Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences - Stethoscope Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)
- Class of 1956
Page 1 of 162
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 162 of the 1956 volume:
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l 1 Q- 3 I 1. 4 W. 1 i I 1 Y 1 W P Gen. 378 S146 1956 The Stethoscope 20 . OO ,M Man-ccrsmszfcr Lass-mn? GE2EG3'ZI 'r -' --' -' --r sw-M, :wigs , HZg2:11.'::j1E . , 'kigjg Indepsmzeatce, 5-E859 Ad' lg Y i n w . i A I A K , W 4 ,hui THE umWqglwyalqalllmmqnyyyrgnw13 ZX X 'W'fP9 'f 'f'hf 1 ' :fzmucf r.ram?W' F x, -VV F' IQETVY-.1 f it Nmdrisi fm' lnds,,a,,g- C01 44 X MID CONTINENT PUBLIC LlBF1A1I IH X X, f DONAT ION: X 4? STETHOSCOPE DECEMBER 1996 1956 fx, 'x .V ,, 1, .. ... .' h . '12 xx t . X Q .- K- Q 1 ' 1 ffm' J Tr fv ax '34 f-,M ,lf l DEDICATION ff To L. Raymond Hall, D. O,, F. A. C. O. S., who has conscien tiously given to his students both of his vast knowledge in the field of oncology and the inspiration of his personal integrity as a physician the 1956 issue of the STETHOSCOPE is respect fully dedicated. pam D FOREWORD . . . Education has been defined as the mental and moral discipline gained by study and instruction. The Kansas City College of Osteopathy and Surgery by its very nature educates: more than that. it teaches the art of healing in its most complete form. The science of osteopathic medicine is winning in- creasing recognition throughout the world. In keeping with the advances of medical science, the college con- tinues to progress each year. This year will see many advances and improvements. In accordance with the spirit of progress ol the pro- fession and of the college, this yearbook will attempt to demonstrate the completeness of the education received by the osteopathic physicians of the future. THE STAFF 4 - ,.41 ,.7- Max E. Bretschneider .,..,, Hilary Bush .,,..,......... Elwood B. Coile ....,,, Eugene B. Sayles ,,,,.,. Alvin G. Hause ......... Albert R. Kastman ....... H. F. Nelson ,,,,,,..,,.,.,,,,,, Ralph B. Stromberg ........ Dallas R. Alderman ..,,.,, Claude V. Cochran ......, Robert U. Davidson .....,, BOARD of TRUSTEES Term Expires April, 1956 Term Expires April, 1957 Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri .. Kansas City, Kansas Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Kansas Term Expires April. 1958 Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri l0hr1 l. Kopp ................ Kansas City, Missouri Claude V. Cochran .,.......................... ..............,..........,,. ..,...,...............,....,.....,,,,, .,., , ..,,,.,,,.,,,,,,..,,,,,....,. P r e sident Elwood B. Coile ,.......... ,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,A V ice-President Robert U. Davidson ..... ...., S ecretary-Treasurer ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS of the COLLEGE Luther W, Swift, A. B., D. Harold W. Witt, A. B., D. Dorsey A. Hoskins, D. O., William A. Lohrey ...,...,.. Mona W. Smith . .... Iohn A. Rindone, A. B.. B. Grace H. Hall . . . 525:75 PTPEQQE' :::'-'ir-fa pu ang 0o'o :: 4134: :ammo s'5wEf rn :QS EFS? F1 'ipgw OE'm:-13 5I?0:n0L. E.f U'u --onFo 53:30 :1'-E? :r' 211.049 Um U5 Q -1....n m 'U' :Ot-Qin'-J -zily' QMEITF pT 3P'Fn Wi'U o:u?I ' ami' r--5? 00359 rr1OPbfc1 3'-55 3:03-m iiiflii 'LU-59 is-aa O:-can N055 1575? ':':: Ui' I' '::: 'IOI: ive: SIE I 'alas 355 1 G3 51 ....1: 1 :-T922 :ss 2 mines 9.11 5 giglzg 9.25.5 'if-?IE 9301 gioi H-C25 naffrs E1 T':: fD:mQ: 01252 '59-52 gssis 519-1? 3315155 g-i9.iE U '2 2 5: 21902 59952 sW5':'z n.Q55 Q.--KD' Q,-D--: Cionni 'x:2: 1 C 4. g4 El5'2 QOEQ: o -1: -':-Q.: rn-.L-I rv-.. -1 no: mmg 5'-5F'g ':1?Qg.S QmnGW0Qm 'D D-mow ,gn 0 IQ. gag,-555521993 .. ' un mg-QQEEILQQEEE. OO as S .B. ....... , .L. ..... .. and HOSPITALS Teaching Program . Superintendent, Conley Maternity Hospital Medical Director ot Osteopathic Hospital Director' of Hospital Laboratories ,, Business Manager, Osteopathic Hospital Registrar Librarian , .lv .f Secretory ot Clinic 'rt I : H '1 ' f'IL3 ' .rl 1 A ' W l ,gillnaggg ini- .Jw fi ? ,'u,,. x.,--.0 , ' V 4-1-J. ffl-- --A..- ' Proposed new clinic building for Kansas City College of Osteopcxthy and Surgery , NN 5' T r' ' ' -xx X ' ' w i l z 2 xl -W' M 4 l X. 1 h . RL ' Q, 7-35 E a 'ff . .N ', l 'll 1 c. c 1 I :ls f I ' ! if , 5 Q 4. 154 r 7 + A Y Q 1 F ,yn 0 Q E ..-.-1. ,- A 15lll!AY NCS'r'AL ,mba , -X i D OP-R1 ' lg v- .. 1 I . NX. , , I X I ru-. A- --,,.uu. mmm f -r- -'- - W-- ji'ofQ 1jjjl Q- i l A mv e a u u I vs X W a l L' KN?- Drawing of plans oi the campus with the new clinic building addition I - I ' I ! I I . I I I I :I I I I fff-eflwfvvff III I I if Lilff' I L ' :xiii I 1 ' I I I I I I W Lg:-jg -W-wc' r I I ' I ' , I I I I f I I I 3 I 4I' II I I I V I ' I I I . 0 NW X ADMINISTRATION ' Q .J hffln' ax A MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN You pick up a copy of a college yearbook. You look at the pictures, you look at the printed words. As you turn the pages, you see before you, a magic world. In this world are characters, pictures. exotic adventures, a way oi life which leads into the tomorrow. Let your mind become engaged with the magic oi the s:enes, the des- criptive passages, the characters who are portrayed in the parts. Let your own mind take over, your own imagination, take over and expand them as you will and then you are the student: you are one of the actors in the pictures: you are the one who said the words of the squibs and wrote the legends of the pictures. Thus you live now, or again as a student in a world without limits. Yes! Yearbooks are iine treasures oi the past, the present, and the future. ' K. I. DAVIS, A. B., D. o. I I 1 , '31 43? Q Ak -.1 J' if P ,vent 1 2 Vgx .- f sffv I1 + '.. N VEHNER I. AMES1 DO- fx Instructor in Practice 3 A L' fpfg Y'-G 3 1 FRANK H. CAFFIN. D.O. I H- A' ' Instructor, Clinical Psychiatry 'S .Q 1 af. If I 'T' 'E ALBERT A. CHOQUETTE, D.O. : F- Professor of Surgery fUroloqyl If gk ffl E. FREEMAN CLAXTON, B.S., M.A. 1 Chief Technician, Out-PatientLabora- A tory Instructor in Clinical Pathology c X2 ' ' WILBUR V. COLE, B.S., M.S., D.O. ' Q. Professor of Principles li DOROTHY E. CRANE, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology A. B. CRITES, AB., DO., M.D,, 4 F.O,C.O. Professor of Ophthalmology, Othorhinolaryngoloqy and Plastic s ..X - Surgery I . FLOYD E. DUNN, D.O. 5' Professor of Practice fPsychiatryl I SN A WILLIAM A, FLANNERY, A.B.. M,S D,O. 3 fg, Assistant Professor of Surgery if 'T ,I ' V 5 IOHN W. GEIGER, D.O.. P.o.c.o. A lfl Professor of Ophthalmology and If Otorhinolarynqology . . V all P ' . , v 4. , Q Q' artovsa N. GILLUM. Bs.. D.O. - S' ' F.A,C.N.. F.A.C.O.I. -j-. If 9 P' Professor of Practice 1' AI WILLIAM KARL GRAHAM, A.B., DO ' ' Assistant Professor of Practice - 'Ella L. RAYMOND I-IALL, D.O.. F.A.C,O.S, Coordinator, Cancer Teaching Pro- gram, Associate Professor of Surgery, . Associate Professor of Principles and i 'R 1 g P Practice L. FRANCIS L. HARMON, D.O. ' - Director of Clinics T, tb' Assistant Professor of Practice GRANT R. C. HOLCOMB, D.O. Assistant Director of Clinics J V Assistant Professor of Practice I DORSEY A. HOSKINS. A.B., D.O, N Q. Professor of Pathology ' J , in 1 . -I ' HAZEL HOSKINS, A.B,, D.O. 'fx ' ' I 'Q' H k Associate Professor of Pathology ...A any A . IOHN M. HOWARD. D.O. ' Assistant Professor of Practice A lPediatrics7 - -'ze f . . H- A Q, 'JN' ,n,.,u,i N ,, -3 ' I' 1-ao? 'T.m N IF' y 'bww-uqx , .J nag 's,o D Y lt ' K .X 5 ba rr s f' ' ,J Q ,fi N' A - ? r , I I 5 s J- A5 4 '4' M-A .gif N.. , i 434 TIM fir 'ft GI I :mm ' ' .ZS-i '1' ,.. at R AK lg, MQ5 'bv' :N , ' W. y. A4 . su.. - ... - -Y ,J - v . A 'NW'- waq .lt P2-f -5:5 xx N, ... wig W ,. 'uh . A -f . af' ' r -U --fl 5 1.3. A , ' 2, I A 25251 0' '- .X Q I for off me f -an fv- .- lv -.qf . . gi ---4 lrjj , . .Ei I LEANORA B. IOHNSTON, D.O. Bursar MAMIE E. IOHNSTON, D.O. Professor of Practice fPediatricsJ Professor of Gynecology HAROLD I. MCANALLY, D.O.. F.A.C,O.S. Professor of Surgery THOMAS 'I', MCGRATH, D.O. Professor of Surgery fOrtl1opedicl PATRICK MARTIN, B.S., M,S. Assistant Professor of Biochemistry and Bacteriology WILLIAM H. MARTIN, D.O. Instructor in Principles and Practice I. EUGENE MIELCAREK, B,S., M.S, Assistant Professor of Anatomy CLAYTON H. MORGAN, A,B,, M.S,. PI1.D,, M.D,, D.O, Professor of Anatomy Director of Graduate Education Director of Rehabilitation Clinic LAURA I. MORRIS Assistant Librarian THEODORE NORRIS, BIS., M.S.. Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physiology ADREN M. PRICE, D.O., F.A.O.C.Pr. Professor of Surgery fProctologyl MURRAY T. PRITCHARD, A.B.. B.S., MPH. Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine, Supervisor of Oute Patient Laboratory HERBERT D, RAMSAY, BS., M.S., D.O. Professor of Physiology and Pharmacology IOHN A. RINDONE, A.B., B.S.L. Librarian IAMES L. ROWLAND, B.A., M.P.I-I. Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine HERVEY S. SCOTT, D.O. Professor of Surgery fRadioloqy7 MONA W. SMITH Registrar MILTON S. STEINBERG, D.O. Associate Professor of Practice Director of Heart Center 11 ' f..-.Q DWIGHT w STREITENBERGER D o Associate Professor of Opthalmology and Otorhinolaryngology vt' LUTHER W. SWHET, A.B., D.O. Professor of Obstetrics Superintendent Conley Maternity Hospital RICHARD G. TAYLOR, B.S., A,M Professor of Biochemistry and Bacteriology FREDERICK A. TREFFER, D.O. , Assistant Professor of Principles , f A ke w . w, ALFRED B. COUCH, I..L.B. Lecturer on Iurisprudence ROY V. CULP, D.O. Associate Professor of Anesthesia LEE E. DAVIDSON. D.O. Assistant Professor of Obstetrics HARVE I. HELTON, A.B,, D.O. Assistant Professor of Radiology RESIDENTS, Dano P. Arneman, D.O. Internal Medicine Eugene F. Augter, D.O. Surgery Dale W. Burroff, D.O. Urology Mary Lou Butterworth, D.O. Anesthesia Lloyd W. Ficke, A.B., D.O. Pathology Andrew Martimick, A.B,, D.O. Pediatrics Myral A. Coatney, D.O. Robert H. Compton, B.S., D.O. George S. Iennings, D.O. Gerald N. Iohnson, D.O. ff Nl FACULTY QNot Pictured MARGARET H. IONES, D.O.. F.A.C.O.S., F.A.C.O.G. Professor of Surgery Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology HAROLD W. WITT, A.B., D.O. Assistant Professor of Practice Medical Director, Osteopathic Hospital ' ELIAS E. ZIHUL, A.B., D.O. Assistant Professor of Practice MYRON D. IONES, D.O. Associate Professor of Practice IPediatricsl LELAND S. LARIMORE, D,O.,F.O.C.O. Clinical Professor of Opthalmology and Otorhinoloryngology ANTHONY E. SCARDINO. D.O. Professor of Practice IDermatoloqyl ESTHER SMOOT, D.O. Associate Professor of Principles FELLOWS and INTERNS 1955-'56 RESIDENTS Dwight H. Hause, A.B., D.O. Surgery Melvin E. lohnson, D.O. Internal Medicine Thomas Lamb, D.O. Radiology William F. Luebbert, D.O. Orthopedics William I. Monoghan, D.O. Orthopedics FELLOWS Edward C. Murray, B.S., D.O. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat INTERNS Alex T. Kowalenko, B.S., D.O. Norvin W. Lewis, Ir., A.B., D.O. Anthony E. Marquglio, B.S., D.O. Iames W. Maxwell, B,S., D.O. Charles A. Pignotti, D.O. Obstetrical-Gynecological Surgery Roy McGregor Slick, D.O. Internal Medicine Robert Springer, D.O. Obstetrics and Gynecology William A. Voit, D.O. Pathology Frank M. Weaver, B.S,, D.O. Obstetrics and Gynecology Harold Vard Nelson, A.B., D.O. Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat lames E. Mhoon, B.S.. D.O. Noel Purcell, D.O. loseph W, Shube, A.B., D.O. Thomas R. Turner, D.O. ' DOROTHY CARRIKER X Secretary to the President Z r S f 4 . W 1' it .-Q. , 5, MRS. MAUD COLLINS ,Q W- ts, Pharmacy Attendant J XS-'Ar ,QW,' , ? lf' ', DOROTHY CRUMP F I Clinical Clerk 4 4 MRS. GRACE HALL ,- Clinic Secretary E .. 5 'B f 1 Pi Mas. FRANCES HENDRIX 2' 6' sl L- Accountant T ' xx N HELEN MILLER L -. 1 Office Clerk BETTY MULNIX A Secretary to the Dean . ' .Q 5 , .5- 63' 2 1' . xy ' ' . ' L, , MRS. FERN RISING , ' Clinical Clerk ,., I fo' 5 , , an ' ws tv Q, MRS. HAZEL SWAIN W. Richard Agee. D.O. Verner I. Ames. D.O. Carroll S. Anderson, D.O. N. W. Anderson. D.O. Arthur L. Antry, D.O. I. Myron Auld. D.O. lames C. Bolin. D.O. Arthur B. Boyer. D.O. Israel W. Caplitz, D.O. Albert A. Choquette. D.O. Wilbur V. Cole, D.O. Olal Coleman, D.O. Lyle W. Cook, D.O. Theodore Corcanges. D.O. A. B. Crites. D.O. Roy V. Culp, D.O. Lee E. Davidson, D.O. Kenneth I. Davis, D.O. lames A. DiRenna, D.O. Floyd E. Dunn, D.O. Richard L. Edwards. D.O. Emory O. Fisher, D.O. William A. Flannery, D.O. ACTIVE STAFF ROSTER Hospitals of the Kansas City College of Osteopathy and Surgery fcomprising the basis for clinical instructionl Ioseph A. Fogarty. D.O. William M. Fowler, D.O. Iohn W. Geiger, D.O. Grover N. Gillum, D.O. William Karl Graham. D.O. L. Raymond Hall, D.O. William Hand. D.O. Francis L. Harmon. D.O. Harve I. Helton, D.O. Wilbur T. Hill. D.O. Grant R. C. Holcomb, D.O. Dorsey A. Hoskins. D.O. Hazel Hoskins, D.O. Iohn M. Howard. D.O. Willard T. Hubbard, D.O. Allred L. Iohnson, D.O. Sydney I. lohnson, D.O. Leonora B. lohnston. D.O. Mamie E. Iohnston, D.O. Margaret H. Iones, D.O. Myron D. Iones. D.O. Leland S. Larimore, D.O. William l. Legg. D.O. A. E. Linville. D.O. Mervin R. Lippman, D.O. Harold l. McAnally. D.O. Thomas T. McGrath, D.O. Charles H. McPheeters .D.O. William H. Martin, D.O. C. H. Morgan, D.O. Charles W. Mount. D.O. Richard P. Mucie. D.O. Robert W. Parker, D.O. Arden M. Price, D.O. Herbert D. Ramsay, D.O. E. D. Reese. D.O. William H. Riche, D.O. lacob Rosen, D.O. Samuel Salman. D.O. Phillip P. Saperstein. D.O. Anthony E. Scardino, D.O. Hervey S. Scott. D.O. Richard C. Shecl-c. D.O. Clyde M. smith, D.O. Esther Smcot. D.O. Willard F. Spiller. D.O. Glenn W. Springer, D.O. Milton S. Steinberg. D.O. Dwight W. Streitenberger. Luther W. Swift. D.O. D.O Frederick W. Thompson. D.O. Billie L. Tomlinson, D.O. Robert R. Tonkens, D.O. Solvin W. Tonkens, D.O. Frederick A. Treller. D.O. W. H. Van de Grift. D.O. Arlan E. Vaughn, D.O. Dorothy M. Watkins, D.O. lames P. Watt, D.O. Friedman Weinberg, D.O. Sibley I. Whim, D.O. Eugene P. Wise, D.O. Harold W. Witt, D.O. loseph Yasso. D.O. Charles Zammar, D.O. Fred l. Zammar. D.O. Gerald Zauder, D.O. Elias E. Zirul, D.O. , ,DX X ,ff Q ',f 12:- ,E'5I1 ' i'iff' L sf ,,2--'iiiillll7fii- lf? f In It I W' If t Xt 1 In nl i. tt 5 f sl I es . sf. if-vi-1-41. .x Inu- f Z I I I I ,I I i l H00 Y N' T573 I t W ' X , .X asf , 'I X U -IIwwIII'fII ,ff 1 x slis- '.'v 1,l,,Im'n' all 7 'W T F16 ll X N tl' f ,th s1'2'g '25 I' jj . X I Xf D X, X, - If I I INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDENT BODY accurate picture of the vital organ oi the body, the heart, so does this issue of its phases - academic, clinical, social, fraternal X I , , I X I I asf' J V. - N I the Stethoscope aim to present the pulsebeat of the college, student life, in all if I O , mp. Rik 1,5 K Q H WI N six W Im I X it , D .. g H II I V tr, - , ' fjfx X -' X f XR . .X .ff 4,1 I , 7 1 X ll W 45 I A O Il I '59 K f X j X f Qs' I I ff N ' I X x x X K -ii ,ann X. Alztir.: Y, AT W 4 . , ' J ,A ' 5 4 Cf 5 3 H, -, g 1-v ----, Lf if .f I . 4 YQ? FRESHMEN 1 - a y 3 x , ' Q v 'V ' ' st. - '- ..: , V ll X The making of a doctor is a long and difficult process. It embraces much more than three or four years of premedical preparation and four years of intensive training in an osteopathic college-for the young student fresh out of college it involves a complete metamorphosis of his entire personality. There is no facet of his life that will remain untouched by the goal he has determined for himself. Emotions, ethics. family and social life-all must be adjusted to his new role of student-doctor. By graduation time the carefree freshman has become a man of dignity and purpose-truly a physician. Perhaps the term carefree freshman is a trifle misleading. Their arrival on the campus about the first of September, complete with shiny microscope and awestruck look has been preceded by many 16 PHILIP ACCARDO. San Antonio, Texas MOHTON AIZIC, B. A., New York City MARCUS ALALOUF, B. A., Philadelphia, Pa. IAMES ALTENES, A. B.. Torrance, California STUART BARON. B. S.. Union. New Iersey MARK BETTERMAN, A. B.. South Euclid, Ohio anxious moments. First, an application for admission to the college had to be filed: then transcripts of college credits were forwarded. and lastly, a personal interview with the admissions committee oi the col- lege held. When finally the letter of acceptance ar- rived, it meant the beginning of a new way of life. For the single student it is good-bye to family and friends for four years: for the married student it meant relocating the entire family, with all its attendant problems of housing fat student pricesl and jobs. To acclimate the new student, three days of orientation are scheduled by the college. These in- clude a complete physical examination, interviews with the faculty, addresses by the heads of the various departments, registration, and a banquet to acquaint the new student with the men with whom A., . B.. ission pts of rsonal e col- ce ar- of life. ly and meant endant obs. ays ot ese in- erviews of the quet to whom BERTRAND BLOCK, B. A.. Brooklyn. N. Y. ROY BOBBITT. Denton, Texas .9 - QL -X at B' X A r ff .. Q .R 1 , . :grads T N . 2. wi o ' 1 f 1 , 5 f- -lt. Q5 4 it ui-- Qf, . . git- 5.52 Qc! ' A b 5- ' C' ll ' ' 'N i V' . fz r - . , X he will work and study for four years. On the Monday following orientation week, work begins in earnest. In the mid-September Missouri heat you will find the aspiring young osteopathic physician carefully preparing a cadaver for anatomi- cal dissection, while the odor of formaldehyde rises in the air and attaches itself permanently to his person. Carefully, laboriously, the dissection proceeds. With the students working in pairs, every nerve. every muscle in the human body is exposed, identi- fied, Committed to memory. For a thorough know- ledge of anatomy is essential to the education of q phygicignj it is the cornerstone upon which the basic sciences are built- ANDREW BOGDAN. B. S.. Farrell, Pa. WILLIAM BOONE, B. S., Kansas City. Mo. CHESTER BOOTS, Wyandotte, Mich. FRANK BRADLEY, B. S.. Orange. Texas To the twelve hours of anatomy each week are added other vital courses: embryology, the study of young organisms in early stages of development: histology, the minute structure of cells: and princi- ples. Later in the year biochemistry, oncology, physi- ology, osteopathic principles, medical psychology and preventive medicine. All are introduced into the freshman schedule. By now, the shiny microscope is showing signs of wear from being bumped up and down stairs, in and out of cars, as it travels from home to school and back again. By now also, the awestruck look has been replaced by one of furious concentration as the pressure of work increases, papers fall due. tests loom. Typewriters pound incessantly, coffeepots 17 ....-- V' A -fi ' Q. up i 1 1- RAYMOND BUCCI A B Philadelphia Pa I ROBERT ciivuazn. B. s.. Cleveland, Ohio VITALE CIAVATTA, B. A., Orange, New lersey x wr- is boil, and all night study sessions become routine. The end of the first trimester finds everyone in a state of pre-examination tension-this, too, is an integral part of a doctor's education. The discipline imposed by examination deadlines prepares him for such future competition as state boards: even the sleepless nights spent in study are a preparation tunknown to himself, perhapsl for the many sleepless nights every practicing physician experiences. Examinations concluded, the second trimester opens-there are new courses, new professors, but the some old routine of study. study, study, which by now is becoming an accepted way of life. H Despite the necessity of intensified learning dur- ing the four years spent in medical school there is, 18 if , ROBERT CONNAIR. Dayton, Ohio ANTHONY CORONA, B. S., Miami, Fla. ROBERT CRAWFORD, B. S Brilliant, Ohio of course, a lighter side to student life. The faculty honors the freshman at a banquet during orientation week: the student council sponsors several dances during the school year, a Christmas party for the entire family, and a picnic in the spring. The fra- ternities fete the freshmen with a series of rush parties during November. There are, moreover, other scho- lastic, medical, and religious organizations on cam- pus. Yet. even when the aspiring student-doctor sheds his white lab coat for a business suit or a sport jacket, his conversation and thought remains the same: courses, professors, therapy, exams. The art of healing is his world, and he takes it with him everywhere. 2 F873 - -': ' Q lt fl- Q. , PHILLIP DATTILO. Kansas City, Mo. DONALD DUSHAY, B. A.. Buffalo, New York RUDOLPH EDWARDS, B. S.. Whigham, Georgia RAY ENGLISH. Kansas City, Mo. E 2-5 A i ' 'Via MURRAY FELDSHER, B. A.. . v Q . ,guna AMA- ff ..... ,if X . ,A i ,Ls v And so the year progresses-second trimester, Christmas break, exams, third trimester. May returns with its warmth and brightness, and it is almost with impatience that the final exams are taken. As classes are dismissed for the summer, the em- bryonic doctor evaluates the changes made in one Brooklyn, New York MOHTON FOX. Tonowanda. New York short year, Not only has he assimilated a wealth of scientific material, but he has learned new methods oi study, the discipline of cr new way oi lite. He has left behind completely and permanently the old of the university campus or the business field. His new world oi medicine, with its tremendous responsibil- ities and privileges, is beginning to shape his life. 4 S1 Q . Ag 1 s Jj ,Q S t. 1 N .fy . I 1 I , ,. . - . A K 19 ..a---- i Z' X' I , - V , f X 1 L Q Q u.,,- , I 'ttf GEORGE HELSLEY, B. S., Memphis, Tenn. '.':'C3 5' as fy! Q, Gainesville, Flu. gf CHARLES HELTON, B, S, Coxbin, Kentucky B S,. THOMAS HETZEL, Dayton. Ohio WILLIAM HILLYARD, B. A.. Lakewood, Ohio Kansas City, Missouri ROBERT GILDAY B Bronxville, N. Y JOHN HANLEY Ado, Ohio i 1- 3 yr in-0 X 'iw .- gj, - - ,. A ., tg i wr A ' A 'A LEONARD HOCK. Walters. Okla. RALPH HUBBARD B. A 'X Oklahoma City,'Okla.-l I fd ' , - LYNN HUEBLER, Wayne, Michigan RAYMOND HUGHES, B. S.. San Antonio, Texas f,..,.... 5 . IOHN KALATA, B. S.. Erie. Pa. , LEONARD KATZ, B. S.. Philadelphia. Pa. l Q i - . 'if Q ,W . ,y ' U' ' f x ' 1 ,, X ,O sl- I , ? ' gk , . .lin f sf wzjf lx f i f . 'W A Q R wig. ,653 'P' Q gt- CN 'fn- ln A51 f..' I . l 4, rr I N 'A A i sr, s - 'KI xi ,L , : , . ., ya. 3 ' ' .4 . A ' .N . ' . sr. 'fl-ix gwii Qgxg, ,-K YF- 'D' 1'J,f,?Qr5 lf. X , -,..-Ash. ARNOLD KAUFMAN, B. A.. Brooklyn, New York LOUIS KOVACS, B. S.. Pittsburgh, Pa. NATHAN KRACHMAN, M New York City WILLIAM KHEBETHE. Kansas City, Mo. ALLAN LEBOWITZ, B. A.. Buffalo, New York ARMAND LUPO, B. A., Philadelphia, Pa. v 'T T CAHMIN MAIETTA, B. S., Patterson, New Iersey p K 'i , . PX . Q Cv- 'E PHILIP MALVIN, A. B.. M A sv- T 'V' Athens, Georgia T T - 4 f if X , :L , ,K , 1 I ROBERT MARES, B S . 1 '-1, vi-af,-4 , Paxmc, Ohio ,T ' ' ' ' ' T I , .V ,E 1 Q ., PETER MAHQUEZ, B. A., E X' xv. Albuquerque, New Mexico , 2 , ' 'WS w , T Q, 2 nn I - . ,K fl RY, I 3 A X f ARNOLD MASTERS, B. s. ' X. S Philadelphia, Pc. I A 'Qu 'O' , ... I f T A 5 Cm MATHWSON N A . fs A , A Ponmfmifhigfm L W 'iffiff f. .45 iii? . 0. T A . ' I , N I N 5 , E EUGENE McCLELLAN. I Delco, North Carolina , T I T 3 f:r S R, IUVK '95 ' ,' IACK MEKRAN, 4 Y I Miami, Flcxida ': ss, '41 'C' f I' , - GEORGE MELLONE, A. B.. Opu-Locke, Flondo '- DONALD MOGERMAN B S Umvexsxty Cxty Mo WILLIAM MOORE Kxrksvxlle Mo qs- 'N- LOUIS ORLANDO B S Kansas Cnty Mo ZZ 111' VERA PATTERSON. Parsons. Kansas T' A IAMES PEAK, B. s.. , fx ...x ,2 'H L 'R 'WA 4 Dallas. Texas - TQ , . s.f-- 'V , ' 'Yau I -js V. was ' N,--' gi' DONALD PETERSON. B, A.. ' Louise. Texas I 'V 2.3.1 , ALBERT PPAUTH. Kansas City. Mo. , ,' 5 ln-:VYQQ A kA 'Nx url . , . .qv DAVID PINES, B. A.. t r 'N Edgewood. Maryland Sr' ' 4-W' . X 5--' , 9 '22, ' Et fluff Q. PHILIP QUINN, A. B.. Netcong, New Iersey I I 1 GERALD REZNICK. B. S.. Detroit, Michigan W X F j A A K. 46. f N. . - , S, ,A A 4, - . ' A ALEXANDER ROBEHTS, It ' in ' Detroit, Michigan A 'Ci' ..,. M , 9:-W' ' ELIA RONCKETTI, B. S. A Brooklyn. New York Q Gr. THOMAS ROSKOS, B. S.. Sharon. Pa. ' V '73 GY - Visa - f My p. aura W 5, ERNEST SACHSE. B. A.. , ' H -.rmwv Fort Worth. Texas 3, 1 4- 4 K , I XT 13, , - A .4-'ss ff Q.. 'Y KENNETH SAUNDERS, A. B New York' City -vp-. ef S54 K9 ' A L Q' N ji. ..... V C' ,x - ...ff 4 .81 ,. N A W, ' 'ON 1' K, i G, 'V W ,. Rs 3, -v , .Y -- :- 5 X i X 1 R A I fs? -,,. 'if 9 X 7.3 I 44 mmm ld ,Q i IAMES SCARBOROUGH. B. A.. Piney View. W. Vo. HUGO SCARINZI, B. S., Pittsburgh. Pu. DAN SCARNECCHIA, B. S.. Niles, Ohio MARVIN SCHERMERHORN. Detroit, Michigan BILLY SEALEY, B. S.. Scm Angelo, Texas ROBERT SKUFCA, B. S.. Columbus. Georgia 3 7 ff ' R -v-aww 1' ,. -5-i rl' 1 lfdiim ROBERT STAAB. Tulsa, Oklcx. 'PS if N iw A VINCENT SUNDRY, B. S., ,wg 'v A Allison Park, Pc. -A ' 5 sm' - . V ' -L 9 DONALD TARR, B. A., w Mt. Bethel, Pa. . A M ' ,Q N Q ., ROBERT TAYLOR, B. s.. .ld Rfk N1 Lewisville, Texas A vl r 1 L.. ? 1 sw R 4' - 3 5, - 5 ,A f 25, ' 5 CLARENCE 'rEnw1L1.1GEn, I xx ' W K' L ' I 5 , Derby, Colorado O XI, CHARLES THOMAS, B. EY' 0 ' Baltimoxe, Maryland ,, . ...s . I Of' 11 J 4Not Picturedl FAWZI ABU-EL-HAI, Collegedale, Tenn. HARRY ALSLEBEN. Cleveland, Ohio IOSEPH AMICO, B. A., Bullalo, New York WILLIAM BAILES. San Marcos, Texas REID DAVIDSON. B. A.. Brawley. California RICHARD EVANS. Dayton Ohm IOHN FERRARA Newark N I ALLEN IOSEPHS B A New York Crty EARL PARKER B S Glendale Calrlornxa ARNOLD SINGERMAN Detrort Mxchxqan EUGENE SORENSON B Lodi Calrlorma RICHARD SPENCE Kansas Crty Kansas S ALAN WEINSTEIN Phrladelphra Pa LWB' Q' 1 1 I f Q' . EUGENE ZACHARY, Dallas, Texas '11 -4-... RUDI WADLE, B. S.. Short Hills, N. I, ....,..., Seattle. Washington EUGENE WUDKEWYCH, B. S.. Salina, Kansas 'Pei 3 ' -.. , 'cal 42 WILLIAM wH1TLocK, H ... , M. W 'C' X.r 'nf' '-ew XI ,206 QA JA N MQ 3 , 1 A ,K X, 15.- . X 5 Nw ' EOPHONEIQES fi 1 m 1 1 i HENRY L. ABRAHAM. H - Bayonne. New lersey f 1 DOUGLAS M, AGEE, A. B., Yucaipa, California ARTHUR ARATOW. Hillside. New lersey Q . ,Q 2 K- . 2 - L' 7 as , In Sophomore year in osteopathic school is to most students one of the most challenging periods in their academic lives. Not even the discipline imposed by the rigorous first year studies has prepared them adequately for the inflexible routine of second year. Throughout freshman year they have heard a legend of sophomoric woes, and it is with some trepidation that they approach the regimen of second year. The demands made of the student's intellectual powers and physical stamina are unsurpassed: yet, with all its difficulties, sophomore year is a year of awakening. For the first time he is brought face to face with basic realities of life, death and birth. For the first time he begins to understand the importance of the physician's instruments, the power of the physician's hands. Long hours of anatomy in freshman year taught the student the structure of the human body: now Z8 ALBERT AZARIAN, A. B, Fresno. California IOHN BAUERS, Ranka. Latvia lOHN T. BEAL, B. A.. Somerville, Mass. pathology, the study of the nature of disease and its effects on the body, shows how the structures of the body are altered by illness. The student must learn to describe each disease, its etiology, macroscopic description, microscopic description, prognosis and treatment. He becomes intimately acquainted with the odd-looking specimens in jars and bottles lining the walls of the pathology lab. Slide after slide is examined under the microscope: there are quizzes, lab tests, examinations enough to keep the weary sophomore in a constant state of tension. When confronted with Boyd's one-thousand- twenty-three page Textbook of Pathology in Septem- ber, the sophomore would term the memorizing of this volume an impossibility. Yet so intensive is their learning that the same student will in lune quote passage after passage, footnote after footnote. Very few copies of Boyd ever see service to a succeeding KENNETH BEAMAN, B. S., Oak Park, Illinois GEORGE T. BELLA, B. A.. Reseda, California MANUEL BLANDO, B. S,. Kansas City, Missouri r 5, 5 5392 Q 5'f r QF' . . y , Q 3 gi jg T RAYMOND BREEDLOVE, la., B. s., QT Kansas City, Missouri i nf ' .iz'1i'g JAMES A.BYRD,B.S., T, g ' I ' V 4 Houston, Texas i ' . i' ' g 53 2 . 'EAV Q ., Joi-IN 1. CAHILL. A. B,. if A W. Palm Beach, Florida y- i class: their underlined, dog-eared pages would not hold together through a second arduous year of Path. Although the sophomore students are constantly in touch with pathological specimens through their study of disease, some are still unprepared for their first'autopsy. There, stripped oi the objectivity of textbook and slide and the familiar walls of the laboratory, they encounter death in its uncompromis- ing starkness. With emotions carefully ,concealed they take notes and watch quietly as the pathologist shows concretely the cause of death: yet here an indelible impression that will last as long as lite ite self is imprinted on the mind. The second year students are required to attend ten autopsies. The protocol of each of these post- mortems must then be compiled in detail, correlating the findings of the pathologist with their own know- ledge and research. Besides the long hours devoted to pathology, there are many other important courses that demand time and effort. Bacteriology in concerned with the study of pathogenic microscopic organisms, requir- ing long sessions with the microscope: add parisit- ology, preventive medicine, neuropsychiatry and the student is hard pressed to find enough hours in the day for study. The young physician is now in- troduced to the use of drugs though materia medica and pharmacodynamics. History taking is a study of the technique of eliciting information from the patient pertinent to the diagnosis. Many hours are also spent in the physiology lab learning bodily iunction through experimentation with both animals and fellow-students. 29 X A , l . I .: .3 1 i -'am' , ' -:vm 131 ws. rv s t, r A Q, A X I 'l ' lf: qt .X Mg, A . -v is M.. A w ,A ' . x . I' , 5' ' ' I ,, 5' I. V. lwfzcy -. - I s , V 3,5 HQ. , 1 '13 . .., f -- .1 A , I my war ' 165' 5 ,A-nu. . gi' I 'fe 7. Es 343 , mr , 'if f' FRANK DILLON Colchester, Illinois ELSIE I. ENG, B. A. ...-Q. 'iso- . snr ALICE DING, B. s., Shanlsai, Honan, China I A RAY C. DIXON, M, A., . , X Los Angeles, California ' fl I Willowbrook, California ETHEL I. ENG, B. A.. Willowbrook, Calxiomia EDVJIN EVERETT, B. A.. Florence. Mississippi BYRON COMSTOCK, Lakeland, Florida STUART COOPER. B. A.. Baldwin, New York ROBERT L. CURTISS, B, A.. Erie, Pennsylvania FRANK CUELLARI. B S Newark, N. I. ROBERT C. CYMAN, B. A.. Hamtramck, Michigan RONALD E. DENNIS Okmulgee. Oklahoma Q A r .fr Y .X j r . f i. .ff , ' 'fw- ur rx 4 I ' 1 f 1 .. I ...,. w- A yy f.. , K' Y V V 5 , 1 3,11 3 M W 2 . Ngfef igl Q' . - ?'5?Sz'.e-aan . Q, is-A ,'g S, -di . .- . H V Y' ' 4. U 1 -5- ,.g .f . 1 . ,t V L if L-. I I ,,. I fi- , It G' 0? 7: R N . 5' - S1 I K I ':. ' A 'F' . 1 LM? l RICHARD E. GRIFFIN. Kansas City, Missouri ALFRED HAMILTON, B. S., Kansas City. Missouri BYRON D. HARBOLT, B. A.. Greeneville, Tennessee GEORGE HENDERSON, M. AJ Cleveland, Ohio IOHN G. HUNHOLZ, B. A., Kansas City. Missouri EDWARD T. HUNTER. A. B. Erie, Pennsylvania SILAS FOX. Adelphi, Maryland IACK GALLAGHER, B. S, Cleveland, Ohio HARLEY GATRELL. IR.. B S MYRON GLICKFIELD. B. S.. Maplewood. N. I. Kansas City, Missouri HARVEY O. GOLDEN, Detroit, Michigan IR WIN GORENSTEIN. B. A Brooklyn, New York - Q gg-Q can 5, -L- v K, -'-s , i , 4, a f -- . ,P . ..- av ,ex A '-'-s fi 1 pi 'Qs '- s I W W: 3' A -- if . '- 2' VINCENT I.. IENCO, B. A., Erie, Pennsylvania ff V 'U' Q- ,se Lf- , ! L 35' . HERBERT ICSHOWITZ, B. S., ' 'a McKeespon. Pennsylvania bs- V A tr YV' H ' ss , ,..-M ,I EDWARD L. KAHM, B. s., ' -1' ' Portland, Oregon ,, I l. , 4 IOSEPH KEUCHEI.. Kansas City, Kansas Q5 WILLIAM LEE, 4. Los Angeles, Calilomia 1' W ORLANDO D. LEO, B. S., New Philadelphia. Pa. :GHG , I 5 ,Bn I :bv I, y- L '1 ' ' iw ' l . A , M5 DANIEL LEONG, B. A.. Singapore. Malaya 1 an W fb: RONALD LePERE, Stockton, Missouri -Sv., DAVID MATHEWS, B, S.,l Quincy, Massachusetts ' X, Q FRANK Mccomvmcx, B. Ea.. 'X Muxphysboro, Illinois se.: I- 'N '- ' I N. . 4 ul -W , L ai, MARIORIE Mccomvmcx, B. s,, Q , '9' 'E Murphysboro, Illinois - ' --N QA f sn . ef! L ' NN'-f S K MELVIN MCDANIEL, x A Wasco, California a L 33 I x 1 7 if , lf' BRUNO F. Mmowsxr. B. s. ' l' ' Detroit, Michiqan - . I' 'A f-1 1 M i in 4:-, ? , B ' FRANCIS 1. NATOLIS, B. S. ba ' I - Iacksonville, Florida 'rf' I' I ...!'... , I, A . ' ,.. I '25, - . 'W V I ,I THOMAS r-r.NUr.r,B A , ' f- ' 'L . Dearborn. Mich. ll A-lL 1.-an U' 4-.-m K 1. -1 my . '31 LUIS QUAN, B. A. Usulutan. El Salvador 'MS pn Qs 'WN VN WALTER REED. lR., A. B. 5 , - Ardmore, Oklahoma V A, sang, -'1 GERALD I. RODERICK, A. B. Kansas City, Missouri IOHN W. RODGERS, B. S. Hickman. Kentucky 'fi'- IRWIN Y. ROSENBAUM. B. A. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania u BILLY M. SARTIN Shawnee, Kansas 34 ANGELO PARDO, B. S, Tampa, Florida RONALD S. PAROLY Irvington, New lersey sa-3 'sf ERNEST L. PHILLIPS Lincoln, Nebraska A . Q f ' A -4 , 1495 , 35 ' I . i , Y I aw. .2 1' V4 -45... W f' f: fifi?2 af- ',-:4 4. K, ,gy L,-1' . .. . s. E N , ?-Mig, . xl! if ,141 I f 4 6 fi a-C y i fl R if ,L 6'-2 ae si.. .antsf ' :ww I r J GEHARD I, SCHILLING North Girard, Pennsylvania REED A. SHANKWILEH, B. S. Detroit, Michigan THOMAS H. SHANLEY, B Phoenix, Arizona EDWARD SHELTON, B. S. Butte. Montana GEORGE A. SIVAK, B. S, W. Aliquippc, Pennsylvania HARRY L. SOLIDAY, A. B Enid. Oklahoma Ig -L-- A , 1 1 s..- -1 lr! I6 I I Ji ,CL X X JUNIGRS 4,.1+ ig l if A412 1 Z., iii - ' 27, 'riff 3 i '33 :, 'X U . . 3. V ,Y 4 A it 9 ',:ff?fQ. Q -, - ' . X.. A 1, V ,Q I ' if , 5 ,rf ' itil 'Q 1-Q QA , ' I' VW? - r r f f . x ,V Meir- ,f:,.f . , 'f ,f K I i oft he. f r, is 1 wq mg , f riff x 7 H Fld It is a milestone in the life of the student-doctor when he reports to receive his hospital schedule for Iunior year. His goal is half-realized: behind him for- ever are the long years of basic science preparation, the all-night sessions at his microscope. He has pass- ed the half-way mark, and graduation day now seems to be more of a certainty than a possibility. Ahead of him are the two years, together with intern- ship, that help him to translate knowledge into the skill of a practicing physician. He is initiated into the protocol of hospital service: he learns techniques of diagnosis and treatment, and he begins to learn the art of human relations, as for the first time he assumes the role of physician to his own patients. 38 PAUL E. ARMSTRONG. B. s. Garden City, Michigan DONALD I.. BARNOVITZ, B. A. Kingston, New York ERNEST BARRETT, A. B. Stillwater, New IEISGY ROBERT C. BELF, B. S., A. B. Detroit, Michigan ALFRED I. BENNETT, B.A. Fairview. Kansas MARION F. BIONDO, B.S. Kansas City, Missouri The junior student is required to spend five weeks oi the summer on hospital duty, and one semester of the academic year, ior a total of eighteen weeks. He works an eight hour shift, six days a week. During this period he will serve in all the specialties, have several weeks oi tloor duty, and spend several more on obstetrical service at the maternity hospital. His uniform is the cap, mask, and gown of the hospital, or his clinic jacket, steth- oscope around the neck. He works, eats, and some- times sleeps at the hospital. In this year, as one of the lowliest members ot the hospital hierarchy, he learns how to take case histories and perform physical examinations. While on floor duty he assists the interns and executes vari- ALBERT L BLACK IR B A Pueblo Colorado THOMAS H. BONINO Dearborn, Michigan l. CLIFTON BUMPUS, A. B. Kansas City, Kansas 'ew 'V i' IW ' xv -,M Q FRED B. COOKSLEY. B. A. St. Helena, California IOHN N. CRANE, B. A. Middletown, Connecticut NICHOLAS A. CUNICELLA. A. B. Westfield. New Iersey ous hospital procedures, such as taking blood pres- sure and starting intravenous injections. One oi the first techniques to be mastered is scrubbing. Once the antiseptic requirements oi general surgery are learned, the extern may scrub in and observe operations, occasionally assisting with minor surgical procedures. He also observes the administration of anesthesia. Problems of diagnosis are studied in the depart- ment of internal medicine. Besides the daily ward walks, the extern, under the auspices of the staff members, learns how to operate the electrocardio- graph. Q 2: , Qs- A On his X-ray service the student learns how X-rays are taken, developed, and interpreted. He observes treatment by roentgen rays and the new radio-active isotopes. In urology the extern watches cystoscopic examinations, and learns the details of urological diagnosis. He further is exposed to various methods oi medical and surgical therapy of genito-urinary pathologies. At the Cancer Detection Clinic he assists in screening patients for the early diagnosis of malig- nancy. In Orthopedics the student learns the manage- 39 E . Q' 4,- re ' Tx :fi -an I ment of fracture cases, the application and removal of casts. He also scrubs in on orthopedic surgery. The study of mental disease is furthered by a two week service at Still Sanitarium in Tulsa, Okla- homa. He studies case histories of mental patients and observes mental therapy, including electro-shock therapy. Some of the busiest weeks are spent on obstetri- cal service. Working one of three shifts around the clock, the team of four externs is often hard pressed to find time for a coffee break, as each year the maternity hospital betters its previous record. The externs take case histories on incoming patients: they scrub in on deliveries to help with the anesthesia 40 CECIL CUNNINGI-IAM Des Moines, Iowa VINCENT F. D'ANGEI.O, B. A. Ridgefield Park, New lersey KINGSLEY DAVIS Kansas City, Missouri GEORGE A. DENKA, B. A. lamestown. New York LYNN DINGMAN Loma Linda, California LAWRENCE A, DOBSON Louisville, Kentucky or care for the baby immediately after birth. One of the externs stays with the patient postpartum until the blood pressure is stabilized and the anesthesia wears oft: they do complete physical examinations on the baby and fill out birth certificates. They also relieve the nurses occasionally in the nursery, and here is wheie the married students have an advan- tage--the students with children of their own handle their tasks with enviable proficiency while their un- married cohorts fumble helplessly with diapers and pins in a sea of crying babies. Around the first of February, the junior leaves the hospital and returns to the classroom. Here he tackles a formidable schedule of clinical subjects in- I-IOMER WAYNE DUNFORD Chowchilla, California DAVID FARBEH, B. A. Union City, New Iersey GERALD P. FLANAGAN Arkansas Pass, Texas ARNOLD FOX, B. A. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania EVERETT E. FRENCH North Kansas City, Missouri LAWRENCE I. GALLA. A, B. Erie. Pennsylvania cluding cardiology, gynecology, pediatrics, applied anatomy, differential diagnosis, prescription writing. toxicology, surgery, anesthesiology, radiology, or- thopedics, oncology, and clinic presentation. Somewhere in the course of junior year the student acquires his first patient, assigned and super- vised by the clinical department of the college. This relationship of student-doctor to clinic patient is the prototype of the patient-physician relationship of the future. Mariifesting a confidence he does not feel, the neophyte physician briskly commences the ex- amination, determined to appear as if he has been it 5? f, - i , ot! ' pg! . r , ., 3 4 , 5,73 1 3 V cg bt. f' - 4 22, ' W L M-, -rs. fr' v - i -in gg- 4 ,ff i ,553 ' ' i fd 'V ' f-. , is . -' J ' I Mig W - '-5 1 - 4' .av I li? e 2,57 2135 - A - , J Ev: 33, treating patients all his life. In this year also the student is assigned a maternity patient by the ob- stetrical department, which he carries from prenatal care through delivery and postpartum check-ups. By the completion of junior year a new dimen- sion has been added to the experience of the student. He has taken an integral part in hospital work: he has learned the use of new instruments and the operation of complicated diagnostic machines. He is becoming more familiar with the technique of hand- ling patients. At long last he is beginning to feel like G physician-a little. 41 if ,A 3 11,2 1 . 1 Q Q' QW xx A J all 4 E. an , .ff-, F ii-1 'Ji Sv 5 S23 ' is... g X253 X ,i ' I Rl 'J ' ,, V Wi: xg as GERALD C. GASS Lansing, Michigan PETER IOHN GIGLIO Tampa, Florida STANLEY GLICK, B. S. Malden, Missouri IACK H. GRAMER, B. S. Fort Wonh, Texas LAWRENCE GREENBERG, B. S. M. S. New Haven. Connecticut HARRY HALTZMAN Bethlehem, Pennsylvania inf.. . ,,.. R I -4'-es Q HENRY HARENBERG. B. A. Holbrook. Long Island, New York 5 'J ' l -' Wh' I-:BBE HARTELIUS, B. A. 4 . ' i Q' ' Berrien Springs. Michigan . A --..N M JD , wr' 1 'Mu ' L. L. HRRTMAN, B. A. lava. South Dakota Th.. V LEONARD D. HOWLETT, B, s. '5 Iackson, Tennessee F 'zu Q i , r ', yay. 1. 'Bw X 'Lf' f 1 ' BERT M. INDIN. B. S. ,--s K, A' 5, Kansas City. Missouri 1 f' T7 . -sv 4 l f vi' N ROBERT I. lZBlCKI. B. A. Erie, Pennsylvania WILLIAM M.1o1-1NsoN. B. s. L ff Pampa. Texas nv . A X 7.. N 'a HERBERT KARPELOWSKY K. . South Ozone Park, Long Island, N. Y. 1 - gi Q K ' 42' DONALD L. KENNEDY. B. S. P v Clarkesville, Georgia Mm: KETCHAM 1 N497 ,gf ,H Tulsa, Oklahoma 'Z ' f Q MICHAEL KONDIK, B. s. ' ff' ' ' V Mantua. Ohio - ' x, -J - v- , vgi' f A N ,' , ' EUGENE E. LALLI, B. A. Brooklyn, New York 43 , --lv , in .. : 7. if-vw. 4' S- f 5. Y bv N . b-..- 9-1 'w,...ff 'X' wir 3-7441 6 Q gy G Q- 2.3 I 1- --: WILLIAM R. MASTERS, M. S. IOSEPH H. LANGNAS Detroit, Michigan ALBERT L. LINDSAY, B. S. Grand Iunction, Colorado EDWARD LONIEWSKI, B. S. Iersey City, New Iersey OMER IOE LOOPER Poteau, Oklahoma DANIEL I. MAGIERA, B. S. West Warwick, Rhode Island REED E. MARTS Kansas City. Missouri San Antonio, Texas ' f 'fbi' D Q V QA WX 5? , SAM IVIISASI, A. B. ' Girard, Kansas 'F S' W ' FT. .. . IOHN W. IVIOOR, B. A. Redondo Beach. California DAVID MORGAN Fresno. California T- . ROBERT F. MURPHY, B. S, ' ' , Q' Kansas City, Missouri 0 ' 5, ,4.., 5. K- 4-Y , PATRICK G. MURRAY Lakewood, Ohio 44 ADAM G. PAONI, A. B. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania IALIL PARSA, B. S. Teheran. han NICK PATZAKIS, B, A. Campbell, Ohio IAMES W. PRESSLEY Sparta, Illinois WILLIAM IOSEPH RHODE Belle Fourche, South Dakota IAMES I. RYAN Normandy, Missouri fl: P l X ,311 t x.- ,,,.-Q 1 fb ttf S, i.t. at .lt ' -T gf ' . if fliff A A B ig? n - Q! 'gwf gf.:g ,Z 5,553 1. A , iff? f ' .1 ' l 15 ca. X A if . 1 ' .1 it if VF' . 3 ' if H x LX 4 96 'Gaf -ang' as , 5-3- N N i 536' -a..' 9- nznklfls lx.. . x fri, 4.1 -. I I L A AV I g B . 2 L, up kv mfg , . '1' - x , Y V f l 1 f Ri W . , f - Y I ' , S, xx if I , 'N Q L . N f PAUL SALANON, B. S, Cranford, New lersey ROBERT SCHIHMER, B. S. Bayonne, New Iersey N. LEWIS SCHOON, A. B. Highland, Indiana LEONARD B. SEGAL, A. B. Philadelphia. Pu. MARVIN SOLIT, R. B. Bronx, New York HENRY S. STANLEY, B. A.. M. S New Britain. Connecticut MARTIN STEINBERG. A. B. Brooklyn, New York CLARENCE BENNETTE SULLIVAN, B.A, Carnegie. Oklahoma , ... g LEO GEORGE STEVIN 5- Flint, Michigan 5 J .s A- Ek 9. .-..4- . M . - 'A' DALE STOOPS. A. B. New Castle, Indiana A ' g ' i - I ' 13 Q , ' ' IAMES TAFT, A. B. , ' f' A fy ' Mexico. Missouri I 9, ' X Sf' I RICHARD H. TEDRICK Evergreen, Colorado , CR -Q W 4 'V' Koi s- , S ' --x Irv fn N - W gf- -Q' ' . ' 'fn' r, , . ', 'ix C4 if ' Q. E -Q. A Y 5...- 'Q' 5. if TED B. THOMPSON, B. S. Austin. Texas CARSON TODD Dallas Texas WILLIAM VAN KLEECK. IR., B. S New Paltz, New York MARVIN VERCLER Chenoa. Illinois IOHN H, WANK, B, A. Highland Park, Michigan ROBERT C. WARD Ml. Clemens, Michigan 47 WALKER W. WEST St. Helena, California THOMAS A, WILLIAMS, A. B. Ewing. Virginia MELVIN L. WISBY Abilene. Kansas ,, QQ...- J: DEAN WINTERMUTE. B. S. , Guilford, Missouri -., EUGENEn.wooD.B.A. V ' ' i Q Hutchinson. Kansas L' x' b MURRAY IACKSON, B. S. Bronx, New York 5'- lNot Pictured! KEITH L. GARD San Iose, California SEYMOUR ISENBERG, B. New York City IAMES I. SMITH, B. A. Fresno. California NK . v f' l fs' fc' R 48 SPG' P .4 g, ff Sy Q 'oh 'SQ 5 ' 1 - - ,,..-N H' lb. w I' I f X If Z X! I f X ,rin-'K -, V. X g , W Q 3 5 X ii 'H 5 5 j i-- -Q E 2 l f I -- T 5 'Hx M , wfwlrl Q ,sv ww I 771 iQg4 ? f 5 an 2 le in f i o 4: ,- ,M l Q ,- VD V3 SENIGRS ,gi-Y 9 49 Y T 'G' t 1- - ... HAY AVEHA, B. S. Los Angeles, California N. E. State Teachers College l. T. S.. I. F. C. Osteopathic Hos.. Kansas City. Mo. , R mr- bb 1, - s V . '4 Q cr RONALD BAKER. B. S. Detroit. Mich. Michigan State College P. S. G. Stethoscope Riverside Hosp. , v , , gg,:.:'i-T ' :ai-1' I WM. BANNISTER. Colleyville. Kans. .1 RY B, S, Kansas State Tech, Atlas Club 463-Q v .1-.-. 3, WILLIAM B. BENDER Detroit. Mich, Wayne Univ. Newman Club. Student Council. S. S, P.. V, Press I. T. S. Detroit Osteopathic Hosp As the senior student returns to the campus for the fourth and final time in September, he cannot help but contrast himself with the bewildered freshman he was three years ago. Then he experienced doubts and uncertainties about his ability to measure up to professional and scholastic standards: now he has the confidence and assurance of a man who has been tried and not found wanting. Then he felt a stranger to the unfamiliar buildings and groups of chatting students: now the halls are as familiar to him as his own home. and the faces are those of his friends. He is amused but undeniably a trifle pleased when an incoming freshman respectfully addresses him as Doctor . And, in the manner of all senior classes, they agree that the new freshman class seems to look younger than they did three years ago. V 50 But the one thing he has in common with that freshman of three years ago is the same impatience to get going-now not to begin his professional studies, but to conclude them. For this year is the fulfillment of a dream, the beginning of his pro- fessional life. and from the first weeks of school he has numbered the days. The senior student has passed the basic sciences: he has completed externship at the hospital and has acquired several clinic patients. During this year he will expand his knowledge in all the medical special- ties and attain facility in diagnosis and treatment through his continuing Work at the clinic and mater- nity hospital. The senior's work is divided into two parts: di- dactic and clinical. The mornings are spent in the lecture halls. and the afternoons in the clinic. Because is i DALHIE BERG, B. Underwood, Iowa Union College Rocky Mountain Osteopathic Hosp A. .,' an qi if T 'iw IOSEPH BESS Atlantic City, N. I, Temple Univ. Soc. Neuropsy. Ir, Acad. ol Ap. Osteopathy. P. S. G., P. S. A. Metropolitan Hosp.. Philadelphia, Pa. - In-, i'-i ' ' 1' T' P' .4 K ,A in -5. I up f EDWARD BOWIE Los Angeles, California Multnomah College Atlas Club, Newman Club. Civic Center Hosp., Oakland. California tw R, E, BEAUER, B. A, Beverly Hills, California LaSierra College Lakeside Hosp., Kansas City, Mo. of his proximity to graduation, the senior's attitude is characterized by much less tension than in previ- ous years. Realizing, however, that this is his last opportunity for formal study, the senior, cushion in hand, approaches the lecture hall. There he is rapidly introduced to such courses as advanced obstetrics, opthalmology, proctology, otorhinolaryngology, and applied pharmacolgy, each taught by a specialist in the field. The didactic work is made as practical as possible, for the instructor knows as well as the student that in nine short months the young physician will be meeting these problems firsthand and often- times facing an emergency situation in which the physician's skill will swing the balance in favor of life or death. To aid in the recognition and treatment ot dis- ease, and to enable each student to benefit by the experiences of his fellows, a clinic presentation is held each week. At this assembly each student takes his turn in demonstrating the case history, sympto- mology, and procedure of treatment of one of the clinic patients. These are sometimes the common, everyday illnesses that a physician meets all the time in his practice: occasionally a rare or unusual disease is treated, of which keeps the student attuned to the constant necessity of study and consultation in all diagnoses. After his last morning class, the white-jacketed senior goes into the out-patient clinic. There he re- cords a detailed case history from the patient, con- sults with the heads of each department, has his proposed treatment approved by the clinic instructor, 51 or l 9 P if ,. .5 , Q. -N... ...A '-Q'-' - .- I . t l rtosznr BURNS Dinuba, Calif. N. E. Missouri State Tchs. R. P. Bulick Montrose. Colo. N. E. Missouri State Tchs. l. T. S., S. S. P. Stevens Park Osteopathic Hosp, P. S. G., B. S. C., S. S. P. and finally initiates treatment. This experience is in- valuable to the physician, and incorporates every phase of practice from the keeping of accurate re- cords to prescription-writing. The students meet, under the supervision of the clinic, a full gamut of diseases from the common cold to cancer. They come in contact with emergencies from fractures and lacerations to burn victims. The student-doctor is often called upon to make house calls, and, carrying his black bag, attempts to look as professional as possible. Few patients sus- pect that the calm demeanor of their young physi- cian often conceals knocking knees, as he struggles with the fear of a missed diagnosis. That shattering ring of the telephone is sometimes followed by fran- tic moments, as the student attempts nervously to dress and shave, check his bag for drugs and instru- 52 F. CAMPOBASSO. B. S. Kansas City, Mo. Rockhurst College T. CAMPBELL, B. A. Hyattsville, Md. Wash. Miss. College Ir. Acad. App. Osteo,, V. Pres. Green Cross Hosp. Cuyahoga Falls, O. P. S. G., P. S. A.. Osteopathic Hosp. Kansas City. Mo. ments, and thumb hurriedly through Merck's Manual. As in all things dicimus facere faciendo-we learn to do by doing-and as the year progresses house calls become routine and self-confidence returns little by little as patients continue to recover. One of the most moving experiences of the young student is the delivery of his first baby. Having been assigned several maternity cases by the obstetrical department, he conscientiously carries each of them through prenatal care to term. As the due date of his first OB approaches, his own anxiety surpasses that of the mother. He jumps every time the telephone rings, nervously pages his textbooks on Obstetrics, Yet when the moment actually arrives, fears vanish with his complete absorption with the responsibility he has undertaken. Only when he sees the baby safely in its mother's arms does he experience the T . ,.,,. 1- 1 . . ew .- .L 632 g - - e fe ,gf N 'ST . K, . . ' 1' 'h T' '. i f Ad 1 S V NK? .y J, V X' l A GLENN CARNEY. B. S- 1. CAVALIER. A. B. A. CORPOLONGO, B. s. 1. CORPOLONGO, B. s. Nickerson. Kansas McPherson College Normandy Osteopathic Hosp. Campbell, Ohio Youngstown Col. P. S. A., Cor. Sec., Student Council. Soc. Neuropsy.. Stethoscope, Layout Editor, P. S. G. Newman Club Green Cross Hosp.. Cuyahoga Falls, O. deep satisfaction which is unique to the healing arts as the guardian of birth. With the beginning of the second trimester, new courses are undertaken, among them medical juris- prudence, electrocardiography, orthopedics, surgery, urology, oncology. As Christmas-time approaches, the student is apt to find himself with a disease of his own-the internship jitters. Mail-watching, occult long distance telephone calls, and sudden dis- appearances into neighboring states are its symp+ toms, as the senior seeks to assure himself of the type of internship he wants, and to re-kindle contacts that may help him attain it. The crisis occurs on Ianuary 15 when hospitals notify by telegram the interns of Pittsburg, Kans. Kans. State Tchs. l. T. S.. Pittsburg, Kans. Kans. State Tchs. l. T. S., P. S. A., S. S. P. Erie Osteopathic Hosp. Normandy Osteopathic Hosp. their choice: within a few weeks, with telegrams of acceptance and the occasional readjustment of choices, the disease has run its course. This decision behind him, the senior is often struck by a sudden feeling of inadequacy, as all at once he is confronted with the enormity of the res- ponsibility he faces, and the shortness of time left in which to prepare for it. The weeks now pass swiftly. The third trimester ushers in his final weeks of study as he tackles der- matology, physical medicine, marriage problems, radiology, neurology. With a growing anticipation the class begins, at a series of uproarious class meet- ings, to wind up its affairs and prepare for graduation. 53 hi PAUL CHONEN. B. S, Louisville. Ky. I. T. S., Sec., S. S. P., Pres. Osteopathic Hosp. Kansas City, Mo. WILLIAM DELP Bethlehem. Pa. Moravian Col. P. S. G. Osteopathic Hosp. Kansas City, Mo. vt -, 3 -P I-'sz' I G. DeVRIES, B. S. Cedar Lake. Mich. Emmanuel Miss. Colle P. S. A. Mt, Clements Genl.. Mt. Clements, Mich. ge .Q V -iv .2Q4t?'f NEDRA DICK. B. A Lawrence, Kansas St. Mary College K. P. D., Pres.. D. O. Z., Secretary Civic Center Hosp. Oakland, Calif. Class pictures, speakers, the gift to the school-there are a myriad of details to be considered. Visits by drug detail men, and talks by osteopathic represen- tatives of states urging the young physician to settle there add to his realization that commencement day is imminent. A round of social activities fete the Seniors in May, and for once he relaxes and enjoys them. Ban- quets, parties, cmd fraternity dinner-dances are in- cluded in this fare-well to student days. Now that graduation day is at hand, the student notices a sub- tle difference in his relationship to his fellow class- mates. Beneath the jokes, the quips, the decided dif- ferences of opinion he realizes that a warm kinship exists between these men who have struggled through four years of hardship together. On Commencement Day, the senior, capped and gowned and surrounded by his loved ones, receives the coveted degree. Behind him forever are the long hours at the microscope, the shabby suits, the back- breaking part-time jobs: ahead the struggle to build a practice, the unpaid debts, the sleepless nights. But now he knows a moment of pure happiness in the present so rare in human lives, as in 'the hushed hall strong young voices rise in unison: I do hereby affirm my loyalty to the profession I am about to enter. I will be mindful always of my great responsi- bility to preserve the health and life of my patients. ........ . I ampus llrganizations A I, STUDENT COUNCIL I IOTA TAU SIGMA PHI SIGMA GAMMA ATLAS CLUB PSI SIGMA ALPHA RHO SIGMA CHI N ALPHA PHI 0MEGA 1 NEWMAN CLUB HI-TWELVE I ALUMNI ASSOCIATION I I I STUDENT IVIVES KAPPA PSI DELTA DELTA 0lVIEGA UMOIl,? VVil'e, talking to lriencl: Yes, lohn's very ill, hope he gets lxetter . , . or something. . . . if you students will notieef' the astute instructor Con- tinued, at no time during the entire treatment do my fingers leave my lianclfl Then there were the two Bc-Bop cats who, when seeing their buclcly in the clonie state of a Gran Mal seizure, cried, Co, man, goll!Courtesy of Charles Zammar. OVERFIEARIJ IN THE Crime. junior student to classmate: 'lflonna cut Dr. Graharnls class tomorrow? l C0urse not, can't you see I neecl the sleep? .A COHSClCIlIlOLlS SLlI'gCOI1 is ODS NVl'1O TICVCI ClUES Sllfgefy on a patient unless he really neetls the money. Doctor to patient: 'Let me put it this Way: if you were a building ynu'cl be condemned. Extern to dull patient: You say you broke your leg in three places? VVhere, may l ask? Patient: 'lCleveland, Chicago, and Erie, Doefl Ohstetrieian to young woman: Mrs lones, l have good news for you. Patient: Miss jones, Doetnrfl Doctor: l'Miss Jones, I have had news for youf' , -Hunan Q es' 5 N ' ' 'U I I' 'K' A. L. EISENMAN Detroit, Mich. Wayne Univ. L. O. G.. Pres. Zeiger Osteopath Detroit, Mich. ,mf - ic Hosp., GAROLD G. ENLOE Iellerson City. Mo. Univ. ol K. C. Atlas Garden City Osteo. Hosp., Garden City, Michigan 'fi ' . - , D i f .n-.-v. j 3 W f '- 5 I' , 1 Xbav ,f , D. FELDHEIM, A. B. Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn College Atlas Doctors Hosp., Columbus, O. WM. S. FORD. Seattle. Wash. B. S. 1 Univ. ol Wash. P. S. A. Traverse City Osteo. Hosp.. Traverse City. Michigan E n, A ai dvi? Sf '51 -:I-' -1-up ' CLINTON GLASPY Lakin, Kansas Rockhurst Col. P. S. G., P. S. A.. S. S. P., Sec.-Trees. Wetzel Hosp., Clint On. A. GONZALEZ, B. S. E. Lansing, Mich. Mich. State Col. I. T. S.. A. P. O.. St. Council, Soc. Mo. of Neuropsy. Wetzel Osteopathic Hospital. Clinton, Mo. 1 l .- -1-. K- . ...N C.. I I. C, GORTON, B. A. Arlington, Calil. LaSierra Col. P. S. A.. Trecs. Hillside Hosp.. San Diego, Calil. IOHN GHAFF Brooklield, Mo. Univ. ol K. C. Cape Girardeau Hospital, Cape G Missouri 2 P R -is X-N ' rp 414, I ,f I- I 'ii irardeau, 57 52 ifliilff ' Salf K' ' T' ,-asf m is' . 1 1 N 3 ',L' -fn. U xg X ily., ,Q gg, .. . is - V- . -' 9 ' w9'?5-L' , V ,A ' 7, i 5 t K. GREGORY, A. B, Commanche, Texas Howard Payne Col. P. S. G. Blackwood Hosp.. Comanche. Texas I. GRIFFIN, B. S. Boy City, Mich. N, E. Missouri St. Tchs. Col. K. P. D., D. O, Z.. Class Sec'y-Txeas.. Sec'y - Treas. Steth. Flint Osteo. Hosp., Flint, Mich. '56 J 5,- r:- X MARION GROFF, IR. Ft. Supply, Okla. N, E, Missouri St. Tchs Atlas Dallas Osteo. Hosp., Dallas, Texas . Col.. 5'-ft Z, ,, Nbr' - T 1 . I - nzssns HALL Ft. Stockton, Texas P. S. G., S. S. P. A. P, O., Sgt.-at-Arms Ft. Worth Osteo. Hosp Ft, Worth, Texas 1 ,f 'vf I . Q- A RE -Q ax XL N f-W 12. in . QL TOHN HEIM, B. A. Alliance, Ohio Mount Union Col. Hi-12, Treas.. V. Pres., Pres., P. S. G.. S. S. P.. t St. Council, Soc. of Neurops Grandview Osteo. Hosp., Dayton. O. fm-rv 5558! M ...gk 94-.ff IFS-GNQQQ .gr-45 Q,--. 5.42. ' ' 1, ' YW? t .. 'ffm 1.-.zysfrg ls. 2 , S' ' ef O . Y, ' wig? 5. W., y. -E- FRED HENSON, B. S. Cleveland, Tenn. Tenn. Polytech. Institute P. S. G., Sgt.-at-Arms Houston Osteopathic Hosp. It 5- Q I 1 l. HICKERSON, B. S. N. Little Rock, Arkansas Univ. of Ark. Hi-12, lr. Acad. ot App. Osteo., Steth.. Art Editor Oklahoma Osteo.. Tulsa, Oklahoma U an .1 ,I z W. C WM, D. HINSBEHG Oak Park, Mich. Univ. ol Detroit Sr. Class Pres., Stet Newman Club I. T. S., R. S. C. h. Photoq.. Detroit Osteo. Hosp., Detroit. Michigan mf. -1 ' Q ...4-1 59 l '.- . ilu gn ..v..5 'I I. W. HOBBS Clinlon Hill. Mo. N. E. Missouri St. Tchs. P. S. G. McCormick Osteo. Hospital, Moberly, Mo. Col. 1 .f,,., rf, 4 'f , 5 dw.. F sf' ' 5 , Q--x 4 'Q ,- .nb .wg P if 1 I V. HOEMANN, B. S. Washington, Mo. N. E. Missouri St. Tchs, Col P. S. G., Treas.. SL Council. Treas. Soc. Neuropsy.. S. S. P. Normandy Osteo. Hosp., St. Louis. . Qnfr K IOHN HOLCOMB Oklahoma City, Oklcx. Northern Okla. lr. Col. P. S. G. Ft. Worth Osteo. Hosp.. Ft. Worth, Texas Q-rx 1' 12 - . .,. N: H. L. HUGGINS Denver, Colo. Regis College P. S. G.. S. S. P. H. S. C.. Steth.. Editor, Soc. of Neuropsy Rocky ML Osleo. Hosp.. Denver, Colo. ,lf 5 ,,,,,,,z U ' 4311415 , .V M., . L 4' h--Q , 'C ,,, H ,ir ' , P 5' Q it feffrfi ...wg M 'TF,1 ?'7efQ? v sl pf... -A-As X , -rs- . , , . .s-X. 1. ,N--.m.5,: K, . -wg ... . 4.- 4 A N. KOPALD. B. A. New York City New York Univ. P. S. G., P. S. A.. Soc. of Neuropsy. Zeiger Osteo. Hosp. Detroit. Michigan K E. KOSTICK. B. S. Beaver Meadows, Pa. Pa, St. College S. S. P., Newman Club Lancaster Osteo. Hosp., Lancaster. Pa. ft -3 .ilpgff 2 1- 'X 1' , ,Q A' A, me 59: , X , L C. KOUDELE, B. A. Collegedale, Tenn, Univ, of Nebraska Osteopathic Hosp.. Kansas City. Mo. BEN KRAUT, B. S. Oklahoma City. Okla. I, T, S., Soc. of Neuropsy. Pres.. Steth,, Bus. Mgr.. Osteopathic Hosp.. Kansas City. Mo. Q V ' ul' , Us I ' ' .. al f , ..-1 pr X X E 3, t fi , , , . 1 g-xp R, Q . :vu . H 1,11 -f if Q 4 .1 f - : - ' , ,' -xv 1, -mln!! J 5' 4 D' , i: Q - ,I ' - 119 .vs-' Z .-I-ng fn, 1, - ., , 5 A US' 9 f.. 3 ' , Qxxw f ' ' , .4 f. I T 'nga , x i ' K C. KUZON. B. A. HENRY LARABEE WM, LAWRENCE. D. C. ROBERT LING. B. S. Buffalo, N. Y. Royal Oak, Mich. Cedcntown, Ga. Hofzswn. TQXGS Univ. of Buffalo Wayne Univ. Southern Union Col. 01 l'ff21iliJH Atlas, Sec'y., A. P. O., L Uuncl' 'cs' pres, Ir' Acad of A had Soc. of Neuropsy., S. S. P . , pp Osteo., Sec. - Txeas., Soc. of Neuropsy. Osteopathic Hosp.. Kansas City. Mo. Community Hosp., Houston, Texas X Q, xl ii it DAVID LOGAN. B. S. Detxoit, Mich. Univ, ol Detxoit P. S. A., P. S. G. Detroit Osteo.. Detroit. Mich. fi' 13 w -. nv-N H. MARSHAK, B. A. New York City Iowa Wesleyan College P. S. G. Doctor's Hosp.. Columbus. Ohio ,Q 'Y-'HZ' Agflf Jw -r V Y Wg, . Inf' ,.v. N' 5 g C. MCKEWON. B Tulsa, Oklc. N. E. St. Col. P. S. G. Oklahoma Osteo Hosp., Tulsa, Okl .S. G. . ,g fi H. MEYERS. B. S. New York City L. l. Univ. I. T. S. Lakeside Hosp. . X. 3 if w N ,R AT. 4,., - .. U 5. mf N. . xx w. ' . K' . -1. .1 i . X IQ Af Q - ' W 5. ---. ' ,gf xx .grgiziir .1 v . K K ' j i. . l ,fi E i O 5 WM. MORRISON Cisco, Texcxs Univ. of K. C. Atlus Osteopathic Hos p.. Kansas City. Mo. D. W, MUELLER St. Louis, Mo. N. E. MO. St. Tchs. Col. Atlas Normandy Osteo. Hosp.. St. Louis, Mo. WM. MUNRO, B. S. Detroit, Mich. Western Michigan Col. Hi-12, Atlas, Glee Club Detroit Osteo. Hosp.. Detroit. Mich. A. NECKLES, B. S New York City Long Island Univ. P. S. G., P. S. A. Bayview Hosp.. Buy Village. O. :.- A xx 4 4-Q, ' W? t M05 Qs . .fs l L, B. NELSON. B. A. Elk Horn. Iowa Union College Osteopathic Hosp.. Kansas City, Mo. w...,, -- 3: t - W in I ' .FP V. .fy K . . ' l it C. PEARSON, B, A. Los Angeles, Calif. Pacific Union College Lakeside Osteo. Hosp.. Kansas City, Mo, U, tu G. PERHON, B. S. Cranston, R. I, Providence Col. Newman Club Garden City Hosp.. Garden City. Mich, iw 't A1331 ff ' gf f -J' MK. x C N CHARLES PERRY Flint, Mich. Western Michigan Col St. Council. S. S. P., P. S. G. V. Pres., Ir. Class Detroit Osteo. Hosp., Detroit. Mich. . ,. ,W t t'i! .. .QV E I r E . . . . if HENRY PETERS Portland, Ore. Lewis and Clark College Traverse City Osteo. Hosp.. Traverse City, Michigan an-.v 'nun N, ROBERT PHACHT Utica, Kansas Oklahoma A 6 M P. S. G. Lakeside Osteo. Hosp. Kansas City, Mo. ...mug K MAURICE PRIDDY Blanket. Texas Howard Payne Col. P. S. G. Corpus Christi Osteo. Hosp.. Corpus Christi. Texa 4-.. L A 5 5310. , 'QV w---... wg... I , 4 I PAUL REYNOLDS Shawnee. Okla. Okla. Baptist Univ. P. S, G., Newman Club Sec'y. President .- 4 . l t T t ,t t It -1 'l 1 2 ,gl A ' 'P RAYMOND HOONEY Olmsted Falls. Ohio Baldwin-Wallace College P. S. G., St. Council, V. Pres. Green Cross Hosp., Cuyahoga Falls, O. a 4 1. Wm f W ,gp Q fa 'Q W'- 1,4 t 5 H' N S, 5 A f -. ffafiili . IJ M LESTER ROSE. B, A. Napa, Calif. Walla-Walla College P. S. A., Rec. Sec'y. Community Medical Center ,,..,f e 1, re ' T 34 Q3 Shelf ' mg .ri svn 'if .A Q K ' , gm Q, alll ' f ROBERT ROSE Irving, Texas Southern Methodist Univ, St, Council, Sr. Class, V. Pres. Stevens Park Osteo, Hosp., Dallas, Texas Zi E. ROSENCRANTZ Portland, Ore. Univ, oi Oregon I. T. S., Hi-12. Soc. oi Neuropsy., Fr. Class Pres., S1eth,, Photoq. Park View Hosp., Los Angeles, Calif. l , w 1 'L A mms. I l - l .Y rags Q, 51.-A, ' ,.,, :y.jQ3i'f - a-na. . f V ' , lr.: ,455 -'f r Li I-Ha' - x ,- DONALD M. ROSS Tucson, Arizona LaSierru Col. Phoenix Osteo. Hosp., Phoenix, Arizona 'FSR' S, -41 EARL SALHANY Winston-Salem. North Carolina Southern Missionary Col, Lakeside Osteo. Hosp.. Kansas City, Mo. M 1-i5f1E5Mf1Lx Qi', ,f,3!3P' ' qw? g 'i2W'f . ii, iii J I A K vi Q 'iq' x -, .,..... LOY SANDERS, B. A. W. W. SAVAGE Arp. Texas Winston, Okla. Univ. oi Texas Northeast St, Col. Atlus Corpus Christi Osteo. Hosp.. Corpus Christi, Texas l. T. S.. R. S. C. Oklahoma Osteo. Hosp.. Tulsa, Oklahoma hi.. in -. m ' M ,Q ' 5 v HAROLD SCHREIBEH New York City Florida Southern Univ. P. S. G., S. S. P. Metropolitan Hosp. Philadelphia, Pa, ROBERT SHERMAN Bethlehem, Pa. Moravian Col. P, S. G., P. S, A.. S. S. P.. A. P, O.. Vi Pres.. Soc. of Neuropsy., Ir. Acad ol Appl, Osteopathy. Newman Club Allentown Osteo. Hosp., Allentown, Pa. -... . Ehybsrjf Q .iid of-.xxbpfft-fi. I gg, 3 . ?5 4...-. .gf i CHARLES SMITH Ottumwa, Iowa N, E. Missouri St. Tchs. Col, Hi-12 Houston Osteo. Hosp. Houston. Texas 1 x t X 1 Qinalcflf f I WM. L. SMITH, A. B. Sandusky. Ohio Ohio Wesleyan Univ P, S. G. Green Cross Hosp.. Cuyahoga Falls, O. FnQf,l 1 I .. K f ful -n--Av. x HOWARD SOMAN New York City S. E. Missouri St. Tchs. Col. Normandy Osteo. Hosp.. St. Louis. Mo. why 0' . ...... R. SPAVINS, B. S, Northport. N. Y. N. E. Missouri St. Tchs. Col. Atlas, V. Pres. Lakeside Osleo. Hosp. Kansas City. Mo. JPN kk 'W S- nv' ww RICHARD STAAB LaCrosse. Wis, LaCrosse Sl. Tchs. Col. P. S, G., P. S. A.. V. Pres. Oklahoma Osteo, Hosp.. Tulsa. Oklahoma 1 bl .Q 1671... -..nr L 1 9? ' A 4 c' WM. STEFANICH, B. A. Campbell, Ohio Youngstown Col. P, S. G., Soc of Neuropsy Treas. Doctor's Hosp.. Columbus, Ohio I ,',Q V I 'lan 5 .5 5 I x - X S V1 r - R x -i gg-5,-, rx. ,,,- ,fwvwff-,igiy fgiiqf- 1 .1 f .V ,iz 'fi 3 , W, . 5, M. f X X 3 F. STRICKLAND, A. B. Talmage, Calil. Pacific Union Col. P. S. A. Los Angeles Co. Hosp., Los Angeles, Calif. IOSEPH STIEH, B. A. N. Sacramento, Calif. LaSienc Col. P. S. A. Community Medical Center , QT- 114. Jeff: K . ,fa w',a.aa,f...3f 555. 5 Y , .. .M 1 f .4 x lie' zpjnxzlf' . it Q 1 Q ' ' ,f 1 V . Z, ,.,k,l,V1?5Yf ,, ?'1 'w'si5?:f1 ' ' '?' .-F227 1215 V . ff W jg? ,Af ' iff' M ff E. SULLIVAN. B. A. New Yoxk City New York Univ. Newman Club, V. Pres., P. S. A., Pres.. Atlas Club Glendale Community Hosp., Glendale, California W. NIAXQ bu. K , D. TREPANIER, B. S. Detroit, Michigan Wayne Univ. Atlas Club.. S. S. P. Newman Club Rivelside Osteo. Hosp Trenton, Michigan filo- iii: . sq.. -..., ,W R. WASSERMAN, B. Allentown. Pa. Muhlenberg Col. Atlas Zieger Osteo. Hosp.. Delroil. Michigan is V fm QP .lf -' .M-' i IOHN L. WATSON Ottawa, Kansas Kansas Sl. Col. Atlas, A. P. O. P. S, A., Soc. ol Neuropsy. Wetzel Osleo. Hosp.. Clinton, Mo. LL '57 if L. WEISHAAH, B. S. Aberdeen. S. Dak. Noxthern Sl. Tchs. Col. Newman Club, S. S. P. s ,.. QN Gi , 5,- --.-- , P I T. G. WING, B. A. Los Angeles, California Univ. of Miss. P, S. G., Slelh.. Pholog. Monte Sano Hosp. Los Angeles, Calif. L13 ' 4 1 - r I I T' 74 ,ll 'A 'in' ,' me -,: f-5fYQ.Nf,g-. . f, 1. f- -k. iwwff y - 'C-I Y' I w- ' . 1 'er '-T J 'fr ' in ,. ,. ,. V I I ' my , 2.45, ' 4 I. WINSLOW. B. S. Dallas, Texas East Texas St. Tchs. P. S. G., I. F. C.. St. Council Dallas Osleo. Hosp., Dallas, Texas Col. I. WOLPMANN, B. S. San Antonio, Tex. Texas A 6 M Col. St. Council. I. F. C.. Sgt.-at-Arms, P. S. Cor. Sec'y. Community Hosp.. Houston. Texas L. ZACHARY, B. A. St. I-Ielena, Calif. Pacific Union Col. Traverse City Osteo. Hosp.. Traverse City, Michigan Yr Q F' : g 15:31-: EI lp ' I f 2:1 , 1 I I - rfgfigz, A, - Q.. .1114 g 7 f I EDWARD ZALEN, B. S. LaPorte, Indiana N. E. Missouri St. Tchs. Col. Atlas Club, Pres., Sec'y. Green Cross Has Cuyahoga Falls. p.. O. wi ,un- V . Q. f IACK ZIMMERMAN Elkhart. Kansas Univ. ol K. C. P. S. G., V. Pres.. Hi-12 Oklahoma Osteo. Hosp., Tulsa. Okla. 1 n- 'Q Q- I ELLEEN HUNTER. B. S. Detroit. Michigan Mercy College K. P. D.. Pres.. Treus D. O, Z., Pres., Treasl Sleth. s I i 'C' - lNct Pictured! HARLEY GALUSHA Ponca City, Okla. Phillips Univ. Grandview Osteo. Hospital, Daylon, Ohio 6 M99 11 nY24f 72,o! l9oc.. 720-t ffL7?uaflz.u Ca fp Wf ff F .WGN afn.,Lfa.z,!.fvi29.,L44-2euz.,zM.' M ? l :Z 69 x lxx , f 5 'J , if D- O' s , I ff --aomlaZ!?laJ-f-uolo4mfww-i 15-Zonal. ,E 5 0 f Q sf? 5 L Mftfff' 542-ij A ,,Nnn'Hl3s LS '29, y,4..!fI., 44.19 aAuma.M? n1.1d..,,...m 'X M... qfgmlib DEPARTMENTS DEPARTMENT OF ANATOMY C. H. MORGAN, Ph.D., M. D., D. O., Chairman WILBUR V. COLE, B. S., M. S., D. O. WILLIAM H. MARTIN, D. O. I. EUGENE MIELCAREK, B. S., M. S. IAMES L. ROWLAND, B. A P. H 'B--.. 'h, 9' DEPARTMENT OF BACTERIOLOGY AND PUBLIC HEALTH RICHARD G. TAYLOR, B. S., A. M., Chairman PATRICK MARTIN, B. S., M. S. MURRAY T. PRITCHARD, A B.. B. S., M. P. H. I. EUGENE MIELCAREK, B. S.. M. S. IAMES L. ROWLAND, B. A M. P. I-I. I ' I 2 Il Q 1. . l ki I It I li-2 ,, I fs: P is 1 DEPARTMENT OF BIOCHEMISTRY RICHARD G. TAYLOR, B. S., A. M., Chairman FREEMAN CLAXTON, B. S., M. A. PATRICK MARTIN, B. S., M. S. hs v rag I I H I . , 1 is yy, 'N' wig V ' i . N y I 2 L. , A ' mf I . is 1 1 DEPARTMENT OF OSTEOPATHIC PRINCIPLES Wilbur V. Cole, B.S., D.O.. Chairman Grover N. Gillum, B.S., D.O. L. Raymond Hall, D.O., F.A.C.O.S. Francis L. Harmon. D.O. Grant H. C. Holcomb, D.O. C. H. Morgan, D.O. Esther Srnoot, D.O. M. S. Steinberg, D.O. Harold W. Witt, AB., D.O Frederick A. Treffer, D.O. S 'sq Q 5 '?'4k:':::2Ql4' is I ! QQ f r ., w-Qu. 'Jr gi 1 vm-we-'H 4 DEPARTMENT OF CSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE Grover N. Gillum, B.S., D.O.. Chairman Allred B. Couch, LL.B. Francis L. Harmon, D.O. Myxon D. Tones, D.O. Floyd E. Dunn, D.O. Grant R. C, Holcomb. D.O. Anthony E. Sccrdino, D.O. W. M. Fowler, D.O. Paul K. Houdek, A.B., MS. Robert R. Tonkens, A.B., D.O. W. K. Graham, D.O. Iohn M. Howard. D.O. Harold W, Witt, A.B., D.O. L. Raymond Hull, D.O.. F.A.C.O.S. Mamie E. Iohnston, D.O. Elias E. Zirul, D.O. DIVISION OF INTERNAL MEDICINE Verne: I. Ames DO G. N. Gillum, D.O., Chairman I , . - Elias E, Zinn, AB., D.O. William Graham, D.O. D. P, Arnemcn, D.O., Resident M' S- Slembefg- D-O4 Melvin E. johnson, D.O., Resident Harold W. Witt, A.B., D.O. Roy M. Slick, D.O.. Resident . :Ak mf --- lin ,A - . E' AI : 'S If I 1 A ,, ' :rg wx ' ga?-E., ? I L I 4 D n I K DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY DIVISION OF MAJOR SURGERY WM. A. FLANNERY, A. B., M. S., D. O MARGARET H. IONES D O F A C O S L, RAYMOND HALL, D. O., F.A.C.O.S HAROLD I. MCANALLY D O F A C O S I x ...Ak 7 if x I id. mI,Irf DIVISION OF ANESTHESIA ROY V CULP, D. O., Chairman MARY LOU BUTTERWORTH, D. O., R d I N 'f I N' Y' DIVISION OF ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY THOMAS T. MCGRATH, D. O., Chairman WILLIAM F. LUEBBERT, D. O., Resident WILLIAM I. MONAGHAN, D. O., Resident A O Ig , Ifrkzw , , . I ' I if f f ' I I nl 4 gi' atv .ff I A fi . , , I ,-J , V ' ,I 1 -:F ' ' I ,f Il 75 'v'- - - ALBERT A CHOQUETTE, D. O., Chairman DALE W. BURROFF, D O Resndent Ps. .4,.ffy - 113, 4 ' ' 3 , X' NF A 2 . it .aa 1 D 4 -sw iS W m 'f'1l3v , 617' ,ff Xi E Ki? f' DIVISION OF RADIOLOGY HERVEY S, SCOTT, D. O., Ch HARVE I. HELTON, A. B., D. O. uirmcm THOMAS LAMB, D. O., Res d t :PN 2 in I , A . , I. , , ' I I .Qi f ' I 4 A i .Mil N I 'JH ,,1 I ' -9 ,. I A . . u 3 DIVISION OF OPHTHALMOLOGY AND OTORHINOLARYNGOLOGY A. B, Crites, AB., D.O., lVl.D,, Chairman D. W. Streitenberger, D.O. W. H. Van de Grilt, D.O. Iohn W. Gexger, D.O. Edward C. Murray, D.O., Fellow Leland S. Lcrimore. D. . Harold Vard Nelson. D.O., Fellow J , A 3' ' f I A W A ff, , I . U .Q I V F I , , J I X X Y ,f , i I X V I I In f ' 'S ' I I' I, ' 17,7 S QAII Is- f-'Calf I I I Q 1 ' - . 5 . I . ' f f I I A I X. M I I I ..,, .. ,. , I - ffm V, I I. r' ' fy I Q ,'.' S., , I DIVISION OF PROCTOLOGY AND MINOR SURGERY Arden M. Price. D.O., Chairman six? E3 OUT-PATIENT CLINICAL LABORATORY AT THE COLLEGE HERBERT D. RAMSAY, M. S., D. O., Director M. T. PRITCHARD, A, B., B. S., M. P. H., Supervisor FREEMAN CLAXTON, M. A., M. T., Chief Technician RICHARD WASSERMAN, B. A., M. T. At the disposal ot every Iunior and Senior student are the facilities ot the clinical laboratory. The clinical laboratory is directed by Dr. H. Ramsay and staffed by Certified Medical Technicians. The student does his blood studies, urinalysis, and any diagnostic procedure that is required in the evalua- tion of his patient's case, in the clinical laboratory. The laboratory is certiiied by the Department ot Health of the State of Missouri for V. D. R. L. tests. Clinical laboratory tests requiring expert skill and determination are done by the medical technicians. The laboratory serves Conley Hospital, the clinic and provides Serological examinations for marriage licensing. The clinical laboratory provides practical ap- plication oi laboratory tests, which the student has studied in his courses. 91 DEPARTMENT OF CLINICS FRANCIS L. HARMON, D. O., Director GRANT R. C. HOLCOMB, D. O., Assisting Director The Clinical Department of the College is departmentalized under the following divisions: DEPARTMENT OF OSTEOPATI-IIC MEDICINE a. In-patient division b. Out-patient division c. Clinical laboratory d. X-ray DEPARTMENT OF SURGERY DEPARTMENT OF EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT DEPARTMENT OF PEDIATRICS DEPARTMENT OF HEART AND LUNGS DEPARTMENT OF MINOR SURGERY DEPARTMENT OF UROLOGY DEPARTMENT OF DERMATOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF ORTHOPEDICS DEPARTMENT OF RADIOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY DEPARTMENT OF PROCTOLOGY When cr patient is registered in the clinic he is assigned to a student doctor who elicits a careful history and does a complete physical examination along with necessary laboratory determinations. The patient is then recommended to the various special- ties and the student doctor is given the benefit of the direction of the consulting specialists. A diagnosis and treatment is then suggested by the student doctor. The clinicians put forth a correct diagnosis and outline a course of treatment, which is carried out by the student doctor. In the clinic procedure the primary concern is for the patient's welfare and secondarily for the edu- cation of the student doctors. The various disease en- tities that are discovered in the course of the examina- tion stimulate the future doctor to further studies. 92 yn in DIAGNOSTIC SURVEY T fl Q3 fl , ,rg ' 4A. ,U A 4 ,P .ffifi , I - A ...f X4 ll, ly my uf X , X M25 5 A NEUROMUSCULAR CLINIC Since its beginning in 1951, the Division of Neuromuscular Disorders and Rehabilitation has ex- panded rapidly, both as to personnel and physical plant. Under the direct supervision of Dr. C. H. Morgan, the Clinic has enjoyed recognition throughout the Middle West. The consistently beneficial response shown by this department is the direct result of correlating the principles of Structural Integrity with the Rule of the Artery with modern physical therapy measures. Clinical research into the effectiveness of Osteo- pathic treatment is being accomplished in this ever- expanding field. POSTGRADUATE TRAINING DR. C. H. MORGAN Director The College and its Teaching Hospitals, through its Faculty and Staff, recognize the responsibility they have to the profession at large to provide post- graduate and graduate training and instruction in the various departments. lt is the object of the Col- lege to furnish opportunities, as they exist or as they may develop, to members oi the profession to obtain this training. To this end the College offers through its Postgraduate division, residencies and fellowships in various specialties. The Postgraduate division has offered in the past brief, intensive cour- ses in selected specialties and has attempted to meet the needs of the busy practitioner. Long term courses in Residencies are offered to meet the needs and desires of the developing specialist. The College through its Graduate Division re- cognizes the great progress being made in the care of the ill and it is its intent to keep abreast with the latest fundamental changes and to serve the Profes- sion at large through this effort. UNDERGRADUATE CARDIOVASCULAR TRAINING PROGRAM MILTON S. STEINBERG, D. O., Director UNDERGRADUATE PSYCHIATRIC TRAINING PROGRAM FLOYD DUNN. D. O., F. A. C. N., Chairman yz,..f .. RESEARCH DEPARTMENT W. V. COLE, B. S., D. O., Chairman KENNETH I. DAVIS, A. B., D. O. T. NORRIS, B, S,, M, S., Ph, D, l. E. MIELCAREK, B. S., M. S. I. M. PEACH, B. S., D. Sc. CHon.J The College is especially proud of the Research Program, which is yearly expanding under the guidance of its director, Dr. W. V. Cole. Dr. Cole, chairman of the department, is con- sidered one of the leading authorities on motor neu- ron terminations: He, with the aid of his assistants, M. L. Wisby and F. A. Henson, have considerably ad- vanced his research into this subject. Dr. Theodore Norris, of the Department of Physi- ology, with the aid of assistants M. Ketchum and A. C. Todd, have completed their research into the effect of cerfical lesions upon the activity of the thy- roid gland, and have since begun a new project studying the effect of the use of ultrasonic waves in producing necrosis of tissue. Eugene I. Meilcarek has ably advanced the re- search project of studying the uses of fluorochrome dyes in nerve tissue. Mr. Meilcarek's work with fluorescence stains will help in explaining some of the histological questions now confronting cytolo- gists. His work has been aided by recently acquired laboratory equipment, including the infrared micro- scopic attachments, nonfluorescing iilters, objective lens and microphotographic units. The Research Program has been sponsored by grants from the American Osteopathic Association. i I-2 nzull H 5 6 7sB'9 wa-:Q Z., 5, ,Z 5, sv ra is nu-ut-nz 98 4 3. f. ' 0. ' 5 D f to ' J. Q i 57 r ! 'e I E I r , I f DEPARTMENT OF GYNECGLOGY AND OBSTETRICS Lee E. Davidson, D.O., Chairman Mamie E, Iohnston, D.O, Charles A. Pignotli, D.O., Resident Margaret H, Iones. D.O, Robert Springer, D,O., Resident Luther W. Swift, A.B.. D.O. Frank M. Weaver, B.S., D.O., Resident ...Q gf- Y i x ', x 1 , 7 ' N I ' ,xt l fr ' . sf'?'7'j: . '+A W LN, K mm, P' VKX A X ,. WB ' 'if Wili' 8 1 IW , yu' .f,i1.g1g,gg .,u '3l w. ad' xv! ' eff? , X. y xl -cf X fix 5 ' ' S X . 0 x S b fri CHILD HEALTH CONFERENCE DR. IOHN C. TAYLOR General Chairman DR. WM. D. HAND, IR. Exhibit Chairman The 24th National Osteopathic Child Health Con- ference was held at the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City on April 9, 10, and ll, 1956. At that time prominent Osteopathic Specialists from all over the country held seminars on Respiratory Diseases, Musculo-skeletal conditions, Endocrinology and Pe- diatric Gynecology. The visiting physicians taking part in the conference presented children with un- usual cases before panels for clinical presentation discussions and for examination and diagnosis by pediatric staff. Seventy-five commercial exhibits, in- cluding some of the nations largest pharmaceutical and supply companies and mild and derivative com- panies, as well as several scientific exhibits on On- cology, Cardiology, Dermatology, Pathology, Roen- tgenology, etc. were displayed. The N. O. C. H. C. also offers a splendid oppor- tunity forthe A. O. A. colleges, alumni and divisional associations to hold meeting in conjunction with busi- ness sessions of the conference. The visiting doctors wives were feted to a brunch and a guided tour of the city sponsored by the Auxiliary to the Iackson County Osteopathic Association. ably assisted by the Student Wives Club of K. C. C. O. S. The Iack- son County Osteopathic Association, sponsors of the NOCHC, were hosts to over 1,000 doctors, their wives, exhibitors, press, radio and TV representatives at a gala banquet and ball which took place the second evening of the conference in the Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Muehlebach. l0Z DR. ROBERT R. TONKINS Program Chairman DR. R. W. PARLSER Publicity Chairman Osteopathic, Conley Maternity, Lakeside, North- east, DeVine Brothers Hospitals and the Kansas City College oi Osteopathy and Surgery cooperated in the technical side of the conference, and with con- tinued good cooperation between the doctors, hos- pitals, college and exhibitors, there is no reason why the NOCHC should not continue to be the outstand- ing program that it is today. W? i gi 44 pf' 1 wwe 696 X o P14 6 ybftx +C -,xN 9:-qbvax, Z wr f ,fm Z riffs? X 57593 f '-15 ,wr gnyvi QE!!! Y I , I X 1' W Z N f,,4QIf1 M J ..f , K6 f I- , if 4? ffffW5fff22ffI1gIffz WW I If ' f ff K A, X KNNWKKNNX I-I l Y ig, I. I KQV ACTIVITIES . cg ,,f'. ' k1',E'2fg5iij s ufix-,-a . QL! ax 5 .fff'fi:i iv W. V. Cole. D.O. Faculty Advisor OFFICERS Edward Zalen Angelo Pardo George A. Denka William H. Clark Clifton I. Bumpus N. Lewis Schoon Edward Zalen Noble Skull NOBLE SKULL OCCIPITAL PYLOHUS SACRUIVI STYLUS RECEPTACULUM ATLAS CLUB The oldest and largest fraternity of the Osteo- pathic protession is the Atlas Club. The fraternity was founded in Library Hall, American School of Osteopathy, Kirksville, Missouri on December IO, 1898. ln 1923, the Mastoid Chapter was founded at this college. The purpose of the Atlas Club is to combine social life, intellectual endeavor, and loyalty to the Osteopathic concept into a well rounded fraternal organization. The government is vested in a Grand Chapter composed of representatives from each chapter and from the alumni organization. Annual meetings are held at the time of the convention of the American Osteopathic Association. The emblem of the Atlas Club is the ATLAS VERTEBRAEH with the letters A. C. appearing on the superior articulating facets. Atlas Club holds the honor of having the only iraternity house on the campus, which has been in existence for a year now. The house helps create a closer friendship and bondage between its active members and alumni. 04 I . . f qs -mrs'- MEMBERS William Bannister Robert C. Bell Marion F. Biondo Thomas H. Bonino Edward C. Bowe Iames A. Byrd Iohn N. Crane George A. Denka Lynn W. Dingman Daniel Feldheim Arnold Fox William K. Franta Peter S. Giglio Marion A. Groff Henry V. Larabee Albert L. Lindsay Dave Mathews William R. Morrison Don W. Mueller William I. Munro Angelo Pardo Roy N. Saners Edward Shelton George Sivak Gene Spagnoli Richard Spavins Harold Sturgeon Bob Thiele Don Trepunier Robert C. Ward Richard L. Wasserm Iohn L. Watson Dean E. Wintermute Cin l fl!! 10 oe I ' ' A f. in W-1' : rf ' ,gag T- A- W 'fbi ,' W. f . ff-2 'm if Ii, 6.3, .. ni, . ww ,, K f 'W' U 4 . J-, ' Y O. Ioe Looper President y MEMBERS F awzi Aby-El-Haj Phillip Accardo Ray Avera William Bailes William Bender Mark Betterman Manuel Blando Roy Bobbitt William Boone Frank Bradley Raymond Bucci Robert Burns Iohn Cahill Vitale Ciavatta Nicholas Cipolla Kenneth Cole Anthony Corona Iohn Corpolongo Paul Cronen Frank Cuellari Cecil Cunningham Robert Cyman Kingsley Davis Morton Fox Everett French Gerald Gass Robert Gilday Arturo Gonzalez Alfred Hamilton Leo Hartman Ray Helton William Hinsberg Ralph Hubbard Arnold Kaufman Ioseph Keuchel Ben Kraut Ioseph Langnas Ronald LePere Ioe Looper Peter Marquez Iack Mekjian Henry Meyers Adam Paoni Donald Peterson David Pines Gerald Reznick Eugene Rosencrantz Iames Ryan Paul Salanon Woodrow Savage Bill Sealey Leonard Segal Robert Skufca Henry Stanley Bennette Sullivan Richard Tedrick Ted Thompson Rudi Wadle Walker West Eugene Wudkewych Eugene Zachary IOTA TAU SIGMA OFFICERS O, lpe Looper PRESIDENT Allred Hamilton VICE PRESIDENT Paul Cronen SECRETARY lohn Cahill TREASURER Ronald LePere CORR. SECRETARY Leonard Segal HISTORIAN Ioseph Keuchel SGT. AT ARMS CHAPTER DEPUTIES Dr. Lee E. Davidson Dr. T. T. McGrath The iirst Greek letter fraternity of Osteopathy, Iota Tau Sigma was or- ganized and founded over fifty years ago. The motivation for its organization stemmed from the desire of a small group of students to augment and intensify their common,socia1 and educational interests. Since the beginning, Iota Tau Sigma has maintained as its goal the perpetuation of devotion to the Osteopathic profession by its members, and has contributed to the material advancement and accomplishment of its mem- bers. In 1920, Iota Tau Sigma was founded at the Kansas City College oi Osteopathy and Surgery. Its activities are integrated with, and to some ex- tent regulated by a Supreme Council on a national level. A semi-annual publication, the GOZZLE NIPPER, provided a report on the activities and progress ot the various chapters and individual members 107 WHSGMA -tl GAMMA A , Q ' OFFICERS AX Basil Iohns ARCHON Pr . ' ' N lack Zimmerman SUB-ARCHON tiff ' T ,Q Marvin Vercler CRUSOPHUI-AX y Wm. Masters PRONATARIUS 'L W' Q' 1 Ed Loniewski PHUI-AX .- j ,, Melvin McDaniel EXTASTASE ,is 4' ' X . .L N 'i ' FACULTY ADVISOR Basil lohns Dr, D. Strietenberger Dr. Dwight Skellenbefgef President Faculty Advisor The Epsilon Chapter of the Psi Sigma Gamma Fraternity was founded in 1915 at the Kansas City College of Osteopathy and Sur- gery. The primary aim of the fraternity is to bring about a closer fellowship among the members. The fraternity holds one business and one social meeting each month. The social meet- ings consist of professional programs which are presented to the members of the fraternity. The highlights in the chapter activities are the Rush Party, the Senior Stag held for the graduating seniors and the Spring Formal held in May. The fraternity, although a social fraternity has achieved many scholastic honors at the college. We have several members in the PSA and SSP. MEMBERS Douglas Agee Iames Altenes Ioseph Amico Albert Azarian Iohn Bauer Raymond Breedlove Robert Bulick Frank Campobasso Ioseph Cavalier Clarence Cogburn Robert Connair Robert Crawford Nicholas Cunicella Robert L. Curtiss Reid Davidson William Delp Ray Dixon Lawrence Dobson Donald Duschay Rudolph Edwards Iohn Ferrara Thomas Forrestal Lawrence Galla lack Gallagher Harley Gatrell Clinton Glaspy Stanley Glick Kenneth Gregory Richard Grilfin Iessie Hall Harry Haltzman Ray Harper Iohn Heim George Henderson Fred Henson William Hillyard Iimmy Hobbs Virgil Hoemann Iohn Holcomb Harold L. Huggins Raymond Hughes Edward Hunter Robert lzbicki Ioe Iordan Derald Kahler Donald Kennedy Michael Kondik Newman Kopald David Logan Armand Lupo Herbert Marshak Eugene Mielcarek Sam Misasi Iohn Moor William Moore Patrick Murray Louis Orlando Earl Parker Charles Perry Robert Pracht Iames Pressley Maurice Priddy Murray Pritchard Walter Reed Paul Reynolds Alexander Roberts Raymond Rooney Iames Rowland Ernest Sachse Billy Scrrtin Dan Scarnecchia Marvin Schermerhorr Robert Schirmer Harold Schreiber Reed Shankwiler Robert Sherman William Smith Richard Spence Richard Staab William Stefanich Martin Steinberg Vincent Sundry Robert Taylor William Van Kleeck Iohn Wank T. G. Wing Iames Winslow Melvin Wisby loe Wolpmann l0 t 1 1 I 1 .. 'i 111 1,1 ... Ill .,y tl 1 11' 11 11 It lt l. X . 11.1 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 . 5 1 5 it 1 1 . 1 4 1, 1. 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 ,. .its ftl afii 5111 ' 110 LAMBDA OMICRON GAMMA Dr. Milton Steinberg Faculty Advisor ag o. ft. 1' A g 0,2 Lambda Omicron Gamma is a national Osteopathic Fraternity with large chapters in Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Des Moines and Chicago. The active alumni oi LOG comprise more than one-tenth of the Osteopathic Pro- iession. The purpose of L. O. G. is to promote fraternalism and brotherhood and to promul- gate and perpetuate the Osteopathic School of Medicine. OFFICERS Arnold Eisenman PRESIDENT Donald Barnovitz VICE PRESIDENT Ronald Paroly SECRETARY-TREASURER FACULTY ADVISOR Milton S. Steinberg, D. O. HON ORARY FACULTY MEMBERS Kenneth I. Davis. D. O., Dean C. H. Morqan, M. S.. Ph. D.. D. O. Herbert D. Ramsay. B. S., M. S.. D. O. MEMBERS Morton Aizic Stuart Baron Harry Cohen Stuart Cooper David Farber Harvey Golden Irwin Gorenstein Allen Iosephs Herbert Ioshowitz Leonard Katz Allen Lebowitz Philip Malvin Arnold Masters Irwin Rosenbaum The nucleus of our chapter was organized in the early part oi 1955. Ou.r chapter is known as the Cardia chapter of L. O. G. as Kansas City is known as the heart of the Nation and K. C. C. O. S. Will become, we are sure, the pivot point of Osteopathy. We assumed an active role in campus affairs in the fall of 1955 and trust our activities shall be a credit to L. O. G. and K. C. C. O. S. '. , 3 ff wi K ' Q., x onvwb A1 LAMBDA OMICRON GAMMA OFFICERS Eileen Hunter PRESIDENT Pat Patterson VICE-PRESIDENT DELTA OMEGA ZETA V Eileen Hunter President MEMBERS Nedra Dick Alice Ding Elsie Eng Ethyl Eng Elaine Freeman Genie Griffin loy Groom Eileen Hunter Marjorie McCorm Pat Patterson Mrs. I. Rowland ack Elaine Freeman SECRETARY-TREASURER Mrs. I. L. Rowland SORORITY SPONSOR The two words Delta Omega have become synonymous in the Osteopathic Profession with ultimate standards of ethics, scholarship and promotion of good public relations. The Zeta Chapter was founded on our campus under the auspices of Mrs. Grover Gillum and Mrs. Iames Rowland. Along with the student doctor members, these founders feel a consciousness towards the fulfillment of the sorority's obligations to pursue osteo- pathic principles, fellowship and incite academ- ic zeal. These ideals remain paramount in the minds of those called Delta Women . I , T ,rn I Nedra Dick President Kappa Psi Delta is the oldest women's sorority on the Kansas City College of Osteopathy and Sur- gery campus, having been established by an group of energetic women a few years following the found- ing of the college. Through the years, the sorority has capably maintained its aims of upholding osteopathic prin- ciples, of establishing better relationships among the student body and of maintaining a high standard oi KAPPA PSI DELTA OFFICERS Nedra Dick PRESIDENT Elsie Eng VICE PRESIDENT loy Groom SECRETARY TREASURER Mamie E. Iohnston. D. O. FACULTY ADVISOR scholarship. To the osteopathic woman doctor the sorority serves to inspire loyalty to her college and as a means of better mutual understanding with the wo men physicians in the field Through informal get togethers through casual meetings and through formal lectures the sororit succeeds in its purpose-preparing the Women stx dent doctors for a career in Osteopathy ,h'-'AKD fHBZH I!-432 MEMBERS Dr. Mamie Iohnston, Faculty Edvisor Ethyl Eng Marjorie McCormack Pat,Patterson Eileen Hunter Ioy Groom Elsie Eng Nedra Dick Elaine Freeman Genie Griffin Alice Ding - INS!! NF BEA I E Ki H II ll Robert Bulick Dr. H. D. Ramsay Vice-President Faculty Advisor Q XI C2 . i h' I Rho Sigma Chi, an honorary society, was founded at Des Moines University. Des Moines. Iowa, in September 1927. The chapter on this campus was organized in August 1950 and named the George I. Conley Chapter in honor of the first presi- dent of our college, Dr. George I. Conley. Rho Sigma Chi bases its membership on ser- vice to the institution or its academic and profes- sional phases, requiring as a prerequisite that the Honorary Society. Geo. I. Conley Chapter OFFICERS Dr. C. H. Morgan PRESIDENT Robert Bulick VICE-PRESIDENT Dr. Mamie Iohnston SEC.-TREASURER Dr. H. D. Ramsay FACULTY ADVISOR MEMBERS HONORARY MEMBERS Woodrow Savage Dr. I. M. PEACH Eugene Rosencrantz Robert Bulick William Hinsberg Harold Huggins Elaine Freeman Richard Wasserman Henry Larabee Richard Tedrick William Iohnson Dr. K. I. Davis Dr. Emory Fisher Dr. Glenn W. Springer student exceed in services usually rendered to the institution. By the nature of the prerequisites, no student is chosen until the junior year in order that a true evaluation of his standing and his services to the college and fellow students may be obtained. A satisfactory class standing must have been maintained by the candidate for membership and his membership must be approved by a committee of the faculty and by the president of the college. 4 Edward Sullivan Richard Staab Lester Rose Ioseph Cavalier Iulius Gorton David Logan I' Dr. Verner Ames l 4 4 Edward Sullivan Dr. Verner Ames President Faculty Advisor P. S. A. received its charter.as a national scholastic honorary society in 1929. The primary aim is to encourage higher scholastic standards as well as to honor those who demonstrate a high degree of scholastic ability and professional attitude. E The functions of P. S. A. include seminars presented by special- ists from the various departments and guest lecturers. At the annual Spring banquet, life membership certificates are awarded to senior members and a special award is given the senior with the highest scholastic average for the four year course. PSI SIGMA ALPHA PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT RECORDING SEC'Y. CORRESPONDING SEC'Y. TREASURER CHAPLAIN FACULTY ADVISOR ll IUNIOR MEMBERS Paul Armstrong George Denka Arnold Fox Robert Izbicki Mike Ketcham I oe Looper N. Lewis Schoon Martin Steinberg Dale Stoops Carson Todd Robert Ward SENIOR MEMBERS Ioseph Bess Frank Campobosso Iohn Corpolongo Gordon DeVries William Ford Clinton Glaspy Newman Kopald Derald Kahler William Munro Andrew Neckles Eugene Rosenkrantz Robert Sherman loseph Stier Frank Strickland lohn Watson MEMBERS W. V. Cole, D.O. Paul Cronen, lVI.S. Faculty Advisor President Founded in 1921 at Kirksville Missouri, Sigma Sigma Phi is the oldest national osteo- pathic honorary iraternity. The charter mem- bers dedicated themselves to the formation of an interfraternity fraternity. Prerequisites for membership are scholas- tic, leadership, good fellowship, and the capa- city to assist in the orderly qrowth and develop- ment of Osteopathic Medicine. Men may be- come eligible tor membership consideration at the end of the second trimester of their Sopho- more year. SIGMA SIGMA PHI OFFICERS Paul W. Cmnen PRESIDENT William B. Bender VICE-PRESIDENT Clinton L. Glaspy SECRETARY-TREASURER Charles L. Perry SERGEANT-AT-ARMS Robert I. Sherman HISTORIAN HONORARY MEMBERS Myron Iones, D. O. Arden M. Price, D. O. Harold W. Witt, A. B., D. O. IUNIORS Donald Barnovitz Marion Biondo Thomas Bonino David Farber Lawrence Greenberg Seymour Isenberg Edward Loniewski Patrick Murray Paul Salanon Robert Schirmer Marvin Solit Henry Stanley Ted V. Thompson Melvin Wisby SENIORS Edward Bowe Robert Bulick Robert Burns Iohn Corpolonqo William Franta lessie N. Hall Virgil Hoemann H. L. Huggins Walter Kempe Eugene Kostick Henry Peters Harold Schreiber Donald Trepanier Lyle Weishaar Ioe Wolpmann lack Zimmerman THE SOCIETY OF NEUROPSYCHIATRY OFFICERS Ben Kraut PRESIDENT Bert Indin VICE-PRESIDENT Walter Kempe SECRETARY E. Rosencrantz CORR. SECRETARY Ben Kraut Herbert Marshak PARLIAIVIENTARIAN President DIRECTORS Grover Gillum, D. O. Clayton Morgan, M. D., D. O. Floyd Dunn, D. O., F. A. C. N. Founded in 1954, the Kansas City College of Osteopcrthy and Surgery chapter of The Society of Neuropsychiatry progressed in both membership and activities during this school year. From a small nucleus membership the organization grew fivefold during the fall. Membership was opened to Fresh- man and Sophomore students for the first time and interest in the activities of the Society became active throughout the college. A Seminar on Hypnosis was held, continuing throughout the year, under the guidance of Dr. Frank Caifin, and much valuable technique relating hyp- nosis to analgesia and therapy was acquired by members of the Society. Contemporary experts in the fields of psycho- analysis and clinical psychology as well as in psy- chometric testing were guest speakers at regular meetings. Yet in its infancy, the Society expects to attract more leaders in the field of Neuropsychiatry to speak and conduct seminars in the following year. In this manner the members hope to be more com- petent physicians in the years to come, treating the entire patient-both the psyche and the body, since they are inseparable. For the third year certificates were awarded to those graduating Seniors who met the requirements of the Society. 117 l p THE UNDERGRADUATE T 1 5 or X , 4 . Y. L . Marvin Solit President 5 . ceq Since the inauguration of a local chapter of the academy on our campus in 1951 there has been steady progress but it wasn't until the present year 1955-56 that we have achieved national recognition, adopting a national constitution and establishing ourselves as the Kansas City Chapter of the Under- graduate Academy of Applied Osteopathy. The purpose of the academy is the advancement of the art of Osteopathy in every manner, particularly to investigate and improve manipulative theory and 8 ACADEMY OF APPLIED OSTEOPATHY OFFICERS Marvin Solit PRESIDENT Tom Campbell VICE-PRESIDENT Henry Larabee SEC.-TREASURER MEMBERS Harry Alsleben loseph Bess Alfred Bennett Robert Cimber Arnold Fox George Helsley Arnold Kaufman Mike Ketcham O. Ioe Looper George Mellone Earl Salhany Lewis Schoon Frank Strickland Robert Ward Thomas Williams technique. Under the leadership of the officers and faculty advisor an ambitious program was planned with two meetings each month. The meetings consisted of lectures. demonstrations and practice sessions by local and visiting osteopathic physicians on such topics as appendicular and fascia technique and Chapman's reflexes. With our firm foundation, nation- al support and a newly found es'prit'de corps we are looking forward to an even more progressive future. it 'Na OFFICERS Henry Larabee Robert Sherman 9099 - ' H, X-ug-',:' PRESIDENT V. PRESIDENT Bert Indin RECORDING SEC'Y Iohri Watson TREASURER Iessie N. Hall ALUMNI SEC'Y Harry I-Ialtzman HISTORIAN I xx 'T' x 'Z 5 in U. : - . ,-9 . Q. o ' QVEYOPM' . 11,169 .0 U I H. Ramsay, D.O. Henry Lorabee Faculty Advisor President ALPHA PHI OMEGA Alpha Phi Omega is a Service Fraternity, cmd the true measure of a successful chapter is the ser- vice rendered to its campus cmd community and nation. This fraternity has a definite program of activities in which the pledges and members direct their energies for the benefit of their fellowmen. The purpose of Alpha Phi Omega, as carried out by the chapters, is to assemble college men in the fellowship of the Scout Oath and Law, to develop friendship and to promote service to humanity. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, was founded December 16. 1925, at Lafayette Col- lege, Easton, Pennsylvania. pvc' 'fc 11 Z0 is or lohn W. Heim Dr. Wilbur V. Cole President Faculty Advisor HI TWELVE Iohn W. Heim Lawrence Dobson Thomas Williams Iames Altenes Dr. Wilbur Cole Paul Bulick William Clark Hall Dillon Peter Giglio Iohn Hanley Scott Hickerson OFFICERS PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER FACULTY ADVISOR MEMBERS Derald Kahler William Lee Donn Mueller Eugene Rosencrantz Iames Rowland Charles Smith Basil Iohns lack Zimmerman The High Twelve club of Kansas City College of Osteopathy and Surgery is an organization of students, members oi the staff and faculty of the college. and professional men who are members of good standing in a lodge of Free Masons. Its purpose is to serve as a social hour. The club is a part of a national organization of High Twelve Clubs. It has the distinction of being the first club of High Twelve International to be formed on the campus of any college. The club has monthly dinner meetings with guest speakers of interest to an osteopathic group. ,. . gi. 2? 'L I. DiRenna. D.O. Edward Loniewski Advisor President The Newman Club has as its purpose to deepen the spiritual and enrich the temporal lives of its members through a balanced program of intellectual and social activities, The ultimate goal of the New- man Club is to guide the Catholic students in the development of their Faith. A monthly Communion breakfast is held at St. Iohn's Chapel and is preceded by Holy Mass and Holy Communion. Following the breakfast a current medical problem dealing with Catholic ethics NEWMAN CLUB OFFICERS Fr. M, Bortolazzo, P. S. S. C. CHAPLAIN Iames A. DiRenna. D. O, FACULTY ADVISOR Edward Loniewski PRESIDENT Robert Connair VICE PRESIDENT Edward Hunter SECRETARY-TREASURER is discussed by guest speakers under the supervision of our chaplain. The entire facilities of St. Iohn's Church have been made available to our organization. , 1Zl w I lf i i l F 1 1 A, f P l V i I 5 i , - . r 1 GLEE CLUB The Glee Club was formed in September of 1955 by I. Eugene Mielcarek and Dr. William Martin. Mr, Morris Kille, director of music at Trinity Methodist Church, a graduate of the Westminster School of Music, was secured as the director of the Glee Club. Prior to Christmas, the newly formed Men's Glee Club gave a perform- ance at the Trinity Methodist Church. The Glee Club will sing at the commence- ment exercise in May, 1956. The elected officers of the Glee Club are Robert Connair, president, Car- min Maietta, secretary, cmd Bertrand Block, treasurer. Faculty advisors are I. Eugene Mielcarek, Dr. William Martin, Dr. Theodore Norris, and Dr. Luther Swift. 2 STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS 1955-56 PETER GIGLIO President RAYMOND ROONEY DONALD PETERSON Vice President Secretary EDWARD LONIEWSKI ROBERT WINSLOW Treasurer Sgt.-qt-Arms The Student Council is composed of six- teen members, four elected from each class, and acts in the administrative capacity for the student body. It has as its prime function the ex- pression of student opinion, cooperation with the faculty in matters related to student welfare and the administration of the Student Council Fund. The fund is used to sponsor all forms of student activities including the school dan- ces, the spring picnic, and the STETHOSCOPE, the college yearbook. In addition to these activi- ties, the fund is used to purchase the A. O. A. journals which are supplied monthly to the students, and for its school improvement pro- jects. MEMBERS FRESHMEN Philip Malvin Eugene Sorenson Robert Connair Donald Peterson SOPHOMORES Angelo Pardo Edward Shelton Joseph Keuchel William H. Clark IUNIORS Gerald Flanagan Ted B. Thompson Edward Loniewski Peter Giglio SENIORS Robert Rose Joe Wolpmann Raymond Rooney Robert Winslow 123 a r . I 1 1 1 A u i . - FW 4 . x 9 Z6 OSTEOPATHIC STUDENTS Lil WIVES CLUB . I X Xi OFFICERS ' X X Rose Marie Hinsberg, PRESIDENT Irene Tedrick, VICE-PRESIDENT ROSE 'gf l?dHi Sbe'9 Shirley Salanon, RECORDING SECRETARY 'es' en' Helen Ward, TREASURER - Phyllis Stanley, CORRESPONDING SECRETARY B. Hall, PARLIAMENTARIAN E Vicci Hamilton, SERGEANT-AT-ARMS QF - ED The purpose of the osteopathic student's wife is symbolized by , I the club emblem-a textbook bearing the medical insignia encircled Grace B. Hall Sponsor by a wedding band. In all things her lite is devoted to furthering her husband's professional advancement. The Osteopathic Students Wives Club aims to promote a spirit of unity and loyalty within the student body: it helps to allay loneliness by providing social contacts between women facing the same problems and working toward a common qoal. Finally, it helps to prepare her for her future as an osteopathic physicians wife. An affiliate oi the Auxiliary to the American Osteopathic Association. the Wives Club included in its activities this year 'the Freshman Tea, a Fashion Show, and the Spring Banquet. Q 4 455 ,9 1. ff MEMBERS SENIOR WIVES Ann Baker Alice Bender Betty Bowe lane Burns Lois Campbell Faye Campbell Barbara Cavalier Dee Corpolongo Martha Cronen Theresa Delp Kay DeVries Bea Eisenman Naomi Gorton B Hall Rose Marie Hinsberg Mitzi Hoeman Cricka Huggins Iackie Iohns leanette Knapp Ann Kopald Virginia Ling Lynn McKewon Gloria Meyers Do Mueller Frances Pearson Ieanne Reynolds lackie Rooney Beulah Rose Helen Rose Edith Rosencrantz Irene Ross Iackie Salhany Betty Sanders Marian Savage Bettie Smith Marlene Smith Marjorie Stier Mary Ellen Watson Winnie Wing Pheobe Winslow Norma Zalen Dot Zimmerman Advisor- IUNIOR WIVES Gloria Barnovitz Betty Io Bennett Io Biondo Connie Bonino Ann Cunicella Ioan Cunningham Virginia Davis Billie Dobson Trudy Flannagan Hannah Fox Flo French Iessie Giglio ludy Glick Barbara Greenberg Grethe Hartelius Dorothy Indin Ieanne lzbicki Ingrid Ketcham Maxine Klitenic Maxine Looper Helen Moor Ruby Rhode Shirley Salanon Lois Smith Phyllis Stanley Louise Sullivan Helen Taft Irene Tedrick Yvonne Thompson Ferrol VanKleeck Gayle Vercler Elaine Wank Helen Ward Gladys West Delma Wintermute Mona Wisby Grace B. Hall SOPHOMORE WIVES Sylvia Cooper Betty Dixon Vicci Hamilton Peggy LaPere Sandra McDaniels Rosalee Pardo Norma Reed Iune Shankwiler Luella Soliday Marge Spagnoli Edie Thiele Lola Truitt Helen White FRESHMAN WIVES Margaret Accardo Sophie Altenes Evelyn Azarian Alleen Bailes Barbara Betterman Mary Babbitt Mary Ciavatta Billie Cimber Mary Connair Barbara Fuller Barbara Hanley Marilyn Hetzel Mary Hillyard Lucille Krachman Araxy Mekjian Dorothy Pine Royene Sachse Evelyn Skuica Melba Taylor Pat Wudkewyck Nancilu Zachary Thanks to the following who have helped us in the preparation of the 1956 STETHOSCOPE: The Administration The Faculty The Staff The Student Council The Fraternity and Club Officers Ray Avera Ronald Baker Grace B. Hall Helen Miller Laura Morris Fern Rising Dr. Herbert Ramsay Mona Smith Richard Wasserman Melvin Wisby Mona Wisby Dr. Harold Witt Iames DiRenna, D.O, Staff Advisor X . vffxf It is traditional for the editor to place, somewhere in the yearbook, his thanks to his staff for the work and assistance they have given him in the prepara- tion of the book. Candidly, this is the hardest part of my task as editor of the 1958 STETHOSCOPE. lt is difficult for me because it is difficult to express my appreciation to the staff with mere words. For the long hours they have worked, for their splendid spirit of cooperation, and for their ready willingness to help at any time and in any way, I can only say THANKS! And while I know the following words are too often and too meaninglessly used, I will say that without their willingness to work and the fine co- operation, this task would have been an impossible one for me. I would also like to join the staff in thanking Dr. Iames Di lenna, our advisor, for his ever available help and advice. Dr. DiRenna blends his willingness and ability to help nicely with his lack of interference in routine affairs of the yearbook. And thanks to the many others, some of whom are listed at the left, who have, in one way or another. helped us. We have enjoyed getting this edition of the year- book into its present form. We feel that the book is worthwhile. We feel that it will provide us all with pleasant memories as we re-read its pages and look at its pictures again in the years to follow. And for those who are not as intimately connected with our college, we feel that this book will give them a closer look at us and what we are. THE EDITOR IZ ADVERTISING TI-IE I-ICDSRITAIS oI the KANSAS CITY CCDILEGE of CDSTECRATI-IY and SURGERY OSTEGRATI-IIC I-IGSPITAI. UNIT ,Q 'ff' . '-.. f wifc - Q, 211' .. 1f'7T 'L 4:1 . .-' -g. g.:,fff,fw, .. - -. W -i. :zEFfQ'.I'55TE75S3' I an '- il5i', , DI , I I ff GENERAL MEDICAL AND SURGICAL SERVICE I h DIAGNOSTIC SURVEY SERVICE: Psychiatry and Neurology RroctoIogy StructuraI EvaIuation InternaI Medicine Surgery Orthopedics I2oentgenoIogy Pediatrics UroIogy I3atI'1oIogy Gynecology E.E.N.T. Q 5 g I CONLEY MATERNITY 1 1 I U HOSPITAL UNIT gii.. an 1 lv COMPLETE OBSTETRICAL SERVICE I 1' ...fuk S , IAKESIDE HOSPITAL A NON-PROFIT OSTEOPATHIC INSTITUTION: OPERATED BY A LAY BOARD OF TRUSTEES FOR AN ORGANIZED STAFF OF QUALIFIED OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS 8. SURGEONS. Kansas City, Mo. A. O. A. approved for intern and resident training: 7 rotating internships: 2 surgical residencies l anesthesiology residency: I radiology residency l obstetrics and gynecology residency Large enough for volume and variety, but small enough for individual application. Commonwealth Cleaners v Complete Cleaning and Laundry Service Comphmems of- BE 1-9630 4432 St. Joh ' - Kansas City, Mo. n O . Compliments of- steopathlc Industrial Clinical Service Frank 1. Machovec, D. 0. for Chr County C I' t f- ' 'men S' Maytag Wash Tub A, D. 0. World's Largest Laundry for the d Cleanest Wash an . THE MAYTAG AUTOMATIC Hazel Hoskins, D. 0. Free F.r.nng Pathologists Dry Cleaning 81 Shirt Finishing 2105 Independence Ave. K. C., Mo. BE 1-4123 2807 Independence Ave shop BE 1-9313 Res. JE 1-7513 BE 19998 Ai' Co di'i 'e Don or Rudy at Your Service to Help F. 8 - Barber Shop Kennedy Auto Service ,,,,,,C,,a,,s COITIPIBIC AUIOITIOIIVB Service Pleaging Ygu I5 Our Businegs . - Open: 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. I426 ohve Kansas CIIY' Mo' 2431 Independence Blvd. GR 1-5414 HU 3-6699 541 Benton 2115 Lexington Complete Family Laundry Service Compliments of- Sheil Funeral Home 8 6606 Independence Ave. CH 1-6665 Linen 81 Curtain Service Dry Cleaning Alterations We Pick Up 81 Deliver Kansas City, 25, Mo. John P. Sheil M. J. Sheil , I Congratulations To The Graduating Class of 1956 JACKSON COUNTY OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION lThe T956 Yearbook Staff wishes to record its hearty thanks to the Jackson County Osteopathic'Association for the splendid support accorded our annual. Their unequalled contribution played a large part in making this publication possible.l Mae's Beauty Shoppe BE 1-9588 We Make Loveliness Lovelier liggett Jewelry Bill Liggett Gifts for All Occasions Watches, Diamonds 81 Jewelry 3011 Independence CH 1-2626 Tires, Batteries, Brake Service, Lubrication, Car Washing Pickup 84 Delivery Morrison's Texaco Service Our 24th Year of Service to Osteopathic Students 2025 Independence HA 1-9078 Echo Cafe BE 1-9247 Al 8g Glenna Karbosky, Props. Food the Way You Like lt 3029 Independence Avenue Ford's Grill 2618 Independence Avenue Open Daily-Except Sunday 6:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Where Students Meet and Eat Good Food At Resonable Prices Circle Pharmacy 3037 Independence Avenue BE I-3225 Prescriptions Our Specialty Free Delivery Compliments of- Tompkins Service Station BE I-9488 542 Benton Blvd. Kansas City 24, Mo. Since 1928 Jones 81 Son Mdse. Store Clothing 81 Shoes for the Entire Family Open 8:30 to 9-Mon. through Sat. HU 3-9000 3014 Independence Avenue Monte A. Gillespie Representing Testagar and Company, Inc. Residence: 1335 Cleveland Phone DR 1-7923 Kansas City, Kans. Pat Serrone Peter Serrone Rose Marie Floral and Gift Shop 2659 Independence Ave. Kansas City, Mo. BE 1-8478 Compliments of- Joseph la Rosa BERNARD B. ZAHNER'S ReP'eSe 'i 9 Diaper Service Co. Metrnnnlllnn llfe Insurance ms Grand A... Ph...G..1.m5 Company Off. Phone Reg, Phone Serving Conley Hospital Over 18 Years WA 1-7403 WA 1-1432 Compliments of- C0mP1imeHlS Of Foxx Pharmaceutical Co. Town Hall BI'0O1i1Yl1 Ave. Geqrge Tidgna K. C. 24, Mo. Phone BA 1-1396 Available for Private Parties ARNOLD FOX Call JEfferson 1-1224 4011 Troost Your library is only as useful as it is current. . . May I help you keep it up-to-date? Seth l. Melhinch Representing W. B. SAUNDERS CO. 5807 El Monte Drive, Mission, Kansas Phone: E Ndicott 2-5694 Congratulations To The Class of T956 I, ,fm 'flf fi J, g.1':r :1' 5137 N Ti 51, N ITUTE, rave--kg I E 1-- 'gf T X4 ,..-7- L A Q: Elp 7:12, El 1 I' fa 5 si 5 rs!! Els. , ' ., : ,I 557.17 33272: ., -,-. Ig , 'I 'slit Excelsior Institute has a 74-bed hospital and hotel accommodations. The combined facilities of the Clinic and Hospital can treat 300-400 prostate and rectal patients a month. Practically all treatments are given by nonsurgical methods. All members of the staff are licensed Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons. EXCEISIOR INSTITUTE AND HOSPITAL T05 E. BROADWAY EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MO. 38 PASSANTINO BROS. FUNERAL HOME AIR CONDITIONED O PARKING FACILITIES Sympathetic and Efficient Service At Prices You Can Afford MI ,f E he Phones: Grand I-2844 Grand 'I-0491 2117 Independence Blvd. Kansas City, Mo. I Clayton X-Ray Co. SUPPLIERS OF COMPLETE X-RAY F In YAY,,c I K and Bmgklyn Fruit Markgt PHYSICAL MEDICINE EQUIPMENT Fresh Fruits and Vegetables 1327 Grand DAY AND NIGHT Kansas Cify, Missouri 2123 Independence Grand I-9131 Compliments of- Tastemark The Mark of Good Tastes . . . . . . on milk, ice cream, butter and other dairy products Congratulations to the Graduating Class of '56 YOUR PFIZER REPRESENTATIVES THE Annual National Child Health Conference is making Important Contributions support it The S. E. Nlassengil Co. Compliments of R. G. Klug Drug Co. RELIABLE PHARMACEUTICALS Y ,,, . . .... -V-A ,-,V . . -fr f i' Y 'PTT-' ' ' I - w . 1 ' A - C5 -go' fr' . I tx:ff.i'gQ' 'f' 1-' ,f,'fa1:q . J 1 ' 'L . ft ,rl 13 40 LEO MCQUEENEY, DISTRICT MGR. For Compliments of- 7 King Merritt and Company Caldarello 5 Distributor of All Listed Mutual Funds Telephones: VA 1.0073 9th 81 Woodland Kansas City, Mo. VA 1-0079 Phone HA 1-9279 231 West 47th Kansas City, Mo. Cleveland Cleaners lively Optical 3013 lndep. Ave. Tel. BE 1-9306 Bryant Building Professional Discount to VI 2 9 Faculty and Students -068 Meet Spector the Collector V, 2,3820 Mrs. C. l. Forster Funeral O , O Business Men s Clearing Home Leon T. Wahl, Manager In Business Over 20 Years 9l 8-920 Brooklyn ' GR 1-03 COLLECTIONS A Funeral Service As You 1012 Baltimore Ave. Kansas City, Mo. When They Owe You They Pass You Byn M. J. Spector, Manager Wish to Have It A Service for Every Purse We serve as you desire: Burial, Crypt cr Cremation Compliments of- Woolf Bros. laundry 81 ca as - - .l. Bob l'llggll1S Dry Cleaners Professional Insurance Service 1501 Prospect THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE co. BE 10406 OF AMERICA BA 1.4800 HE I-0193 Serving tl? l-Losrgtalss of the EX C E IS I0 R HERNIA CLINIC EXCELSIOR AND ELIZABETH STS EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, MISSOURI CONGRATULATIONS SPEEDY'S CLEANERS 561 .izw'C C ' I E' QPEEIIOVS VCLEANEIIS ab' 'fi Em 311596 , I HI IEW COMPLETE LAUNDRY CLEANING SERVICE Let us care for all your clothes. SPEEDY pleases. 606-608 wooDLAND HArrison 1-9487 T wt: . ,. W M1 . t H t 'I Wt 1 N I t f v , 4 txt' pt 1,1 at 1 tl It QM? U V ,g 1 r ti, tl!! tt 1 t it t ' N it t' V tx W I : 1 N w is V . tt I H tn 1 I I , I V , lv rt' EW tfl 4,1 ,tl 142 MAJESTIC STEAK HOUSE THE HOUSE THAT STEAKS BUILT .. Ji- any af f Q-v-f-1 'E Steaks -Spaghetti - Pizza - Ravioli SERVING THE PROFESSION 3IST 81 HOLMES VAIentine 9208 S St S MEAT COMPANY WHOLESALE 8. RETAIL Il V rf t 4 we Yin , ., . 1 A WV. t x I x 9. . I 1 A I 'S ' .X , ...aim P ,Q . , .fs . fl - K ' J me X X T? gk ' Wa.. J . S. ..v: nh., xi Xu V.' -in iw QUALITY MEATS Catering to Hotels, Restaurants, Clubs and Institutions 637 PROSPECT CHestnut 4152 la SaIa's Market GROCERIES and MEATS ITALIAN PRODUCTS 2119 Independence HA l-9466 Goetze Niemer Company Physicians' and Hospital Supplies 2600 Gillham Road Kansas City, Mo Topeka, Kans. St. Joseph, Mo. Joplin, Mo. Surgical Supplies for Students Easy Terms for Physicians Entering Practice ' 'r, 44 NORTHEAST OSTIEOPATHIC HOSPITAL COMPLETE MEDICAL 8g SURGICAL SERVICE DIAGNOSTIC LABORATORIES 620 BENNINGTON KANSAS CITY, MO fffwfq Wise-0 Super Market Lexington and Park WE GIVE NATIONAL FAMOUS S 81 H GREEN STAMPS PLUS EVERY DAY LOW PRICES. READ THE WISE-O AD IN THE KANSAS CITY TIMES MAKERS OF KANSAS CITY'S FINEST ITALIAN SAUSAGE Malpractice Insurance Serving the Profession Nation-Wide Since 1925 Exclusively Endorsed by the A.O.A. Since 1934 Experienced claims handling protects the doctor's professional reputationg broad policy provisions backed by millions in assets protect his financial position- present and future. The Nettleship Company 1212 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles 17, Calif. Fordview Osteopathic Prescription Shop Serving the Osteopathic Profession for twelve years in the same location. 6520 Independence Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Osteopathic Prescriptions Exclusively Delivery 8 a.m. to 10 p.m.-Every Day BEnton 1-4444-5 Phil Levine, Prop. BE 1-9359 Meet at . . . Community Cocktail Bar 9th and Prospect AIR CONDITIONED Create An Immediate Estate-With The Northwestern Mutual life Insurance Co. 601 Com'l Nat'I Bank Building Kansas City, Kansas Res. SK 1-2732 Off. AT 1-4323 HERB ROME 0 Periodic Life Insurance Audits 0 Planned Income Services 0 Estate Analysis 0 Retirement Income Plans i'NO war or aviation restriction in contract or disability provision. 'ONLY medically examined risks accepted. . .,. ' 'ri l 1 l l 1 l 1 Blue Valley Clinic 5811 Truman Rd. Kansas City, 3E, Mo. Olaf Coleman, D.O. Lyle W. Cook, D.O. Maurice M. Geraghty, D.O. Herbert C. Lahue, D.O. Charles W. Mount, D.O. Earle G. Sperry, D.O. Kenneth Adler, D.O. Gravino's Greenwood Pharmacy 1510 East 8th St. Kansas City, Mo. Prescriptions Picked Up and Delivered Free VI2-6727 Phones: HA1-8998 The Yearbook Staff Joe Fogarty, D.O. l. D. Robbins, Drugs compliments Reliable Drug Service of- 31st 8. Paseo 59th 8. Prospect WA 3-1331 JA 2-6132 Kansas City, Missouri Continental Hotel 11th 84 Baltimore Kansas City 5, Missouri Compliments of Medical Center Prescription Shop 1104 Grand Ave. 146 KEIEKET X-RAY CORPORATION KELLY-KOETT-THE OLDEST NAME IN X-RAY X-Ray Equipment and Supplies Cambridge Electrocardiograph Equipment 81 Supplies C. U. KITLEY, Branch Manager 3001 Main Street Kansas City 8, Mo. Tel. Westport I-0858 SERVING THE OSTEOPATHIC PROFESSION SINCE 1900 BOGART and BROWN PRESCRIPTION SHOP PROFESSIONAL PHARMACISTS First National Bank Bldg.-Independence, Mo. INdependence I-1800-CLifton 2-9332 PHARMACISTS: Damon Bogart, Frank Brown, Jerd Bales Arch Woods, George Perry, Chas. Saylor, Frank Morris, Glen Slagle, Roger Thomson PRGMPT DELIVERY SERVICE 14 1 li l 1'lQ ,li ll1 1 1 Q TM F1 W 1 ' 1 l T .i T! 'E f 11 il E1 T., 11 111 .1111 Mlm H111 Ulf 148 .Aa Q.l'fl?lQ' ' . 'W TY ,M , S ' ,V f A BAllCllNIC.lNC. H - Excelsior Springs, Mo. -ff: iSince19191 Specializing in the treatment of ARTHRITIS - RHEUMATISM 8. Associated Chronic Conditions Free Descriptive Literature: Address Ball Clinic, Dept. 760, Excelsior Springs, Mo. 'J XX W T 1 x U ge 1. I A , A, ' L, '1 1 J I T -'T , an ae.-2b,f 4, A , . A.. i5f1D1:if k, u,, ,m , I wlv, m YQ , km America's largest chain of auto seat cover specialists RAYC 0 9 THE EEllX CAMERA STORE W.-- e 'N N -4 --ali v. CUSTOM F ITTE D FRE E IN 30 MINUTES QQQSSQEQ5 wv11RAPSS5'ESQ Qi Q, 5 P 1 fsggwsr-aea'g is xx w A l -'sq -ma, 2311 Independence Boulevard 1301 Truman Rd. same 1913 Between Troost and Paseo Phone Vlctor 2-9000 , , , SCINIECA S SUPER MARKET T A ., , 5.5-,.. v .,.. . Independence Ave. and the Paseo A 'Q T L' A - . - fy - fi t iff- 121. Open Until 9:00 p.m. Daily iv - , .-,, 1- J iff' - - Sunday8:00to1:00 . e,e,, Sh-ng-A Congratulations, D. 0. Graduates It-has been our privilege to serve the medical profession since 1860. It is our earnest desire to continue to deserve your patronage for many years to come. A NATIONAL INSTITUTION: We have 13 shipping points through- out the nation-wherever you may locate, there will be an Aloe representative to call on you, and a nearby warehouse for fast service and low delivery costs. EQUIPMENT CHECK LISTS: Listing everything you'll need from hypo needles to X-ray machines, with both itemized and total cost- furnished without obligation. PLANNING SERVICE: Whether you rent or build, use our equipment layout service-completely equipped room layouts scaled to size to help you evaluate your needs. TAILORED PAYMENT PLAN: We have an extended payment plan to fit your needs-no interest or carrying charges on our new office plan. LOCATION SERVICE: Aloe representatives know of many ideal locations for able young physicians. This information is yours for the asking. Write for complete information. A. S. AIOE COMPANY of Kansas City 4128 Broadway Phone JE 'I-2221 Kansas City 2, Mo. Please Patronize Our Advertisers 14 4 AN. ll L- ?-, ,. c M M' -'HM ' D. v ,. 5 vw '5' . - ' if , m ,,' Q'i' - A , 14 ,ff v f '53'L'f W1 5 -Q ,lull iii? ,hwbrilh .. -. ' 4- 1 ' ' ' g, ef'--gf, , , - TJ,-,W I. . , - 'wah '11 , . WMS, ie. ' N .,lv4q'1!gx 'rf 1 ' f , gy g. ! - ,J V gm - 74 qw, , ' . k ., ,, .5 .A , Ln .f . -,',' .'lj,xvf.. K l , hw -. . 4 . 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