Medical College of Pennsylvania - Iatrian Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1964
Page 1 of 88
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 88 of the 1964 volume:
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r PENNSYIVaNin Q A 1 fc. irL it K ' JW? • ' PK icn o t« sessions of sweet silent thought I summon up remembrance of things past . . . latrian 1964 THE WOMAN ' S MEDICAL COLLEGE OF PENNSYLVANIA, PHILADELPHIA JL And so ... as you take your first steps toward the practice of medi- cine, I tell you the road is long and hard and the work is never- ending. You will at times be dis- couraged, at times terrified, but you can be proud to join the great fraternity of healing, the profes- sion which has been helping man- kind since the beginning of time. Opening Exercise Speech by Dr. Van Loon, September 6, 1963. As a member of the faculty since 1923, and as a professor of oto- laryngology and broncho-esophag- ology since 1931, Dr. Van Loon has instilled in countless students her infectious enthusiasm for the practice of medicine. With com- petence, intellect and wit, she has taught and inspired for 40 years. In 1958 the Elizabeth Black- well citation was awarded to Dr. Van Loon for significant contri- butions to the science, practice and teaching of medicine. It is with deep appreciation and great admiration that we dedicate this yearbook to Dr. Emily Lois Van Loon Marion Spencer Fay, B.A., M.A., Ph.D., joined the faculty of Woman ' s Medical College in 1935 as Professor of Physiological Chemistry. In 1946 she was named Dean, and in 1959 was elected President as well. Before undertaking her unique ad- ministrative responsibilities as the only woman president of a medical college in this hemisphere, Dr. Fay specialized in the field of biochemistry as teacher, author and researcher. She has re- ceived honorary doctorates from eight institutions of higher education. Irene E. Maher, M.D. (left), As- sociate Dean, and Doris G. Bar- tuska, M.D. (above), Assistant Dean, have added much to the ef- fectiveness of this administration which has seen many advances in the faculty and facilities of the Wo- man ' s Medical College. Their aim has always been to provide the best possible medical education for the students, and their devotion has paved the way for hundreds of young women entering the profes- sion of medicine. Eva Fernandez Fox, M.D., Chair- man, Department of Radiology, our advisor during the clinical years. Dr. Fox has achieved a gra- cious balance between dignity and informality in giving enthusiasti- cally of her exuberance, warmth and sympathetic support. Wherever the art of medicine is loved there is also love of human- ity, Hippocrates ' J 1 A J • The Freshman Year is a beginning. Not only the beginning of a career in medicine, but the establishment of new relationships and the as- sumption of a new kind of respon- sibility, to one ' s self and to one ' s future patients. It is unlike any- thing you have ever known before. To each person entering the first year of medical school, the experi- ence will have a different meaning; the realization of a goal long sought; the challenge of the intel- lect; the opportunity for service. To all it will mean hard work, long hours of study, frustration, discov- ery, anxiety and a feeling of kin- ship with all those who have shared this experience. This first year is an introduction to the fundamentals of the science of medicine. The study of anatomy is to medi- cine as geography is to history; it describes the theater of events. For some, it is also the first encounter with death. For the physician, Death belongs to life as birth does. The walk is in the raising of the foot as in the laying of it down. Biochemistry, a seemingly hope- less array of formulas, calculations, metabolic pathways. Although the intricacies may be elusive, a basic scientific approach and training in logical thinking are achieved. Physiology is alive. For the first time one observes in the light of new understanding the living ani- mal. The principles of action and interaction which one learns are constant and applicable to the rele- vant organism, man. A learner with the simplest, a teacher of the thoughtfullest, a no- vice beginning yet expt i nt of my- riads of st asons. Walt Whitman The transition period is over. The first year of medical school has been successfully completed. With this achievement a new confidence begins to develop, and the attain- ment of a medical degree becomes less a vague possiblity and more a reality. You have become reconciled to a life requiring many sacrifices, and the demands of one ' s work. In this year perhaps more than any other the amassing of a tremendous a- mount of material will at times seem impossible. For it is as a sec- ond year student that you begin the study of the processes of disease. Now too the principles of therapy are introduced in the study of pharmacology. In the second year there is another beginning. For the first time all the words that have been read, the pic- tures seen, the facts that have been committed to memory become meaningful in their application to the patient. In physical diagnosis one ' s own senses of sight, touch, hearing are utilized to understand the complexities of man. And sud- denly the Doctor is you. r ♦ ■ ; ; ■ Nothing is more estimable than a physician who having studied na- ture from his youth knows the pro- perties of the human body, the dis- eases which assail it, the remedies which will benefit it, and exercises Ins art with caution. Voltaire The clinic years, anticipated since the beginning of medical school, have arrived. The hospital is now the classroom, and formal lectures are only a small part of the junior student ' s continuing medical edu- cation. The hospital becomes a fa- miliar place, and although one ' s contribution to hospital life may be small at first, it can be very valu- able to the patient who may find reassurance and comfort from the student who is able to give of her time and herself. 1 Mr Tb . 32 - W x - J , t ' 1 v For the junior student in medicine and surgery, the best teaching is that taught by the patient himself. The whole art of medicine is in observation, but to educate the eye to see, the ear to hear and the fin- ger to feel takes time, and to make a beginning, to start the student on the right path, is the essence of the third year. The most essential part of a stu- dent ' s instruction is obtained, as I believe, not in the lecture room, but at the bedside. Nothing seen there is lost; the rhythms of disease are learned by frequent repetition; its unforeseen occurrences stamp themselves indelibly on the mem- ory. Before the student is aware of what he has acquired he has learned the aspects and causes and probable issue of the diseases he has seen with Jlis teacher, and the proper mode of dealing with tlicm, so far as his master knows. Oliver Wendell Holmes . And miles to go before I sleep. Robert Frost the class of 1964 Marcia Alexander University of Pennsylvania, B.A., LL.B. New York, New York Josephine C. Aronica Kent State University, B.A. Norwalk, Ohio I 9 Virginia H. Baker Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Scranton, Pennsylvania Nancy Crumlish Bruemmer Rockford College, B.A. University of Missouri, Ph.D. Grand Island, New York Celia Marie Cavoto San Diego College for Women, A.B. Mesilla, New Mexico 6 4 17 Sherod Daugherty Pennsylvania State University, B.A. Tyrone, Pennsylvania Marion T. Di Figlia Queens College, B.S. Flushing, New York Charlotte Geraldine Dolecki Adelphia College, B.A. Port Washington, New York I 9 Loretta F. Early University of California at Berkeley Northridge, California Judith Eaton Pembroke College in Brown University, B.A. Amherst, New Hampshire 6 4 Elsie Jane Ernest College of the City of New York Staten Island, New York Kathleen Jamea Ferrari Seton Hill College. B.A. Jcanctte, Pennsylvania I 9 Mary Agnes Ferry Immaculata College, A.B. Easton, Pennsylvania Carol Ann Fried George Washington University, A. A., B.S. Hinsdale, Illinois Roberta Beckman Gonzalez University of Rochester, B.A. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Kathleen Harris University of Pennsylvania, B.S. Bridgeton, New Jersey 6 4 Sheila E. Hodgson Manchester University Pittsburgh University Grantham, England 21 Eleanor E. Howell Northwestern University, Ph.B. Youngstown. Ohio Marion Elizabeth Kabakjian Ursinus College, B.S. Lancaster, Pennsylvania Loraine Simons Kelley Houghton College, B.A. Doylestown, Pennsylvania I 9 Charlotte Elnora King Agnes Scott College, B.A. Charlottesville, Virginia Diana Eleanore Kostyra University of California, B.S. El Cerrito, Calif ornia 6 4 Nancy Lee Lamb University of New Mexico, B.S. Albuquerque, New Mexico Janis Sau Ling Lee University of Hawaii, B.S. Honolulu, Hawaii Eleanor O. Leise University of Michigan, B.S.N. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Katherine Amory Leland Trinity College, B.A. Montclair, New Jersey I 9 Carolkay Lissenden University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Elizabeth, New Jersey Carol Jean Mackey Hunter College, B.A. New York, New York Dorothy M. Mikat University of Michigan, 15. S. Ann Arbor, Michigan 6 4 Clara M. Milton Seton Hill College, B.A. Henninic. Pa. I 9 Marie Kudzma Monte Immaculata College, A.B. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Georgia Bower Nolph St. Olaf College, B.A. Appleton, Minnesota Jane Lesley Norman Ohio State University, B.S. New York, New York Audrey L. Randolph Boston University, B.S. Sargent, College, P.T. Inwood, Long Island 6 4 Marilyn Pardine Mar - Washington College, B.S. Little Falls, New Jersey Deloris E. Rissling Temple University, B.A. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania I 9 Judith S. Rose Barnard College, A.B. Brooklyn, New York Ruth Rosenblatt Washington Square College, B.A. New York, New York Constance Dorothy Schwab Northwestern University, B.A. Elmwood Park, Illinois Marjorie Lynne Smolens Southern Methodist University, B.A. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 6 4 Gloria Marie Strutz University of Michigan, B.S. Richmond, Michigan Juliet Vilinskas University of Connecticut, B.A. Windsor, Connecticut Sylvia V. Wilson University of Utah, B.A. North Salt Lake, Utah . . . may it be granted to me to enjoy life S the practice of the Art respected by all men in all times! Dr. Marion E. Fay retired on January 1, 1964, as Dean and President of Woman ' s Medical College after sixteen years of dedicated leadership and service to the College. It is not our in- tention here to chronicle the achievements of the College un- der her administration, though they are formidable. We do want to thank her for those unique qualities of personality which have enabled her to perform the many demanding duties of her position as an administrator while maintaining a warm and personal interest in the students. Dr. Fay is a lady in the grand sense of the word. Gracious, thoughtful, gen- tle, she possesses a vision of the College which in her many years of service she has endeavored to bring into being. We are proud to have had her leadership during our four years at the College. We will join the many students who have graduated before us in thinking of ourselves as her girls. We will miss her. It is the end of an era. Dr. Glen R. Leymaster was installed as the new Dean and President of Woman ' s Medical College on January 1, 1964. Prior to assuming his new position, Dr. Leymaster was associate secretary of the American Medical Association Council on Medical Education and Hospitals and is familiar with both the assets and problems of the College. The new Dean received his M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1942. He was Associate Professor and later Professor and Chairman of the Department of Preventive Medicine and director of the Health Service at the University of Utah from 1948 until 1960. We welcome Dr. Leymaster and express the hope that the College will continue to grow while retaining its unique position as the only medical school in North America exclusively for women. 32 The Faculty Preclinical Faculty C£L--_ i T. N. Dubin, M.D., Chairman of the Depart- in. M.D., Bernard Czernobilsky, M.D. RIGHT: likat, M.D., Marvin R. Dunn, M.D. Elaine E. Mill Wiener Whitbeck, Ph.D., Evelyn er, Ph.D., Emily Young, Kirber, Ph.D. R. Baker, M.T. Carol Buschbeck, , Ruth Maria a aft RMACOLOGY — Jacob Blukoo Allotey, M.D., Barbara Lyons, M.D., Charles R. Swaine, Ph.D., Sydney Ellis, Chairman of the Department, Albert J. Eusebi, Ph.D.,. [. Vincent, Ph.D., Marvin M. Goldenberg, M.S. CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Rose La Roca. Lewis A. Deleva; Mary Mckee Porte: Chairman of the Depart ment, H. William Schmidt, M.D Alma Sykes. rt- OB-GYN is. Elizabeth Jeffress, Edith Millican I : Dr. Alma L. Young low: Dr. Elizabeth S. Waugh Above: Dr. Florence M. Smith Below: Dr. Carolyn R. Williams Dr. Mildred Kistenmacher Surgery Dr. Robert D. Heath Orthopedics Above: Dr. Bernard Sigel, General Surgery Left: Dr. Pauline Coonel, Oto-Laryngology Right: Dr. George Gowen, General Surgery Dr. James G. Bassett General Surgery Dr. Edward R. Hagopian General Surgery kDr. Grace R. Nachod Dr, LeRoy H. Stahlgren General Surgery Dr. JoAnne Overleese General Surgery Dr. Francis W. Batipps Urology : Dr. Sidney U. Wenger, Psychiatry. Right: Dr. Maurice Sones Medicine Dr. Henry William Harris, Chairman f the Department. ft: Dr. Doris G. Bartuska. Middle: Dr. Harry C. Gottli -. Margaret J. Vassalotti. Dr. Gaetano Brindisi Dr. Margaret I. Anderson Dr. Joseph Splendido Radiology Dr. Eva Fernandez Fox, Chairman of Department. LEFT: Dr. Hadi Ozer. RIGHT: Dr. Beatrice K. Schreibman. Student Health : the Emergency Room SEATED: Dr. Alice Anderson, Dr. Marion Boyd. STANDING: Elizabeth Lucas Alice Devlin. R.N. ■ A„, 51 Dr. Miriam Santisteban Ob-Gyn. Resident We present on these pages the Residents and Interns of the Wo- man ' s Medical College Hospital. Traditionally overworked and un- derpaid, they have in addition to the responsibility of daily patient care the obligation to teach the medical student. There is a na- tural bond between the resident and the senior student; they are both students although at differ- ent levels. We have enjoyed and profited from the informal learn- ing situations provided by daily rounds, writing orders, carrying out routine procedures with the resident. Nights on call, whether staying up all night with a critical patient or playing scrabble when the house is quiet engender a spe- cial feeling of warmth and com- radeship. While we may complain that the Resident is sleeping while we give I.V. meds at two, four and six A.M. or the patient ' s been in the house for eight hours and not yet worked up, we are, neverthe- less, grateful to the house staff for many things — for showing us how to do a procedure when it would be quicker and easier to do it alone, for consoling us for our mistakes while pointing them out, for the latest Journal reference, for friendship, and for providing a standard of excellence to which we aspire. Dr. M. Ekram Dirnbiloglu Surgery, Resident Dr. Lucienne T. Lanson Ob-Gyn ; . Resident House Staff Candid Photographs 55 Thank God for Fleets I never use Fleets. 56 Togetherness Shape up or ship out. 57 r ' can ' t bear to look. Children and dogs love me. It is a potato! 60 Kisses $1.00 each. 5 out of 7 New York doctors have tvax. ' Hello! I ' m the new Dean. You ' re what? I made the 30 day camel test but I prefer women. Now try lead two. Next year ' s seniors. Alright give me back my bubble gum. ' I ' m going to PGH! 62 THE SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI Mmmmmmmm! What a machine! Never lower Tillie ' s pants mother might come home. Fly me to the moon! The newly-weds. ■Dr. Ching. Dr Ching . . . Dr. Hoist, Dr. Hoist Di. Ka: eh. Dr. Ktireh . . . Dr. Christie, Dr. Christie 66 This 84 year old white male . . . No-ooo George, I don ' t think it ' s polyo- stotic fibrous dysplasia. I think it ' s a hang nail. Occupational Therapy? This is a clear cut case of polyo- stotic fibrous dysplasia. GRIPE SONG Doc Dubin is hard working, he ' s always on his beat. Doc Miller is perturbing with all her good technique. And then there is Doc Ellis with a million drugs to learn. Come on! Parole Board! When is it our turn? Dear Doctor Dubin, we ' ve lots to discuss, If we don ' t know our Shakespeare plays Why make such a fuss? We know granulomas, we ' re experts on pus, That seems like quite a lot to us Dear Doctor Miller, one favor from you, The labs were lots of fun, They gave us something to do. Your lectures are some of the finest in town So please won ' t you let us write them down? Dear Doctor Lambert we ' ve something to say. That What-Not shop is getting more expensive each day. The line is so long that when you get a tray Lunch time has almost passed away. Somewhere there ' s an island where everybody rates. I understand they sleep there and girls go out on dates. Someday I ' m gonna go there, that paradise so dear, If I ever make it through this year. Kindly professors we ' re down on our knees. Won ' t you heed to our pleas? W T e want to learn all that will make us the best But we ' re in dire need of rest. We need rest, we need rest, we need rest, rest, rest, We need just one good night of rest. TO THE JUNIORS What a year for us! There ' s not much cheer for us. Soon we ' ll start on our clinic years Free from troubles and fears. There ' s a time for us. The Junior ' s pine for us. But you haven ' t too long to pout, We are coming to help you out Juniors, Juniors, Juniors. PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS I saw cirrhotic disease today, Liver right down to the knees today. I heard a bronchial wheeze today. I had a patient with fleas today. What a loud heart murmur we got! It sounded just like a gun-shot. P 1 was louder than A 1 If you used imagination. I had a man who was drugged today. I felt a tracheal tug today. Mv patient ' s fingers were clubbed today. Mine vomited on the rug today. My patient had salpingitis Followed by oophoritis. I had a man who ' d won prizes. His testes were different sizes. I made a very good start today, Diagnosed rheumatic heart today. Case checker said I was smart today. I looked at my patient ' s chart today. 68 Ob-Gyn Song We ' re the tops! We ' re the greatest service. We ' re the best And you don ' t deserve us. We ' re an all-star team With the broadest beam around. We ' re the stork ' s own girlies, The oyster ' s pearlies, We don ' t touch ground. We ' ve got Pike! Tho ' she tries to please Come prepared, Bring your antifreeze. Then there ' s Waugh so dear Who will bend your ear on Gyn, And M. Biemuller The well-known chiller On Mannikin. Jane is late! But it doesn ' t matter. We can wait ' Cause she fills our platter. Elsie Carrington Known by everyone as bright, She is never wrong She just talks too long ' Cause she ' s Er-u-dite. f t jPhJ H Residents! Bright and shiny faces, Eight-o-clock Like they ' re running races. Lanson leads the pack, Cha Cha ' s in the sack, it ' s true. And our Judy Meyer That ball of fire Will smile for you. w i ' ty ' ' -lift- Now for tips! When you ' re on our service Close your lips Don ' t you make us nervous. And of us beware, pretend you care or flop. ' Cause you junidrs you ' re the bottom We ' re the top. IATRIAN STAFF litor: Elsie Ernest Co-editors: Eleanor Leise, Carol Mackey Staff: Marian Kabakjian, Sylvia Wilson With many thanks to Herbert Mann for his excellent photographs The Four Tears Completed. So Much Experienced, yet So Little to Say Except Perhaps, 1 Might Have Done Better; I Might Have Learned More. 70 INTERNSHIP APPOINTMENTS FOR CLASS OF 1964 ALEXANDER, MARCIA Hospital of the Woman ' s Medical College of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. ARONICA, JOSEPHINE C. Akron General Hospital Akron, Ohio BAKER, VIRGINIA H. Mount Zion Hospital San Francisco, California BRUEMMER, NANCY C. Millard Fillmore Hospital Buffalo, New York CAVOTO, CELIA Hospital of the Woman ' s Medical College of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. DAUGHERTY, SHEROD Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. DiFIGLIA, MARION St. Vincent ' s Hospital of the City of New York New York, N.Y. DOLECKI, CHARLOTTE St. Vincent ' s Hospital of the City of New York New York, N.Y. EARLY, LORETTA University Hospital University of Washington Seattle, Washington EATON, JUDITH Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. ERNEST, ELSIE Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. FERRARI, KATHLEEN University of Pittsburgh Health Center Hospitals Pittsburgh, Pa. FERRY, MARY AGNES University of Pittsburgh Health Center Hospitals Pittsburgh, Pa. FRIED, CAROL Research and Educational Hospitals University of Illinois Chicago, Illinois GONZALEZ, ROBERTA Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. HODGSON, SHEILA Allegheny General Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. HOWELL, ELEANOR Cook County Hospital Chicago, Illinois KABAKJIAN, MARION Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. KELLEY, LORAINE S. Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. KING, CHARLOTTE Grady Memorial Hospital Atlanta, Georgia KOSTYRA, DIANA Los Angeles County General Hosp. Unit 1 Los Angeles, California LAMB, NANCY Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. LEE, JANIS St. Francis Hospital Honolulu, Hawaii LEISE, ELEANOR The Lankenau Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. LELA ND, KATHERINE Boston City Hospital Boston University Boston, Massachusetts LISSENDEN, CAROLKAY St. Luke ' s Hospital New York, New York MACKEY, CAROL Beth-El Hospital Brooklyn, New York MILTON, CLARA The Graduate Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. MONTE, MARIA KUDZMA Thomas M. Fitzgerald Mercy Hosp. Darby, Pa. NOLPH, GEORGIA The Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pa. NORMAN, JANE Maimonides Hospital Brooklyn, New York PARDINE, MARILYN T. Jersey City Medical Center Jersey City, New Jersey RANDOLPH, AUDREY The Long Island College Hospital Brooklyn, New York RISSLING, DELORIS Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ROSE, JUDITH Montefiore Hospital New York, New York ROSENBLATT, RUTH Montefiore Hospital New York, New York SCHWAB. CONSTANCE University of Illinois Research and Educational Hospitals Chicago, Illinois SMOLENS, MARJORIE Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. STRUTZ. GLORIA Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, Ohio THRIFT, KATHLEEN The Cooper Hospital Camden, New Jersey VILINSKAS. JULIET The George Washington University Hospital Washington. D.C. WILSON. SYLVIA Charity Hospital of Louisiana New Orleans, Louisiana 71 Patrons Evelyn R. Baker Edward J. Huth, M.D. Mrs. May Baker Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Jeffrey James G. Bassett, M.D. John J. Joyce, M.D. James A. Batts, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. A. M. Kabakjian Bernard Behrend, M.D. George P. Keefer, M.D. E. Cooper Bell, M.D. Maria W. Kirber, Ph.D. Martha L. Biemuller, M.D. June F. Klinghoffer, M.D. Katharine R. Boucot, M.D. Mrs. W. W. Koester W. F. Bouzarth, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. H. Kuhlenbeck Robert T. Boyd, III, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Otto J. Lang Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Bower Virginia Lautz, M.D. Arnold King Brenman, M.D. Jane M. Leibfried, M.D. Elsie R. Carrington, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Leise Miriam F. Clark, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Kurt Leise Margaret Vassalotti Conrad, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Ludwig Leise Pauline Coonel, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Amory Leland Donald R. Cooper, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. George Lissenden Frederick D. DeMartinis, Ph.D. Leo Madow, M.D. Helen O. Dickens, M.D. Judith Mausner, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Donaldson Ruth E. Miller, Ph.D. Eleanor Douglas Edith F. Millican, M.D. Mary B. Dratman, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Moyer Mr. and Mrs. Charles Drouin J. F. Mulach, Jr. Mr. John F. Drukten Mr. and Mrs. Allen F. Norman Sydney Ellis, Ph.D. Rose R. O ' Connell, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ernest Jo Anne Overleese, M.D. Bernard A. Eskin, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Dick C. Pang Mr. Arthur L. Evans Mary DeWitt Pettit, M.D. Herbert A. Faust, M.D. Mrs. Dorothy S. Peuser Marian Fay, Ph.D. Mary McKee Porter, M.D. Eva F. Fox, M.D. H. Phelps Potter, M.D. A. M. Frumin, M.D. Spencer Raab, M.D. Thomas H. Ginley, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. John Rissling William Gefter, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. A. Schiller Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Gerneth Dr. and Mrs. Francis Schuman Ann M. Goessel Mr. and Mrs. Leo I. Shapiro Mrs. Jean Goldstein Mrs. V. L. Stibler Harry Gottlieb, M.D. Charles R. Swaine, Ph.D. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Gaeto Terace Benjamin A. Gross, M.D. Philip R. Trommer, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Maurice N. Harris John R. Urbach, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Haas Gordon Van den Noort, M.D. Roberta Hafkesbring, Ph.D. Mr. David P. Willis Robert D. Heath, M.D. Lee Winston, M.D. George C. Henny, M.D. Margaret Gray Wood, M.D. Doris A. Howell, M.D. Alma L. Young, M.D. Joseph Hughes, M.D. Mr. Tim Oy Young Surveying village health needs, an SK F Foreign Fellow examines a child in Kurali, near New Delhi, India. INDIA... TANGANYIKA... IRAN... GUATEMALA... At hospitals and medical outposts a long way from the classroom, medical students learn to cope with unfamiliar diseases; help to provide much-needed medical services to people in underdeveloped areas of the world; and contribute to international under- standing and good will. This unusual opportunity to work and study in for- eign countries is offered to students through the Foreign Fellowships Program of Smith Kline French Laboratories. Administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the program has enabled 123 students to work in 40 different countries during the past four years. Junior and senior medical stu- dents are eligible to apply for Fellowships, which provide for an average of 12 weeks ' work abroad to be completed before internship. Students who are interested in Fellowships should apply through the deans of their schools. Smith Kline French Laboratories First with the Finest — Since 1885 Throughout Your Professional Career You Can Rely on . . . WILLIAMS, BROWN EARLE, INC. For the Finest Medical Laboratory Equipment and Complete Photographic Apparatus and Supplies 904-906 CHESTNUT STREET WA 3-1800 PHILADELPHIA 7, PA. WOMAN ' S MEDICAL COLLEGE CHAPTER OF SAMA Wishes the Class of 1 964 Success in Their Future Endeavors. SAMA Executive Committee President: Jane L. Norman Vice-President: Marta J. Chaplynsky Secretary-Treasurer: L. Roslyn Coskery GRACE LABORATORIES CLINICAL — ANALYTICAL — RESEARCH 5909 Ridge Avenue Philadelphia 28, Pa. Best Wishes to Class of 1 964 Ortho Pharmaceutical Company Congratulations! From The Freshman The Sophomores and The Juniors 76 at your fingertips — the world of medicine Your hard-won knowledge and skills will now be translated into action to prevent illness and to help those who are ill. Wyeth Laboratories is proud to stand with you in your chosen pro- fession and pledges: to provide you with therapeutic agents of proved merit to constantly search for more ways to help you and your patients to keep you fully informed about Wyeth products— old and new Wyeth Laboratories Philadelphia 1, Pa. BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1964 THE PARENTS ASSOCIATION OF WOMAN ' S MEDICAL COLLEGE Dr. Rose R. Mikelberg, President William Green Chairman, Philadelphia Harry Labovitz, Secretary-Treasurer TO CONTINUE IN GREATNESS Here is a bird ' s-eye view, expressed in less than two hundred words, of the place of your College in its one hundred thirteen years of existence. We, the Alumnae, are counting on you, our present undergraduates, to help our beloved College to continue in greatness. A portion of the program for the dinner — November 7, 1963 — OUR SECOND CENTURY YESTERDAY, from unpromising beginnings, this College was begun in two rented rooms off Arch Street, with eight students, a narrow curriculum and, for visible equipment, a second-hand manikin. Invisible strengths were there, however, in the form of a new dream, and a fierce belief by a few visionaries that women, if given training, would make good doctors. In the news- paper of that day in 1850 the founding was scornfully called a new wrinkle. TODAY, a century and thirteen years later, that tiny College has grown with the country and with the times, to take its rightful and unique place in American medi- cal education. It is proud today of having trained more than 2700 women physicians and of having 217 more presently enrolled. TOMORROW holds a luminous future. In facing its promise and its challenge we are borne ' along by the groundswell of our past — by remembrance of the lives of daring founders, dedicated teachers, devoted gradu- ates and the many friends, known and unknown, across the century who have stood with us. Tomorrow, we know, will bring to fruition great new de- velopments now in the planning, and unforeseen ones, too. A strong sense of continuity brings us to face this future with renewed courage and dedication. We are confident that in the decades ahead, amid conditions that we cannot now foresee, this College will continue in greatness. 79 HAPPINESS ISA GREEN HOOD Student Government Kay Leland, President Jean Moroney, Vice-President Gail Barton, Secretary-Treasurer
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