except for those who had taken anesthesiology preceptorshlPS previously tin such places as Santa Barbara, Stock- A Lond holttlt or f jhv 0 he U59 lost amongstl other flirt! three Weeeur Cine Zlldln . nu mf Wm g1erin2TPG: excitlfl97Jel himlN0thlng how T0 meas nmc. H1099 nellnre2f3'Zf gr,PosGYS ' ajPl slide. t variefl of n ences. Tllefl allergy cltntt even ln tht visits. About toenails. Surgery b tractors. H0 post-op care to spend mo trative deta him. Medicine especiallya and gave t problem w' the floors? together wi lent contim mg what 1 Those on t managing v cause the Celts than and learne Fortuna blocks. S Washingt W9l'9 Con Eltdocrin Others. U dellth, H Fspettlall lll the CO Elecnv was un tllldled first and they WS a Here Sca th0llSan one ret feel 3 I holm or Londonl. Then two weeks on E.NT to review the tlse of that machine that tests hearing. One was lost amongst the forty-odd orthopedics residents and thus another opportunity for a holiday. Mike Ginieczki had the handball court reserved so often during ortho- pedics that Dr. Brent called him up to borrow an hour. Three weeks were divided between preventive medi- cine and neurology. The latter was a good block if one did not incite the slashing ire of Dr. Chambers. Dr. Merin at PGH went out of his way to make the block exciting-Jefferson sorely needs more teachers like him. Nothing should be said about preventive medicine -Something should be done about it. We did learn how to measure urine velocity in health maintenance clinic, though. And then there was dermatology-a well-organized block highlighted for lowlightedl by Dr. Posey's story of how he almost got the Big S from a TPI slide. Afternoons during derm were spent in a variety of medical sub-specialty clinics and confer- ences. These were excellent, with the exception of allergy clinic-comments about which are unprintable even in this yearbook. We also made home-care visits. About all the good l did was to cut my patient's toenails. Surgery block consisted of four more weeks of re- tractors. However, we became masters of pre-op and post-op care. The Samuel D. Gross Professor resigned to spend more time cutting and less time with adminis- trative details-like practice plans, etc. Can't blame him. Medicine was, for the most part, a superb rotation- especially after Jefferson rearranged the private floors and gave the seniors real responsibility. The only problem was that the seniors were required to leave the floors to go to clinic two mornings a week. This together with the lack of paging made for just excel- lent continuity of patient care. One can't help wonder- ing what some people's concept of excellence is. Those on medicine at peripheral hospitals had been managing patients for years-but this was often be- cause the students were further up on current con- cepts than the attendings. Nevertheless, we tried hard and learned much. Fortunately, senior year also included elective blocks. Some of us went to Boston, Israel, Chicago, Washington, or India during this time. Others of us were content to seek out Jeff's finest-Cardeza, G.l., Endocrine, Kidney, Barton, Radiology, and the few others. Unfortunately even many of these units lack depth. How can you have a one or two man unit- ?SPecially if you are one of the largest medical schools In the country. Electives were either clinical or research depending On one s interests. Stimulation to learning on electives was- unbelievable. Students who never before had studied suddenly became alive on electives. For the first time they were treated like graduate students and thell responded accordingly. WS a shame about Jefferson-token efforts, a few Scattered 900d people-but a supporting cast tof thousandsl that leaves something to be desired. As :me reflects on these four years, he cannot help but eel a little cheated. During them we have come to fiiicgzvfguthe Jefferson ljWYth. This history has reviewed that hr years, in doing so has attempted to expose myt and shed some light on the real problem 'lamell' that Jefferson seems mired in mediocr T . ' Y- lgsgefullyl Jefferson will wake up. Some sweeping nges are certainly in order. And so our senior year came to d ' National'Boards, and Intern Matching. Aa?ex5nst'udaemg Were QOITIQ to places that had rarely, if ever, had a Jefferson intern before. lThanks, Dr. G.!J Our four Zigi? lrfd fgone q.uickly. They were full of enjoyment U u no learning. However, one is left with the impression that this was often in spite of The Sys- temu, not because of it. Finally, one thinks of the un- realized potentlal-the things that could have been . . . but fell short. , .,,,,,XX Q 54.5. , Xifflg -Xv' ,x 'XT X 4 ' ' Xl ,:X 4' JX ,, A QF: Xe-if 4' 1 .9 X, :gf ' 1 , ij' sf -51' ' cerla' ' ' 2 m s, , f if , ' f ' ,X ' , 627' I f f I ljpktim . h X X 1 , ' i : XX X g ,- g X ff 1 gXfgXff 4. 1, X X x ,S 7 - X, .,., X , ,. , . , 11 1 2 . s .2 1 s 3, . X 41-iX' ,X .,1X.X 1 ac ,,. L if X9 X. , ,lgifigffv H XL., ' Wifi X 711 ,,.- x X1 tif 1 X ff- WX- X,fg1'a:X,w3, , 1 1, -I lxgf' . X X 1 XX , , ,lf 15 X1 ,, fc 5.2 - X f- f s ' .wb X ' X, , N, X- 6, Ap, ', X ,,,,,QX 11 , , , 1 1 , sf. 1.,s X X. 4 X LNXf11s,X- , 1 1 X -Mfg, 1: .1 - elf. XX 1 1 EX, Kim, ,If - f 1. iff I V, ,651 , X, X-Q ,. , Qi .A X fX Xg.. XX , 3 7,-xgAXaXew 1 f, . 547524 1. ,, X ,f ,Qs-', aff - . ,ff 1' NfQ,x'X5:,s1X:f 2'X' fig-g51X2X f ' 1,1 X f Q , rx X 1 ' ,, ,. . -t X X- 1' 1 X . X , g ' Q. lk 14 nf 17,1497 yi 'X Qfgy' 5 ' 9 XX . 5 JX1 'H X : ff -f ' ,Q 1 - 1 my , 1 , N211 A X1 16 , 1, ,, K 5? W -'trgigq 6 6 Q zffxs fzf X ,lX5Xxfr1+1X ', , X, ' 2, 1:4X 1 Je . X,.Xw4-14,1 .11 X- - 1 f X X miss, ,1 , X,w.,gg fy, A ,Xfg,mgwy,f1 ,fa ' f f ' R K yi'-c 1 V. ,g?31XSK b ,QQ x M Xg3Y,,X1y3w.f1 :ft , X , if , :ZXQ my X XX ,gt ,' X mg LQ , ,r X H 1 'ff' '-X7 N- ' -1 A ln 461 1'XST'E 'X.f'1f 1 A V X , ' , ' ,51 ,wt ff , 'L , ' 1 1 5 , , ,,QM,,gXg,, K T, ix XX! , 1 V L, XF V , J 1 . - X.X' XX 11 ' :1 .- 4' ,X LX ' ' ,:, X . 1 X 35,4 X f 5,45 X, f figw 75 1 V 1 X Q , iff' fag, If S, f is : 1 1 ,ff ,,1 1' 1 .311 rf' X1 WSF' V- 12' X 1' 1 14622-:X ff ' X XX ' W, H - NX gf 'X ' XX 9 Q Vx vw ' ,11-X , 4 A 1 ,gg 1 X - 1 a f X X. X,X X1 rx S f ' , 1 f ,X 'f ff Q ,A+ M ' 5, ,ge 1 Xa 4, -1 f X , X1 'Y -, 1 ' 1 X X' 1 , X-' f?XS71'p xx' , ' , fl :K X lg Xi, .Qi , A , X STS s.,,X.s4' Q, 'f .Xg my X A 245, Xv, 'X , , -,f f A XXX f XY XX-X ,I ...X , w , , EXXVQ iq f A XXX ,. A i , 3' K E .I 4 X if X57 f X X 'WMS1 - ' uf. A X X4 X, 5325 x if ,X x , 5 XX,-'42, 1 , , WXX If 4 X -- X A 1-:g si 59:3 O,YXDXg V: X K Q. X pgglff I X X WYXX ' '1XX w ' :1 X' f 4752 HX, , , X1 1 kg, XXXSX Q 1 X5 , 1 f X 4 , Xl' X i PX 1 if ,is ,1 X ft X YT sw 6214 Wayne Avenue, Apt. 41113, Phlladelphla, Pa. 11 X1 X X , X -X, 1 Wesleyan Umverslty, B.A. miifr 1 1 XX 1 ,f Q ' Kathie Buchsbaum, 1968 A g ' , 5 Phu Chu, Student Council, Student Medical Forum, Currlc- , I ,X ulum Committee, Kappa Beta Phu 5 , -1 X5 X 1535 . , Viv ' J A Q ' N XX11 XX.,xi :QgXX,3xsq ,xv -N x , X KX pgsql Internal e :cane or enera Practice X , XX 1 X , , ft X R X 1- .1 'XXV 1 X 6 X 'X X- 'swf-fwf may -s ' X A , , 1,1f,gg,5Q-,, XX F' - 3- 1 X f 4,51 f -X, 1 X X ,gf X , ,M , 71 41' , ,,,v'fXXXf XX 1 XX1 X1 X wQf1XXX?MX,X1 s1,, -f 4 f-- Ti DAVID JOHN ADDIS ' 1 X ff, X 52 1' ,X XSs:XXf:'X3S 'XX 1 XX : L X X X 52 S . . Q X Q 6 pruce Street, Phlladelphla, Pa. , X ,X -X, 531:51 '1 XX X 1 Umverslty of Pennsylvania, B.A. Q ,X t-1 ,fgX,,,Xi X 5 'Q X, , , ,Q Xioffy? f XX, if vw 'Q 33'L1,,g-fyfk QR 4 ,,A,,..f'f g x - 1 Pruscllla Evans, 1966 X 5p3,Xg1aX f' X 1 Phl Chl ,X 11 1 QWXNM 5gl? g LX , - luv 4 X TX-in - 1- Xi XS, . 'A X X ,Xfmrf X. fs 'Xb XX Q XX' X ' ' X W ' 5: 1 5 TK- '5' 1' ,sxxle-'lIE'l1fXXs-,9, .S X Surgery 150 RN XX X Xsg XQNQ A swcwv N X -fm, fy if ' 1' ly? wr . M Z RICHARD LAWRENCE ALLMAN 226 Green Briar Lane, Havertown, Pa. Boston, University, A.B. Nu Sigma Nu CAssistant Steward, Stewardl, Sims Society Obstetrics and Gynecology JOHN BETHUNE ANDERSON 2476 79th Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown University, A.B. Kathryn C. Gahagan, 1965 S' 2 A Q K NSN' PETER MATTHEW ANSON 3301 Congress Street, Allentown, Pa. Muhlenberg College, B.S. Pediatrics Society, Sims Society, Phi Alpha Sigma 152 ROBERT LESLIE ARKUS 155 East Godfrey Avenue, Rutgers University, A.B. Bobbi Sinton, 1968 Phi Alpha Sigma, SAMA Internal Medicine Apt. B 301, Philadelphia, Pa. ,L -vb,-A l0UlS BERNARD BALI iiiroad Street. Hatbor isstonCoilege,BA, iiiillpha Sigma lstw Pediatrics i . phia, Pa. IYX M' xpafs-uf 1 ff' LOUIS BERNARD BALIZET ALAN BARON 39 Broad Street, Hatboro, Pa. 1713 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Boston College, B.A. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. phi Alpha Sigma lStewardJ, Pediatrics Society, CLINIC Alpha Kappa Kappa. Student Cpuppil. Rugby Club Pediatrics Orthopedics ix! VAN S. BATCHIS 166 West Main Street, Penns Grove, N.J. Brown University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Externship St. Bartholomew's Hospital, London, Rugby Club lCo-Captainl Neurology or Psychiatry JOHN H. BAUER 1918-B Humphrey Merry Way, Elkins Park, Pa. State University of New York, at Buffalo, B.A. Barbara Gruger Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha Internal Medicine NZEL milf' BE Avenue' Ne f,le1lsw0'll2PennsyivaH Mlyfpsilol Hadiololl gigllnm EDW Penh Lankenau A M nsywania Mal ln LEY BENZEL glsvvfjrth Avenue, New Haven, Conn. fPennsylvama, B.S. phi Delta Epsilon University 0 Radiology X 499' NNW., ospilal, GARRETT EDWARD BERGMAN 3:70 Lankenau Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. m Sylvania State Universit . y, B.S. Marilyn Malamud 1967 Phi Delia EpSilon,'SAMA Nga: K' 1 ,J :gli , 1 'Y- 2,f'l37f!gg9x ,eff -LQ , ' 1 4 .a.5.g,' 3 f 1-ff 57? A! lv W . 5 j I x PK' , fvf , kfawtly V , gif-, Qfimv' .J , bg' SX r 'W eggfif' Q gvi,i1gj..'H 'T P17 VY' qw 'L I . ' Luk , ' Twffl. 'gal .jig 1 1 , 1' --If. E' 1 1 I V .',, iv . 1 rf, Lf, '-A . ,,,-, 4 A' . A ,Jian . If ' 1 'K . i. ! 3 fx ' ,, 'Q nf' Q: J ln ' ,xv , .'- .f' I 1 3 . Xa , ,, l Q., .x V K 4 1 ui 9....W.,,.,, x ' . .fi ,,-vm Q ,if v .NL w a J , xml T N- -, mi 47 9-,WWWmm,,,W,..m,W..wWMwvm....-wwfmwf Qs: 9 ff a 14 ANDREW CHARLES BOCKNER LAWRENCE S. BERMAN 24 Hemlock Walk, philadelphia, pa- 1211 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, A.B. The J0hnS Hopklhs UhlV9l'Si'fY1 BA- Dlene Hope Bush' 1953 Joanne Yaworski, 1968 Phi Chi, SAMA, Pediatric Society Phi Chi Psychiatry Pediatric Cardiology are mil ROBERT I ZlSHunl Lane, N Eeorgetown Uni W1SlgmaNu,Ke lislelrlcs and l '-eeeee X X x emi X A 1. N 5357 X N N 156 ' 'X :N A P f X SW' - f. . i X L . te, K V A f PETER ROBERT BONAFIDE STANLEY NEIL BRAND 766 Hunt Lane, Manhasset, N.Y. 900 West Spencer Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Georgetown University, A.B. Union College, B.S. Nu Sigma Nu, Kappa Beta Phi, Sims Society, Newman Club Marjorie Kestenblatt, 1966 Phi Chl Obstetrics and Gynecology Internal Medicine N lf E 5 S 5 fe 5 e L E E ! if V1 X - l Q ,Q n , . ' -i y X X X lf, Fxxmxi NXXXXX Z 22,5 f I 1 ,, Yyiiflgs ,Q XXP5 wi X X X x zv M ,X of X, X QW' - X as XX' we X X X X sz, , ,. ls XX f XQQXSKXXQFSXX X NX XX M XX l, X XX fi Xi 'AL ' X XXXXXX X X X wx XXXXXX Xt xt X 'Xi Xe -XX X?SNXs??3X. , .X A XX X X X p X. '0iPXfffS:215XzXXXX XXX Xsw,-f XX-.ts XX- Si yrs X X P X X 1 X. X X xLLL ' X X s 'iifksfhxms 1- X X X XX X ,XFX- XXWEW XX XX 'fi PN RXPX-FM 'fs X XXX 51: X X X X ,, ' . - ., X... X X X Xt TX? .,,L his is FXX XX X. X XX : WX-X-f f.sXXXXfg2iXS ' XT? X X - , -X ,XXX X X X X' ,-XQXXg,f ix x XXX XXX. XXX 5 1,x.XX K3 XX X X X , ,Q . .. X E1sffg3XXsv1+f'r's1-QS--X XX XX ' X'54?li:fY ,XXX XXXX Y X XX on X A X XS . b'33Y,XXw-iw 5 XX N . -:-.fa-rs:-:zzllz-W' X P VX sw ,X XXX, -, XX X gp XX X M x X 1.-sf.XgffgX X X XXX X X xi ff SX XX XX X X X J X V3 :X ,js-j XXX X X XXXXXX ,, X YX rsX'gX-.-fXX : X X X H X Q X- X XX . .LXLX XX , Xk X X -I XXKQXXK ,XXXIXXKXXU X XX XX X X, XX X X , X -XL- X X E X KXXX Z X X XX , 3.fX I k XX a . X XX X XX ' wg , :Z fXi:fXX- lf, X XX X X X , , GARY L. BUSENKELL X ' ' X XX P - - - , N 909 Clinton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 1. 'V X XXX lei., S1555 'K X' X X X S' Sv y -XXXXNX ' fX XXX, cv Q X as XX, ,XX Qs 1 M? XTJZGF3 3313.5 I i X' X ' ' ' X lEf?if-i,?EiXsXzXaXgXX- 2 lf ima: X 4 X X :TX X X: fgggizis j Xi X X Eur.-X.-'b'.:' ,Al x- X K: - , , V Villanova University Ann Morgan, 1966 Alpha Kappa Kappa, SAMA, Hare Society General Surgery JOHN ROBERT BUSSARD 2030 Delancey Place, Philadelphia, Pa. Yale University, A.B., University of Pennsylvania General Practice v 1. ,J My MLW, , 'W M- ' ,f,:f Mw .5 , ,Ig Q I , .W , W, ,, FW! ' if 1 JOHN ANTHONY CLEMENT 1905 South 29th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Georgetown University, B.S. Phi Chi, Hare Society, Pediatrics Society Radiation Therapy CHARLES THEODORE CLINE, JR. 106 Morningside Circle, Parkersburg, W. Va West Virginia Wesleyan, B.A. Danielle Grant, 1964 Z 2 N X51 . PAW? 1, x t 0 S 3 ,H f 4 ,M , e lxx LINDA LORRAINE COLEMAN 666 Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Duke University, B.S. Hare Society Internal Medicine DONNA LAURE COOPER 2173 Papermill Road, Huntingdon Valley, Pa. Oberlin College, A.B. Hare Society Internal Medicine JAMES li. COOP 1000 Walnut Stre Geneva College, Gaye Ann Evo, 1E Hare Society lVt mittee,Phi Chi l Anesthesiology JUDITH MARl0l 492 Pinecrest Ro Wellesley Collet Microbiology Pt Class Secretary mittee, Student lSeoretaryl , Aly internal Medicii xx 'ES mf 4 S SI fqsqt, . 1, WMO 5 ' Q J ' X ?, RU 'K , M, xwnww NV' N W x 'f ' minima - ' . 4. il ' X NX am Q' Z X .fn ,- ,N ,f We I VKX. 1 X, N3 , ,, N .xlw , SXQSRSA A 5 hm 5? A WN: MY? GARY STEPHEN COREN 8414 Verree Road, Philadelphia, Pa: Temple University, A.B. Marsha Klugman Hare Society Radiology PAUL EDWARD COTTON 120 Ardmore Avenue, Ardmore, Pa. Phi Chi 132-'W Surgery aw 31 .gi QU 4' wk .,,,,. T ,, ,,x 0 -D A X, Q 5 f x 5 Qing U W km 3, lk f , Q, K f F fy ,, 'Q' V -we X ,ea W rgfgsfee, - f' T . , '13i n,efmQ5fef.i ,-'e N W, .L Y-1.3 Q A W 4, Q I N1 A if Q , ,X l ,Q :M ,, 'I' , X T U 9--Q E, f , W -A .W V , 4'-we PM-S., R Y as My . N my Q Us xx 'sky . Q, Q X SSX xx 45 X. f X X Q x g I, R C Y Q ff Sw' in gm T fam 3' 0 'W A Q s rg X in my if eq 4, Q' X University of Pennsylvania, B.A., lVl.A. PAUL J. C 1515 Easlo LaSalle Co Mary C. Hi Internal Mn MARVIN E Landenberq The Johns l Eva Casler Alllha Kapg PAUL J. COVERDALE Aw : fyi sw , -1 Q SX L .. 3 lx, x 3 rwfnirffir V Q K X 0 ,M X' Q Nytk WU E Y. mx? N fam W., XA k ,Q N X 9 Q mf ...s,fi' f,M. H MA A: -TX-X s if t- 1 ,..,. Q., I . , iw, X +S'g+i,Ag ' s we W Xfs Q 'amxqgki 1515 Easton Road, Philadelphia, Pa. LaSalle College, B.A. Mary C. Higgins, 1967 Internal Medicine MARVIN EDWARD CRAMER Landenberg, Pa. The Johns Hopkins University, A.B. Eva Casler Brown, 1968 Alpha Kappa Kappa , , -,- V ,-, 1 fl' cf, JOHN HOMER DeFRANCE THOMAS J. CUOM0 1200 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 322 Sicklerville Road, Williamstown, N.J. Rutgers University, B.A. Fordham College, B.A. Jill Sicari, 1967 Nu Sigma Nu, Hare Society Internal Medicine General Practice or Surgery 'cf,zy, I .nn , f ,J fr 1 166 f ANTHONY JOH 2519 S. Garnet S La Salle College Surgery i , i l l 1 l Jill' ANTHONY JOHN DEL ROSSI 2519 S. Garnet Street, Philadelphia, Pa. La Salle College, A.B. Surgery JOHN DEL GIORNO 1536 Forrestal Street, Philadelphia, Pa. St. Joseph's College, B.S. Pediatrics ROBERT GEORGE DIAKUN 82-65 233rd Street, Bellerose, N.Y.C. City College of New York, B.IVl.E., Renselaer Polytechnic ln- stitute, lVl.S.lVl.E. Pi Tau Sigma lNational Honorary Mechanical Engineering Fraternityi , Trustees Scholarship I CHRISTOPHER ROYER DONOHO, JR. 227 Orchard Road, Newark, Del. Brown University, A.B. Joan Hayes, 1966 Alpha Kappa Kappa Internal Medicine FREDERICK J. DUDENHOEFER 4321 Branch Street, Erie, Pa. Gannon College, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Omega Alpha Medicine 168 EDWARD DRASIN Lakeside Apt. 320 D, Philadelphia, Pa. Muhlenberg College Rochelle Rosen Alpha Omega Alpha, Hare Society, Kappa Beta Phi, Phi Delta Epsilon Internal Medicine MARTIN JOSEPH DURKIN 1212 Church Road, Oreland, Pa. LaSalle College, B.A. Rugby Team Psychiatry I' ,if EDWARD FRA 14I B Burring Holy Cross Col Anne Marie To Phi Alpha Sign Medicine GARY A. EDV Fort Lauderdal Pennsylvania E llll Sey Way Hare Society, EDWARD FRANCIN DZIOB 144 B Burrington Road, Upper Darby, Pa. Holy Cross College, B.S. Anne Marie Tougas, 1968 Phi, Phi Delta Phi Alpha Sigma, Pasteur Society fPresidentJ, CLINIC Medicine GARY Aa. EDWARDS Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Lin Sey N. Wang, 1967 Hare Society, Phi Delta Epsilon l MARC STEPHEN EBEL 1032 Drexel Avenue, Drexel Hill, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon, Sims Society, Pediatrics Society Internal Medicine ROBERT W. EGDELL 10 Rose Hill Avenue, Armonk, N.Y. Ohio Wesleyan University, A.B. Phi Chi, Sims Society Obstetrics and Gynecology fi E 1' ri! W 5 II 3 .'.. F ' 1,-L ii L ,H I I I I 1 I 1 fl - ff. rm X sn' a U 1 4 ff-1 i su' E !'QiQ H ffil 1 .'., I 4 f 7 ff I 5. ,D ii ,5 f 2 ' ' lx, Q :, n , I, 5, ' 5 M nl ' 'A SKI' I' S E e xg gf 4-8 Ll I M3 I1 5M 'T' w A p I ir if 5 x ,, ala: K4 - , K Vi wi L SU bl 5.1 HOWARD ISAAC FINKLE 717 West State Street, Trenton, N.J. Yale University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Zu Zu Club, Class Historian WALTER JAMES FINNEGAN 123 South Munn Avenue, East Orange, N.J. Seton Hall University, B.S. Eleanor Spisak, 1963 Alpha Kappa Kappa lAthletic Chairmanl, Anatomy Prize Lange Publications Awards, Pathology Prize lHonorable Men tionl , Alpha Omega Alpha, Hare Society 171 DANIEL FORKIN RICHARD L. FIREMAN 3120 Verree Rgad, Philadelphia, Pa, 43 Watnong Drive, Morris Plains, N.J. University,of Pittsburgh, B.A. H3V9l'f0l'd COUGQG. AB. J0-Ann Kasindorf, 1965 Phi Alpha Sigma, Theta Kappa Psi lPresidentl, Alpha Omega Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha lVice Presidentl Alpha Surgery Psychiatry 172 KAY ELLEN BU Apt.324, 1218 W Bethany College Michael Frank, 1 Hare Society, Al 0Phlhalmology .Wm rpg'-,Z-,ff are ,,.... l if fi f!E!?- 1, Alpha Omega KAY ELLEN BURDETTE FRANK JOHN F. FRANTZ, ll Apt. 324, 1218 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 119 Avondale Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Bethany College, B.S. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Michael Frank, 1968 Mary Ellen Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha, Pediatrics Society Phi Alpha Sigma lSecretaryJ, Sims Society lTreasurerJ Ophthalmology Hare Somew ARGES7' 6'!07l-iff? 6 ill, Sl, S. ROBERT FREEDMAN 7452 Malvern Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. St. Joseph's College 1 Sarah Warshauer Phi Delta Epsilon, Kappa Beta Phi, Hare Society, Pediatrics Society, Student Council JULES MARTIN FRIEDMAN 7900 C Stenton Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon Medicine FRIED ROBERT H' ee Sli 1720 Svfucecoileq 9 Gillillr EpSi'0'1 lirqafllzation v J - ' Z WALTE ghiihafl legen Lilleg Univers luiby glues' 'S lllgery or Obs' 'WS fff mf A fd if ' R 42' 4 ,gn .. a v, ' Mn! J kai: ' a if f 4 wat Y Q24 ,i 2 ff PHILIP HENRY GEETTER PETER ANDREW GEHRET E 148 Maplewood Avenue, West Hartford, Conn, 105 Edgewood Road, Alapocas, Wilmington, Del. Tim-: Trinity College, B.S. Yale University, B.A. Nu Sigma Nu Grace Huntsberger - .43 , ,g, Ophthalmology Alpha Kappa Kappa, Dean's Committee. 5 Tfzefog . . .sits looking over the harbor and the city on silent lzounehes and then moves on.'J CARL SANDBURG shelf ALEXANDER C. GELLMAN 163 Valley Boulevard, Wood-Ridge, N.J. Rutgers University, B.A. Phi Alpha Sigma, Nu Sigma Nu, Kappa Beta Phi, Class Presi- dent lFreshmanJ, Student Council, Pediatrics Society Surgery - MICHAEL JOHN GINIECZKI 2517 Dunks Ferry Road, Apt. 1-303, Philadelphia, Pa LaSalle College, B.A. Michele Boyce, 1968 Nu Sigma Nu, Class Vice President Uuniorl Urology SALVATORE P. GIRARDO 1007 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. St. Joseph's College, B.S. internal Medicine LEONARD MARK GLASSNIAN 423 S. Camam Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Cynthia Aaron, 1969 Phi Delta Epsilon lSocial Chairman, Vice Presidentl, Hare Society, Sims Society, SAMA Radiology 8 fl lf, n V. Q .. 5 4 I G. 6814-4 .W vq ,flglllll 'I A 9 5 'fit' of 124' , 54' 24 r. JLAP-w I S X 'x MICHAEL RICHARD GOLDIN 9 Links Drive, Great Neck, New York University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon HARRIS MICHAEL GOODMAN 1016 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon, Sims Society Surgery ICK DALE BARTLETT GOUGER JAMES EDWARD GOODR 1647 Hannah Court, Sharon, Pa. 1200 Locust Street, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Lebanon Valley College, B.S. Medicine Carol-Ann Burian, 1967 Nu Sigma Nu Psychiatry BARRY CHAF 905 Clinton Si Dartmouth Cc Sara Haber, 11 Nu Sigma Nu Ophthalmolog 'fir 1, i 'I'-SE, ,15- Q, C1511-'v Z . sssyfasvf BARRY CHARLES GROSS RICHARD CHILDREY GROSS 905 Clinton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 329 South Juniper Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dartmouth College, A.B. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Sara Haber, 1967 Carrol Gallihue, 1968 Nu Sigma Nu Nu Sigma Nu lSocial Chairman, Secretary, Alumni Secre Ophthalmology taryl, Rugby Club, Interfraternity Council, Kappa Beta Phi N . :ww ww R .4 eg, , W1 7 ,M m QS W X MM d,,.,,..,....-fha HAROLD ROGER HANSEN 27 Orchard Lane Livingston N.J. Dartmouth College A.B. Nancy Woodring 1965 Dean s Committee Alpha Kappa Kappa SAMA Alpha Omega Alpha Orthopedics JAMES D. HECKMAN 52A South Morton Avenue, Morton, Pa. Princeton University, A.B. Susan Coleman Alpha Kappa Kappa, Hare Society -I Orthopedics x I f f f!aQ!fZV,fW!,!!f, ffffzf ff WW Mff,Wf,ffWfMmw,Wxmf,,m my W WY if ff , , W I r , 1 f f f an nn- ...- f f 5 .1 ?. MW 4? CAROL BETH HERSH X 179 Riverside Drive, Princeton, N.J. University of Delaware, A.B. Pediatrics Society Pediatrics HERBERT H. HEYM FRED NICHOLAS IFFT 1208 Lantern Square, Apt. 412, Philadelphia, Pa. RD 1, Evans City, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Gloria De Biase, 1964 Kappa Beta Phi, Phi Alpha Sigma, Student Council Internal Medicine Psychiatry RICHARD ALAN INSEL 708 Burnt Mills Court, Silver Spring, Md. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Alpha Omega Alpha lPresidentJ, Phi Delta Epsilon, Hare Society Internal Medicine THOMAS MICHAEL KAIN, lll 278 D. Garfield Avenue, Collingswood, N.J. University of Virginia, B.A. Mary Dolan Nu Sigma Nu Internal Medicine iflfefs- ROBERT E. JACOBSON 1023 Brighton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon, Kappa Beta Phi, Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha, Vice President lSenior Class! Neurosurgery JONATHAN S. KAPLAN 107 Trent Road, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha lVice Presidentl, Hare Society, Nu Sigma Nu Internal Medicine 186 1 DAVID J. KATZ 636 Indiana Stre Washington 81 Je Phi Chi, Hare S Surgery JOHN JOSEPH 539 Rock Glen l St.Joseph's C0 Kappa Beta Phi. i ouuiuiy, Alpha re Society. Nu l i DAVID J. KATZ 636 Indiana Street, Johnstown, Pa. Washington 8. Jefferson, B.A. Phi Chi, Hare Society, Kappa Beta Phi Surgery JOHN JOSEPH KEVENEY, JR. 539 Rock Glen Drive, Wynnewood, Pa. St. Joseph's College, B.S. Kappa Beta Phi, Alpha Kappa Kappa MORTON ALLAN KAVALIER 111 Brewster Road, Philadelphia, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Nu Sigma Nu, SKF Foreign Fellowship findial, Hare Society Internal Medicine M. DEAN KINSEY 330 S. 12th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Bucknell University, A.B. Katherine Kingsley, 1968 Nu Sigma Nu Medicine v M. LEONARD KLEIMAN 22 Edgehill Road, Marian, Pa. Albright College, B.S. ALAN ERIC KRAVITZ 108 N. Jerome Avenue, Margate, N.J. Muhlenberg College Phi Delta Epsilon, Sims Society Internal Medicine A 188 X 'F . . i ' ? X - n I w f ' . 1 I . 1 i , K Q : X f Y A x Q , 5 , Q E 5 Q I S 5 4 2 i l h s i f I 5' 1 i 2 ? 3 SJ., Q A s K , I A x , I I 3 . i 3 'E W W T L . pf -lr' 1 -'Q .. 4,7 wif. ' .QQ A, V I , A 'V 1 vi' W . 4 LJ bmaawwwl . YYNEBN vt! SSI A , , Q xy -. Syn -- N, ,v N 'f N: :FH R+ -. f.:.3 A Nw. .N Q s 5 . N N Nels- Q -N, .NN NNN N X Nz 9 '1 ' '5'5vi-Zswexi NN NNN ,QQ -N N- q,51.N.N X- .. -- NN - -- X N N . - N. Q 1 N X x ,wa - w N A A 11.5 s a NA N 1 ' Q53 f N - '-M' wx ' N N N N - N , .X-Q N -' Q' N -K .V -- .Nxx - wwe -- f .-N www- '- N , V .X , N. ' TNI X5 3 , NNN, NX xv L iN. X X .4 ' N, ' N Fi LN xQ nj' , S ji A ' x X Y R,3fSN V . ' NN X fN A NN ' ' :gQ,N . .5751 N 5 K V 1 X . -- 4 2 N 'Q 1 ' K Nfl S . - N Q T fl - ' I . . 9 1 Y- Q 1, 3 . f iN., M- ' X sy' -- X , e - fx ,ls ,N .Nx,, .- A - LN- ir Q .N Lf X N x 5 L NN X E-YCN, .E 3 SAS? X1 A My , a Y Q N N N f Ns. ,.- Y -, -N X , 4 E 4 H 2. Q x Xi gf E 12-it M . I . f N Q N X y , Q. L' V AN ,wy.4QgN , N Sf-'XY' WW Www um we gr-ml Ab. x Q , xx 2:55 , eh ' 4 SN Q? lf? 5 , f QM1is3mW4S'+.- QM fs . 'ew ww , .w., , ,AMW f' N. ,ff . fy-gm N. 5 Lf-ff U -Z? 45 xf f yy M - M. NNN Q. 66 ,. c 0 fq. 1 I Q 'Ny K xw arg? ,f W 54.1 1 fl R Aa B x 1 .gsllfiif , i M f asf , 4 . xf. Q 11-5 15h P ' Q Meg ,552 ' rr .MV ggi YR,-. 5-A gawk X1 Q 'USE - ' -N VH? '- X , M fl A-N j . fb U xx 3 rf X 4 x iw! uncil, 1969 ,Q W2 MC JAMES VALENTINE MACKELL, JR. ROBERT MORROW MacMlLLAN, JR. 1253 Burnett Road, Huntingdon Valley, Pa. 327 East Mount Airy Avenue, A-3, Philadelphia, Pa St. Joseph's College, B.S. Rutgers University, BA. Alpha Kappa Kappa Annette Malchin, 1966 Internal Medicine X A if LEE ARNALL MALIT GERALD ALAN MANDELL 803 Yeadon Avenue, Yeadon, Pa. Wynnewood House, 300 E. Lancaster Ave., Wynnewood, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. University of Pennsylvania, BA. Phi Delta Epsilon, SAMA Susan Perilstein,1964 Phi Delta Epsilon, Sims Society Internal Medicine JUSTIN Mi 55 Chatham Pennsylvar Phi Alpha E O 0 as ., 1 'lil . I lil on ' ML -gg 4 K' .L if 4 ' a. A ' ' ' P' qu ' a M- Q. .Q H S .ara .1 x' mil .Cl:al I . .V I 5' , ' Ki ',, ...' ...to nt.. I ' 1 M , ' b --I P . , 'Q 'fo n0Cv:..h..l -,r '.'.' ' : Q , , ' 1 . 'sw on D ' ,J I o 0 il, ., 1 X ': N . . - X' . if cr! f' + ,, ,K .. .. Q f - ' he , lg 'vm 4 .Q-f nmwiaf .Bii'51ll4. 8 Viv- 'mtg M1 --m-In-V Yu-N ,V 0 ' MQ 5 y L , v X .Q Q , gg Q H V. Q . . 'sh' i . i Y 0 y' A ' , ' 8 V f 5' : 'xxx -1' :T:if:i,., ' 'ii 1 Q X .....W. A ' .Y -' - QQQ 1-'Q -'--s. ,. ew - ' ,,.,.,.-fa' my . , Q., xx -X , 'PS1'l4 .T.sW ' X 2 Y' s E 3 7 5. 1 MZ A 2 ,fm .. W iii' www ', 'mn ,W ON 'vw W , K .- . A 1-- Wwwwwffff Kg , M ,ff ,WWW MQ' if 1,705 .W W 2 1 , i 5 1 f U f fu Z, fd 1 f M-1,1 4'9- THOMAS J. MCGLYNN, JR. 6939 Lynford Street, Philadelphia, Pa. EDWARD WILLIAM McGOVERN, JR. 103 Oxford Place, Wilmington, Del. St. Joseph's College, B.S. Bowdoin College, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa Celinda Strange, 1968 Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa Kappa Beta 'a, D i if yn ,yn ,, ,ff 41 -I-' PUXW-j THOMAS PATRIC McMAHON, JR. KATHLEEN McSWIGGAN 3524 Nleridan Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 3011 Glenview Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Villanova University Holy Family College, B.A. Theta Kappa Psi lTreasurerJ SAMA, Pediatrics Society General Practice Pediatrics ,Mm 'J' ,qw-KM' ROBERT DOI 7925 Narrows Brown Unive Alpha Kappa Medicine or 1 ROBERT DOUGLAS MERINGOL0 ALBERT V. METZ, JR. 7925 Narrows Avenue, Brooklyn, N.Y. 260 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown University, A.B. Rutgers University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Student Council Kathryn Rose Karst, 1966 Medicine or Gynecology Theta Kappa Psi, SAIVIA Surgery ff X xx. XM, . Y R A P Q 'BVS 'S is Q 'M 'si 32.4 Sf Af N F Sa Wm WILLIAM C 2801 Ebrigh Universityf Carol Fram Alpha Ome Medicine LEROY J. 2640 TF Purdue Alpha Ortho f W W . ,Q .F -mlb 5535? wwf www wg 4 4- ,, A wi N X K ofw' N , w ,w x Egg 'Tn av' ix' gifs! .hm F 'D' A 4 in I , s.5f'ig.'hq-55?-T-i S! AA ,urls x 1 X x qi . I 'X 5 l XVI L 4 N1 4 . 5 'b ' ' ' z Y, ' X V ,, -1. -vi, N , A - Y?2y1f'W' Wx 'w L izfwywx x ' Q V ' Q A A 1 fig? X X -,w.y-K-ww mm X X W JV- QNX x Xu: f wfzw, NWN A.. ,S 3 Q 'Q g ,XX gg? xg ng Y. ,sw V. X Y 1 Ay fxkfftfff ww X wi 1 X N a aim 35132, v svfixx ' Miiiiv Y V WX 4 Q f- QS' f' k -: 3L,,? 74 E QWRQ x qv I , 2,214 55352 A A lQ N ,, 2 NS A xi .. -'fig A X N 4 T Q O 281 is X MX f X X X. 02 - M fiflvf, X Q X Q x fr M 2 XJ f' WHA N X fix? N V Af' ' fr v f N. xxfx x 'fs , S x F x NN xy Xx ,'-fx ga U uv fx .J n , A s 'Q .4 ,, P x i' 1 sl 'J Q Y' ' X F x I xx gs I I +1 r on f x 1' x x XX. Q f iy f- x fx awk X- V lx .x x. X f it I fmg f 1 L fp A X i W QS- 'f :fx M. Yfifxrlgmx EN M fx-JZ 2 43 , A Q Xigflxgfi 'Qs , 5 lbw X 4 f f 'WM gym 4 X ':ai1T5m,f, if Q ' -,.'1 .,,,,,,kW,- grew W, . Pk Q Q ,xmgx 'wxye , y 1, ARE, SE, xy xqyX,,,xSx1W,,L M xg. A f Q X 'r ' ' X fifi-sys? Sffgvl 4... 2 -X 52' NY Nfig ,gg g.,.1 Sw 3 M .f if-X ', ' vi L M1 Nxmxx K VU, LW V VR ., - Q . , f' X QW .Sw Q ' I iq, . Qlxif X J A. X pm X' X . was pg.. WU ' M! ff 13 , f ,, wwf, XWM1 W I 4,9 X :fa x ,f Q? , ff M 1 ,Wa 0 M fff j f 7 f , X 1: af W , X AAMAM ' f . ,f Q Alwy fgfix ,fe A hr, f - f 1 ' - . ' V1 ffflz, , 71 :0 '! X , f ,- -' jf, jf ?4 f 4 '42 , f f, jj Y J f Ui M ' W fff ,Q A X- Z, gf ,,,, f ,L XM' w 9 f if mf!! , .- A 47 I 1 , ,M l Q fs, Z M i, , W M4 7 , f' in a 4 Q f O V , , f r N Q THOMAS ALEXANDER OKULSKI 18 Fairview Avenue, South River, N.J. Rutgers University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa iTreasurerJ Plastic Surgery ANN O'NElLL MEREDITH KWOCK LEONG PANG 49 Heatherwood Road, Norristown, Pa. 1570 Alewa Qrive, Honolulu, Hawaii Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Yale UmV9 S fY1B-A- Pediatrics Society Pediatrics or Medicine Surgery JOHN MICHAEL PENTA 237 South 5th Street, Reading, Pa. Franklin and Marshall College, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Kappa Beta Phi GARY POUPKO Cherry Hill Apts., Cherry Hill, N.J. Yeshiva University, B.A. Joy Brickman, 1968 . if MORRIS ARTHUR POLLOCK 206 South 13th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Cornell University, A.B. Suzanne Berger, 1968 Phi Chi, Alpha Omega Alpha, Kappa Beta Phi, Hare Society Internal Medicine VINCENT THOMAS RANDAZZO 109 Safran Avenue, Fords, N.J. Rutgers University, B.A. Phi Alpha Sigma, Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha, Kappa Beta Phi Internal Medicine v ..,-f IAN THOMA 512 Hampton Pennsylvania Rugby Club. Managerl Psychiatry EDWARD Al 724 Pine Stre University ol Ann Rovere, Alpha Omeg Internal Me: l i, Hare Society a Alpha, Kappa JAN THOMAS RAYNAK 512 Hampton Street, Greenburg, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Rugby Club, Alpha Kappa Kappa Managerl Psychiatry EDWARD ALTON RICKETTS 724 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. University of California, Berkeley Ann Rovere, 1965 A Alpha Omega Alpha Internal Medicine Z STANTON M. RAYNES 1925 Wynnefield Terrace, Philadelphia, Pa Maxine Lipson, 1966 1969 CLINIC lBusiness Phi Delta Epsilon, Pediatrics Society Pediatrics THOMAS A. RIZZO, JR. 753 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. St. Joseph's College, B.S. Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha Medicine 206 EARL W. ROBISON CAROLE Y. ROKUI 5 Emerald Avenue, Westmont, New Jersey Waipahu, Hawaii Drexel institute of Technology University of Hawaii, BA. Patricia Patton, 1963 SAIVIA Sims Society Internal Medicine MQ PAUL .lERl 337 Station Pennsylvar Phi Delta E Internal Mn 'R P rw M PAUL JEROME ROSENBERG ALAN LANCE SCHEIN 337 Station Avenue, Haddonfield, N.J. 3D West Amherst Road, Bala Cynwyd, Pa Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon, Hare Society Student Council, Phi Delta Epsilon Internal Medicine Internal Medicine nfl ll LEONARD SCHICKLING 438 8th Street, Clearfield, Pa. Pennsylvanla State Unlverslty B S Barbara Hughney 1960 Hare Society Internal Medicine 208 JOHN CHARLES SCHIRO 209 Kendon Drive Easton Pa. Northwestern University B A Nu Sngma Nu lSoclaI Chairman Treasurerl Kappa Beta Ph: lVlce Presldentl General Practice e ELIZAB 130 Fou psa a l SAMA l -erl, Kappa Beta Phi ELIZABETH ANN SCHROEDER NEIL S. SCHWALB 8418 Verree Road Philadelphia, Pa 130 Fourth Avenue, Milford, Conn. , Upsala College, B.S. Temple University, A.B. SAIVIA lVice Presidentl Lois Susan Bell Psychiatry X- ft :Y N .lex M x ::,, my NX N . BS x R x . N 5 xy 'Www-...X W S K f k,,.i .e 'aQ ' M f ' ' J .. 1 W, , X ,9,5,t,,:r:., A NN -,., ' ,,f- N 'w., wf'g2ffjf,j'fSEi1:vfagf gf7,ffvgyijf k ' MQ ,A wxwg KT W ' ,, :QC 3 X M W 4 fb , 3591 -1 f iw. si. gyms x. x x : vc F01 x X1-EQ -Q x -H, 5 ff x ' XAYB XVX Qiwsl. 1' G4 . f- JMS r-:sf - 9 3 . , ..-NX .X , x. . lii1.fwz' ' ,M ' , A5 x-wx 3M,rx0 ' , -' K 'zfiirifsxf N nfs. w V -X A X X' -- x ikziik H s .. f - X n SSrxixS,gq W, x iw. .X N, N,',,:,,y1,3x Q, Qi- 3 cf M: fm :pil 5 35 P Sf :X w EX fx -uf .X Sywfx X -4 K 'KX LX X . 1. N? 'i5fzw .- :Lf M' N .. L , is X .X mf, , 1-.V-.. . fb' fu anus.-4 xv TZ ss N 'XS 'Y X X 7 Fifi' L IM' Z uf-.I 1 ,Q4s,v,y ,Q, -3,5-. :Y r x v P, V , . .' 1' 1 ' :Q Q-A - gl 1 j 5 ' rl 5 .. ' h 'Q my ,B ,. 'A D . 'r ,xr - X :Y .50 1. - . V g ' ,f 7 Ag: QV ' ' 93' A DQ g Q, ' O ,. . Y' fe-. - 1 Y 9 ruin W ' ' n ' 'fo V 'kiggbgf ,Wt-.tif - , I - :- -,- 'T - -fa .. Vg 1 Y pj Q ,J - 2 0 4 'As' ' 4 ix, L .. 5 Aa 9 ,N nf' Q - . gg, - ry nh was bf, U: -,jig I ' 2 .2 wif- Wx 5 S -.-K - 'f .W . ' -. 3 + W fl 5 .45 L .L mg, -Q., is .t Mb ...Q gfdak Q ' l LJ-. X52 ' , a-ji' 1 fb: ,X ,gr S Q' ' F-:Lm?Ysr - 'r,'3.q, xl Q. L'W 'H ,,,.,f ,A 1 a Q, , Q 34 Q - -V A x -.. 1, I W it ' ..'1 ' 1 - p 3' i is- 3 11 gf? -'Q . 'X F, wx ,,5'Wx, , ig 'fi-afzx A L 1, f 1: ., , 5 'J . X ff h f, ,fw v JRQSBJ Q XJR 445 J Lift' R, 1 elif, A Y ,ii M R 1, W xi I . m , , A J K 2 ,x . . 5 ww P Q '43, .sk 1 . , Qfgmill S, N I L ., Q f F N 1 S x 2 X 3 S. ' L W Sw :W , S U 4 mf Q3 . 3' x , W . vu .. . . ., ,Q , N f 4. mfr' - po . K Q ,Ny iq , . -5 x fx D 1. , QQ ' - 5 -W if -Q QQ , ex K -X X . .. iff 'H M ' A Q K ' an Y Q ' 7 Q K 'Q 'NNN :O f2 '10 - - gy x X 9 ,ng :.,.,Q ' ' -iw -. 6 W I . I , ,L x x WW SN vi ,Aw uf .V , ... w+N..25, f .Q N ,, -ff -Q H .M R X me ' -Q x . M KSRQ 3- M. V was-W k Kam x wygxg, -'..,N., 1 LW' X W M . f. , LV- .. X Q ,Q vnu., Q ' 'i A xl. X ' 'nsmvvifi - - W M100 X 'ff - , ' 'klxgmww 15, h - W ,pw ,mg SSWXKV X ,, , - .A9' , , . ,NW ,N x Xxxqxdxd 1 if N AQ , MN- x M X X..-WX w.,1g.g' . vw W Q Mig 'Ml fm . , X zysxwm.,-W NM xt Q N 9 5 , - K, U ,Q XN-59l,V,,- lsww WS K ' ', Wi+-ww1RbNveggp,,.-,g N ' K' ' At, ,f , ww A-X i X. A 'S X X S WN ., , Q A A Q .Q D mx - ' .,. N. Xmw X. .K .QQ SSM-f,.N X K X K 5 N v I PWUKW , , WILLIAM H. SHERMAN JOHN WADE SHIGEOKA 206 Upland Road, Merion Station, Pa. 1648 Dillon Road, Maple Glen, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon iSocial Chairmanl Phi Alpha Sigma, Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha Surgery Internal Medicine JAY SAMUEL Sl 2719 Country Clu Pennsylvania Sta Phi Delia Epsili Hare Society IF Student Council, mittee, Freshma Internal Medicin I have done the state some servzce, and they know it ...D WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 43 A.- f ,JV-10n 'd X . ggdffw 1:37555 Wx :WY s X f, f 1 XY X W7 swims My WILLIAM JOHN SNAPE, JR. 220 A Hillcrest Avenue, Collingswood, N.J. Princeton University, A.B. Susan Combellack, 1964 Alpha Omega Alpha, Hare Society, Class President lSopho- more, Junior, Seniorl, Student Council, Dean's Committee, Nu Sigma Nu, Roche Award, Physiology Prize, Pathology Prize, Lange Medical Publications Internal Medicine ROBERT CARL SPAHR 121 South Forest Road, Springfield, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Judith Ann Gould, 1968 Hare Society, Phi Alpha Sigma, Dean's Committee, Alpha Omega Alpha NORMAN FRED SOKOLOFF 8424 Verree Road, Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Ilene Safra, 1967 Phi Delta Epsilon, Sims Society Surgery or Orthopedics SUZANNE RUTH SPRINGER 2533 North Second Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Susquehanna University, B.A. SAMA, Student Council ELIZABETH M 812 Ridley Cre Rosemont Col Pediatric Socim Child Psychiat M K iq. qf f MSWQW 1 ,4..Q,,,.., MW, vzwguddv jf' in ffNZ5ffyl-,uiAf,. .ww . . .SL .A'hMv.. 5 L M , , , J 1 M Y, ' , .me f MW, ,...,,,,..,. ..,,, ..,, .,f 3, S X' 5 NN, x f X 2 Q av 1, N I ge '-Xf31,f N 5' 7 WV' 4 ,,,, 1 J A , 0, fa A, VJ-- , Www A , iffy- wry, wuwv '. , ,.-K, . Q. ,,f,,,L,:, lVN,,. A 7' ,fx W xf - , f 1, ' A 'f f' ',. 1 4 wk' ww ' HN' . ,x 4n.fwW,,,...v,5. 1 5' 9. , ,I , . Vw- ,wc- , f X ,4 ,r fzkx ,Mew G fi V ffvhrv 2 vn- O ,,,,.,:,, M41 K- Q.-. W ..,,-,,,-,- . ,ivy N' ,J I dj , :ff J QQ-.,, X gf? I 'Z X ' . ., A, 'x,'g,Q,., A A 41...--vw'-12' 7' ' .pq me-, .,.As-.1 4 i B 4'g'W-wx 4 WILSON W. STRONG, JR. 301 East Mount Pleasant Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Allegheny College, B.S. Sherry Gaye Westerland, 1965 Surgery THOMAS E. SULLIVAN 76 Cottage Street, Fall River, Mass. Holy Cross College, A.B. CLINIC lAdvisorJ, Pasteur Society lVice Presidentl, Student Council, Phi Alpha Sigma lAmbassador At Largel KENNETH GEOH 903 Clinton Strel Georgetown Uni Kathleen E. Felz Alpha Omega P lum Evaluation l Memberl Psychiatry . Q . -Q. .,.......,,,r,- . mm., , N KENNETH GEORGE TERKELSEN 903 Clinton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Georgetown University, A.B. U'UUIIU,Studeni Kathleen E. Felz, 1967 rgel Alpha Omega Alpha, Student Council ISecretaryJ, Curricu- lum Evaluation Committee, Student Medical Forum lCharter Memberl Psychiatry l 1 l l EUGENE LAWRENCE TIMINS 132 Gregory Avenue, West Orange, N.J. The Johns Hopkins University, A.B. Phi Chi, Class Treasurer Uunior, Seniorl, Hare Society, Sims Society Neurology S' I I y I . '..,,p.-QV tk jf W v T, ,f.,.:., ,iw ' i ,L L , , Z 3 ' ,I , - , - X j -ZVVGV VV s mics MQ ff-I V, N ...W me-use ,. .V VV V V V, i f 'i'Ni , W W KV' N . - i ' e ' ' ',nv'v14'.'f?Zf ' A f - ' ' l'c'M ' 1'E ' -.,..M i m -K ' X -we sumsszwmsss HY Al 1. ,W-M-f ' my 526933 4 A fs' K 't , W . T... V- RSV 1 153' -f-W-N U - X N X KM. i . i A zwmsansrzagixmmsimma A - ' ' 111- . 5 H f'-X N-. WL N ew .. if? .-siiliawpu ammmsrsswasyvxsgkwifw gr QV ,gy A . A sw A SV Qfmy, .O .1 w ' V , . 1' -:tl ,Ms , ff--'V 'WX v, ,vW.,,, L . Q 3 ,MV , Xj , VW, M Vt X F3 wma ,sf -N -. V iiiw M Q r Wizt ummlssrxggiik. 1 -- tsfftl - . , A I t ,X r A ,HW-at , V N X gf ss- ' ' um' smK'lQ?'?'9RSx3S KA, f V ,N jfjrf' ' fff - ,, W . :f5f,Q,,:.ig,,sQ,t,s4..,.. f'f?i 'i4Q:S? GI . , 5 J , wa s yV V VV, M. f,VtNwZVlM Aw I whW, Vi f w ?Ws V i 'W A A X waauunxunuwsmrs -5 . -c Aii' A..,.,..,1w. 'tw x ' ' P f.-..c,t.s'fw X ' N ' 'fet:'M'ffT fs..t..swv-E ,.......M'-M'f'Vff 'y i'iiJlgS-4t..Qt Qslwk ,MW . 'nunmw9 ',,W --Lf. an K X' , ,ss-V e z2.gV.s--1 --wh -K uw I in ,V - ' sjff ,i ,MW.S3R3Q - Q . 11.1 - f ., N-,lf ...vb-M-lf 4 are-f ' sv f- ' Nt , --s- - Y gas . gwvfllw .in T ' of FL 2 N 'M V m....-ff -s:1f+sf 't 'W .,..'93-l-QW-ff-Q f f JT ' unlnnnunlrsllf 1 , I wi ,' ' ,-,..ts:..ss'f.'-fra' V - ff xva V V At' ,-,, - K- nfs? 1 -ww' ,V . -, ii mm 15 -. r is our K S,,,,x.',-sg J? elf 'S - g sz-X5 f 1,,,.sz3e1'w, ,, W ' . Q ,qw - -ei M ,- 55153 1 5 e ' - V C ' 5 C , , ' .'xv,- N, X x ,. V , - , V, VMQ ',,,,,,, . , t i . A ,Q ,. pt -A GMQXTI v3.,,sp.t-rf . ,T 'tk W' VM- X X - . VVV V V ,. it VV V , 4 s ,. V , V ,,, WN:M,,,,. kia.,-nba--' 4 V f i .X ' . , , . ,m 5 i-he , ' Q ,.,.,,-., I -. ' N. - 4 I ff . My -,U .-1 tspfxsfiaf' :Ll DONALD NICHOLAS TOMASELLO 5625 Edwards Avenue, Pennsauken, N.J. St. Joseph's College, B.S. Lydia Audino, 1966 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Kappa Beta Phi Surgery ANTHONY S. TORNAY, JR. 7740 Stenton Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Gettysburg College, B.A. Bernadine Dillon, 1968 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Rugby Club, Hare Society, Alpha Omega Alpha Internal Medicine VICTOR BERN Apt. 3D, Bldg. Providence Co Peggy Ann Fie Phi Alpha Sig Beta Phi, Pedi Pediatrics I 4.2 .141 ' llpha Omega VICTOR BERNARD TUMA Apt. 3D, Bldg. E., 136 West Allens Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Providence College, B.A. Peggy Ann Fierugia, 1968 Phi Alpha Sigma lSocial Chairman, Vice Presidentl, Kappa Beta Phi, Pediatrics Society, 1968 CLINIC Pediatrics JAMES WILSON TOWNSEND, JR. Doylestown, RD 4352, Pa. Bucknell University, B.S. Phi Chi, SAMA, Sims Society ANDREW BUCHANAN WALKER 919 Clinton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Colgate University, A.B., University of Pittsburg, M.S Theta Kappa Psi lVice President, Presidentl Medicine LINDA MERLE LEVIN WEINBERG PAUL MORRIS WEINBERG 7709 Borus Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. 15 White Spruce Lane, Levittown, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Paul Morris Weinberg, 1967 Linda Merle Levin, 1967 Sims Society lSecretaryI , Pediatrics Society, SAMA Phi Delta Epsilon, Pediatrics Society lOfficerJ, SAMA, Sims Pediatrics SOM-fv Pediatric Cardiology MITCHELL ALAN WEINSTEIN KENNETH LEE WIBLE 1007 Spruce Street. Philadelphia, Pa. 6th and Lowe Streets, Youngwood, Pa. University of Pennsylvania, B.A. Juniata College, B.S. Ester BrilI.1966 Phi Alpha Sigma, Kappa Beta Phi Alpha Kappa Kappa, Sims Society Psychiatry Obstetrics and Gynecology :sf-P-v' l S A, Sims fi! , 'iff 'if f w 1 r I I v , I n YY SQ 4 ? , x X 1 2 , f 1 R wgpum yw fn Z 2 X X. Ms X N NS ln- wx 2 .... :H+ away f Nwwf Aww ww ,, Aww-'f 'W x 4 5 4 Nam www -v Nw,-XM ,MN 'Q M Q. ' FV Q ,XWJ ,aww . X 'QQW' ENN X Q Wbwwwwfv-4-wxwxx X - WWQU JAMES WINTER JOHN C. WIRTH, JR. Forest Hills, N.Y . Apt. A6 8210 Elberon Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Ursinus College, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon, Hare Society, Student Research Society, Car0IynT0mIinS0n,1Q65 Sims Society, SANIA, l.E.E.E. Group on Biomedical Engineer- SAMA ing, Association for Computing Machinery, Alpha Omega Sur er Alpha 9 y Radiology: Biomedical information processing EDWARD BOOTH YELLIG 170 White Oak Drive, PlttSbUl'gh, Pa. 414 Wayne Street, Hollidaysburg, Pa. UnlVe SltY of PennSYlVanlaf BA- Juniata College' BIS- Allpha Kappa lSocial Chairman, Chairman of Executive Coun ci Susanne Judy, 1967 Phi Alpha Sigma Kappa Beta Phi, SAMA, Sims Society Internal Medicine 22 cutive Coun- Q And miles to go before I sleep. ROBERT FROST INTERNSHIPS CHARLES C. BRIGGS, III ROBERT ABE'-' 'IR' . Lankenau Hospital Temple University Hospitals Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania GARY L. BUSENKELL University of Illinois Affiliated Hospitals Chicago, Illinois DAVID J. ADDIS Methodist Hospital I Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JOHN R. BUSSARD Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pennsylvania RICHARD L. ALLMAN Allentown Hospital Allentown, Pennsylvania THOMAS F. CARRIG, JR. JCI-I2 ReaAcIIIr?gEHso2rIIItal Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Reading, Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania PETER M. ANSON WILLIAM G. CHODOFF Allentown Hospital Montefiore Hospital Allentown, Pennsylvania New York CITY. New Y0fk ROBERT L. ARKUS JOHN CLEIVIENT - Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl St. Vincents HOSPITHI Philadelphia, Pennsylvania New York CitYf New York LOUIS B. BALIZET CHARLES T. CLINE, JR. West Virginia University Hospital University Hospitals Morgantown, West Virginia Columbus. Ohio ALAN BARON LINDA L. COLEMAN Naval Hospitals St. Vincent's Hospital Camp Pendleton, California New York City, New York VAN S. BATCHIS DONNA L. COOPER Pennsylvania Hospital University Hospitals Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Madison, Wisconsin JOHN H. BAUER JAMES R. COOPER Indiana University Medical Center U I Jefferson Medical College Hospital Indianapolis, Indiana Philadelphia, Pennsylvania STANLEY BENZEL JUDITH M. COOPER Duke Hospital Durham, North Carolina Maimonides Hospital Brooklyn, New York GARRETT E. BERGMAN St. Christopher's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania GARY S. COREN Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonj Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LAWRENCE S. BERMAN Jackson Memorial Hospital PAUL E' COTTON Miami Florida Philadelphia General Hospital IUniv. of Penn.l ' Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ahl',22EQ'gag'n3cf,fJ'i'g'iEgI PAUL J. covEnDALE Read- I P I . Misericordia Hospital H19 ennsy vania Philadelphia, Pennsylvania PETER R. BONAFIDE St. Francis Hospital MARVIN Eg CRANIER Hartford, Connecticut fit' Lure i goslmrflal Y k ew or ity, ew or STANLEY N. BRAND Riiiiiogecqosgita. Y T'2flMv'l3Cii.5l'3'X'0-t I r i y, k - spi a ALAN S ew or New York City, New York . BRICKLIN University of Pennsylv ' H ' JOHN H. DeFRANCE Philadelphia, Pennsylvsgils Ospltal Harrisburg Polyclinic Harrisburg. Pennsylvania JOHN T- Si. Ch Philad ANTHOI Jeffef Plillad ROBERT Mead' New ' CHRIST' Philac Philac EDWAR Jacks Miam FREDER Stron Roch' MARTII Allen Allen EDWAR The T Read MARC Phila Phila GARY Wm, Gain ROBEP Wilr Wilr St. S tals :rsonl ersonl ,1, of Penn.l JOHN T. Del GIORNO St. Christopher's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ANTHONY J. Del ROSSI Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ROBERT G. DIAKUN Meadowbrook Hospital New York, New York CHRISTOPHER R. DONOHO Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania EDWARD DRASIN Jackson Memorial Hospital Miami, Florida FREDERIC DUDENHOEFER Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York MARTIN J. DURKIN Allentown Hospital Allentown, Pennsylvania EDWARD F. DZIOB The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania MARC S. EBEL Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania GARY A. EDWARDS Wm. A. Shands Hospital Gainesville, Florida ROBERT W. EGDELL Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware DAVID J. ESSICK St. Mary's Hospital San Francisco, California PETER M. FARMER Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania HOWARD I. FINKLE Beth Israel Hospital New York, New York WALTER J. FINNEGAN University of Michigan Affiliated Hospitals Ann Arbor, Michigan RICHARD L. FIREMAN St. Vincent's Hospital New York City, New York DANIEL FORKIN San Francisco General Hospital San Francisco, California KAY B. FRANK Mount Sinai Hospital Cleveland, Ohio JOHN F. FRANTZ, II West Virginia University Hospital Morgantown, West Virginia S. ROBERT FREEDMAN University of Illinois Affiliated Hospitals Chicago, Illinois JULES M. FRIEDMAN District of Columbia General Hospital lG.W.J Washington, D.C. ROBERT H. FRIEDMAN Harlem Hospital New York City, New York WALTER J. GADKOWSKI Providence Hospital Seattle, Washington PHILIP H. GEETTER New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital New York, New York PETER H. GEHRET Presbyterian Hospital Denver, Colorado ALEXANDER C. GELLMAN Harrisburg Polyclinic Harrisburg, Pennsylvania MICHAEL J. GINIECZKI Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pennsylvania SALVATORE P. GIRARDO Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LEONARD M. GLASSMAN Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MICHAEL R. GOLDIN City Hospital at Elmhurst New York, New York HARRIS M. GOODMAN The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania JAMES E. GOODRICK Albany Medical Center Albany, New York DALE B. GOUGER The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania BARRY C. GROSS Maimonides Hospital Brooklyn, New York INTERNSHIPS RICHARD C. GROSS - Harrisburg Polyclinlc i Harrisburg. Pennsylvania CHARLES F. V. GRUNAU Misericordia Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania RICHARD F. GRUNT I Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania HAROLD R. HANSEN Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital Hanover, New Hampshire JAMES D. HECKMAN University of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia WILLIAM J. HEIM Medical Center Hospital of Vermont Burlington, Vermont DAVID F. HENDERSON Medical Center Hospital of Vermont Burlington, Vermont CAROL B. HERSH Cincinnati General Hospital Cincinnati. Ohio HERBERT H. HEYM Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware NICHOLAS IFFT Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pennsylvania RICHARD A. INSEL Children's Hospital Boston, Massachusetts ROBERT E. JACOBSON Mount Sinai Hospital New York City, New York THOMAS M. KAIN, III Jefferson Medical College H 't I Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ospl a JONATHAN S. KAPLAN Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York City, New York DAVID J. KATZ Philadelphia General Hospital IJ ff Philadelphia, Pennsylvania e ersonj MORTON A. KAVALIER University of Michiga Aff'l' - Ann Arbor, Michigan n I lated Hospltals JOJHIEIJ. KEVENEY, JR. el erson Medical College Hos 't I Philadelphia, Pennsylvania pl a DEAN M. KINSEY York Hospital York, Pennsylvania M. LEONARD KLEIMAN St. Vincent's Hospital New York City, New York ALAN E. KRAVITZ Grady Memorial Hospital Atlanta, Georgia ALFRED G. KREBS Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania TRUVOR V. KUZMOWYCH Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LINDA K. LANE Philadelphia General Hospital Ueffersonl Philadelphia, Pennsylvania THOMAS A. LANE Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware RICHARD M. LEPIE Jewish Hospital of St. Louis St. Louis, Mo. FUREY A. LERRO The Reading Hospital Reading, Pa. SANDER J. LEVINSON Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ROBERT A. LUSTIG I New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital New York City, N.Y. JOHN H. MacINDOE, II University Hospital Madison, Wisconsin JAMES V. MACKELL, JR. Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ROBERT M. MacMILLAN Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LEE A. MALIT Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania GERALD A. MANDELL Albert Einstein Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JUSTIN MANG Albany Hospital Albany. New York rsonl Jolitan l-l0SPllal l ll ALAN R. MAURER Jackson Memorial Hospital Miami, Florida ALFRED J. MAURIELLO Lankenau Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania DAVID B. McCONNELL Henry Ford Hospital Detroit, Michigan THOMAS J. McGLYNN, JR. Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania EDWARD W. McGOVERN, JR. Jackson Memorial Hospital Miami, Florida THOMAS P. McMAHON Philadel hia General Hospital Ueffersonl P Philadelphia, Pennsylvania KATHLEEN C. McSWIGGAN Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York ROBERT D. MERINGOLO New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital New York, New York ALBERT V. METZ, JR. Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware JOHN T. MILLINGTON, JR. Harrisburg Polyclinic Harrisburg, Pennsylvania PETER J. MLYNARCZYK Chestnut Hill Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania WILLIAM G. NEGENDANK University of Pennsylvania Hospital - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LEROY J. NELSON Mercy Hospital Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania MARK NISSENBAUM Cook County Hospital Chicago, Illinois ANN O'NEILL Rochester General Hospital Rochester, New York ALLEN OKIE St. Christopher's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania THOMAS A. OKULSKI Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MEREDITH K. L. PANG Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware JOHN M. PENTA University Hospital Madison, Wisconsin MORRIS A. POLLOCK Boston City Hospital lTuftsJ Boston, Massachusetts GARY G. POUPKO Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania VINCENT T. RANDAZZO Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JAN T. RAYNAK Mercy Hospital Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania STANTON RAYNES Harrisburg Polyclinic Harrisburg, Pennsylvania EDWARD A. RICKETTS University of California Hospital Los Angeles, California THOMAS A. RIZZO. JR. Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania EARL W. ROBISON University of Michigan Affiliated Hospital Ann Arbor, Michigan CAROLE Y. ROKUI Kaiser Foundation Oakland, California PAUL J. ROSENBERG Montefiore Hospital New York City, New York ALAN L. SCHEIN Michael Reese Hospital Chicago, Illinois LEONARD F. SCHICKLING University Hospital Columbus, Ohio JOHN C. SGHIRO Harrisburg Polyclinic Harrisburg, Pennsylvania ELIZABETH SCHROEDER Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pennsylvania INTERNSHIPS NEIL S. SCHWALB I Albert Einstein Hospital I Philadelphia, Pennsylvania STEPHEN M. SCHWARTZ Geisinger Medical Center Danville, Pennsylvania S. NEITZ SEIBERT The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania BENJAMIN P. SELTZER Boston City Hospital lTuftsJ Boston, Massachusetts ROBERT P. SHACK Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York FRED P. SHERMAN Mount Sinai Hospital New York, New York WILLIAM H. SHERMAN University of Illinois Affiliated Hospitals Chicago, Illinois JOHN W. SHIGEOKA Strong Memorial Hospital New York, New York JAY S. SKYLER Duke Hospital Durham, North Carolina BARRY S. SMITH The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania WILLIAM J. SNAPE, JR. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center New York, New York NORMAN F. SOKOLOFF St. Vincent's Hospital New York City, New York ROBERT C. SPAHR Geisinger Medical Center Danville, Pennsylvania SUZANNE R. SPRINGER Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pennsylvania ELIZABETH STABINSKI Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JAMES A. STOCKMAN Children's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania WILSON W. STRONG Yale New Haven Medical Center New Haven, Connecticut THOMAS E. SULLIVAN St. Vincent's Hospital New York, New York KENNETH G. TERKELSEN Boston City Hospital lB.U.J Boston, Massachusetts EUGENE L. TIMINS Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania DONALD N. TOMASELLO Philadelphia General Hospital IU. of Pa.J Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ANTHONY S. TORNAY, JR. Duke Hospital Durham, North Carolina JAMES W. TOWNSEND, JR. Wilmington Medical Center Wilmington, Delaware VICTOR B. TUMA St. Christopher's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ANDREW B. WALKER Rhode Island Hospital Providence, Rhode Island LINDA L. WEINBERG Jefferson Medical College Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania PAUL M. WEINBERG Children's Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania MITCHELL A. WEINSTEIN Medical Center of Vermont Burlington, Vermont KENNETH L. WIBLE West Virginia University Hospital Morgantown, West Virginia JAMES WINTER University of Chicago Clinics Chicago, Illinois JOHN C. WIRTH, JR. York Hospital York, Pennsylvania JESSEE H. WRIGHT, III Lankenau Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania EDWARD B. YELLIG Santa Clara Hospital San Jose, California HUNDRED PATRONS Joseph P. Long, M.D. i391 Thomas G. Gabuzda, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Paul J. Poinsard I411 William R. Thompson, M.D. Sol Lubin, M.D. and Frank Rykiel, M.D. George A. Hahn, M.D. J. Wallace Davis, M.D. Sandor S. Shapiro, M.D. Russell W. Schaedler Franz X. Hausberger, M.D. John B. Montgomery, M.D. Robert L. Brent, M.D. Dr. Norman Mosckowitz Dr. Paul Maurer M. H. F. Friedman Jules H. Bogaev Frank D. Gray, Jr., M.D. Robert I Wise, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kotin B. Bacharach, M.D. Paul A. Bowers, M.D. C371 Irwin N. Hassenfeld, M.D. T. D. Duane Philip J. Hodes, M.D. Francis X. Keeley, M.D. George H. Strong, M.D. E. Harold Hinman, M.D. Jay Jacoby, M.D. John D. Corbit, Jr., M.D. George Ross Fisher Ill, M.D. Dr. Baldwin L. Keyes Harold L. Israel, M.D. John H. Gibbon, Jr. T271 Benjamin Kendall, M.D. Simon Kramer, M.D. Louis Merves, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Field Arthur S. McCallum Dr. J. William Cox Dr. and Mrs. Jos. F. Rodgers Franz Goldstein, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. William Stepansky l521 Leopold S. Loewenberg, M.D. l561 William F. Kellow l. Sack Cohen, M.D. l391 Dr. William T. Lammon Leonard J. Stabinski Mr. and Mrs. Fred lfft Mr. and Mrs. Thos. F. Schickling Dr. and Mrs. Philip Levin John A. Clement, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Bussard Mr. and Mrs. Robert Abel Mr. and Mrs. John G. Spahr Dr. and Mrs. Richard D. Cramer Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Donaho, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Alan D. Weinberg Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randazzo Mrs. Lister Grunau William B. Gellman, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Egdell Dr. and Mrs. S. M. Goldin Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Mauriello W. J. Snape, M.D. Frank Z. Edwards Herbert A. Luscombe Dr. John N. Lindquist Dr. Wesley W. Parke HONORED PATRONS Mr. and Mrs. John Raynak Kurt Wolff, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Townsend Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Weinstein Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Lerro Mrs. Katherine V. Farmer 1691 Dr. and Mrs. Albert P. Seltzer Mr. and Mrs. William P. Goodrick Marvin Okie Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Wible Dr. and Mrs. Philip Arkus Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Gross Dr. and Mrs. Harold T. Hansen Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Shack Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Cuomo Dr. and Mrs. Louis M. Meringolo Dr. Judd Bockner Anthony S. Tornay Mr. and Mrs. Martin Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Gail L. Rose William D. Johnson, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Harold F. Chase Stewart E. First, M.D. i561 Dr. William E. Kelly Richard H. Goodwin, Sr. Dr. Louis Margolis Aris M. Sophocles, M.D. i501 Mr. and Mrs. Larry Berley Peter Scoles Francis J. Braconaro Andrew B. Chase Mr. and Mrs. Allen L. Seltzer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lepie Colonel and Mrs. John W. Maclndoe Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. MacMillan, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. Lup Muon Pang Mr. and Mrs. Nathan A. Geetter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bergman John F. Frantz Richard D. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Bernard L. Balizet Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Schein Harry Sokoloff Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. McGlynn Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Schmuckler Dr. and Mrs. Archie Sherman Edward H. Topper Charles Zabielski J. Franklin Fowble Mr. and Mrs. Clarence W. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Nino Bernini Mr. and Mrs. Wilson W. Redka Nathan and Celia Cooper Jack Skoloff Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Burdette Mr. Michael Diakun Stanley Mlynarczyk Mr. and Mrs. John E. Addis Mr. Edward W. McGovern, Sr. Dr. Leonell E. Strong W. Patton Kinsey Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Essick Mr. and Mrs. Edward Allman Mr. and Mrs. Victor J. Schiro Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Anson 3 M. Mi M M S. Th Pa Dr Ar De W Al L. Jo Ja Di Jo Jo Eu Ju Sa D ndoe lan, Sr. I' fl Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Freedman Thomas G. DelGiorno Martin Durkin Sidney J. Katz S. J. Catanzaro, M.D. C361 Thomas L. Harris, M.D. Paul D. Zimskind, M.D. C571 Dr. Moses Behrend Arthur First, M.D. Dennis A. Fried William Fraimow, M.D. Abraham E. Rakoff, M.D. C371 L. Isobel Rigg, M.D. John N. Lindquist, M.D. C431 James Byron Carty, M.D. C391 Dr. Robert G. Johnson C491 Joseph P. Long, M.D. C391 John H. Hodges, M.D. C391 Edward D. McLaughlin, M.D. C561 Joseph W. Stayman, Jr., M.D. C421 Samuel S. Conley, Jr., M.D. C441 Dudley P. Bell, M.D. C331 John W. Goldschmidt, M.D. C541 Daniel and Helen Rednor Foundation William D. Brandon, M.D. C461 Edgar H. White John E. Leach, M.D. C331 Henry L.Yim, M.D. C561 William B. Abrams, M.D. C471 Philip D. Gordy, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Conly, Jr. Joseph Medoff, M.D. C391 Richard G. Berry, M.D. Dr. Zygmunt A. Piotrowski Anthony F. DePalma, M.D. C291 Martina M. Mockaitis, M.D. C681 W. Bosley Manges, M.D. C441 Delmar J. Donald, M.D. C551 Nathan S. Schlezinger, M.D. C321 Richard T. Padula, M.D. C611 Phillip J. Marone C571 Bernard J. Miller, M.D. C431 Richard A. Cautilli, M.D. C581 Joseph F. McCloskey, M.D. C431 Daniel C. Harrer, M.D. C671 Dr. and Mrs. Howard Sabarra C681 Donald l. Meyers, M.D. C501 Francis W. Wachter C601 Dr. Merle Bossart C191 Rudolph C. Camishion, M.D. C541 H. Edward LaVoice, M.D. C511 Wm. V. McDonnell, M.D. Albert W. Freeman, M.D. C361 Mary E. Knepp, M.D. C651 Newton E. Kendig, M.D. C541 Marcel Stanley Sussman, M.D. C36 John J. Duncan, M.D. C371 Arnold Goldberger, M.D. C331 Baldwin L. Keyes, M.D. C171 Gerald Marks, M.D. C491 Raymond E. Silk, M.D. C481 John B. Montgomery C261 Henry L. Bockus C171 Herbert E. Cohn, M.D. C551 Marston T. Woodruff, M.D. C301 Burton Schaffer, M.D. HONGRED PATRGNS Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Savacool C381 Dr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kotin C301 Thomas F. McGarry, M.D. C581 Thomas R. Quinn C191 Walter E. Starz, M.D. C371 William W. Lermann, M.D. C161 Joseph E. Malia, M.D. C401 Hammell P. Shipps, M.D. C261 Dr. and Mrs. B. Bacharach C561 William A. Freeman, M.D. C641 John G. Finley, M.D. C491 Donald I. Gallagher John J. Dowling, M.D. Sherman A. Eger, M.D. C291 Harold L. Israel C341 Leon N. Prince C331 Dr. and Mrs. Paul Poinsard C411 Arthur Steinberg, M.D. C501 Ralph A. Carabasi C461 Paul A. Bowers, M.D. C371 Bernard B. Rotko, M.D. C351 Robert Mackowiak, M.D. C641 E. S. Felderman, M.D. Samuel Baron C171 Leroy Newman, M.D. C491 Dr. Floyd W. Nicklas C441 Jerome J. Leboritz, M.D. Dr. Jane Breck C671 Lyle M. Nelson C251 Dr. William P. Coghlan C471 Dr. and Mrs. Vincent D. Cuddy William P. Martin, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Jos. F. Rodgers C571 Edwin D. Arst, M.D. C551 Morris Amateau C231 Edwin I. Cleveland C501 Stewart D. Shull, M.D. C681 Dr. Carl G. Whitbeck C371 Conard Zagory, M.D. C491 Darryl B. Tisherman, M.D. C641 Dr. and Mrs. Richard T. Smith C411 L. A. Gehris, M.D. C351 W. H. McMicken, M.D. C581 Nicholas J. Christ, M.D. C421 C. S. Holman C191 William U. Lober Joseph P. McGee, Jr., M.D. C471 M. H. Yoder, M.D. C081 Gerald A. McDonough, M.D. C591 Harry Alexander Smith, M.D. C151 Dr. and Mrs. George J. Haupt C481 William V. Harrer, M.D. C621 Dr. Ramon B. Molina C591 Nathan Sussman, M.D. C351 Leonard P. Roseh, M.D. C471 Dr. John H. Gibbon, Jr. C271 Dr. Anthony E. Narducci Daniel J. Rednor, M.D. C381 Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Dziob C361 Albert A Mazzeo, M.D. C451 Herbert S. Hunter, M.D. C441 Richards H. Hoffman, M.D. C281 M. S. Fabricant, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Charles K. Mervine Dr. and Mrs. Edward J. Baranski C591 Robert C. Magley C561 3 Ron Che Wil Jea Joh Sar Dr. Dr. Jos Irw G. J. I Dr. A. Fra Jo: Irv Ja Sa Ronald E. Cohn, lVl.D. C591 Charles J. lVlorosini, lVI.D. C251 William H. Newman, lVl.D. C311 Jean E. Olsen, lVl.D.. C671 John D. Phillips, IVl.D. C271 Samuel Schesinger, lVl.D. C381 Dr. lVl. J. Borthwick C331 Dr. William T. Lemmon C211 Joseph W. Simpson, lVl.D. C531 Irwin IVI. Potash C531 G. E. Aponte, lVl.D. C521 J. David Hoffmon, lVI.D. C561 Dr. John C. Urbatitis C301 A. B.Cimochowski C301 Frank J. Gilday, Jr. Joseph R. Russo C241 Irwin S. Jacobs, lVl.D. C531 James F. Olley, lVl.D. C451 Sau Ki Wong, lVI.D. C451 Harmon E. Holverson, IVI.D. C531 Kenneth Brail E. L. Hedde, IVI.D. C281 Richard C. Tozer, lVl.D. C451 W. Royce Hodges John F. lVlcGinty, lVl.D. C431 Samuel E. Senor, IVI.D. C251 David Russell Perry, lVl.D. C191 Dr. Joseph H. Johnson C261 H. Strawertter C501 Archbold IVI. Jones, Jr., IVl.D. C591 William IVI. Barba, lVl.D. C501 Joseph G. Cook, lVl.D. C301 Lewis F. Somers C391 Warren P. Goldburgh, lVl.D. C521 James Regan C561 Russell Wilhide Johnston C101 Edgar N. Johnson, lVl.D. Roger B. Thomas, lVI.D. C401 L. lVlarshall Goldstein, lVl.D. C591 Arthur S. lVlcCallum C221 James G. Marnie, IVI.D. C451 Robert Lee, Jr. C541 Robert Revelli C441 Dr. Welland A. Hause C381 E. L. Grandon, lVl.D. C501 Richard V. Duffey, lVl.D. C501 Frederick J. Sullivan, lVl.D. C391 Thurston G. Powell, lVl.D. William A. Ranson, lVl.D. C481 Dr. W. Waldo Boone C221 lVlacLean B. Leath C331 Arthur B. Vangundy, lVl.D. C441 Joseph Baka C591 Harold J. Hassel, lVl.D. Paul L. Gorsuch, IVI.D. C441 Dr. Donald L. Arey C361 Burchard E. Wright, IVl.D. C321 George J. Boines, lVI.D. C291 Henry Lihn, lVl.D. C341 William C. Herrick C471 Barnet Fine, IVLD. C321 E. H. Metcalf, lVl.D. C141 J. N. Zimskind C271 Lester J. Finkle, lVl.D. C351 Blackwell Sawyer, IVl.D. C241 William E. Stass, Jr., lVl.D. C621 I-IGNORED PATRONS Frank K. Rykiel, M.D. C601 Joseph J. Blake, M.D. C501 Robert J. Sorensen C541 John F. Kennard, M.D. C571 Robert D. Rector, M.D. C481 Donald Hooper C601 Harrison J. McGhee G. F. Wheeling, M.D. James E. Barefoot, M.D. C631 Oswald R. Carlander, M.D. C251 Dr. Irving J. Stewart C251 Carl L. Minier, M.D. C291 John R. Helff, M.D. C471 John M. Daniel C561 Dr. Eugene Byron Glenn C311 Martin D. Shickman, M.D. C541 Arnold H. Weinstein, M.D. C601 George A. Lundberg C191 Dr. James L Hollywood C291 Andrew E. Ogden C271 Paul B. Reisinger, M.D. C181 William A. Halbeisen, M.D. C411 R. S. Naoen, Jr. C531 Anthony J. Repici, M.D. Robert G. Salasin, M.D. John R. Rushton, lll, M.D. C481 Holbert James Nixon C141 Grover C. Powell, M.D. C411 Donald R. Watkins, M.D. C471 Ray H. Flory, M.D. C441 Jos. F. Lechman, M.D. C321 Wm.A. Merlino, M.D. C631 Jerome M. Cotler, M.D. C521 Alden P. King, M.D. C241 Jesse Schulman, M.D. C451 Arthur T. Colley C301 John E. Morehead, M.D. C531 Charles E. Nicholson, Jr., M.D. C591 G. W. Plank, M.D. Thomas A. Randall, M.D. C541 P. F. Lucchesi, M.D. C261 Alexander J. Duplicki Fred L. Rosenbloom, Esquire J. R. Connelly Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. George Hryshko Fred D. Geha Robert Zeligman R. M. Johnston Andrew Francis Balkany J. H. Brubaker, M.D. C421 Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Nogi Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Steward C421 Stewart E. Ritter Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs Harry Doyle, Sr. Sidney H. Ellis Valentine Klick Philip J. DiGiacomo Victor R. Cacchione Dr. and Mrs. John Reichel, Jr. Frank A. Wolt, Jr., M.D. David W. Kramer, M.D. John S. Watson Dr. George Hay Raymond C. Grandon, M.D. Mrs. Mildred Semler, R.N. C241 Mrs. Olive I. Dean 2 Mr. Mr. Mr. Juli Mr. Wil Dr. Ch: Vlr Vlr Vlr Vlr Vlr Dr Vli Vll Ju M ll! D . Mr. and Mrs. Abe Scherr Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Bescher Mr. and Mrs. Leo A. Bressler Julius C. Rosch, M.D. T441 Mr. and Mrs. l. Jack Dovnarsky William L. Murray Dr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Chollak Charles A. Tomlinson Mr. and Mrs. John B. Edinger Mr. and Mrs. Alays J. Haymanek Mrs. Philip Schleifer Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Kershner Mr. and Mrs. P. William Marshall Dr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Rooklin Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Light Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Brittain Judge Samuel H. Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. John Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Frost Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rakoff Dr. and Mrs. Frank H. Rubin Dr. Herman Caplan Arthur L. Josephs Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Schiller Peter Huhn Samuel S. Faris Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Tischler Martin Ackerman, M.D. Joseph J. Kelter, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Brown S. Merrill Skeist Samuel David Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Sowden, Sr. Dr. Thomas M. Connelly M. A. Monroe Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Jaeger Abraham A. Cohen Lorsi and Catherine Borucki Mr. and Mrs. Wilber G. Freeland Benjamin Pomerantz Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel H. Silberman Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Barylak Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toff Mr. and Mrs. Herman S. Pitchon Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kabler Mrs. Anthony D'Arcy Mr. and Mrs. Norman H. Fliegelman Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Hughes Emory Klein, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Soloman Ager Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Rosof Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Danoff Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis Dr. and Mrs. S. Gordon David Ehrlich Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Wakefield Mr. and Mrs. David H. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hellman Mr. and Mrs. William F. Fell Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A Comfort Joseph Polsky Charles L. Quaglieri, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Donnelly Samuel Penchansky, M.D- Mrs. Yetta Parker Mrs. Ruth Probst Isaacs HONGRED PATRGNS Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Monkowski Mr. and Mrs. Henry P. Seymour Charles and Virginia Greanoff Mr. and Mrs. W. Kozielski Mr. and Mrs. David Guralnik Mr. and Mrs. A. Charney Mr. and Mrs. John K. Buffington Mr. and Mrs. Edward Greltsch James E. Ftiscar Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dorand David H. Haltman Ralph G. Sunder Mrs. Richard A. Davenport Nat Lefton Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fleishman Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Noller Robert J. Malovany Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H. Bescher N. W. Nemiroff, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Gould Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Left Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Calabrese Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Forrest Lawrence J. Olsen, D.D.S. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Burket Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Pietragallo Mrs. Preston Flanigan William J. Hyde Mr. and Mrs. William H. McCoy Seymour Weber Rev. and Mrs. Murray Gold Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur M. Pryor, Jr. A. A. Baskous Mr. and Mrs. Julian Dmochowski Joseph Austin Miller Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Jambro Louis C. Blaum, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Hennessey Mr. and Mrs. George Spigel Mr. and Mrs. Louis P. Nosher Leonard N. Nespohi A. C. Andrulonis Dr. and Mrs. Floyd S. Cornelison, Jr. Dr. C. P. Kraatz Nelson H. Reavey-Cantwell, M.D., Ph.D. M. L. Simenhoff Allan J. Erslev Leroy Newman, M.D. C491 Edward A. Jaeger, M.D. Arthur W. Rhodes Howard M. Oliver C441 Wilbur H. Miller, Jr., M.D. C551 William E. Wallace, M.D., P.A. C511 Allan Lazar, M.D. C571 James J. Humes, M.D. C481 Charles H. Powell C541 Allen E. Chandler, M.D. C611 Joseph A. Pessolano, M.D. C151 Chester L. Lassiter, M.D. C151 Thomas Kelso, M.D. C601 Thomas M. Kain, Sr. C121 W. B. Clendening, M.D. C. D. Schloss, M.D. C581 Dr. and Mrs. William T. Condefer C551 Burton L. Wellenbach C441 Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Ramsay R, S. Edw Dr. - Harm Johr Edw Wal Joe S. E Nori E. H Frau Dr. Dav Levi Stu Roh J. IJ Dr. Dai Mil Fra R. ski D ssey in, Jr. D., Ph.D. 11 1551 R. S. Naden, Jr. 1531 Edwin D. Harrington, M.D. Dr. Joseph S. Gonnella Harold H. Colburn, M.D. John T. Magee, M.D. 1571 Edward Gottheil, M.D., Ph.D. Walter W. Crawford 1401 Joe Henry Coley, M.D. 1341 S. Eugene Dalton, M.D. 1241 Norman J. Goode, Jr. 1431 E. H. Colemann 1301 Francis C. Prunty, M.D. 1311 Dr. and Mrs. H. Glenn Hostetter 1601 David B. Heller, M.D. 1471 Lewis H. V. May, M.D. 1531 Stuart W. Hamburger, M.D. 1491 Robert C. Dietel, M.D. 1461 J. D. Groblewski Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Mlynarczyk 1661 Daniel R. DeMeo, M.D. 1511 Millard N. Croll, M.D. 1481 Fred C. Hubbard, M.D. Stephen R. Ellin 1681 R. M. Zweig 1521 Wm.T. Rice, M.D. 1321 Dr. George A. Brown 1141 J. Robert Ball, M.D. 1501 Herbert M. Epstein 1601 R. R. Schicchitano, M.D., M.S. 1271 Charles O. Thompson, M.D. 1641 Dr. and Mrs. John A. Koltes 1471 Dr. Walter H. Wishard 1171 Joseph A. Besecker D. M. Feigley, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Ricketts 1411 Warren H. Endres, M.D. 1321 Alvord Lovell Stone 1261 Dr. L. A. Smith 1291 Earl B. Ross, M.D. John A. Gillis, M.D. 1431 Robert R. Thompson, M.D. Edward A. Norton Joseph Hodge, M.D. Ralph Markley James C. Hitcher, M.D. 1511 Gerald E. Callery, M.D. 1431 Alan N. Fleckner, M.D. Louis N. West 1121 Geo. H. Jones 1441 Dr. Truman N. Morris 1271 Thomas S. Scott, M.D. 1681 Norman C. Rintz, M.D. 1311 Sylvester F. DeRosa 1241 Robert N. Cothane, M.D. Bernard Cramer, M.D. 1461 Dr. and Mrs. William Rutter 1571 Francis A. Aaron 1291 Charles H. Greenbaum, M.D. 1541 L. M. Lide, M.D. 1211 Thomas Edson McMicken, M.D 1631 L. Graziani 1551 N. Edalatpour, M.D. 1561 Leonard H. Grunthal, Jr. 1561 Edward Hoberman, M.D. 1341 LeRoy A. Schall, M.D. 1171 John J. Blizzard 1541 , HUNDRED PATRGNS Delmar J. Donald, M.D. 1551 Joseph W. Stayman, Jr., M.D. 1421 Chas. P. Snyder 1311 Dennis M. Wadler, M.D. 1611 Padie Richlin 1381 Connell J. Trimben 1601 Dr. James Jordan 1301 Murray Moliken, M.D. Harry W. Baily, M.D. 1171 Vance A. Funk 1431 John J. Madara, M.D. 1451 David B. Allman, M.D. 1141 Vincent T. McDermott, M.D. 1261 C. B. Lull, Jr. 1481 Donald M. Blatchley, M.D. 1481 N. J. Ruggiero, M.D. 1661 Harvey R. Rutstein, M.D. 1601 Garrett C. McCandless, M.D. 1281 S. Victor King, M.D. 1471 Clyde E. Harriger, M.D. 1541 Howitt H. Foster, M.D. 1191 Elmo J. Lilli, M.D. 1581 Angelo S. Scherma, M.D. 1241 Raymond P. Seckinger, M.D. David Dewey Detar, M.D. 1331 Dr. Norman White 1041 Peter J. lgnnuzzi 1371 Dr. and Mrs. Thaddeus P. Fryczyuski 1541 Carl R. Dudeck, M.D. 1531 Willis W. Willard, M.D. 1621 G. Robt. Senita George W. West, M.D. 1501 Benjamin Bruce Langdon 1381 Mr. and Mrs. Milton Gewertz Mr. William D. Boswell Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bonafide Mrs. Howard L. Robertson, Sr. Arthur A. Kunkle Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Urbanski Dr. Armondo F. Garacci Rolf Lemp, M.D. 1631 J. Jerome Cohen 1611 Jarome L. Sander, M.D. 1581 Dr. S. Sprigg Jacob Dr. Neal R. Moore 1261 William D. Brandon, M.D. 1461 Dr. and Mrs. George B. Ulmer Richard B. Crowder, M.D. 1491 Dr. Charles L. Brodhead 1591 Kenneth Dollinger, M.D. 1521 David R. Morgan, M.D. 1161 Herbert G. Magenheim, M.D. 1591 Edward P. Schwartz, M.D. 1301 G. F. Nies, M.D. Bernard B. Borkowski, M.D. 1541 Angelo P. Angelidies, M.D. Robert E. Berry, M.D. 1551 Margaret G. Mahoney, M.D. Mrs. Louis B. Orlowitz Dr. Thomas B. Mervine 1401 Marcel Stanley Sussman, M.D. 1361 Dr. J. M. Coon Fred Harbert, M.D. Robert Mackowiak, M.D. 1641 Kenneth Brail Georgia B. Makiver Gretchen Marquardt ? F S HOSPITAL and BUSINESS PATRON S ' ........J E EFEERSON MEDICAL COLLEGE TH I ALUMNI ASSOCIATION extends congratulations and best wishes to the GRADUATES OF 1969 ir WELCOME TO MEMBERSHIP in the ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Founded in 1870-6,700 Living Members ir As a Member of the Alumni Association, you will receive . . . . . .The ALUMNI BULLETIN 4 times a year . . .Notification of Alumni Events . . .News of Your Classmates and other Alumni . . .Benefit of the Alumni Placement Service KEEP ALIVE YOUR CONTACTS WITH THE COLLEGE ir Lifetime Membership-355.00 l S THE STUDENT COUNCIL IN ACTION if ' Pre-Med Luncheons and Tours ' Orientation Week ' Intramural Athletics ' lnterfraternity Social Council ' Concert Series ' Curriculum Evaluation ' Mend Activities ' The Clinic if BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1969 2 i 241 ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION - RARITAN, NEW IERSEY For G complete choice of medically accepted products forfplanned conception cohtrol 0195! OPC ,.....-........,....,...,....-....-..., .:...-.. -. ,....- ............ .. .-,.44... .,....,.,,,......f.........V,..,.,.,, , .,..,,.,..,,, Congratulations and Best Wishes to Iefferson Medical College if Eastern Optical, Inc. Qphthalmologistsi Prescriptions Filled 932 Chestnut Street 4523 Frankford Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 60 Garret Road Delcroft Shopping Center UPPST Darby, PH- Folcroft, Pa. -1 ' ff S TO OUR NEIGHBOR .... JEFFER O EDICAL COI ,I ,EGE . . . . Its distinguished Faculty, Alumni and Graduating Class ..... Continued success in pioneering breakthroughs in medical teaching, treatment and research . . . the services of healing and mercy you have provided mankind throughout the world . . . PHILADELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY AN INVESTOR-OWNED COMPANY SERVING SOUTHEAST PENNSYLVANIA Cometo one ofourofficesto talk ahoutyglroffice. Some doctors come to see us about the equipment they need for their offices. And a Professional Loan to buy it. Some come to talk over renovating their offices. And a Home Improvement Loan to do it. Some come to look into our Medical Billing-Accounts Receivable Service. And the professional way it takes over handling outgoing bills and incoming payments. Other doctors come for a Home Mortgage Loan. Because they have a family growing along with a practice. Many come in to discuss their personal banking needs-checking accounts, sav- ' ings programs, trust and estate planning. Welcome, Doctor. PRGVIDE T NATIONAL BANK IAIN OFFICE! IROAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS. PHILADELPHIKIIIOI OFFICES SERVING PHILADELPHIA. IUCKS. DILAWARE AND IONTGOIYRY COUNTIES IEIBER FDIC! IEIIER FEDERAL RESERVE SVSTEI fi 5 Best Wishes From cz Friend of the College Statistical data for 1968 which house staff is as follows: Admissions . . . Deliveries ........ Operations ......... X-rays CDiagnosticJ Radioactive Isotopes . . . WEST JERSEY HOSPITAL NORTHERN DIVISION 418 BEDS HOSPITAL STATISTICS would appear of importance to the prospective members of the . . . 16,998 . . 2,210 . . 9,762 . . . 45,570 . . . 1,230 Pathologic Tests ................. 352,360 E.C.G. ......... . . . 13,462 O.P.D. ................ . .. 12,350 Emergency Ward ......... . . . 27,218 Emergency Ward Cadmisj . . . . . 2,500 Autopsies .............. . . 30fMn Average Patient Stay ..... 9 PROGRAM FULLY APPROVED FOR: New facilities 3 Year Family Practice Residency Rotating 1, 2, 3 STIPEND: 358,500 Interne or 1st year. Family Practice Resident 359,000 2nd year Family Practice Resident 359,500 3rd year Family Practice Resident HOUSING: 12 room operating suite with incircuit T.V. 6 bed completely equipped Coronary Care Unit Cunder constructionb Obstetrical wing Cunder construction Twelve 2 and 3 bedroom homes adjacent to the hospi- tal are provided free for the intern and his family tfurnished and includes utilities and phone servicel. WEST JERSEY HOSPITAL SOUTHERN DIVISION 100 BEDS Approximately 60 new service beds Cunder constructionb 4 X XL UN DS h 2 0 l8 D0 X 9 th A Compliments of CROZER-CHESTER MEDICAL CENTER Upland, Chester, Pennsylvania 2 249 - CONEMAUGH VALLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL JOHNSTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 1968 - HOUSE William A. Cassidy Bruce E. Duke M.D. M.D. Steven P. Griffin Harry K. Jeroy M.D. M.D. .Mui Robert T. Moll Walter J. Nieri M.D. M.D. STAFF - 'I969 Robert W. Fausel Jr. Richard W. Gorski M.D. M.D. WK. Judson H. Kimmel Eugene R. McNinch M.D. M.D. wiv W. Bryan Staufer Jghn H, Zqbkqr M.D. M.D. If -I Rot 1 X z ST. LUKE'S HGSPITAL, BETHLEHEM PENNA 1..,'i1fs-'-av, inf. ,. 500 Beds I Rotating Internships, with Majors in Medicine and Surgery. Q Approved Residencies in General Surgery, Internal Medicine, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Pathology. O Full time Chiefs in Medicine and Surgery O Affiliation with Jefferson Medical College and the Graduate School of the University of Pennsylvania O Excellent stipend with full perquisitses A FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, WRITE OR CALL COLLECT Michael L. Sheppeck, M.D., Medical Director Sl. Luke's Hospital, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 18015 1 I -1 Q MI-ETHGDI T HO PITAL 2301 South Broad Street -:- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19148 DEWey 6-3300 Methodist Hospital as it will appear upon completion of current building program. 1-'H NEW HOUSE STAFF ON-CALL QUARTERS OPENED MARCH 1967 NEW ADMINISTRATION BUILDING OPENED MARCH 1969 250 Beds-22 Bassinets All air-conditioned facilities Eight approved twelve-month Rotating Internships-with medical, surgical, and ob-gyne emphasis SIUIISIICS-'1963 S6800!year stipend with 51200 living allowance 3,462 PGTIGDIS 89,031 In-Patient Days Night Emergency Department coverage by members of the 20,698 Clinic Visits Alfendlng Staff 24,557 Emergency Patients 1 . . Apartments available at nominal cost for married interns 3221222215 .J MERC 1 I I luill g I I ll ll ll I1 n.ul lullnal.-ll lll :I ,, 'll n gi! - -In u ..- N 'll I I-' II I ' H i l I ' i The Mt oi the natl Delaware! The Fitzger ' An acti through handles ' Full-ti cal, CII Serviq ' Rotmi eXper tunity ' Furni Further by wrm MERCY CATHOLIC MEDICAL CENTER OF SOUTHEASTERN PENNA 5.31, Fitzgerald Mercy Division Mlsemordm Division i - I - I I Y- O I - l . ,J s il.i-NP' V B x fy' .i, tl. ll: ' .D I The Mercy Catholic Medical Center is a new 800- bed teaching center serving the West Philadelphia area of the nation's fourth largest city through its Misericordia Division, a 400-bed hospital, and suburban Delaware County through its Fitzgerald Mercy Division, also a 400-bed hospital. The Fitzgerald Mercy Division Offers: ' An active intern training program with rotation through the various services. Its Emergency Room handles over 21,000 admissions annually. 0 Full-time Department directors in the Medical, Surgi- cal, OBXGYN, Pediatrics, Pathology and Radiology Services. 0 Rotating CO, 1, 2, 3 and 43 internships to provide experience in all maior specialties plus an oppor- tunity for study in elective sub-specialties. 0 Furnished apartments for interns and residents. Further information and applications may be obtained by writing to: Arturo R. Hervada, M.D. Fitzgerald Mercy Division Mercy Catholic Medical Center Lansdowne Avenue Darby, Pa. 19023 The Misericordia Division Offers: 0 An active intern training program with rotation through the various services, including an Emergency Room that handles over 25,000 admissions annually. 0 Full-time Department directors in the Medical, Surgi- cal, Pediatrics, Pathology and Radiology Services. ' Choice of straight medical or rotating internships to provide experience in the maior specialties plus an opportunity to study in selected sub-specialties. 0 Affiliation with Jefferson Medical College. ' Furnished apartments for married interns and resi- dents. Further information and applications may be obtained by writing to: Norman N. Cohen, M.D. Misericordia Division Mercy Catholic Medical Center 54th Street 8- Cedar Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 19143 The Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Third and Radnor Street Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17105 777 Bed General Hospital. 33? Classic and Flexible Rotating Internships with up to eight months in major field. 323 Residencies in Medicine, Pediatrics, Radiology and Surgery. 'iii Sound Educational Program in the Setting of a Superior Community Hospital. Zi? Major Affiliation with HAHNEMAN Medical College in all Departments: Electives with JEFFERSON Medical College in Pediatrics and University of Pennsylvania in Surgery. Please consult Medical Director for details. 3 3 3 Generous Stipend. and Fringes. 333 Attractive, Friendly Community. Come and Visit Us. ii 3 'Q THE L CENTE PENNS Located the bea Mounta Vital Si 430 40 12 14,849 RESI Pat Gy Pra THE WILMINGTON MEDICAL CENTER Wilmington, Delaware A. M. A. Approved Rotating Internships 0, 1, 2 and 4 14 positions Straight Internships in Internal Medicine 6 positions Straight Internships in Pediatrics 3 positions fi Residencies in Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, i Pathology, Pediatrics, Plastic Surgery, and Urology. 'N Full time physicians for Educational Programs in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics. 1100 Beds 140 Bassinets 39,824 Admissions 253,973 Total Ambulatory Service Visits Large Ward and Clinic population. A unique opportunity. For additional information write: p R. B. Flinn, M.D., Acting Coordinator of Medical Education ,I Wilmington Medical Center, Box 1668, Wilmington, Del. 19899 ,I Uhr 1-Xlinnna Munpiial THE LARGEST TEACHING -- N Agggglljdfrgilili SOUND CENTER IN CENTRAL ,L ,.-3, - j 5 ,S E PENNSYLVANIA ,, 323155 . 535'-'g1i'if4 ILj1f:::,,i.........,-l D A. ,,... i L: LA- v - , I.,- ? Located in the heart of ALTOONAJ PA. the beautiful Allegheny Mountains Vital Signs: 430 Beds 40 Bassinets 12 Rotating Interns 14,849 Admissions RESIDENTS IN: -- Pathology, Obstetrics, Gynecology, General Practice and Surgery UFFALO E CLEVELAND N Y V 1:4 I AL'r oNA A I o Nun I-mznlsaune .. I PmssuReH 5 v ti 2 19 senronn 'ab PHILADELPHIA INIERCHANGE Q- moReANTowN BALTIMORE wAsHlNsroN2 L FOR INFORMATION WRITE: Philip Hoovler, M.D. Director of Medical Education The Altoona Hospital Altoona, Pa. 16603 THE MEDICAL STAFF INCLUDES Physicians in all specialties, a Nuclear Medicine Department included: COME AND SEE US! WRITE OR CALL COLLECT 814-944-0811 Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, N. J. A REGIONAL GRADUATE AND POST-GRADUATE MEDICAL EDUCATION CENTER CONGRATULATIONS! BEST WISHES FOR A SUCCESSFUL AND PRODUCTIVE CAREER Partners in Health . . . BLUE cnoss YOU YOUR HOSPITAL YOUR DOCTOR BLUE SHIELD and BLUE CROSS OF GREATER PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA BLUE SHIELD Ct 1ii FI Three-1 FAMILY A of North offers: I. Broad and ca 2. Maxi famili physi 3. Suffic Plunn 5- Emph Also nal Compliments and Best Wishes of MERCY HOSPITAL Pride and Locust Streets Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania FAMILY MEDICINE PROGRAM Three-year program Iincluding internshipl in FAMILY MEDICINE, closely affiliated with University of North Carolina School of Medicine. Our program offers: 1. Broad experience in internal medicine, pediatrics, and community medicine. 2. Maximum continuity in relationship with selected families, whom the resident serves as family physician. 3.Sufficient electives to permit individual program planning. 4. Competitive salaries and benefits. 5. Emphasis on education. Also available are approved residencies in inter- nal medicine, pediatrics, and pathology. For further information write or call: Chief, UNC Teaching Programs Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital 1200 N. Elm Street Greensboro, N.C. 27405 Telephone 919-275-8292 CHURCH HOME AND HOSPITAL Baltimore, Mqrylqnd HA Unique 0PP0I'fUnity to obtain superior quality training for clinical practice Internships: Rotating, Medical, Surgical Residencies: Medicine, Surgery, Ob-Gyn For information, write to: Director of Medical Education Church Home and Hospital Baltimore, Maryland 21231 ROTATING INTERNSHIPS THE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL Washington, Pa. 15301 Internship Igeneral rotatingl organized as a year of teaching experience, both clinical and di- dactic. Strong planned program plus regular Depart- mental and Staff meetings. Over 14,000 admission-2,000 births per year All Patients in Teaching Program Large Out-Patient Load Attractive working conditions and policies. Modern facilities provide 512 beds including Neuropsychia- tric Unit, Intensive Care Unit and all Other Depart- ments and equipment. Adequate remuneration, attractive furnished quar- ters for both married and single interns. For more information, write the Chairman of the Intern Program. Personal visits to the hospital are welcomed and encouraged. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1969 ST. FRANCIS GENERAL HOSPITAL Pittsburgh, Penno. 15201 We invite your inquiry. Write Director of M eaical Eclucation Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1969 Merin Studios of Photography, Inc. 'A' Official Photographers to the Clinic for the Past Thirty Years 'k All Portraits Appearing in This Publication Have Been Placed on File in Our Studio and Can Be Duplicated at Any Time WRITE US OR PHONE FOR INFORMATION 1010 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. WAlnut 3-0146 WA1nut 3-0147 COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND .Qs .. AIR11 organ proff feqlll W cons' centf O: depa the a cons . , ,gr J. :' N, .J . .s , , 1 .' M5 P ,F .M ,, , 1:2 r K ' I 1. Congratulations Al R to the Class of 1969 HOSPITAL FOOD MANAGEMENT a professional service to ethical standards AIRIA Hospital Food Management is an organization of dietetic Kr food service professionals directed to serving the requirements of the dietary department. We provide dietary management 8: related consulting services to hospitals, retirement centers, Sr other health care institutions. Our function is to manage the dietary department so expertly and so responsibly that the administrator is relieved of its time consuming details. Independence Square, SW Philadelphia Pennsylvania 19106 .11 Efm I E ae...,.Cm 1 1 from The Philadelphia HARD ROCK SOCIETY O Help preserve Wildlife this week . . . Throw a Party Call MR. BARTKUS - CL 9-6887 iElectric Music for Mind and Bodyi NEUBAUER'S, INC. Since 1875 Modern Formal Wear - Rental Service 1107 Walnut Street WA 3-1267 Philadelphia 7, Pa. ' 747-bed community HARRISBURG HOSPITAL hospital with a major medical school affiliation. ' Full and part-time faculty in Medicine, Cardiology, Neurology, Hema- tology, Radiology, Nuclear Medicine, Pediatrics, Surgery, Emergency Room, Pathology, Physical Medicine, Physiology and Biochemistry. ' Flexible intern schedule rotation. ' Residencies available in Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics-GyneC0I09Y, Pediatrics, Pathology and Oral Sur9efY- 0 Leading Coronary Care Unit. for more information call or write h M D Director of Intern Education Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg PennsY VU Thomas F. Fletc er, . -I ' . . - I ' , I nia 17101 Delaware County Memorial Hospital Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania 19026 301 Beds Admissions 8,848 Accident W ard 18,240 d R t tin Internship and General Practice Approve o a g Residency Program-Postgraduate teaching Program -Current Library-Monitored Intensive Care Unit- Radio-lsotope Lab-Stipend S500-S650 Per Month -Director of Medical Education, NAHDME. Compliments of CHESTNUT HILL HOSPITAL R13 THR the 311,060 When dining out becomes a special occasion . . . The Stratford Garden Famous for fine food, gracious service and expertly-prepared coclctails. Popular prices. Dinner music 6:30 to 8:30 PM. The Hunt Room A quaint English Tavern. .Lunch- eon, Dinner and After Theater Snacks. Sunday liquor service 1 to 10 PM. Broad Street at Walnut ' PE 5-0700 THE Best Wishes OUR LADY OF LOURDES Camden, N.J. PE 5-8400 ST. JAMES HOTEL BARBER SHOP S.E. Cor. 13th and Walnut Streets Anthony Fanelli Albert Fanelli ln the Service of CIeanIiness F. W. HOFFMAN 81 CO., INC. Cleaning Supplies-Sanitary Equipment 231 E. Allegheny Avenue Philadelphia Reading Atlantic City UNION ELECTRIC CONTRACTING COMPANY Electrical Construction 'k 1708-10 Callowhill St. Philadelphia, Pa. 19130 LOcust 3-3140 dimensions in and home IUH in the world- iamous store Philadelphia . DP Funelli f delphic fic City UEQHENIIYS. - ' BW g MPANYM: dimensions in fashion ' HM dh f ' h' an ome urnis ings I Philadelphia 3, Pa. in the world- famous store in Philadelphia . .. FOR BETTER PAINTING 2018 Sansom Street if Over 70 Years of Dependable Service Visit the New KITE AND KEY Cocktail Lounge Exciting-Charming Decor Drinks Mixed Perfectly to Your Taste Char Broiled Steaks-Chops SPECIALTIES FOR-Luncheon and Dinner OPEN DAILY 11:30 A.M. to 1:30 A.M. SPECIAL Sunday Dinner 1 PM to 10 PM I' BENJAMIN FRANKLIN HOTEL CHESTNUT AT 9th ' WA 2-8600 3 Wall-to-vvall adventures Lees weaves magic int0 carpets and accent rugs... Your choice of over 300 colors in every texture from the civilized shag to the soft!hard floor. LEESCARPETS A Division of Burlingtonrlndustries Valley Forge Industrial Park' Norristown, Pennsylvania 19401 g MCG Fomc E-Tncell DQ- WAInut 5.41 HR T X If lf' 1 Q I fpeci. Ol' in THANKS, JUDY AND FRANNIE FOR YOUR MORAL SUPPORT. 1 MCGILLIN S OLDE ALE HOUSE 1 Established 1860 1310 DRURY STREET Philadelphia, Pa. BEN KING SHOE CENTER DECKER'S dvemums Famous Brands High Grade Men's ' STATIONARY STORES a A Cancellation Shoes AAA-EEE-5 to 14 HDQ-Conductive 81 Ripple Sole Shoes 1216 Chffsmul Sffeef WA 34644 I into WAlnut 5-4761 224 s. l1th.Street Cherry Hill Moll, NJ- NO 3 8622 1gIC Clll lllllsu' A THE CHARTER HOUSE ' IRV'S LUNCH M1015 RESTAURANT Right Across from the Accident Ward wel A HR. h A f J H , For Take Out and Delivery from IQ t cross rom enerson s can MA 7-6538 Mum Enhance Newly Renovated g t0 Telephone for Take-Out Orders: FOURTH SUCCESSFUL YEAR tl WA 2-2961 WA 2-3107 101. If lt's Photographic, You'll Find It at Sgavfgavbfgv ,Ap PETS Phot RoShl1NEEl'Df Inc. World's Larguest Record and Audio Dealer ' , ograp lc upp les' ln Philadelphia Located at nlndugllles Specialists in Supplies and Apparatus 1125 Chesmut Street Elo- rk for Clinical and Medical Photography lrial 11 -401 rlvallla 19 'f Klngsley 5-4359 1304 Walnut Street A l 263 CLINTON PHARMACY AND LUNCHEONETTE 100 Spruce Street PHILADELPHIA, PA. Phone: WA 3-4066 JEFFERSON BARBER SHOP Directly Across from the Hospital 129 SOUTH 10th STREET Philadelphia, Pa. H. ROYER SMITH CO. The World's Record Shop Most Diversified Stock of Phonograph Records in the U.S.A. 10th 8. Walnut Streets Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 Phone: 215 WA 2-2023 CLINTON LAUNDRY 8. DRY CLEANING Reliable Service at Reasonable Prices 301 South 11th Street WA 3-3151 Est. 1930 MARY DOUGHERTY CARD AND GIFT SHOP Full Line of Hummels 134 South 11th Street l Supplying the Medical Student, Interne and Practicing Physician J. BEEBER COMPANY, INC. 1109 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Visit our newly-designed consultation, waiting and examination rooms. Our services include layout, decorating service and low, long-term financing EDDIE'S CORNER Good Food at a Fair Price 107 SOUTH TENTH WALNUT GRILL BAR - RESTAURANT Club Breakfast - Special Luncheon Full Course Dinners 117-119 South 10th Street WAlnut 3-0272 Philadelphia, Pa. ADOLPH SOEFFING 8. CO. 2010 Wheatsheaf Lane PHILADELPHIA, PA. MA 7-8563 TED'S SOCIETY HILL RESTAURANT Delicious Broiled Steaks-Our Specialty Philadelphia, Pa. Take Out Orders Free Delivery FROM A FRIEND CAMERAS PROJECTORS, SCREENS, ENLARGERS, FULL LINE OF DARKROOM SUPPLIES AND EVERYTHING NEEDED IN PHOTOGRAPHY. KLEIN 8. GOODMAN, INC. 132 S.11th St. WA 2-1216 Dedicated of hea McNeil I phan REFEREI For THE SA BRANCH 0 Iawgp, X X IPIIIG, Pc. T llty I Delivery -ii' - LINE UI NEEDED Dedicated to the continued advancement of health through drug research McNeil Laboratories, Inc. C. Fort Washington, Pa. pharmaceutical manufacturers REFERENCE LABORATORY SERVICE For Physicians and Hospitals THE SAMSON LABORATORIES BRANCH or Bio-sclENcE LABoRAroRiEs 1619 Spruce Street, Philadelphia 3, Pa. PEnnypacker 5-6900 For Best Quality and Value in Intern Suits Made to Your Measurements Stop in and See Us or Write for Samples and Price D. WILLIAMS 8. COMPANY Designers and Manufacturers Since 1876 246 SOUTH 11th STREET PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. ARAX ONE HOUR CLEANERS 8. SHIRT LAUNDERERS 240 South 1 1th Street 'A' Specializing in Doctor's Laboratory Coats and Nurses' Uniforms CHARLES SHAID OF PENNSYLVANIA, INC. Painting 8: Decorating Fabric Wall Covering A Shaid Better 2141 Mt. Vernon Street Phila., Pa. WILLIAMS, BROWN 8. EARLE, INC. Serving the Medical Profession Since 1885 Medical Laboratory Equipment Microscopes - Stethoscopes Diagnostic Equipment - Blood Pressure Equipment Clinical Equipment - Hematology Sets Tuning Forks - Percussion Hammers 904-06 Chestnut Street Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 WA 3-0882 WA 3-0312 JEFFERSON DRUGS coMPLETE cosmetic DEPARTMENT R-SPECIALISTS N.E. COR. 10th AND WALNUT STS. MULTILITHING MAILING Cold Type Composition Sequential Card Composition JOHNSON 8. PRINCE Inc. ' 214 So. 12th Street Philadelphia 7, Pa. PEnnypacker 5-1717 CENTRAL LUNCHEONETTE 1034 Spruce Street Nite Time Snacks Breakfast Lunch-Dinner COMPLIMENTS OF WEST CHEMICAL PRODUCTS, INC. Authorized Dealer for Philadelphia Gas Works Phones: LOcust 7-2426 7-2395 GEORGE E. SPENCE SONS, INC. Registered Plumbing and Heating Sales and Service Custom Kitchens N.W. Cor. 20th 8. Pine Sts. Philadelphia, Pa. 19103 Compliments of MADONNA'S TUXEDOS 813 South 10th Street WA 3-3341 For the Very Finest in Formal Attire Bus. WA 51535 Kipselq MenucA N, GRI IIIOCIIIIIIIPOUSATIS Catering 215:wAlnuf 2-2493 I E. C. Camera 1015 CHEST Philac GC LINI X R' 5- MCCI Cv 16' LY 9.4519 A I 1885 sure 'els rs X INC. Iorks In Service 19103 Bus. WA 5-2535 Weekdays 9-7 P.M. Saturdays 9-6 P.M. The Sundays 11-2 P.M. gasoline wlulnl' that cleans your carburetor Q , and Klpsely Sweet Shoppe keeps it AMERICAN, GREEK 8. ORIENTAL PASTRIES Clean propriefor 212 South 11th Street THOMAS POUSATIS Philadelphia 7, Pa. AHanHcRichfieIdCompqny Catering to Special Occasions 215: WAInut 2-2498 WALTER O. ROTH, Owner BUSINESS FURNITURE CQ. 909 WALNUT STREET E. C. WALTER MANTZ PHILA., PA. WA 3.1344 Camera 8. Instrument Repair 1015 CHESTNUT STREET - ROOM 621 Our Professional Design Phll0delPhl0, PG- 19107 Staff is at Your Service WA 2-2600 G0RD0N'DAV'S RALPH E. HARRIS ASSOCIATES LINEN SUPPLY CO. PRINTING PhI'C'de'P I 919 wqlnur sneer Philadelphia 7, Pa. Floral Arrangements R. S. McCRACKEN 84 SONS, INC. Plants and Gardens Distributor of Linde Liquefied Gases Hops 1 Cryogenic Equipment BONATSOS FLOWER S CE 6-5151 Philadelphia, Pa. 19123 Hfh 8. Sansom Streets 133 Soulh lolh Sffee' 1625 Princeton Avenue philadelphia 7, Pg, Philadelphia 7, PC'- LY - - 9 4519 Trenton, NJ. 08638 WA 5-7440 WA 3 1330 WITH SINCERE APPRECIATION WE THANK The PATRCNS, HCSPITALS and BUSINESSMEN for their CENEROUS SUPPORT of the 1969 CLINIC X Z . The Brothers of ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Extends Best Wishes to the Class of 1969 We are deeply ihdebted f GLORIA ZOSKI and BILL BRUTON 5 WE WISH TO THANK WM. T. CCOKE PUBLISHING and JCDHN C. UHRSPRUNG for their OUTSTANDING SERVICE and GUIDANCE 1, f --H-N . .. -,..a.,, .V . - A ---- ' - . 1 Q - . Li l' ,, -- In , , ..,, --- h---:A---35.1.4 Y I --, - ..,, - ....,- rf' .-... , N ,, V - -1L'r'1. -vwbz- ..f----' .T T -r',- '7 -V - 1 4 , - mf. y 7 , , ,, . ,.. .- W, - . 2 1 - ' mfg . -,,,, , -1:- ,. A. 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Suggestions in the Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

1977

Jefferson Medical College - Clinic Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979


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