New Jersey College of Medicine - Journal Yearbook (Jersey City, NJ)
- Class of 1966
Page 1 of 186
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1966 volume:
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I . u P s I i :?k NU- --:fyfsr 571 W -V 1.-ff: 'air' sun' 'QTQ ..w5.1 ' - 'R N THE NEW JERSEY COLLEGE GF MEDICINE JERSEY CITY, NEW JERSEY THE Jo wwf 5 mf!! X L 'll' Xl iv N71 XI ' mm1 W-4 -1 .,,, Q Y 11- -3, -:E ' QQJI 1' 'Ml N E .id 4 nn. ' :-v I If HH: 4 Q ,wxx , 1-1 ,qw , WJ I' M vt WISE ll Q H 4 W 1 T HW -3 gg W - i -, r 1 J ,ll -,4 w. 1 o .i gil Hx 33 W wi lag W l ,f' 1A , 1 . 1 7 1 1 :f . 1 A, . Y' 1 I, QXQXQ 1111. 1, hffg 'f I YXN eww -1 1111 11 ' 1UHi'i LF W 'iii A A111 'I1':'VlI 1411 lm N 13 1 '1 1111 51 flu I ft1H,! eH?ls33gU 'f E1 1 W si X' J 11.1-1125111516 Hi' 111 U '1e1,.g1s1,l' 1 1 ml rq if W 1111111 233114 E1 1, 1 1 11 3 + '51 is 11g 1ifi11,1I, M' '1 U'i:E1!1i '1 v 1' 1 1 .Ii HL' v 1 111 11iW1' 1 V.g1Q' HJ 'lf-gills lx H' 1 it 'Li :ie 1 fF'5if'1 W' ' 13 l Tl 2 3 F71' 1 Q 3 N P mm. T IH? !r 4 ' 'fi ' 12 -fi 1' 1f fgx' -wif will 11' N aiu lx! R 'Hx ib D 1-. kill 111' 1 1 ' ' 1 1' - ' 1111ff'5 fl E1 H Miflg mii VH' L fm l ?'l U ' -ii : 1-H' '1'U-',k !'1 Wi TN V f wI1-'+11 1'f in 1 1 'WP 11 11 F 11,1 151 N! JJ 11' 5 1 . 11? W '-1 P11 9 ! 151l?'E3j 15,1 A 1121 1111111113 f M1 'H M wr 1 11 1112+ 11 ' 1 41111 1 +1111-' 2 211 411 1 L5 r' f :jH1l1!!31! ij' t7 11!111111111L1 - 14 H au g'g'M! 11111 - v I' Hua A Ullif 'Lui 3 :Ins -N K . f,g,, H2111 1 ' +'-'-. Em 415- , 'I1 ,1-Lt ,. 4, --- - - -2 1 ,M 1 1 1 f2Q11 ',11i2421 1 32.1 Lf 1 411'! fn 111 4ff'.ff,3:1:'12f Y ' ,, : , ,, M ,.- W, 1 1, , 1 11 1 1: 1 1 1 1 . 1 ,,.W 11 M, 1 1 11, 11We,yman REFACE This Annual represents a collection of illustrations of our medical school life-four years as we saw them. Some has been forgotten, much has been omitted, but the significant mem- ories . . . the faces . . . the thoughts . . . and the humor, we have attempted to record in this Journal. c. 1. P. A. E. W. It was unusually warm for SEPTEMBER 10, about 750, and the eighty-odd students who gathered in the main au- ditorium of the JERSEY CITY MEDICAL CENTER wore summer attire. Small beads of perspiration were evident on everyone's forehead which could have been due to anxiety. For all of us were gathered on that autumn day of 1962 to begin four years of medical school, four years toward the fulfillment of an aspiration which began who knows when. We came from forty different colleges and universities throughout the Eastern United States, but we all had one thing in common now-we were students at SETON HALL COLLEGE OF MEDICINE and we wanted to become Doc- tors of Medicine. It all really began back in the junior year of undergrad- uate school when, before we even knew what a medical school looked like, we took the MEDICAL COLLEGE APTITUDE TEST. This test would decide for many if they would even be enrolled in a medical school, and for others it would decide where they would spend their next four years. The tests were gruelling and quite extensive in their subject matter. We probably gained an awareness then of what medical school was like. That summer was spent read- ing bulletins, filling out application forms, writing out checks, and waiting. That was the hard part-waiting. And, we wait- ed, also, in our senior year for INTERVIEWS and letters of acceptance. The interviews came as did those same trite questions: WHY MEDICINE? WI-IY THIS MEDICAL SCHOOL? Sure, we all had our own answers-some of them very idealistic some of them seemingly childish. Again, we waited for the letters, and they came- We regret to in- form you . . VVE ARE PLEASED TO INFORM YOU . . .', FRUSTRATION and SADNESS became SATISFAC- TION and ELATION. Little did we know then that these elements. of emotion would recur again and again. Out of the thousands of applications, we EIGHTY-ONE were to form the first year class of Seton Hall College of Medicine in 1962. So, we sat in that auditorium and listened to then AS- SISTANT DEAN LEWIS welcome us and try to instill in us the meaning and value of medical education and what was expected of us during our next four years. He was brief but exact. He was followed, however, by a more ex- hausting speaker, MR. RAUCH, the librarian. I don't think anyone knew what he said. -Afterwards, we walked stead- fastly to the BASIC SCIENCE BUILDING to fill out var- ious REGISTRATION forms, pay our TUITION, be photo- graphed, get our lockers and lab coats, etc., ad nauseam. Books, of course, were another problem. Rumors started then as to which was THE Book. But, they all seemed to be the same ridiculous price, and so we thought it wouldn't make and difference-eenie meenie-very professional. Our schedule was handed to us and we studied it carefully: ANATOMY, anatomy, and more anatomy, gross and micro. But, whatis this on wednesday afternoon: GENETICS AND STATISTICS?? We then began our formal medical education with a welcome by DR. PIN CKNEY HARMAN, anatomist and folk singer, and DR. MAY HOLLINSHEAD, a woman, 'nuff said. These two people, together with DRS. TASSONI AND HEATH, would in the next three months guide us in normal anatomy as seen through a microscope. The next day, how- ever, we met the real Dr. Waterloo, BOCCABELLA by name. Anxiety mounted still further as we entered the anat- omy lab to meet our real anatomy teachers-THE CADAV- ERS. Can anyone forget theirs? It was over the dissecting table and lab benches that friendships began to be mould- ed. During that first week, we had our initial class functions. The first was the FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE PARTY held at Franks May and Tony danced the two step .... The second came as Tony Scialla banged his gavel for the elec- tion of CLASS OFFICERS. No one really knew anyone else but we took our chances. Tom O'-something was elected president, Rick Algran Vice President, Rose Marie Aportabco Secretary, and Liny Pieli as Treasurer. We then began to- feel at ease, but this was premature for tests began to rule our lives. In that first semester, we struggled through seven written anatomy exams, four prac- ticals, five cross sections, and the unbelievable DR. MIRAN- TI with the anatomy of the human body in seven hours, not to mention, of course, the incomparable, ambidextrous DR. HOUVDE and what's my lesion. ' As we licked our wounds, we entered the more sophisti- cated second semester to endure BIOCHEMISTRY and PHYSIOLOGY. Here again, exams would wreck our nervous systems and turn us into caffeine and nicotine addicts. If we would learn nothing else from DRS. OPDYKE, LITTLE, KAHN, and SMITH, we would learn to be exact and punc- tual. The functions of homo sapiens, we soon learned, was not an easy thing to grasp. And, just WHAT IS COMPLI- ANCE ? The spring months were spent in the biochemis- try lab boiling urine and watching little dots climb paper. The fudge factor was rampant. Lest the reader believe that this year was nothing but gloom, let me intezject a point. True to form of medical stu- dents everywhere, we had our parties. The fourth floor of 645 Bergen Ave. was the scene of many-ORGIES is a bit strong. Summer finally came and, after completion of final exams, some of us took our leave of jersey City. We all, of course, wondered whether we would be together again the following year. Again came a period of waiting-for marks this time. When they did arrive, some wept, some sighed, and some smiled. The class held various jobs that summer- RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS, EXTERNSHIPS, TEACH- ING. WEDDING BELLS rang out for some and for others it was basking in the sunshine. But like all good things, it came to an end too quickly and September arrived. Now, the veterans returned to Jersey City. The first year was spent learning the normal. Now the abnormal, the dis- eased, was to be mastered. We spent the first day going through the routine of registration and renewing old ac- quaintances. The confusion and apprehension, which char- acterized the beginning of our first year, were not as evi- dent now. As we looked about, we could not help but notice those no longer with us. We had mixed emotions-sad for them but glad for us. Again, we were welcomed by the re- spective department chiefs, DR. HUGH GRADY of the DE- PARTMENT of PATHOLOGY and DR. BERNIE BRIODY of MICROBIOLOGY. From the very beginning, our role was clear-these subjects were rough and it was our task to mas- ter them. Once again, the classroom and laboratory became our second home. The lectures, we noticed, were terse and much was left to our own initiative. The microscope again was our companion as we studied the fine structure of disease, the monotony only broken by the monotoned, pseudo-phil- osophical RAMBLINGS OF DR. SHARPE or the sweet aroma of DR. SALGADO'S PIPE. We contaminated our- selves, our friends, and everything else in the vicinity in microbiology lab. We took guinea pigs and injected them with something or other and if it came out it was positive, if not, it's not. Something was lacking in the path-tests. But, this lack was more than compensated for in micro- biology. Never have I seen people hoping just for a D. Friday afternoons were marked by a struggle to get through a C.P.C. All sorts of diagnoses were made, and can anyone forget Jimmy Murphy calling a resident? To add to the apprehension of this, our SECOND YEAR, we were plagued by rumors that Seton Hall College of Medicine would close it doors. A long battle between city and university culminated in the dismissal of DR. JUDY as Chief of Surgery of the Medical Center. Protests from the university were apparently of no avail. Meetings, of course, were behind closed doors, and much was left to one's imagi- nation. Despite the too quiet reassurances of the administra- tion, rumors of every conceivable kind arose. 645 Bergen Ave. was relatively quiet that semester and 133 Clifton Place only rarely rang out with merriment. For amidst the confusion and anxiety, FINAL EXAMS were quickly upon us. No one knew exactly where they stood in pathology but, unfortunately, we all knew exactly where we stood in microbiology. Our class had the dubious distinction of having 44 out of 75 people with a grade less tha-n C. So, who cares about -viruses anyway? You canit kill them with penicillin! But, a faint smile appeared on our lips during the sec- ond semester of' that year for we were about to take some- thing CLINICAL.', We were introduced to the Art and Sci- ence of PHYSICAL DIAGNOSIS by DR. MORTIMER SCHWARTZ. How proud we were as we carried our LIT- TLE BLACK BAGS each Wednesday and Saturday and placed our STETHOSCOPES on chests hoping to hear PFTT-TA-DA-RHUUHY' And, as we banged and poked each other and unsuspecting patients, DR. MURRAY NUSS- BAUM showed us what was to be our constant companion for the next two years-the technique for doing a CBC and an URINALYSIS. Now this is what we called HMEDICINEY' People even called us DOCTOR ! Sure we traveled to re- mote places on the globe like STATEN ISLAND and PAT- TERSON, sure we took notes like crazy as giants of medi- cine, like DRS. HOWARD and WEISSE lectured to us on subjects ranging from bleeding gums to rectal polyps, but this was what Medicine was like-ignorance is bliss. We were tested now in a different way-by a- proctor standing by as we asked- ever had syphilis, lady? And, who can forget MUSICAL HEARTSD? Medical school became fun and we, of course, cele- brated in the usual places and in the usual way. But, de- spite all this, we knew that the fate of the medical school was still uncertain. Except for the JERSEY JOURNAL, news- papers were rallying to the side of the school urging the politicians to mend the differences and keep the medical school, the only one in the state, in Jersey City. And now the state began to take an interest. So the year ended. No one really took the final exams in lab medicine and physical diagnosis too seriously, and We felt confident that the third year would be the best year yet. Although the academic year ended, no one could really relax. For before us lay the ominous NATIONAL BOARDS, a six part examination designed to test our knowledge in each of the basic sciences. Each of the department chair- men had stressed how well the previous class had done and how we had to better their performance. How we tried in two weeks time to review all we had learned and learn all we had not. After those twelve gruelling and seemingly in- finite hours of filling in the blanks, we had a pretty fair idea of how much we didn't know. Again, the waiting per- iod-for our scholastic and Board marks. Again SADNESS and FRUSTRATIONS, again ELATION and' JOY. The summer vacation was shortened that year because of the National Boards. As we assumed our various positions, the thought of beginning our clinical years engendered ex- citement and expectation. September finally came and as we donned our WHITES and lifted our BLACK BAGS, the SYMBOLS OF STATUS, we were again saddened because of those left behind. But, in the tradition of our predecessors, we went on. Because of previous, confusing, unexplained, and. un- fortunate circumstances, numbers of the class began to travel from familiar Jersey City to outlying areas for their SUR- GERY and PSYCHIATRY CLERKSHIPS and OBSTETRICS were no longer part of our rotation. New for us were the practices of BLOOD LETTING, STARTING I.V.'s, TAKING EKG's, DOING CBC's ad nau- searn, and all the other delicacies reserved for the low man on the totem pole. On MEDICINE, we dreaded the TWENTY PAGE WRITE-UPS, the FORBIDDING LONG HOURS, SITTING UP WITH GI BLEEDERS, MONITOR- ING THE M.I.,s, those redundant LAB TESTS, and CON- FUSING ABBREVIATIONS. This, of course, was intermix- ed with four hour LECTURES twice a week, numerous CONFERENCES, and being a WHIPPING BOY for the res- ident and intern while at the same time spending hours in the stacks LOOKING for x-rays and CALLING the central lab four times a day for serum calcium levels. All this was to help us lose weight, precipitate neuroses, and become better doctors-- I think. By the time we left the ward serv- ice, We knew too well the meaning of STAT and the value of knowing one's patient. The SURGERY CLERKSHIP was held at the V.A. HOS- PITAL in EAST ORANGE, a formidable structure whose cafeteria boasted the finest DOUGHNUTS on the east coast and for just a nickel. There were many gripes about the ro- tation: the indifferent attitude towards students, the inabili- ty to do anything, the fourth man to scrub, holding the idiot sticks, poor surgical material, and, finally, a lack of clinical faculty to teach. The rotation was highlighted, however, by DR. SEEBODE's PEARLS and the fanaticism of DR. SAD- OFF. During this time, new class officers were elected with Pat Flannery as President, Bill Mroczek as Vice President, Kathy Whelan as Secretary, and Tony Scialla as Treasurer. In December of our junior year, the Legislature of the State of New Jersey voted to assume operation of the only medical school in New Jersey, now the NEW JERSEY COL- LEGE OF MEDICINE. Many believed the transition was for the best, but black clouds lay ahead. There was no dras- tic change in our lives now that our school was State own- ed-not even the tuition changed. In any event, second semester rolled around after a seemingly brief Christmas vacation. A sight to behold was the young doctor, suave, debon- naire, and quite egotistical facing the young child, crying, dirty, and quite bratty. Those whites were no longer white after an afternoon in PEDS CLINIC. We learned then how to perform a physical exam under the most adverse circum- stances. Meanwhile, we watched with awe as DR. KUSH- NICK formulated his DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS of broken fingernails or as DR. BEHRLE very casually dis- cussed anything under the sun. But again those damned CBC's drove us mad. WVe were temporarily relieved of SCUT as we began GYNECOLOGY. How shyly and hesitantly the Don Juanls got their fingers wet. But after a few weeks, we also were saying: O.K., honey, relax, in the tradition of Al Elmer. P.I.D. became a by word in our vocabulary. And, finally, the piece-de-resistance, PSYCHIATRY. We were greeted at OVERBROOK HOSPITAL by the hy- pomanic DR. HENRY A. DAVIDSON, author, lawyer, edi- 6 tor, after dinner speaker, and letter writer. At first, we were amused by the staff. One poor patient was classified as dis- oriented when he asked: What day today is it here now? But soon we became bored and PING-PONG and PINO- CHLE began to fill our every hour. During the spring months, plans for the formulation of a STUDENT COUNCIL, long recognized as very necessary, were established. Although the full organization of this group was not to be, at least in our day, it was, nevertheless, a beginning. Contemporary with this was the first edition of THE CHART, a student publication edited by BILL MROCZEK whose topics ranged from News Capsulesf to lambasting the Department of Psychiatry-a very flexible volume. As the year ended, the dread of final exams was upon us. We had heard that the MEDICINE EXAM was impos- sible, but we were soon to find out for ourselves. The looks on our faces must have been priceless as TIGER JIM handed us those 40 page epochs which were only Parts I and II. Parts III and IV were to be held on a separate day. This was only because the pick-up truck would stall every time he tried to load all the exams on it. After six hours, the exam actually began to get funny. Surgery and Gynecology were quite benign in comparison even though one had to guess which REVIEW BOOK DR. RIVA would take his questions from this time. Our final and what was supposed to be our most grati- fying year was one that was characterized by confusion and disenchantment. This was the year that our alma mater was to become an interim school. It all began quite normally, but then things began to disintegrate. We were to begin our Christmas vacation when we received those unforgetable letters informing us that we were no longer affiliated with J.C.M.C. No prob- lem, chanted our leaders, for there are hospitals from Trenton to Boston being investigated . . . and WE WILL CENTRALIZE .... ', So our classmates were off to BELLEVUE and BOS- TON, to NEWARK, to TRENTON, to ELIZABETH, and to STATEN ISLAND. And now a new clinical rotation was introduced . . . COMMUNITY MEDICINE, whatever that is? During the final five months, however, we were to obtain our results from the NATIONAL INTERN MATCH- ING PROGRAM, sign our contracts, take PART II of the NATIONAL BOARD EXAMINATIONS, and, for all prac- tical purposes, finish our senior year . . . REJOICE and HALLELEUJAHl But this was not enough, for the day we were long awaiting, the day we aimed for on that warm morning in September of 1962 finally arrived - - JUNE 4, 1966. It was on this day that the battle-weary veterans, the student doctors, were awarded the degree of DOCTOR OF MEDICINE . . . yet this is only the beginning. R. F. C. THE JOURNAL 1966 VOLUME VII STAFF CONTENTS Editors Preface w,..............M,. CARL J. PEPINE ARTHUR E. WEYMAN The Year 1955-56 - Business Managers Organizations - '- ROBERT A. BRONFMAN Students ...,..,... NEIL H. KOLSKY . d The Seniors ........ Layout E itor ROBERT C. STADALNIK The Faculty --'----- Literary Editor The Patrons ' EUGENE P. FLANNERY Advertising ........M.. Photography Editor Acknowledgements WILLIAM MROCZEK Index Production Manager MICHAEL TIGHE Treasurer GINO L. GIORGINI Writers: Richard F. Cioffi Evan A. Starnos Contributors: Charles Bellingham, Charlene Burn, Frank Light, Vincent Oriente, Anthony Scialla, Ron- ald Van Heertum Faculty Advisor CARROLL M. LEEVY, M.D. ECONOMY naive STARTSQJAN. 3 450 students caught in med school hassle By ,PETER WEINSTOCK ight in 'the middle ofthe ent discord between the wHJersey College of Medi- e and Dentistry and its rsey City landlords are They face two problems. Jersey City Mayor Whelan Wednesday announced an economy drive at ,Jersey City Medical Center-the school's quarters-starting Jan. 3 that college's accreditation. On the other hand, the Jersey City corporation counsel, T. James Tumulty, said Thursday the college could wind up out of a home because its contract First and second year stu- dents declared the planned dismissal beginning Jan. 3 ot 1,000 hospital employes and loss of 800 beds as the end of the Jersey City Medical Cen- The present order calls for the reduction of beds to 400-a move that sophomore, Ron Meltzer of Dumont, considers a threat to the medical school accreditation. me 450 students. reportedly could imperil the with the city expires Dec. 31. ter. Most medical schools are ,ag ,ia ,d COLLEGE CANNOT P Fair, nll1de:ueflm:glww,'hi2h llJ1lfei0?os.1 99th,Year-No. 202 p.3'f?'5.?25'oft'Sl In Hos ital 1.0. ll DISAST + T . 3 'Catastrophe' Seen Doctors Seek Break In Ho pitol Crisis break in the situation which will face the public the end Hudson County physicians today were seeking feverishly some e . . -w ek because the New Jersey College of Medicine and D - -i '- Q ha d 'ded to ll 't Medical Students Complain Transfer Costs Experience sl eci pu ou Medical Center. As one man with mang of practice in Jersey C it: . The city, the county state are now all embai a course 'of conduct tt only spell catastrophe people of Hudson Coun New Jersey. 'WITHIN THREE wen Jersey City Medical Cen be closed 'to all but tl gent, New .Iersey's onli cal school will have shu 320 .medical and 160 den of this T-'-:if Colleg Will Dela Move 5, To Meet on Month Halt' ,RE The med school deti By WILLIAM J. MADDEN Jersey City's widely an- nounced S5 million 'annual 'def- icit in maintaining its Medi- cal' Center is,actually nearer S6 million. Another S1 million charge .and thus me salary, like the other items in the appropria- tions account, does not show up as a direct charge to the hospital. Also, the city provides three firemen at the center, two ---.ont-is and o linxxtnnanl' cal Center situation, sai believed' such things as bage collections and service would also be against the city and not as a direct charge agains hospital. - hnnnifn nh-Ann :Jehu-1 PERMANENT HOME FOR THE N. J. COLLEGE OF MEDICI totelmed school to end Jersey City ties Jon. I By BRUCE BAILEY to study under. an temporary he board of trustees of the w Jersey College of Medi-A e and Dentistry last night contract, but this d1d not set well with Mayor Thomas A. Whelan. Whl wh6 admitted he closed it had voted' to 'dis- 1 239: ,, tinue its ties with the Jer- was Lsilghtllfjoff ,PPP Pitt CEI THE F increase, they can get out so I can deal with someone more respectable. Smith never gave me any 'indication of their planned action. Whelan said thatyduringx the 1.,n+ m 992,-Q nm f-ihnhzas snh-I TURE? XPERTS AGREE THAT THE MEDIC L IDE ADEQUATE MEDICAL TRAINING NS. 0 fill Dill UNE DULLAR AREA eegegaresver Pleas Appeal l s to Arrange Meeting To LBJ d Trustees, Citizens Studied ii. s,3Z2TZfZ?Z?l1Z'la ...,..... semen Hughes I-n+ y For i Jersey Presider the city ' 0 patient 6 mllllon id his orders for a sweep- g 'shutdown of about two- irds of the hospital would on as scheduled. In one' of the first 'direct oves, dismissal notices will out to 1,100 employes, of the cnrtnl. .fnrnmfrnur Stop Whelan ,-ouncil L Mayor Thomas J. Whelan i YK y ew Jerseys First and Unls 7 eel Schoo W- A Suck By joseph R. Hixson Ol The Herald Tribune Staff JERSEY CITY. It is typical of the hassle that may cost New Jersey its only medical school th-at state authorities and the Mayor of this city can't even agree on how many square feet of the Jersey City Medical Center are being rented to the New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry for 523,000 a, month. Situated right ln the heart of Hudson County politics, the 301year-old towerimz stone medical center with 1,840 beds has been embroiled :ln a bit- Patzent ready yfaced with a flnancl: crisis that is going to requii the state's first income tax. Mayor Hugh Addorlizio 1 Newarlrhas offered the fact ities of the big Newark C11 Hospital to train the colleg third and fourth-year sta dents in medicine and ped atrics. The Governors spoke: man said other hospitals ha bid for part or all of the oo' lege, Which, was purchased h the state for S4 million la: July from Seton Hall' Un. versity. But the gubernatorial timism seems to regard rnaedicallcollege as a piece Hospital utback v otf tg? Ajiiglltdedical Center with the city council voting unanimously to U bl-ILLUUC. lVJ.U.,YU.l VLABUIIAUD 'lelan says this city '6an't 1 'to maintain the medl- hpol at the city's medical The city pays 345,000 to the medical school patient. care 'of the and it gets back- the 523.000 rental from help care for patients an keep the Mayor's hospi budget down. The medic staff fees would be more tha 345.000 without them. Dean McCormick is leavin the college for good next su mer. Most of his stu as . - .,, .. W V-Vw 1, -.ax , . - 41. .ig I -V, ..-Q7. ,L w N as .. ,U ., 1 '.,,--12 - W- Jawa?-2K? HND, Q 1. E1 vi I I .1 ,. 1 K 1 , X nf' .f - 3+ x I.. fd 3 . ,, my - 79-.V N A 4' ' S 'I' Y ...as-'si 4 Q g U .Cs... f I. - X 1 I . Dr. Opdyke leading the graduation processional Governor Hughes addressing the graduates. 11 l Dr. McCormick and Dr. Lewis bid farewell I-A jf A to Ioan Farley Carroll Whose charm, friendli- ness, and cooperation had for many years represented the best in the spirit of Seton Hall College of Medicine. Tonight a lx Y -Q-E-! 1 A A .L . I ,q'T Q-f H t X f feast, tomorrow a cathartic. -.,- Q--- -y' Ladies night out. ! 1 24,1 'KZ N 4' ill y am 1' 41.7 The cycle of summer, farewell, and hello again. Back from the beaches: The Seniors warm up for the Hnal year. Eat, drink and be merry, school starts Monday. , 4 And after only six liters of beer I ' xi PL' I I ' I , 1 Psstl VVhat's the name of the school? The first day back: the confusion of orientation and the pain of tuition dissolve the hangover of summer. Old friends are greeted, the missing counted, but the reunion and reverie quickly over, the GRIND begins. mm , ei -I ,I . 'ifggg 2 fB'i'fi- d a, .5 UH ff V -1 V A . f- . I i, 'uf P I - 1 F. 'X' .514 i i N'-fs. So I gave her a hundred and she gave me 4216 change and said it was a bargain. 1,5 3:30 Friday afternoon. In the next hour Qff f vp ' ' M 4, , , 1 H Q N, I ,f ., Y I-Z ' X They'll never leave jersey City. gf But all I asked for was a free CHEST X-RAY. E ,, M 1 we will cover the arm, leg, and pelvis . . . . and then her husband showed up. 4 4 xx 5 J ,I ' f-inf , if--1 'V A fi Q, YW, The boss? He's marching on Washington. 5 , inf' vw 15325 EV N Service with a smile . well at least the smile. L max, Qi- vnsmne noun S t' Hcunrwvd fr: Sunlm?3m W lfF1hLf'Snt , mc - . lg-:.... s gf - Q- -1- ,L--..53gt1,6mK,,u' Hs' s 4 . in 1 mm- iv 6.1 hir N. W .I , if ,WY Jsiffw Q 1, ' L- ff Let me have 82.00 on Rocking Chairi' in the fifth. 5 3 A.M., 6 A.F.B.'s to go, and no Carbol Fuchsin. I 1 E 1' I I F E I 'Ulkow our x lla OLD 57'0oLs N54 , 4' Cbijlss S ffziglgk in W5 f ul? WW 15x XP 5'7 18 . A-fifwsf m MW 0 W M i? 1 Q Q, Y- :qw W1w,WH NWHW ' ,.v..Q,1 I, 2-. , P 45:5 i.::iif1 f 'Wu 2 -Hey ? :S 35. Q XR, S5 vi 15. Qi N ,f 41 L - - f A .W . , X' V r J 7:5 5 ' I Y ,C ' 1 QE 1 , 'Fmiw I X, 'N -Q 5. ' , Slide over SWEETIE. ig, 0 ' Q Q! :QW .U - bi V51 , ,1 ,ri E , -f.5.q,,,l Q F7 , ww 'fl' ' 'E' 'Ll I' Ji IE WW Y f :1 .' , nf- V , 1, 'fl M gg, The Reticular Activating System-temporarily in activated. ff-5. GP? il T ...guts 2 5. W' Cecil B. DeLotto throws a red vest special. QA pinch of Rhinoceros Horn in every glass.Q The old MLu'phy soft sell Sorry girls, I'm all dated up this week. ,v . ., me - . 2 , ,ii A foul blow, about to be delivered. Student Stadalnik W 1' J A -cf!--' V ' M , x w,fg..1.,,.4 .1 4, .,,,,,,,.,M., V if ,L,,,..-- .,.z ,, W . , ,, .- 5 l FV Lis' 1 221 -5,5 ---..-L - v- A .alasexsgnf ' .- l ja, -.q1.,.,, ..,, M.,-45-11 . N It reads MERRY CHRISTMAS In a time of crisis and a moment of truth, Dr. Lewis assumes the Dean's chair and addresses the student body for the Hrst time as Dean. The faculty hears the current situation-they should have opened with a joke Bill Mroczek, Senior Class President, ex- pressing the opinions of The Class to the Board of Trustees and student body. , , -E' , , , . N A I, No, at this time we can't answer that question either. Kiss me, I'm an enchanted prince. THE DEAN,S HOUR You might think they didn't trust us. .u , in 1 Q M Au' hh,,Ah, u mi M 1 H xmwgf , E If I wait another hour maybe it will come to me. ff Y M U ,.., C i I if Down the halls and out the doorg each turning his own way, to a new testing ground -THE YEARS END Q AMA The Student American Medical As- sociation is an autonomous organization oper- ated independently by its members. Member- ship is voluntary and includes medical students, interns, and residents. With more than 60,000 active and affiliated members in 80 medical schools throughout the United States, SAMA is the largest student medical association in the world. The purpose of the Association as defined in the Constitution . . . is to advance the profession of medi- cine, to contribute to the welfare and education of medi- cal students, interns, and residents, to familiarize its members with the purposes and ideals of organized medicine, and to prepare its members to meet the social, moral and ethical obligations of the profession of medi- cinef' Through annual Scientific Forums, Exhibits and Meetings, and the publication of the NEW PHYSICIAN, SAMA fulfills this plupose and serves as the voice of the nation for the young physician in training. In addition, SAMA provides strong liaison committees to officially represent its members among such groups as the Associa- tion of American Medical Colleges, the American Hospital Association, the American Medical Association, and the National Intern Matching Plan. Our local chapter was formed in 1957 at the Seton Hall College of Medicine, and in the past decade has grown to include about 802 of the student body as mem- bers. Throughout this period, we have attempted to unify the student body, to represent it at regional and national meetings, and to provide active association with state and local medical organizations. Local service programs in- clude the dissemination of educational material, micro- scrope and book exchanges, an active Woman's Auxil- iary, and publication of the student directory. To round out our local activities, SAMA sponsors a variety of social affairs. These include the annual Golden Apple Dinner, the annual Christmas Dance, and student- faculty picnics. This year we added the publication of THE CHART, our local newsletter, and the establish- ment of a SAMA Scholarship to our other activities. fvrff-ff OFFICERS Lt. to Rt., Frcmt-VVILLIAM MROCZEK, Editor-THE CHART, ARTHUR E. WEY- MAN, Social Chairman, MICHAEL I. TIGHE, Vice President. Back-HUGH B. MCCORMICK, Treas- urer, PETER N. ROSS, Secretary, CARL I. PEPINE, President. 6' 5-1-1. 'jf' ...gl THE WOMAN,S AUXILIARY TO THE STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION I OFFICERS Lt. to Ht., Front-LYNN PEPINE, Presidentg JUDY MCCORMICK, Vice President. Back - MICHELE MEOLA, Treasurerg MIKEL ANN FLAN- NERY, Editor-MEDWIFEBYg RITA MONTELL, Recording Secretaryg SUE WALSH, Corresponding Secretary. rn vor. II Number 2 rut CHART Q y ll lji .- THE CHART, the oiiicial newsletter of the New Jer- sey College of Medicine chapter of the Student American Medical Association, since its inception in 1964 has served as the collective voice of the student body of the college. Springing from a desire to improve the lines of com- munication between the faculty-administration and the students, it has been well received by both faculty and students alike as a welcome substitution for the rumor system . Written and edited by an enthusiastic core of students with a Hair for journalism, it has candidly voiced comment upon a multitude of vital issues when it was felt that the best interests of both student and school were concerned. During the turbulence of transition from a private to a state institution, THE CHART chronicled situations and events and conveyed lucid analyses in an attempt to establish a well-informed stu- dent body. Initiated as a cornmunique of facts, it has expanded its efforts to student services, class and club news and announcements and biographical sketches of instructors- fx MISS M. NOWACKI, Typist. THE EDITORS: Editor, William I. Mroczekg Associate Editor, Michael I. Tighe and Arthur E. Weyman. MR. C. LEWIS, Printer K 2 .m Medical School the Phi Rho Sigma Medical Fraternity IS currently 1tS seventy-fifth anniversary year. C . . , RO SIGMA Founded in 1890 at North- N ollege of Medicine s Alpha ew Rho Chapter was in 1958. The fraternity program is divided into such areas as alumni relations, chapter lectureships, community service, publications, social events, ritual and regalia and loan and professional programs. As a professional fraternity, the Alpha Rho Chapter is very fortunate in having many faculty members from the various departments of our medical college as honorary members. Many of these have contributed their time and effort toward making fraternity programs and projects a success. Guestlecturers have included Dr. Pasquale Statile on Dermatology, Dr. Maceo Howard on Liver Metabolism, and selected topics in Rheumatology and Pediatrics by Doctors john Calabro and Howard Perkel, respectively. Last year the Alpha Rho Chapter was greatly honored by the visit and guest lecture of Phi Rhols National President, Dr. Charles M. Bethune. V1 EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OFFICERS OF PHI RHO: PETER GRECO, Pres, JOSEPH GRECO, V.P. for Clinical Years, DENNIS RHYME, V.P. for Basic Sciences, CHARLES LOGUDA, Treasg THOMAS KIERNAN, Corres. Secy, JOHN MCCONVILLE, Rec. Secyg STEPHEN WHITE, Student Council Rep, ANTHONY SCIALLA, Symposium Chairman, DR. PAUL MIRANTI, Faculty Counsellor. Anthony Scialla introducing Dr. Charles M. Bethune, National President of Phi Rho Sigma at a dinner in his honor. 27 AT RACE i ,, ., , I M' or we pay the tow. 3 -'r -Q ' ' M o - T ,E 1. t 1 ,,,... I ' 51 g' X3 Q , Www , ww, , U , + f 4 Y I V 5? 2 ' '9 li - X 431. 4 f I an-J . ' - W me ' ' , - wi f - t p ' . 951 , W ' ,, f H V my -1- l f- Q'4A:,N.vu,..,,.1 Aj. X .- - pf: t I i it ,gf 'fl We go in the snow . . . N A ' Q ' 'gig ' -'fu 1 fi.,- 28 What do you mean I'm too old for bus tickets? In II I. I , I Kelly . . . pickups . . . scalpel . . . tie . . . f' MORRISTOWNF MEMORIAL I I HOSPITAL f W thought you said this was the road to K , I The 5:15 a.m. train to Trenton , ,fV- School bus OUT OF ORDER 'OURNAL STAFF ,ii x ,u,4 ,yn -a . N 1 ,wx ,gg 15 :Qwaw ' CARL I. PEPINE Co-Editor ffkfxox. X V 'K jl Z ARTHUR E. WEYMAN Co-Editor 30 WILLIAM MROCZEK Photography Editor CARROLL M. LEEVY, M.D. Faculty Advisor MICHAEL I. TIGHE E' R Production Manager CINO L. GIORCINI, IR. ROBERT C. STADALNIK Treasurer Layout Editor ROBERT A. BRONFMAN Business Manager f'x-W ,gy ' ' V n iiiiiii i e E E or A X , X5 x A X XX 532,31-W , ' Q X. - 2 X SEX, X 1 EUGENE P. FLANNERY i 'uoeu 3 Literary Editor X X X X X X X X LX X L rl 1 41,55-'li NEIL H. KOLSKY Business Manager X. -RESHMEN Front, Lt. to Rt. I. Burtaine, I. Korek, T. Rothenberg, D. O'Leary, P. Belott. Back, Lt. to Rt. R. Wademan, P. Kete- laar, P. Keats, D. Iascott, R. Johnson, R. Levinson 32 .? ig.. Dorft tell Eliot Ness. Front, Lt. to Rt. I. Broselow, L. Perrotta, I. Szulecki, I. Mara, M. Herald, S. Rous, M. O'Neill. Back, Lt. to Ht. R. Henseler, M Scollins, D. MacNeil, W. O'Grady, T. Fell, F. Mitros, I. L'Annunziata, F. Stratford, L. Amorosa, C. Argila, I. Donohue .-, l 5W4 W ,, , .Q , L-: P vs 4:7 , is 1'-,Fi . .1 ' 1 . . ' ' if ' 4 J if L C44 mhz- V A Y f , ni ' L N . ' N .. . . X r 1 V X l ,, - L , I E 1 H-, .-1 'f :, ' ' ' ' ' 2- - 'V . 'WL J. . -.1f-t- v T -I 1. C ' .-es.: . . 1 ia h f ,Z M 5 1 .. ' r-.fix Y T-STH we ' - ' 'f iff.,-TQ, .Tit it 1: ,T W 'Q V. V x za . .. -- F'-iff 1'1 .f .' 'lr 1. . . 35.1.-.. V I T ' if: ff- -V iss fr , A . ' -- - . . .. -- Q- fa ,.l--3.4-5 3-N Milligan 1-H , - - X -fy .. ' M . . TZ? S V , 1 1 -.1-ya 4- Fvlhm im . .v f fmfii,-.v,:Y.5,: Front, Lt. to Rt. M. Plante, I. Mcllduff, C. Cetrulo, A. Flippin, H. Brown. Back, Lt. to Rt. H. Turse, S. Kaul, L. Schultzel, I. Rhoder, P. Borromeo, R. Pallant, B. Fecowycz, P. Smith .11 -gi - 1 .15 gl-gif. an 'Z' liar-..:, in iff F12 ' '- -vi! TSS.. vi X '4 - - 'N fiffl- .. 25.4 'X ..ffa:n. U 1 i 51 ,I Z' E ' A H ll ll l g l 9 l if ig mfwel Sf . l lI gil H' 'H I i .fifdihi fg I i f l I I U ' f lflflf l' 'Ffa in, X -.I W A1 A. , Wa S l . x X ..,, an 5 . .' L X N xxan . X' ' I 47 ' N 1 wi' -v 1 - D: Front. Lt. to Bt. 1. Sorrentino, A. Petrillo, H. Grabelle, R. Margulies, D. Quinlan. Back, Lt. to Rt. I. Paulhus, F. Celona, I. Hanagan, H. Smith, R. Greene, H. Rosenbaum, P. Harhnan, I. Spiro 34 L?-, -...N 7 1--V RJ:-JMR 'H-41, v 1 . - mf I Hrrmf...yea.h...we ll...ah... F11 fill mine, and you fill urine. 35 CEA -OPHOMORE Front, Lt. to Rt. A. Neumann, P. Kraft, V. Seybuck, B. Kretkowski Back, Lt. to Rt. D. Ryhne, D. DiBona, G. Shaw, I. Gegwich, P. Clark, C. Strife I? M. ..m5u , 1 I- plz. Em . . I. ix? :I I' Riffs li, ..1,1,Ig V .ff f.j.1'h.5 iw... fi.. 1. 45521 . v. if UW , is he '73 L' 1 'I-ia 'PC in M If ' . ' firm If '3 ' ...Q E31 ' 29? I fi 57' --Q S! . V N X , . 1 if .1 l '1 za Iii? .:'Y75i ,1- yz... , HT' v-. In . F ff? F 4,1 . E ,S , .I,. i t 'ar I I Mother already wrote that note for missing Cardiac III 1 Front, Lt. to Rt. j. Erianne, P. Stahl, K. O,Conne11, R. Brouillard, J. Lang, A. Guay, P. Massimino A Quartell Back, Lt. to Rt. B. Malyk, F. Buda, B. Dzindzio, F. Pereira, L. Corsaro, M. Rocchio, W. Hansen .4 x i 'K Ng A an I , if f I i 5 Wg, ,M 4 I ., 'W 1 it wry f- ' 'E If - :Nga I I 5 Q 'XT N X! 1:3 rl , - n , x 4 - s x . , ' Fri?-X' . V ,Q . J ' .R Y 1 X 4 X ' Y 1 O H 1 I A H W I i . r V k I ' ia-an f Front, Lt to Rt. C. Irwin, A. Vanderzanden, H. Chashin, I. Maida, D. Pietrucha, M. DiBe1la, I. Morseman, P. Infantolino Back, Lt. to Rt. E. Sawicki, L. Blumberg, D. Diana, M. Ponzio, A. DeMaria, M. Fragala, W. Caragol 38 M. 75, . , f l , . H 1 Y , Q Did I give 0.2 cc or 0.002 cc? 'Wm ax :L . ...E , N u 1155 i -.. . x 3 .14 Front, Lt. to Rt. J. Berardinelli, L. Mound, I. McConviLle, T. DelPresto Back, Lt. to Rt. S. Pesin, D. Davis, I. Campbell, P. Hollister, I. Salerno, R. Ruotolo, R. Modarelli, G. Barkins, I. DeGerome ORS Front Lt. to' Rt. K. F iscella, H. McCormick, R. Ellwood, E. Luchansky, L. Parmer, E. Sheppard, I. Greco, D. Fitzgerald. 1 , Tw... Back, Lt. to Rt. T. Maron, P. Strack, P. Greco, K. Gordon J. Santaniello, T. Kiernan, Z. Hero, R. Link, I. Pauswloski, D. Burke. I M U Q K I - -w Zz . V 1 ,fxw ' .Ts V 'ri' 4 'mx'-I I i Y 5, I H . wkf rqf ff, 1,1 i-fl . ' Jr f J. I 4 M 1. I I , ll . , I H A ' ' ,Yi ' V rss QE ' 1- 1 I9 I if H 1 A ' ' I w if jgig. , ,, , . SKI A Ig Q i . X , ii! ,, ,Ng e Q 3 K ' a w I rg A I , I -' A H . f 154 I I ' 1- w P . Q Q I T' A 'NA . 2 I It . VETERAN'S ADMINISTRATION HOSPITAL, EAST ORANGE 4 + finger prints t Q A rxixi , v. 'L , ta ? t - 4 if t .1 . t .. it ' F I , , 1 Q- I I I , ,- Q 5 Q I ,' . A -. 7 'C' J 4 My . R tx li Q nw Y ,, La 6 ,tt 'VE' 1 -1 . ' - Y Es awfgj' X ,I X ' 1 -f '20 , : w T S . :ab I ' M 7 .14 'I ' 1 7 - - ' V 9 w.'4 1 9 ', 5 ' I ! AK '-L M 171 f ' In 6 . in ' 3 s if, ' ti, :FLG ' 1 Y 'aw' J ' 2 M .t g .Lu iv fT x .,,'t Ui? R - .? . .. . 1 . ... , g.t,,g ,, A f 't .JG .14 L ,IU L- i, ,. ,K :A i . ?. my! lx. ,V 1 . .N .Sify '-Q3 tgp. 1, 5 'Q 5 1 ' nl M ' - fd X 1 A . Z 1 G 'ws I K. . 1' h ES! t X GF Wi. 5.5 . fi , ' J I . fri - ,rg A F t M H 4-. -1 it . I - 7 f bt 16 ' ' K4 L tj I zllvf P11 -K 1 ' 1' l I E! 5 Front, Lt. to Rt. S. White, F. Stitik, B. DiGiacomo, S. Schnoll, 1. Franklin, E. Patten, F. Picone. Back, Lt. to Rt. A. Cibulski, j. Walsh, I. Orsi, E. Montell, I. DeGrinney, R. Moylan, A. Conte, B. Murphy, R. Pekaar, S. Fischl. Q 7 . ti ga J? TF ight, Mg t -..K E i ' Yes, I know, but Where's the C.B.C. Chart Bounds? MIDNIGHT! Son of a gun, it's still alive. Let's fry for WABC,'. I I xr It 'N , 1 Sag I 4 . . U - ' , an XJ h H ' j 1 -- H7 F 1 .X .JY i if we rl I I ' s shd -rf' 'J' A -x 1. x - L- Wusiggf'-'f 3 -gb Xx I is .bffgl A lf fc ,- . .- PR RZ. Q , M7 V, w'NR15Va w ,x vii You,1l never get it OE the ground. OVERBROOK HOSPITAL W' . I 5 ' N ,,W,,, faggiggggi .J 3.35, N ' YJ- '.L , 50 gi' ll' .,, ,. anon-L is Ji 4 'Q -.-vu col wr'-c fn ,A ., 1 . ,- Ya x7 F ' ' , V ' ! N161 ii., fx 3. im, -aw 25.7 'Til L., ' 6 , A ...i , ?A I , ,, A, 4 L X .uuffrf , Qi -'au-1 , , ag' Q X 5 A 129 lui' vi- xs-ib 4 ' ki.- E Ti 1' J? -, 'H 65,55 mf, :W My wg f W -' -55' '.:??WW 'j E H fs W , , , .H X f A , 1 3 u 55 Q WE, ., :QE , 'gf ei l? 1 ' W '15 C , 'ww x K? A 7 Q, , if 'N T 1 ' 'ii I 51' X. r X 7 . .f f 1 5-.Q 1 1 I, H V C ' ,'!, , . J THE SE IDRS JONATHAN ADLER, MD Rutgers University, AB. Jersey City, New jersey i DANIEL AHEARN, M.D. Maryknoll Seminary College, AB New York, New York RICHARD ALJIAN, MD. Seton Hall University, AB Palisade, New jersey Qu WILLIAM G. ANNAN, MD Dickinson College, B.S. Ridgewood, New jersey RQSE MARIE APOSTOLICO Rutgers University, AB. Newark, New Jersey CHARLES E. BELLINGHAM, M.D Allegheny College, B.S. Keyport, New jersey H: :Q 1, V-fx 'ww-. get ,X - WM, -., H grew iw 1111 LH' bww viiiiw ' Zig if, ' Q4 DENNIS M. BIER, MD LeMoyne College, BS. Hoboken, New Jersey MICHAEL BGNOMO, M.D Middlebury College, BS. South Grange, New jersey ROBERT A. BRONFMAN, MD Rutgers University, AB. Highland Park, New jersey CHARLENE I-IARGROVE BURN, MD Columbia University, BS. Leonia, New jersey ALEXANDER A. CACCIARELLI, M.D Gettysburg College, A.B. Belleville, New Jersey CAROL ANNE CANIVAN, MD Marywood College, A.B. Honesdale, Pennsylvania NORINA CARNEVALE, MD Barnard College, AB. Brooklyn, New York RICHARD F. CIOFFI, MD. College of the Holy Cross, AB Bellerose, New York RICHARD C. CGRCORAN, MD Rutgers University, AB. Woodcliff Lake, New jersey PETER L. DeLOTTO, MD Seton Hall University, AB. Clifton, New jersey ALBERT T. DERIVAN, MD Manhattan College, B. Ch.E. Jersey City, New Jersey CHARLES R. EGOVILLE, MD University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania BERNARD R. EISENFELD, MD Rutgers University, AB. Newark, New Jersey MICHAEL ESPCPSITO, MD Manhattan College, BS. Long Island City, New York 'Q S uv ,5 'ENMQVZQB T. 1 r Q i :YE W an iwjq ,Ez ' ,iw , Eg, H W w.w.,f1EQ QQ ROBERT A. FECHNER, M.D. Kenyon College, A.B. Tenafly, New Jersey JOHN H. FISHER, MD Duke University, AB. Plainfield, New jersey EUGENE P. ELANNERY, MD. United States Military Academy, BS Elizabeth, New Jersey W QEPP . gi'-,lit Z 3? ur .L EQ? H? , L '32 50 ew if .-V+ - H 'Jr ,, ,. .ta Y Wiiiiff' v5i1'1- LV 1 'l W 4 M . www' , ucu.'gm'Q ,H , Q 4 mam agganvsgyx- 1,!553i'1 . 5 , 32' x XP M2 'X ,,,lgi5.,g... Q X9 , H ' Lv .fini NLSLHXNX . 'H' K ,1 H 4 asf GINO L. GIORGINI, JR., MD. Villanova University, BS. Copiague, New York Y, -v NYM., ? .M WN!! sms qi?Lu u wfiQxmY w 'n ,H Ag! , 6,5 5 MICHAEL GORDO , M.D. Rutgers University, AB. Newark, New ersey ,gag 'Q s +3 JOSEPH G. GROSSO, MD, University of Connecticut, A.B Waterbury, Connecticut FRANK G. GUELLICH, MD St. Peter's College, B.S. Orange, New Jersey ALBERT BARRY HASSAN, MD New York University, A.B. Bergenfield, New jersey JANE SUSAN HENKEL, MD Barnard College, A.B. Seeaueus, New Jersey 40 FRANK D. HUSSEY, JR., M.D johns Hopkins University, AB. Stonybrook, New York NEIL H. KOLSKY, MD Rutgers University, AB. Morristown, New jersey LEON F. KUKLA, M.D. Seton Hall University, B.S jersey City, New jersey 'EC I in in uw ri sz i i e i hwwnwzwr uw N my Q ,i Eiyi mga ii ag, ,. FRANK B. LIGHT, MD Rutgers University, BS. Hillside, New Jersey PATSY J. LQIACQNQ, MD Syracuse University, AB. Harrison, New York RICHARD G. LOVANIO, M.D Fairfield University, BS. Bridgeport, Connecticut CHARLES E. MANGAN, M.D Brown University, AB. Berkely, Rhode Island El, xx? 555: vi -4-2. Z wi in ,JUN Ji .Hitt , 5 , ,mi l234,,. ,,1, Jimi if Q- f , , I. Y f MEM ,WW nj, PM 11256: E11 M iiiiii ff 55 -gf' ' 121- 25 Fi will isjg. 'Z x ll i , ge Wlgiiqi Miiidi! Y ,L fam-, E f i 23 ig l fi if ,, H t . Vil tig. . - 'Q w 'A 3aQ.l55ei,2,Ei5ilngiw'M -' emwiiwkio V1eToR 5. MANUELE, MD. Bucknell University, AB. Collingswood, New ersey FRANCIS J. MEQLA, MD. College of the Holy Cross, B.S. jersey City, New jersey STANLEY R. MICHALSKI, MD Seton Hall University, AB. Bloomfield, New Jersey ' EDWARD' M. MQLLOY, MD Fairfield University, BS. Bridgeport, Connecticut WILLIAM MROCZEK, M.D Seton Hall University AB. Belleville, New Jersey JAMES P. MURPHY, M.D. College of the Holy Cross, BS Bloomfield, N CW jersey 3 4 lay , aa, - , ,gh , ? BARBARA ANN NEILAN, MD. Chatham College, A.B. Glen Rock, New Jersey , LL 10 Hiiilll H .5 2 A-+317 ,ill 535: l-it W, W n ,A W Q 'M W 0 1 M .-Q' It 1,--w.a,,.3 Q. ,1 s,,qgQufi ji, Fvagvff 1 ' in' 4fqp,,. VINCENT G. ORIENTE, M.D New York University, AB. New York,NeW York ' V Q1 A L .f I Hllrffgg ' k .-, ' -,xf Q ANTHONY P. ORLANDO, M.D Columbia College, A.B. Long Island City, New York RICHARD R. PAQUETTE, MD Assumption College, A.B. Worcester, Massachusetts ANTHONY PASSANNANTE, MS., Ph.D.,M.D. Fordham University BS., M.S., New York University Ph.D Metucheri, NJ. CARL PEPINE, MD. University of Pittsburgh, B.S Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania EDWARD J. PETRUS, JR., MD Seton Hall University, AB. Trenton, New Jersey X OLINDO PRELI, M.D Fordham Colligo, B.S. Brooklyn, New York RAYMOND E. REILLY, MD Villanova University, BS. Newark, New jersey ggmii, fi f' X F J, 'I f . RICHARD E. RUBENSTEIN, M.D Lafayette College, AB. Morristown, New jersey mx S lui. Q! 1 ww yum WH W ROBERT SCACHERI, MD St. 'Iohnfs University, B.S. Rego Park, New York ei? gs N32 Zag, ' ,632 ANTHONY V. SCIALLA, M.D Seton Hall University, AB. Waldwiek, New jersey RAYMGND E. SLEVIN, M.D Manhattan College, BS. New Hyde Park, New York ROBERT C. STADALNIK, M.D St. joseph's College, BS. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania EVAN A. STAMOS, MD Rutgers University, B.S. Elizabeth, New Jersey STEVEN STANZIONE, M.D Georgetown University, B.S. Pennington, New jersry PAUL STEIN, MD. Rutgers University, BS Newark, New jersey DANIEL TERES, MD Tufts University, A.B. Elizabeth, New Jersey MICHAEL J. TIGHE, MD St. Peter's College, BS. Newark, New Jersey JAMES T. TREZZA, MD Brooklyn College, AB. Brooklyn, New York AWE? ,4 Qlgggw hy fl Mm 7: PEQGMEX QQ, me ' ln wr: 1 ,. imma ,lm Y W., ,X iv ., 9 ,Q ,Y l Mn:,:,4 M, 2, R Hy, X4 H, N - RGNALD L. VAN HEERTUM, MD Gettysburg College, AB. Palisade Park, New Jersey PAUL A. VIETA, MD. Columbia University, A.B New York, New York JACK S. WEINSTEIN, MD Colgate University, AB. Belleville, New Jersey ROBERT H. WEITZMAN, MD Columbia College, A.B. Linden, New Jersey ARTHUR E. WEYMAN, M.D College of the Holy Cross, AB. Montclair, New Jersey KATHRYN A. WHELAN, MD C. W. Post College, B.S. Hicksville, New York ROGER S. WILSGN, M.D. Trinity College, BS. Ridgefield Park, New Jersey SHIG YASUNAGA, M.D Seton Hall University B.S. Flemington, New jersey N1 P . 4 - 7?1.A 1 -Q V '- -f l THE FACULTY ADMI I TRATIO THE HONORABLE RICHARD HUGHES Governor of New Jersey ORVILLE E. BEAL BOARD OF TRUSTEES GEORGE F. SMITH Chairman PAUL A. CORMAN KINGSBURY S. NICKERSON DONALD ALTMAN Cnot shownj Legal Counsel IR b VR RRR V? RICHARD DRUKKER ARTHUR I. LEWIS, M.D. Dean JAMES E. MCCOBMACK, M.D., sc.D President CHARLES R. BEAM, M.D. ' m M5 253 -n ,Z Assistant Dean THE EXECUTIVE FACULTY DAVID F. OPDYKE, Ph.D Assistant Dean W! . 3. JEROME S. RAUCH, M.L.S. Librarian 'is 4' , -ki? l s 2-. - my ff ' , KENNETH J. DWYER, M.A. Registrar IOSEPH F. SALERNO M.B.A. Comptroller v JOSEPHIN E V. CURLEY Bookstore GERALD G. KALLMAN, M.S. Director of Public Relations MABIAN KEBRIGAN Cashier 121 U in f W if ' . 1 ..- l . NATOMY Upon entering medical school the green novice is terrorized by the fact that he must master the anatomy of the -human body, both grossly and microscopic- ally Wlthln the first four months of his career. This task is great, obviously exhausting, but neces- sary. For if one is to examine and treat this body, and if one is to know the abnormal, the diseased, he must know the normal morphology. Such is the purpose of the department of Anatomy. So, with his cadaver, microscope, and Gray's Anatomy as his guides, the student enters the lab and begins his task. He shudders as he pulls the sheet from his cadaver for the Hrst time and yawns as he stares into his microscope. But after numerous lectures, conferences, exams of every size, shape and description, one finds himself talking about the blood supply of the liver rather than the Giant's game. The frustrations and agonizing concentration which characterize the study of anatomy were only alleviated by such light moments as Pinkney Harman singing Ole Man River, Vinny Oriente painting the arteries red, veins blue and nerves yellow, just like in the book, or Paul Miranti singing out Tom has a nurse downtown. In time not only did we come to realize the im- portance of this subject, but We began to enjoy it-this naturally led to our retaining the matter and mastering the subject. The department is unique in that veal scallapine is served in the conference room, the switch plates in the labs are spotless, and the electron microscope hasn't worked for five years. H W' 1 From the start of the medical school, PINCKNEY HABMAN, Ph.D., has been an im- portant part of our faculty. He joined us after serving two very successful ten year periods on the Georgetown and New York University Medi- cal School faculties. His special fields of interest lie in chemical and electrical studies of the nervous system and in mammalian neuromuscular mutations. Few department heads could make us feel more at ease tl1an'Dr. Harman. Off cam- pus, few could beat P.j. Cor, The Duke, as he is known in Schiavdsj at pocket billiards. Who can forget that familiar sight at lunchtime of PJ., sporting his goatee, carrying a brown bag of groceries with a loaf of Italian bread looming over the top? ANTHONY V. BOCCABELLA, Ph.D., came to us in 1960 from the faculty of the University of Iowa, his alma mater. His chief interests lie in Endocrinology, specifically the thyroid gland and the reproductive system. Few of us can forget his lectures on feedback mechanisms or his cross sectional exams. Others still are chased in their dreams by cadavers covered with tags from the last gross anatomy practical. Now class, he would begin, and then launch into a discussion of how many parts our all-day exams would include, and how many floors they would cover. But we did learn anatomy, and in the process gained one of our best friends. ROBIN L. CURTIS, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy . y Sf IJ JOSEPH P. TASSONI, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy 525552:- eqg 1-'-- 1 --loso or FRANK D. ANDERSON, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy MAY B. HOLLINSHEAD, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Anatomy fry X X PAUL J. MIRANTI, M.D. GORDON W. HEATH, Ph.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Anatomy Assistant Professor of Anatomy IOCHEMISTRY The Department of Bio- chemistry faces an increasingly more diffi- cult problem each year. It must present to the student all the fundamentals of one of the sciences so vital to his medical education while, at the same time, increase the scope of its pro- gram to include the rapid, daily developments in the field. To accomplish this end, each facet of biochemistry is presented in lecture form by an instructor who has done or is doing research in that particular field. Each lecture series is correlated with laboratory experiments intended to enable the student to better grasp the subject. The experiments are designed to illustrate the practical applications of biochemical prin- ciples to clinical medicine. The advantages of the new techniques, such as spectrophotometry and isotope label- ling, in establishing a diagnosis become obvious. Imme- diate benefit is derived from arriving on the wards with some knowledge of the meaning of the basic blood and urine diagnostic tests. As clinical medicine and medical research more closely approach the molecular level, the importance of a firm foundation in biochemical principles becomes in- creasingly evident. The Department of Biochemistry is devoted to the task of instilling this foundation in the physician who graduates from the New jersey College of Medicine. ,gf ,f .. Q Q C RAYMOND L. GARNER, Ph.D., is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Biochemistry. He grad- uated from Westminster College in 1927 and received his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins Medical School in 1932. He was a Fellow at Johns Hopkins from 1932 to 1935. Dr. Garner then served on the faculty of the University of Michigan Medical School until 1956 when he came to our institution. In addition to his departmental work, until last year he served as Chairman of the Admissions Committee and since then he has been appointed Assist- ant Dean of the School of Dentistry. Dr. Garner's research interests revolve primarily about the biochemistry of carbohydrates and leukocyte metabolism. He also derives particular personal satis- faction from his work with the blind. BRII SAXENA, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Biochemistry GEORGE KALF, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of Biochemistry. He received his Bachelor of Science degree from Upsala College in 1952, his Master of Science from Pennsylvania State University in 1954, and his doctorate from Yale University in 1957. Dr. Kalf came to the New jersey College of Medicine in 1960. One is quick to note the drive of this prolific young man. He already has numerous publications to his credit, most of which deal with enzymatic studies and protein synthesis. UZ , as . um wx 11357 ' H M ,.s,'uw, -ww Y me KATHERINE LEWIS, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Biochemistry M 1 fr 4. 1 ill-1 me-V V i , fi! gf: 9 M H in E 5, J 1.52 1 , . 5-A .. . - , 2'3 JOHN H. GLICK, jr., Ph.D. I Assistant Professor of Biochemistry THOMAS W. CYBRIEN, Ph.D. Instructor of Biochemistry ICROBIOLOGY It has always been the purpose of the Department of Microbiology , chemistry of microorganisms and their rela- tion to human disease. This includes the entire world of bacteria, viruses, and protozoa. More recently, the field of immunology, with its study of antigen-antibody relationships, has been added to this subject. The horizons in this latter field are vast. In spite of the fact that its subject matter is endless, this department is perhaps the most organized of the basic sciences. Not only that, but it can boast of having some of the most well known men in their field among its numbers: Dr. Briody, an eminent virologist, Dr. Maurer, immunologist par excellence, Drs. Wolin and Bevis of the culture medium fame. Perhaps students in their first years do not appreciate this department. Agreed, that nothing can be so boring as memorizing Latin names or trying to figure out which way the worms went or staring at little purple things in a microscope! But, in the clinical years one has a rude awakening. The differential between pneumococcal and staphylococcal pneumonia oft times relies on the gram stain. The study of rheumatology is coming to be a study of immunology itself. The philosophy of education of this department, however, is confusing. Because one must have at least a 75 average to pass, the grind becomes all the more difficult. It becomes even more confusing when Dr. Briody states he is pleased with the test results and you're sitting there with a 50. The infamous 44 know ...... A unique characteristic of this department is that its features correlate with the catalogue's description. 'to teach the structure, physiology, and bio- .jf 095- msd! 1 .- A- a wZ'i- ' 75 ' if ' .' fa' I . wwf-' 2 ' - 7- '-.tt-' .. :gi ' . , QV. , ' rr a' M e . L .jfs , 7.3 4 ' - ' af aft' 3 ' 1 H.: . 2 M ir Qg- '1' . . .., rm ,La g Ei ,,:g .:ga Q N' .. mass. fs , .V -Ze I-V -as ,fig V: -.,,p,.,9 ai it? ...i.n:' , -- ' ...rg , 1 . . W Y 3 N N X .iilamw-4.5, W W- T it ,x DR. BERNARD BRIODY, Chairman and Professor of the Department of Microbiology, came to Seton Hall College of Medicine in 1959. Born in Bethlehem, Penn- sylvania, Dr. Briody received his B.A. from Lehigh Uni- versity and his Ph.D. from Yale in 1946. For the next two years, he was a National Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne, Australia. After a brief stay at the University of Michigan, Dr. Briody returned to Yale as Instructor of Virology and later became an Assistant Professor. He returned to his home state to become Professor of Microbiology and Director of the Virology Laboratory at Hahnemann Medical College. Dr. Briody is a virologist by choice with a special interest in the pox virus about which he has written numerous articles. At present, Dr. Briody is co-author of a textbook, MICRO- BIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE, which he promises will be unique . - . eh? The man with hidden talentsf as Professor PAUL MAURER, Ph.D., characterizes himself, is a native New Yorker. He received his B.S. from City College of New York and his Ph.D. in Immunochemistry from Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons where he later served as a research associate. After nine years on the faculty of the University of Pittsburgh's School of Medicine, Dr. Maurer came to Seton Hall College of Medicine as Professor of Microbiology in 1960. Dr. Maurer is first and foremost an Immunologist with a special interest in Immunochemistry. He is inter- nationally known for his studies on antigen structure. This man of few words is also a member of the National Board of Medical Examiners. With a lawyer for a wife, and two teenagers in the house, perhaps he has no other choice but to be a man of few words. I ROBERT E. GILLIS, D.D.S., Ph.D. Professor of Microbiology 1, ooo 1 1 1-1 1111W,iiirM111 11.13 . 1 1 f 1 51.5 Q. ,iff-r 'X , V-.5 ., 5!4-rv: .zs 11 Y , . 'Q-2 er 1 f Z :I-Sigel-f 'fyf' ,f- 4 ' W' L' ..?'L1' 'iii N V K -is xi H L ,,-,EAA Y ZICMUND C. KAMINSKI, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Microbiology L- , 1 11 ,1- '1 f'1 vis te1g111g1111 .4 v1 1.r 1 1 ,.,. ,gr , ARTHUR E. KRIKSZENS, Ph.D. PETER WILKINS, Ph.D. BERNARD F. GERULAT, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Microbiology Assistant Professor of Microbiology Assistant PIOf6SS01' of MiCr0bi0l0gy Yl PAUL PINCHUCK, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Microbiology Mme'-cg ref' GERALD S. BORMAN D.V.M., M.Sc Assistant Professor of Microbiology mf- ,. .--f:5f1'1'll !5-, ' ' I - ' .4144 in ' rf, ,.f, ,KE qs' 1. 11s s, sf 1 ll 1 1151s-V . q.-11 111111, 1 A ff 1 xiii 3 1 A 1-iv-E ggfr , ,mv 17 ' .HT --figg, 1 Y 311 , I1 11111 gs 1 1 -1 . V . -. - f wm , aff J 1 ' P 111 Y Q , -f 2 ATHOLOGY The Department of Path- ology is concerned with the structural and functional aspects of disease with emphasis on pathogenesis and patho- physiology. In the first few months of , , general pathologic processes Chyaline dropouts, fatty metamorphasis, Zenker's waxy some- thing or other, etc.j dominate the scene. Then the emphasis shifts to systemic pathology-the first look at real medicine. In Pathology, the spoon feeding ends, and any resemblance between exams and specific lecture material is purely coincidental. Exams are rare but relatively easy if you can decipher the questions . . . . . . and dogs ARE cleaner than cats! It is the sixth floor lab that many learn why a binocular scope was recommended at the start of medical school ...... You can close your eyes and no one can tell you're asleep. It is the rare, novice pathologist who is not seeing double by the end of a session-and it is even rarer to find one who fails to stay until the end and escapes the forked tongue of Big Bad Billf, The weekly C.P.C. is usually quite enjoyable and exciting for all but the unfortunate few called upon to udiscussl' the case .... a difficult task for one who's so nervous that he can't remember his own name. Autopsies can be very informative, and the introduc- tion to one's first protocol on the final exam can even be shocking. When the pathology course ends, the study of pathology is just beginning. The importance of this subject, regardless of future specialty training, he- comes more evident every year one is associated with medicine. - -' I N- '-.- - ,E is HUGH G. GRADY, M.D., Professor and Chair- man of the Department of Pathology, came to the New jersey College of Medicine in 1958 from Howard Medical School. Dr. Grady graduated from jefferson Medical School in 1934 and returned there to begin his teaching, The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology was also among his former assignments. His special interest lies in Gynecological Pathology. Perhaps his most famous work is his monograph, The Ovary. Associate Professor of Pathology, ERNESTO SALGADO, M.D., Ph.D., is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Madrid Medical School. After getting his Ph.D. in Montreal, he joined the faculty of New Jersey College of Medicine in 1958. Dr. Salgado is currently engaged in research in experimental hyper- tension and inflammation with some forty three published papers to his credit. His special interest lies in Renal Pathology and Dr. Salgado is considered an authority on the Nephrotic Syndrome. , ? NmAFM?' ALFONZO MADRAZO, M.D. Instructor of Pathology WILLIAM D. SHARPE, M.D. Assistant Professor of Pathology ILONA BUBELIS, M.D. Assistant Professor of Pathology 'N-.X-is af hsmf----. 1-JJ-WW 1 DAVID DREIZIN, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Patholo gy ANTHONY L. PIETROLUONCO, M.D. '29 Associate Professor of Pathology Pharmacology defined us the mteraction of drugs with living Lectures conferences lab sessions and the inevitable exams were all aimed at us with its basic pr1nc1p1es From very Hrst day we realized that we were to be better than seventh in the nation-or else! Nothing became more controversial than the now famous Five Point Program. It started with the greatest shortage of volunteers in history, but by May there was a rush to every instructor s door in an attempt to fight for a last minute topic Kf -91' asf ,M Some of us will probably never understand three weeks of epinephrine vs. twenty minutes of penicillin, or why we were always questioned on the prototype while the actions of the drug of choice remained a mystery. In the lab, we observed, among other things, actions and toxicities of drugs and had an early introduction to surgery. A few will always be hard to convince that their unknown was not a placebo At times, the small group conferences developed into heated discussions, but a telescopic view of the harbor from 12 BSB was usually enough to bring even the most irate back to a state of composure. At the helm of the Pharmacology Department is DESMOND D BONNYCASTLE M D Ph D Dr Bonnycastle came to Seton Hall in 1957 to become Professor of Pharmacology and Chairman of the Depart ment after 10 years at Yale University where he was an Associate Professor of Pharmacology After receiving his VI D Dr Bonnycastle held academic positions at Banting Institute and the University of Toronto receiving his Ph D from the latter During World War II he served 1n the Canadian Navy becommg Surgeon Commander and VVa1 Gas Consultant to the Navy Dr Bonnycastles ma1or interests include analgetrcs and biogenic amines 1H the central nervous system Pharmacology IS a famlly affair with the Bonnycastles Mrs Bonnycastle is a re search associate in the department currently studying brain serotonin and dopamine An lmportant member of the crew 1S SHELDON B GERTNER PhD who joined the faculty in 1957 as Associate Professor in 1961 After graduation from Yale University in 1953 Dr Gertner did post doctoral work at the National Institute for Medlcal Research m London Here he studied histamine and neuromedrators with Dr Feldberg A year later he traveled to Home for further study with Dr Bovet From 1955 until 1957 Dr Gertner was an associate in the Department of Pharmacology at Columbia College of Physlclans and Surgeons He 1S presently engaged in a study of the significance of histamine in the nervous system Together with Dr Hollinshead of the Department of Anatomy he IS lnvestrgatrng the presence of mast cells in sympathetic gangha and other neural tissues Guitar playmg flamenco and classical has been Dr Gertners chief avocation for the last few years He puts this second in enloyrnent only to travel with his wife and two children ff! 3 I ' . , . ., . . . ' 7 3 3 . K , C . . , . I . . . . , . 1 . ., . ' ' ' ' . . . , il if. 43 F, lx if: N' , i1fF'2 ' . 'L -I '12 ' Iwi Q-QQ . 1 ' 'H f- i v mfyj i X M N Assistant Professor of Pharmacology. He became an ,. . . . . , l . - . I ' , ' ,Q . n I , a XX x VN . . . . QP, in p , A X ' . : . j . I f' , ' ' . . . A' . A . . 1 A I Q , Q 'Fr f K Xp .. N ' , u 'hx xi ,x 5 rf! .-GE.. GEORGE A. CONDOURIS, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Pharmacology Y fl! W 'MAY 1 .,,- , P ,o5 ,g1 P, 3 . if Ria X 4 --is N, YY 31 fi rl' , wg Ji- , ,XXKQ DUNCAN E. HUTCHE-ON, M.D., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Pharmacology -ww , KM. MARY MYCEK, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Pharmacology K X i 1 , xxl H. JOHN CLITHEROE, Ph.D. Research Fellow Persuing Prostaglandin s In Physiology, we were with learning how the systems of n body function in health and in No one quite knew what to expect our usual advisors, the sophomores, had completed the course while its able but demanding chairman was spreading pearls in other areas of the world. After the Hrst exam, the answer was clear-it was a disaster. Apparently, what we had heard the first day, We do not yet understand a single physiological phenomenon CClaude Bernardj, applied just as well to medical students. But we will be eternally grateful to the GI Group who, late in the year, presented many with their first respectable grade of the year. Graphs, charts, and curves became an integral part of every conversation. These caused immeasurable con- sternation in more than a few as we tried to appreciate how the lungs really work. Labs were a very businesslike affair except when interrupted by such classic moments as Ken Blum's blood bath or the heated competition for class vital capacity champion. The importance of Physiology did not really become clear until our iirst encounters on the wards. Since then, we have grown to appreciate Dr. Opdyke's pipes and Dr. Little's electrode off the coast of France. DR. DAVID F. OPDYKE, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Physiology, began his career as an educator with the Department of Physiology at Indiana University, his alma mater. From 1943 until 1951, he was with the Physiology Department at Western Re- serve University Medical School where he became Associate Director of the Department. Dr. Opdyke left Western Reserve to become Director of the Department of Physiology at Merck Institute for Therapeutic Re- search. Since 1956, he has headed the Physiology De- partment at New jersey College of Medicine and in 1963 was made Assistant Dean. Between 1961 and 1963, he was a Visiting Professor at Airlanggu University Medical School in Indonesia. Dr. Opdyke's major re- search efforts have been in Endocrinology and Cardio- vascular Physiology. He is a member of numerous pro- fessional societies including the Scientific Council of the American Heart Association and the editorial board of their publication, Circulation. DR. ARTHUR J. KAHN, Associate Professor of Physiology, was a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army Air Corps between 1942 and 1945. Subsequently he com- pleted his undergraduate training at New York University and later received his Ph.D. at the same institution. From 1951 until 1956, Dr. Kahn was a member of the Physiology Department at Georgetown University School of Medicine. He came to Seton Hall with the first class and has been enlightening students concerning muscle physiology ever since. Most students have had the benefit of a personal explanation of his experiments on con- tractile-elastic relationships in cardiac muscle. Some also had the misfortune of being late for one of his lectures on the subject. :C+ ' rg R ill T resist Q. 9' sau. 1 1 .. , 5 , .to L. ir W.. El v S f ,. . . . 1. F' 'tl R r .gag jf .g.,...,. W I .,j....w jg 2. ,tm ' J Egg. I '. V 1' M P .ar . mm u.f1j...m 1 H3 1 it HH A Ii 1 mtl 'lvl ilxamw W ttV '4 5. . .L i. W n . ai? an 0 Z, , nm , v . 5. ' H r I E3 'air . 1 W - ir Magi 15 122, ggtuagg yi v . it 1... ii s...,,, gr... , ... , , :gli ,Q 1 r r :gl . . , 'QQ y 1 1 , wvzeiasgo- I. B. NOLASCO, M.D. Visiting Professor of Physiology ROGER W. DAHLEN, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Physiology 5 Q5 W C. sid rf me' Q 'lx Wlwi rd W Q53 is 'ff 'Mis .-A 9 A .L H ' my -HA' ' H- , '-77-' 35' . ?i fE2f'fv'.E-'r,-925 --: AL-1 v . V ' - 1 1.11: 'Hn M 4. , ff.-,,. .w r mf -wr. f f 2,--Q: k ff -. .-f: 'f ,Q 52411,-iv1L.vf-.: - . ' , -L. ,f, ' Ulf? 22.23, . 1- .- :' ' 'fiifv ig '11-FQ: ii5evix1?'f. P if 4 I in ' ' M ' im' .-11: . .4 wV'.' ,. sfi5.:a - Q: ,gze , v My-4,a'-,iifi ' -' .- H , P 1' ' A A ' ' ' A an ' 2,3-45.:PJ'i , ' Hs ,i,:q?fg'1 E ' Lgpxaar . - 5 .. :aggflv f X 5+ -325. X 1 'Eur Q: :iff ' , ' jjfgizi-j.l4':Q, df. ' - . 2.-fu' - , Q K, j .f 5.1-:,:Laa .f- . . - 4 ip , r 5 Q' Eli JR' ' Q - , X lad M T , ' -- '3 , r 1' fl 'R 5.1m A if is 'fx saggy' .4-51 - . N, f 'if' .- , J kj' ' A m ie'-' ff-sf ,F ' 5 -1'-:ffl A :svn A 1 - 2 - mlm -H' ' so .si . er-:wz, f g -sg. - 1+ ' ' .:g.,-,:' . -- - :ig ' 9 - ,-f.f:-fs-15,11 pf' ' 5653? JF' 7,1 A-a,..r., A' Eg.-Mf', iii ment of Medicine IS the orientation of the student to the art and science of diagnosis and treatment of medical dis- orders. Students are taught to employ a discipline which seeks to utilize scientific methods and principles in the solution of the problem. But we soon learn the ultimate solution remains an art in that rarely can the patient ever be thought of as the equivalent of a controlled experiment in Basic Science- Beginning as a sophomore in Physical Diagnosis, the proper method of obtaining a complete medical history and performing a physical examination is the requirement. This and a knowledge of the basic laboratory procedures as stressed in Lab Medicine, are necessary before the wards replace the classroom on a full time basis. Any guilt feelings about not properly mastering various lab tests, however, are rapidly wiped away after the initial introduction to scut Workv as a junior. - EDICINE The objective of the Depart- Q' 44 During the third year clerkship, there is an op- portunity to actively participate in the diagnosis and treatment of patients with a wide variety of clinical entities. Several weeks on the infectious disease and cardiorenal services help to prove that Alcoholic Cirrhosis is not an incidental finding in every patient. The senior clerkship provides additional re- sponsibilities, longer hours and 'a lirm grasp of the principles involved in the treatment of the hospi- talized patient. According to the Ieghers' philoso- phy, students are allowed to do as much as they demonstrate they are capable. In addition to the regular clerkship, everyone retums for two weeks during the Psychiatry rotation to learn the ins and outs of the corpus callosum on the Neurology Service. Internal Medicine is a specialty in which a firm medical school background is paramount. The foun- dations in diagnosis and treatment in addition to the opportunities in patient responsibility and obliga- tion provided by Dr. Jeghers, department are beyond parallel. HAROLD IEGHERS, M.D., Professor and Chairman of the Department of Medicine for many years. He came to Seton Hall in 1956 after leaving a most impressive mark at Boston University School of Medicine and Georgetown University School of Medicine. One of Dr. Ieghers' major interests is the role of self-education in medicine. Literally thousands of physicians from coast to coast have learned the value of the nleghers' system for keeping abreast of the current medical literature. Dr. Ieghers has also dedicated himself to strengthening the role of the community hospital to postgraduate medical edu- cation. His comments on internship and residency training programs are valued by all who know him. CARROLL M. LEEVY, M.D., Professor of Medicine, was graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School in 1944. He is one of the original faculty members of this school fol- lowing its establishment in 1956 as Seton Hall College of Medicine. Dr. Leevy is widely ac- claimed as a world's authority on hepatic metabolism, liver disease, and nutritional diseases in man. He is presently engaged in a multifaceted research program focusing primarily on the study of cell biology with particular emphasis on the effects of alcohol ingestion on hepatic metabolism at the molecular, enzymatic level. If '17 RICHARD CHAMBERS, M.D., Professor of Medicine, is the director of our neurological service. A graduate of Oxford University, this British-born scholar has previously served on the medical faculties of Harvard Medical School and the University of Toronto. At the end of this academic year, Dr. Chambers intends to terminate his tenure at New Jersey College of Medicine and plans to assume the chair of the neurological division at Ieiferson Medical School, Philadelphia. MORTIMER LEONARD SCHVVARTZ, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, has the distinction of directing the best organized course at New Jersey College of Medicine, Physical Diagnosis. His unanimous nomination for the golden applev served to demonstrate that students appreciate his unceasing eittorts to insure that everyone is Well prepared for clinical clerk- ships. Mort has been Director of Physical Diagnosis since 1958. This year he took on added responsibilities as Director of Clinical Cardiology. In the past several years he has written several papers on various aspects of cardiology. His special article, Physiolologic Basis for the Heart Sounds and Their Clinical Significance, is an important part of every New Jersey College of Medicine gradu- ate's file. .if L PHILIP H. HENNEMAN, M.D., Associate- Professor of Medicine, is the scientific director of the College of Medicine's Clinical Research Center. Before coming to the New jersey College of Medicine, he served for eight years on the faculty of the Harvard Medical School, his alma mater. Among Dr. Hennemanis many research interests, the study of human growth hormone and clinical problems associated with growth command a preeminent position. Aside from his many endeavors on these topics, Dr. Henneman has evidenced a similar interest in the study of renal calculi. TIMOTHY I. RECAN, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, received his M.D. degree at Boston University Medical School in 1952 and completed his internship at the City of Detroit Receiving Hospital. He subsequently be- came a research fellow and Assistant Professor of Medicine at VVayne State University College of Medicine. Since 1961 he has been an Estab- lished Investigator of the American Heart As- sociation. As Director of the Division of Car- diovascular Diseases and the Thomas I. White Cardiopulmonary Institute, Dr. Regan is, cur- rently engaged in studies which are directed toward assessing in vivo the changes in biochemi- cal properties of the left ventricle that occur under the following conditions: during the initia- tion of diminished left ventricular functiong dur- ing the appearance of. ventricular arrhythmiasg and during the onset of muscle necrosis. NORMAN LASKER, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, received his medical degree from the University of Illinois in 1953. He completed his internship at Mount Sinai Hospital and his residency at Iersey City Medical Center. Dr. Lasker's past projects and scientific papers have dealt principally with hypo- natremia and renal hypertension. At present, his group is actively engaged in two projects: The first is an attempt to standardize the conditions under which split renal function studies are performed, and the second is a pilot study of chronic peritoneal dialysis. Its aim is to determine the practicality and efficacy of this approach to end-stage renal disease as compared to chronic hemodialysis. 5 'in Q Q, s LL... ,.11.ia.. n.- RALPH HEIMER, Ph.D., serves as Associate Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry. He gradu- ated from City College of New York in 1948 and received his Ph.D. from Columbia in 1956. He then served on the faculty at Cornell until 1953 when he came to the New Jersey College of Medicine. Dr. I-Ieimer's special interests in protein chemistry, particularly as it relates to the structure and func- tion of antibodies, is rapidly making him an author- ity in the Held of Rheumatology. Most medical students greatly appreciated Dr. Heimer's availa- bility and patience as they floundered through their laboratory experiments in Sophomore Biochemistry. JOHN I. CALABRO, M.D., came to jersey City Medical Center in 1956 as Chief Medical Resident. The previous year he had held the same position on the Harvard service at Boston City Hospital. Dr. Calabro then continued his training in Rheuma- tology at Hammersmith Hospital, London, England, and Massachusetts General Hospital. Returning to Jersey City in 1958, he became Assistant Professor of Medicine. Among his numerous monographs, his description of foot manifestations in Rheumatoid Arthritis is considered classic. His lecture series is always one of the high spots of the junior medi- cal clerkship. Dr. Calabro's active participation in many local and national medical societies makes him one of the busiest members of the faculty. 'I37 Iii I Fw , J YE :fe 'ncsrlifj U in ii? V if if 1' ff JOHN 1. BUTLER, MD., Associate Professor of Medicine we 5. V GUSTAUV LAURENZI, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine as vi, It ,ff ' 5 1 L '01 v t , 411, vi , Q ' 'S 3 4 , , - J- ' 1 ,1 fg:,,' , , 1 is - We .ix i X .,-rw GILBERT E. LEVINSON, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine ul- ' LOUIS V. AVIOLI, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine O. DHODANAND KOWLESSAR, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine LOUIS SULLIVAN, NLD., Assistant Professor of Medicine ff' I A X cfff- ,J f l JOHN L. ABRUZZO, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine S PATRICK H. LEHAN, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine JAMES A. McA'NULTY, M.D., As- sistant Professor of Medicine, has served for the past several years as liaison oflicer between the students and the Depart- ment of Medicine and also as a close personal advisor to Dr. Ieghers. With the beginning of this academic year, Dr. McA'Nulty moved his base of operations to Dr. Henneman's endocrine unit Where he is now engaged in some of the re- search and clinical aspects of that sub- specialty. Having devoted his time primarily to the Held of medical educa- tion in the past, Dr. McA'Nulty still maintains an interest in that area but plans to devote most of his time in the immediate future to endocrinology. An alumnus of the Tufts University Medical School, Dr. McA'Nulty joined our faculty in 1958. MURRAY NUSSBAUM, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine DOMINIC A. MAURIELLO, M.D., Clinical Associate Professor of Medicine and Chief of the Communicable Diseases Service, joined the faculty in 1957. He is well quali- Hed in all aspects of internal medicine, and as a clinician in the field of infectious diseases he is without equal. It is in the tutelage of this particular medical discipline that Dr. Mauriello proves to be of invaluable aid to students. His daily teaching rounds might serve as a model for any medical training program. H, N. CONANT WEBB, M.D., Senior Instructor of Medicine E MX- X S x ff HOVVARD D. BRONSTEIN, M.D Instructor of Medicine I . e Y f -42 v f. xf The Real PROFESSOR of Medicine I. lf f- .sa x AMEN I URCERY The Department of Surgery does not set out to make surgeons of its students but rather to acquaint them with the princi .ples of diagnosis and management of surgical disorders During the third year clerkship, particular emphasis is placed on pre-operative and post- operative care. A series of didactic lectures on the fundamentals of surgery and the surgical specialties is given throughout the academic year. During the fourth year clerkship, more time is spent on the wards and in the operating room. Experience is gained in minor therapeutic procedures, and interested surgeons-to-be can attempt some of the more com- plicated major procedures in the experimental lab. Combined conferences with the Departments of Radi- ology and Pathology are among the high points of the clerkship. KENNETH JUDY, M.D., is Professor of Surgery and chairman of that department. It is primarily through his efforts that the department has been able to secure the present compliment of alliliate hospitals utilized by our students for their clinical clerkships. On the school's staff since its inception, he has within the past few years assumed the chair of the department and made it what it is today. i Q , at.. . ' . ', gp.. ,r X V C 3 frtsi' . . 4 L 1 Q'N'f.. , - . H, mg., Sgr,-W mu, M X r ly, .ll pw., zr' nv ll r . 5' Q Q 5 . .. , ? - i If JOSEPH I. TIMMES, Professor of Surgery, received his M.D. from Georgetown University and a Master of Medical Science degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He entered the Navy in 1938 and divided his surgical training between the United States Naval Hospitals of Philadelphia and Brooklyn, and Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia Medical School. During his military career, Dr. Timmes held faculty appointments in the Department of Surgery at Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons and the State University of New York. At retirement in 1962, Captain Timmes was Chief of Surgery and Chief of Thoracic Surgery at St. Albans Naval Hospital. He then assumed command of the Division of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, B.S. Pollak Hospi- tal, and the Fourth Division, Department of Surgery, jersey City Medical Center, and was appointed Professor of Surgery at New Jersey College of Medicine. Dr. Timmes is the author of many general and thoracic surgical publications. He is a member of numerous professional societies and is on the edi- torial hoard of THE ANNALS OF THORACIC SURGERY. ERIC LAZARO, M.D., Associate Professor of Sur- gery, is a graduate of Madras University Medical School. After completing his surgical training at Mission Hospital in India, he received his Master of Science degree at Georgetown University and served as chief surgical resident. Dr. Lazaro then became a teaching fellow in surgery and was a member of the Department of Anato- my faculty. He then returned to India where he became Professor of Surgery at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi. In 1962, Dr. Lazaro joined the Seton Hall faculty. He is a member of the Executive Faculty and the Education and Curriculum Committee. Dr. Lazaro's present research projects include studies of the physiology of the spleen, the auto-immune response in the transplantation of canine organs, and the influence of regurgitation in the genesis of pancreatitis. HARRY A. KAPLAN, M.D. Professor of Surgery is ' .QV PB. if A I ,, , if W ERIC J. LAZARO, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery .3 . it FN f, ' mt X' ' N, we M y .. . ,t,., PETER P. POULOUS, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery ..- -gqnqnrv- I 42: .43 . ., 3, Af 'W E' ,, W t at- . 1' -.- ! 1 5 7 ,,, ,--zu ff Q , .A ,,., nv -. '--- Y ..-J , 'if o Q Iggy 1.-V , , . . Y 6- I N .- ,. E r M .L ng -1 'F 1 . J. K .J1'Av sf 1' fr 'x xx , 1 'K,,, I ' w,-:e?E2,j..- ' 1 , ggi it :rf My-,,,.,!' . :-2+-s. A-1' ' is-ffw-as ' ' f ' VINCENT SCUDESE, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery A . - M.. Y, r. n ---.-.? 't,:2'.v -.., 5 vb V Y A V Y ' V M-twig 9, '5:.'!fL...e- .f ,A f w WILLIAM T. OCONNOR, M.D BERTON -B. BERGMAN, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professors, bypassing an ileum JS-4' JOSEPH SEEBODE, M.D. , it Assistant Professor of Surgery X .1 YAA .mf Egg 1 J -gs.---V efz 'ff '- M-NCWTQQ Y 1 ' 'A ' ff! M J LJIE' :I V W. , ze wi X. 2 B if ff ' ,.m.. ALFONSE A. CINOTTI, M.D. Associate Professor of Surgery . f ,--rf, ,N VNU!! VICTOR PARSON N ET, M.D. Z A . ,r.gJ:.f Q fins ' 1,-...' ,Z' J, ,V .fr . ,L JJ. Bm f, J- MAXWELL MALAMENT M.D. Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery 1- -.- , . . . . . , 1 si 152 -1 x 1 A . Associate Professor of Surgery I fy M3 kwa, 'K M, w rf' . V, T H y Q W 'N 1 -I 'L W' , !. g Fifi: if 4 gsggg-Q li 1 I? m. ,11 r 2 ' ' 'fi f, , ! W q 1 f t a Ll gps E? g Q :M 1 Mu ve w x ' ,X 3 W we XX 1, 6 V 7? I y L 3 nl ff' 1 9 A f v gff w 2 , if in ' '1 y W L I .I 'Q 5 4 M ., V .... V.- ,. b ,g E J.,n,M '-X, I M,, H 3955 mg JOHN I. KNIGI-ITLY, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery , Q, l IAMES TOVEY, M.D-, Chairman, Department of Surgery, U.S.P.H.S. as um Q, Q x 3 , JONATHAN L. HARRIS, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery 146 4 V JOSEPH AMSTER, M.D- IRWIN E. SADOFF, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery ' N:-ff wwf -' - -vwivvf' Fri, 35 ,QTQ 51- 2 '- 1 - wi 2 '1,'f':'YiT1'f l1T'?fl '?fTif' f H ffg,?Qu','..gi-5591,,.,.:- 1 -b 5171 A 11, :il M, 1. 1xy-clyiiuig.:IQ-2:f:1',if Qiff' 2345-51,-',gj5, .. V 'I K 1' 'swf' JZ- ' ' ' T71 'S' - 'Q if. Af 'i 15 -,V 11,7 W J- . ' A I ' A . I i 'H' IL I I , 'M ,n A, ' 2 Mr ' -Q ggi M v'9?j?131,.ix nxnxggg 'f n', 1EZTq' I1I i qME,,,'F ' wig? W? 1 -I . I. -2-., ' 'V ' Rf-545-i?2fL',..:f--5' f. NT. l,':1.? - 5,15 .2:'ET7:?' I'l?1 f7. i E J f ' 1 -' ' .: - UQ , 5 gf - :f .,5,f,Q,g1Qif 7, iz j ff T ,fgj51i2s:,ggg'a H-'lSwffv LFf+ ,. g g, . 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' ' ' I +2 dl . -. III? lxfgqi' .ug my 5 5,5 , t 5W,M:3f'g?5g,fxLg4 ,in :,,,3Q -saw-'JI' 5 Qurrfi mi: fin n Ill I ll H' 'Ai Wu I 'N . I :, H -V J :1..... ..'Y f- . , .g , f -' - ,,. .. ,,. , - --- f.,f- Q-', 47. my - , pf - lv I J I !vl.M,.',,.pL4-I-N,-151.4 K A r, .'wfj,'gyI':11f,p 'Iliff-1, H ,ILM-1, ,MI NAQ: urgm :Q 1. .. - ' - LA. ' . A ' . , W' -1-'f v,, s ' . :iff 1 -Xh ?-f '- ---IT'-Z f, .A '-Lf, ,W ' 'V- -?5-1-if SJ'-lim ,, ' are ,gg-Ff 1'lllI I' -ill 7F.l?J I .1 . Q , ' -'Q , ' - 1 I 1 Zi ff-i PFTY 'lrllrni' If 1 I :w 13,i H:v ' f' A I I ' ' . I L, I- '11-i f infiliiffffs. V. 5 'U' ' . -g,-.L 125' -'iuiifliifiz gf . ' I T5 ' L 1 -+ , . ,A , 'Nl' ' 1 ,g 1 5' I - 'I A w . I - I '- .S iz 'ff 1. -f . . f- ' I 'bf .1- v ' 'N 'N My .nm A 3 .JL-A-I-'lu ': - Y, , ,Y ,--,.f -1 -V.-g...,L-, Li., - IHQIEZLL V- 1- .IL ,Y ' 1:La,....4-,,Sig,--I Af' ' A UNITED STATES PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE HOSPITAL, STATEN ISLAND, N. Y. Let's do a Caesarian section 65 Where's the john? The Department of Pediatrics to acquaint the student with both and sick infants and children and physical and emotional needs for medi- guidance and care. Normal growth and the prevention of disease, and the diagnosis of disease are stressed. During the third year clerkship, six weeks are spent on the pediatric wards and in the Out-Patient Department. The fourth year clerk divides his time between the wards, the emergency room, and the newborn nursery. Weekly pediatric dermatologic, X-ray, and psy- chiatric conferences are held as well as daily Ward rounds, but the high point of the entire service is daily teaching rounds. In this one hour, Doctors Behrle and Kushnick present enough factual information and practi- cal considerations to make any day on Pediatrics seem well spent. To the amazement of all, these two individuals were able to maintain an active, first-class department in both jersey City and Newark during the recent months of transition. There is little doubt that the Department of Pedi- atrics will continue to make advances in its new home. FRANKLIN C. BEHRLE, M.D., received his degree from Yale University Medical College. He served an internship at Naval Medical Center, Bethesda, Mary- land, and spent the next two years on active duty with the Navy. Dr. Behrle then completed his training in pediatrics at the University of Kansas. He remained at the University of Kansas Medical Center as a faculty member and in 1957 became Associate Professor of Pedi- atrics. Four years later Dr. Behrle came to Seton Hall as Professor of Pediatrics, and in 1964 he became chair- man of the department. Dr. Behrle's research projects and publications have been concerned primarily with diseases of the newborn. . if :xi .rg I 'Rl I s THEODORE KUSHNICK, M.D., received his B.S. and M.S. in Bacteriology from Ohio State University. In 1951, he graduated from Harvard Medical School. After a medical internship at Boston City Hospital, he spent a year at Boston State Hospital as a Psychiatry Resident. Dr. Kushnick then trained in Pediatrics at Childrenis Medical Center, Boston. After two years on the faculty of the Harvard Medical School, Dr. Kushnick went into private pediatric practice. In 1959, he joined the Depart- ment of Pediatrics at Seton Hall, and in 1963 he became Associate Professor of Pediatrics. He is a member of the State Board of Managers, Woodbridge State School for the Retarded and a Medical Consultant for Project HEAD START- The subjects of Dr. Kushnick's pub- lications include mental retardation, bacteriology, anti- biotic therapy, immunology, cytogenetics, and special syndromes. 7.1: X -rx .wx .H x ., I aa . ,J V . l V fl J' 5' She,s Allergic to WHATPP - Y 1 1 , A 1 Hey Mama, Tell that .... .. . Docta to get his hands off ma neck. mf- ,M D3 31 3 5 3 ggi? TKT ' 1 T Q. The Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics aims during the second year course through a series of lectures to introduce the student to the subject matter in both disciplines and to orient his study in relation to other courses. During the third and fourth year clerkship, the time is divided between the con- ference room, the operating room, and the delivery room. Everyone learns a little about the A-Oi' tech- nique, and some future gynecologists participate in a complete course on the subject. The department has become ufamousi' for conducting a weekly lecture program with associated exams right up to gradu- ation. U YNECOLOGY AND OBSTETRICS HUMBERT L. RIVA, M.D., Professor and Chairman of the Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, came to Seton Hall in 1961 after a twelve year tenure as Chief of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Walter Reed General Hospital. During this time, he served as Clinical Associate Professor at George- town University Medical School. Dr. Riva has con- tributed over 50 publications to the literature in- cluding much work in recent years on exfoliative cytology. N W...-. 'te : for MM ,ll I ,.. , I EUGENE SLOVVINSKI, M.D., Assistant Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics, is a young energetic member of the faculty who takes his civic responsibilities seriously as well as those of his specialty. As past chairman of the Section of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the Academy of Medicine of New jersey, present Secretary of the New jersey Obstetrical and Gynecological Society, and past chairman of the Section of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the New jersey Medical Society, he is well informed on the needs of the profession in the state of New jersey. Dr. Slowinski has been a frequent moderator and speaker throughout the country on medical education on behalf of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology. ZDENEK KUBES, M.D., Assistant Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics, came to Seton Hall as a research associate in 1961. Prior to this, he held faculty appointments in six European universities including Chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gyne- cology at Postgraduate Teaching Hospital, Charles Uni- versity. Among his many scientific papers, Dr. Kubes' original work on blood clotting defects in obstetrics and gynecology met with wide recognition. He is the originator of a new technique for vaginal ureterolithotomy and vaginal repair of high intcapartal lacerations of the uterus. Among his many professional society member- ships, Dr. Kubes is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Union of Gynecologists and Obstetricians in Paris. 2 . mir ,mg Aar- 'i PAUL S. ANDRESON, M.D. Associate Professor of Gynecology :Sz Obstetrics i is J l r . l . SARGEI 2 . 2551! - I 152 The Department- of Psy- endeavors to convey the classical ideas, techniques, and philos- to the student. Its ultimate purpose to give the student a broader and deeper of himself and his fellow man and their relationship to the vicissitudes of the environment. It is hoped that this philosophy will help create more effective medical care for the community. Utilizing a series of seminars, the first year program is directed toward teaching the parameters of normal growth and development. The curriculum of the sopho- more year investigates the mechanisms of human behavior and their dysfunctions, neuroses, and psychoses. The third and fourth year clinical clerkships are spent at the Essex County Overbrook Hospital in Cedar Grove and at the State Hospital in Trenton. At these institutions, the student applies the lecture material to a clinical setting with particular emphasis on diagnosis and therapeutics. LEO SHATIN, Ph.D. Professor of Psychiatry .11 .fs . . I t Y 1 4 i l J Q1 N 2 I 1 HARRY A. LA BURT, M.D. Clinical Professor at the New York School of Psychiatry Professor of Psychiatry at Adelphi College Senior Director at Creedmoor State Hospital Director of Harlem Valley State Hospital Director of Syracuse State School and Clinical Professor and Acting Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry. WILLIAM LAYMAN, M.D., Associate Professor of Psychiatry, is a graduate of Georgetown Medical School. After serving a fellowship in psychiatry at Yale, he joined the New jersey College of Medicine faculty in 1959. Dr. Layman's interest in human communications has led to research in psychotherapy, specifically non-verbal com- munication. He has published articles entitled Folie a deaux and Impotence and has also been instrumental in organizing a post-graduate course in oflice psychiatry. ' ,,f'i! it WML- -N i 1 F He? J 1 'll N, -7 ff ff I lp! i X i 1 X XI! 5 , , i i a S N .aaa A l ji Y DAVID ABEL, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry i l L 1 MORTON KURLAND, M.D., Assistant Professor of Psy- chiatry, received his degree at Downstate Medical School. He had his psychiatric training While a house oflicer in the United States Public Health service then later at the New York Psychi- atric Institute. His publications include studies on the Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome and Irnpotence. Currently, he is researching the pattern of sexual activity of the patients at Over- brook Hospital. PSYCHIATRY OR PINOCHLEIP! ani, HENRY A. DAVIDSON, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry ,nV,-,-if -,Eff ,. . - . .qs 5, Y - -Y , , If ,sg-, STANLEY R. KERN, M.D. Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry . , ,, .,r,,.,, D , ,,.. J . , .1 ., 'ii -iw - ea f :zmhwm lr.-1 ADIOLOGY The student is introduced to the specialty of Radiology during his fresh- man year when, in conjunction with the Department of Anatomy, a series of lectures is presented to help supplement the student's understanding of gross anatomy. During the sophomore year, attempts are made in cooperation with the Department of Pathology to cor- relate the pathology on postmortem examination with the observed roentgenological findings. In addition, a series of lectures is given as part of the introduction to clinical medicine in which the student becomes ac- quainted with the fundamentals of roentgenological interpretation and application. In the third and fourth years, in conjunction with the Departments of Medicine, Surgery, Pediatrics, and Gynecology, the student participates in x-ray rounds and conferences utilizing the current case material with which he is involved. Clerkships are also available during the senior year for those students expressing the desire to spend additional elective time with the Department of Radiology. WILLIAM VV. KOSLOVV, M.D. Clinical Instructor of Radiology 154 FRANCIS RUZICKA, M.D., did his undergraduate work at the College of the Holy Cross and received his Medical Degree from Iohns Hopkins Medical School. After serving his internship and residency in radiology at University Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland, he was ap- pointed Instructor in Radiology at University of Minne- sota Hospitals. Later, he became a Clinical Professor of Radiology at the New York University College of Medi- cine. At the present time, he is Director of the Depart- ment of Radiology at St. Vincent,s Hospital in New York City. In 1965, Dr. Ruzicka was appointed Acting Chair- man and Clinical Professor of the Department of Radiology, New Jersey College of Medicine. C Not photographedj SIDNEY KETYER, M.D., was graduated from City College of New York and went on to receive his Medical Degree from the Chicago Medical School. He later served a residency in radiology at Queens General Hospi- tal and received further training in Radiation Therapy at Memorial Hospital in New York City. Following this, he confined his practice to radiation therapy for several years before becoming Chief of Radiology at St. Elizabeth Hospital. Dr. Ketyer is now Clinical Associate Professor of Radiology at New Iersey College of Medicine. JOSEPH R. NAHON, M.D. Clinical Associate Professor of Radiology u frfvokg siswisl Y Mlsams I 5' 1' cs svccvxz 3- X Rama Q 1 Disco Q3 , f Qtr T 5? Wi 3 l f up it-U , 1 X Ei' e 4, Li 5 wi? ls xr Xiaser was-asf THE GREAT SEAL The great seal of the New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry shall be a disc two inches in diameter, bearing in its center a low relief representation of Aesculapius and the motto CVe1'gil, Aeneid 1. 630j, miseris SUCCU1'1'61'8 disco -'KI learn to relieve the sufferingf, The repre- sentation of Aesculapius shall stand upon a nar- row iillet of oak leaves, fruited proper, above the escutcheon of New Jersey, three plows, which escutcheon shall interrupt the border. Around the seal's circumference shall he inscribd, Siqil- lum Colleqii M edicorum Rei Publicae -Nouae Caesariensis Fund. MDCCCCLVI.. FACULTY PATRONS John L. Abruzzo, M.D., Edwin H. Albano, M.D., Bernard M. Alt- schuler, M.D., Frederick H. Ambrose, .M.D., Paul S. Andreson, M.D., Mark Bankier, M.D., Franklin C. Behrle, M.D., Burton B. Bergman, M.D., William R. Bonelli, M.D., Desmond D. Bonnycastle, M.D., Ph.D., Edward N. Bookrajian, M.D., James L. Breen, M.D., Donald K. Brief, M.D., Bernard A. Briody, Ph.D., John Calabro, M.D., Alfonse A. Cinotti, M.D., Robert A. Cosgrove, M.D., Samuel Critides, M.D., H. S. Chung, M.D., David Dreizin, M.D., Salvatore T. Ferrari, M.D., Nathan Frank, M.D., Hans Freymuth, M.D., Raymond L. Garner, Ph.D., Bernard F. Gerulat, Ph.D., Dr. and Mrs. Hugh Grady, Pinckney J. Harman, Ph.D., Duncan E. Hutcheon, M.D., Ph.D., Harold. Jeghers, M.D., Kenneth Judy, M.D., Harry A. Kaplan, M.D., Jack A. Kapland, M.D., D. Katz, M.D., Stanley R. Kern, M.D., Sidney Ket- yer, M.D., Bernard J. Koven, M.D., Zdenek Kubes, M.D., Theodore Kushnick, M.D., Norman Lasker, M.D., William A. Layman, M.D., Eric J. Lazaro, M.D., Gilbert E. Levinson, M.D., Arthur J. Lewis, M.D., Katherine Lewis, Ph.D., Milton L. Lieberman, M.D., Ruy V. Lourenco, M.D., Stephan R. LoVerme, M.D., James A. McA'Nulty, M.D., Joseph E. McDonald, M.D., B. J. Macchia, M.D., Paul H. Mau- rer, Ph.D., Dominic A. Mauriello, M.D., D. McCullagh Mayer, M.D., D.D.S., A. Roy Morrow, M.D., Mary J. Mycek, Ph.D., David F. Opdyke, Ph.D., Victor Parsonnet, M.D., Walter A. Petryshyn, M.D., Anthony L. Pietroluongo, M.D., Peter P. Poulos, M.D., Charles R. Ream, M.D., Christopher T. Reilly, M.D., Raymond P. Reilly, M.D., Humbert L. Riva, M.D., Dr. and Mrs. Jules Rivkind, Ernesto D. Sal- gado, M.D., Ph.D., Joseph J. Seebode, M.D., Mortimer L. Schwartz, M.D., Irving Shulman, M.D., Eugene J. Slowinski, M.D., Joseph J. Timmes, M.D., James Tovey, M.D., Frederick Valergakis, M.D., A. B. Weisse, M.D., Michael D. Yahlonski, M.D. FAMILY AND FRIENDS Dr. and Mrs. Daniel I. Ahearn, Ir., Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Belling- ham, Mr. and Mrs. S. Bronfman, Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Cacciarelli, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cioffi, Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Fechner, Mrs. Angela Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Calla, Dr. and Mrs. Gino Giorgini, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Grosso, Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Hargrove, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur N. Hoagland, Donald I. Holtzman, M.D., Mr. and Mrs. William Kolsky, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Kukla, The Levy Company, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore N. Manuele, Miss Camille Meola, Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Pepine, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Preli, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Reilly, Mr. and Mrs. V. Salge, Mr. and Mrs. Quinto Scacheri, Anthony M. Sellitto, M.D., Mr. and Mrs. Albin Stadalnik, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Teres, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Tighe, Dr. and Mrs. Iohn O. V ieta, Mr. and Mrs. Noble F. Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Weinstein, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Weyman. LEGISLATIVE PATRONS Mr. Vito A. Albanese, Mr. Maclyn S. Goldman, Mr. Frank I. Guarini, Jr., Mr. Robert L. Halpin, Mr. Henry Helstoski, Mr. Marvin D. Perskie, Mr. Robert N. Wilentz. THE P TRON S Uur Sincere Congratulations And Best Wishes BOARD OF TRUSTEES NEW JERSEY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE SKdZF Foreign Fellows Have Gone to INDIA, TANZANIA, IRAN, GUATEMALA At hospitals and medical outposts abroad, medical students contribute to international understanding and goodwill by helping to provide much-needed medical services to people in developing areas of the world. This unusual opportunity to work and study in foreign countries is ojered to students through the Foreign Fellowships Program of Smith Kline di French Laboratories. Administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the program has enabled 180 students to work and study in more than 40 countries during the past six years. Junior and senior medical students are eligible for Fellowships, which provide on the average 12 weeks' work abroad, to be completed before internshhz. Interested students should apply through the deans of their schools. Smith Kline dz French has published an illustrated 24-page booklet telling the story of SKd'fF,s Foreign Fellowshuvs Program. For your free copy of Fellowships in M edicinej' write to : SKAEF Services Department, Smith Kline dl: French Laboratories, Philadehzhia, Pennsylvania 19101. Smith KIIf19 E Fl'eI1CI l Laboratories Sain! ,Michael 's J-lospim! 306 High Street Newark, N.J. 07102 Phone 623-8200 Congratulations NEW JERSEY STATE HOSPITAL serie , E, AT TRENTON Approved Shi? about two months ago Three Year Psychiatry Residency CONGRATULATIONS to the CLASS OF 1966 NATVAR CORPORATION Woodbridge, NJ. Manufacturers of Plastic Tubing for Intravenous Infusion Sets ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION ' RARITAN, NEW IERSEY For a complete choice of medically accepted products for planned conception control G2 msn csc Gfwfflwffffwf Worridfown memoria! ,uoapifa morria fown, nw genie? rg F 'r it BEST WISHES ' Hunsou coumv J L in QI 8 'N my he E I 1 - o n B NATIONAL BANK 'f' --Q- A Jersey City HEADQUARTERS.. Bayonne Weehcxwken Hoboken North Bergen I ' J Union Cify Goifenberg Z Deposi-Ts Insured Up To 510,000 By The Federal Deposif lnsuronce Corporation CIENTIFIC LABORATORY- 0 APPARATUS LAKES 4 msrnume - PLPA1?-ATVS 4 CHEMICALS T E Q N CIC? XXNTZ ELOOMFIELD. NEW JERSEY 9 GLAS SWAR E Complimenfs of . KNOLL PIIARNIACEUTICAL COMPANY ORANGE, NEW JERSEY . . . serving fhe medical profession for more than sixty years C0lYlPAI7lellt5 of I New Jersey Chapter of the STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSGCIATICN and the WOMANS AUXILIARY of the STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION 4 4 Congratulations to the Class of 1966 Mr. and Mrs. William Z Mraczck, Sr. Eu! WMM and Swwm fa the 61644 of 7966 Wm . Anna jjgclerowicz xfxwfff- -ff . , .-,xx ,x4.x .14 , - , 1- - - --.wxx ns.-131 -.L rv--:fxx Q-. ,'. 7 141. . le ' QW ' 1- x'f i'3f ffx . -e'fgjx.'i'? ' L - A x x f x 1 ' f' - , '---'w':I,:1'f-'Yiiffx' RIA P xifagxp- Lfif-'iff x.x - , - x ,fx xt--' 'A Ftf5f2,x: l f'-'t-.Leg-szz' -.M ' 'x'z- f x xxxxexlfi .xx rx? ' '.lr,zxJxW' Y 'ii xx9xx'tx'P?Q??xx , '1 rxxlxxrwiixiiktiftsxl-xxtxxlxlxx1QlQgQ. x5x1xx xxiixxix xxx-xt ''xx5'5'15gfgwxr-Ax-.. :sf1i .3x!x'ff-Qffiigix ' fitlftafixggiqsi 3.xx,-PW.. 'xa x fjxxlltgij jgx x xxs-32541 xx xxx ' -3.1315-Y x' fgjwfx , x xgfgrxx x rm--'wfixmxf 1, - ,fx-' -4- : J x x - xrxxafw fe H' ful '- '- . Q , ' Y' x . ' 'p ' 'x-A fxx ,, 'P x::1'.'.M.x-1 f- 1-W' SHE ' '9- .x - ' . . - - x,'::x- x-1: 4-' x-fx .. xf x L ld W ' s . Y ,xxx.4,xx,.1 A A,xt-,,- vi, .Lf5a'xe,V, x 1, ,. :xxx , xxx. ,,.a5,-,,- ,Y Y . Q x -vf .sexy',e'aw.x:-.-zxfrfgs ' fx xi:f::.- 2 --, Us . -x , 4, , wx - x 1 x .. .fa -- , .1 xx ..,. , . x -x . , Y 4, x - . ' f,5A::,4.'ff: Jf:2j'gv.-T .asf Hx JG' gf ff : -,J ' , - .: 1 ' ' 4 am' Y xg , , '31, , U5 , - lin-xf12y,1W5aE'xi'21:55ffff' f 1 : ' , 1' -fwxf . xx , x' H xx x ' - x x- -' x x xx - x xxtggghi !QQ1,x-x'vnzihgaxxmxf xt, Axigwgxxsx- :xxx Hxxxmwfxgxigxfxx xx M xxxx Hxxxgxgflgiggefxvrxxsixtigia,X, 'f fqfx JF xx ix . z 9 U ' fi ' x- ' H ' W ' Fx ,, - :, - xg-. me -' - . - - ' Y , , , 'Q 'xT'l:' ' V ' ' Sir -, ' '?i'fi t' . ' 1, 1 x- ' . ' A ' , -A , , A 2151 ir 1 -. iii? x x 2 x x xx y- x xxxx x ,xxlx xx x x 'i' xx xl x ' x xxx-ix-I-ftxgxjxxx-'x'xxx Qxgxgfg Y 'xxx'f:szggxxx- 'xx ggi ,Vx x x S xx Y xxx xu -x xxx 3xgig4EsWiWQxxxixxeswfxsx-xx xx xiii? xx ,,xxfl?xg,, x 5 4 x-xx fix: x . y,x xx 'Y , V I ' , ' K' VV if 1, ' ' Z Y x x' SL x -x xxx' xx 533 x xii xx x 'Mx lf ,xx Y '- ' ' W x xx gixixx xx x '15 ,xx jxfxxxfj J xx V x ,M xx Y x xmfgexxxx x .x lggxx H 54, x My x T3 x xzxxgx x Cverlook Hospital i Summit, New Jersey Salutes the Graduating Class of The New Jersey College of Medicine and Dentistry Compliments of MONMOUTH MEDICAL CENTER Long Branch, N.J. MGCLUSKEY DRUG CO., INC. PHARMACISTS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL SUPPLIES 351 MONTGOMERY STREET X JERSEY CITY, N. J. Rf 3.1 f Congratulations PETER'S BARBER SHOP 51 Baldwin Ave. QE? 51035131014 and bagels to restore Jersey City, NJ. Compliments of HACKENSACK HOSPITAL HZCKBIISZGK, New J8I'S8y . H :iw-, V - ,- , ----f- w X , . K 7 A K 4 X, ---f was JU 35 f n.E'51.rxn aaaeiims ' AE-li V' 3 . I 'lf f. if 2 n X.,-, is-. f .4 V ! N Q SX' ii, W v V1 bi lij giz --X .A . 5' - , . ., -A . I E ,gli E -sn-il W. in .Lffwif :..:'r5mQ55i'l?iiv? 1..-1-eflgge... -- 1.irif.5f-:QLELS I g'We1l, I have to earn my tuition somehowf' SPECIALISTS IN ANIMAL LABORATORY DIETS TRIUMPH DOG FOODS MILLBURN FEED CO., INC 378 MILLBURN AVENUE MILLBURN, NEW JERSEY STANDARD Cocif Apron 81 Linen Service, Inc. 32 Bishop Street Jersey Cify, N. J. Congrafufafiona amz , .QHZHZQGJUFGLA 5ll,CCe66 mm Cfaaa of 1966 ORGANONINC WEST ORANGE NJ 07052 Endocrine and Pharmaceutical Products of lluality ,-, , k v Naam- Y. , -f 1 ,sly 1 1 , - V I ' H:- Medical Center Luncheonette '1-. 641 Montgomery Street y I . .2 P. 5 2 1 QCor. Baldwin Ave.J ' M Jersey City, N. J. -.w .Rs -4 O.K. Cupcakeg my place at midnight. cuftzrk Eity Hospital 65 Bergan Street Newark, NJ. 07107 INTERNSHIPS Statistics - 1965 Rotating 18 Total Beds 762 Straight Sc Mixed Admissions 19,763 Medicine 4 Operations 4,000 Surgery 4 Autopsies 616 Ob-Gyn 4 Ambulatory Visits 148,610 Pediatrics 6 FULLY APPROVED RESIDENCIES CHAIRMAN, EDUCATION COMMITTEE C. Richard Weinberg, M.D. DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL EDUCATION Arthur Maron, M.D. MEDICINE: Lawrence H. Warbasse, Jr., M.D. SURGERY: Irving M. Rollins, M.D. OBSTETRICS 8a GYNECOLOGY: James L. Breen, M.D. PEDIATRICS: Franklin C. Behrle, M.D. OTOLARYNGOLOGY: W. Franklin Keim, M.D. UROLOGY: Burnet Rothhouse, M.D. PATHOLOGY: Edwin H. Albano, M.D. Best Wishes from ANDY JUG STATE RESTAURANT QUALITY 81 SERVICE 741 Montgomery Street Y' A 750-A Bergen Avenue Jersey City, N. J. Whitehouse Dairy, Inc. Deborah Lee Ice Cream Co. MILK AND MILK PRODUCTS 162 Beacon Avenue Jersey City, New Jersey Phone: 659-7911 Compliments of Norval F. Kemp M.D. No close your eyes, and dream along with mef, CKNOWLEDGEMENTS. We are deeply indebted to the present and past faculty members who have labored with us over these four years, each has made his contri- bution to our knowledge. Our indebtedness to the patient population that has provided us with a wealth of clinical experience will always be remembered. And since the study of medicine leaves us with such little time to spend with our families, our debt is boundless as they have patiently provided advice, understanding, encouragement, and financial support through these years. Thanks are due particularly to Dr. Carroll Leevy, our faculty advisor, for his advice and criticism and for the use of his secretarial staff, to Dr. Robin Curtis and the Department of Anatomy for the use of their dark- room and photographic equipment, to the Department of Psychiatry for providing the yearbook ofiice, to Lou's Photography Studio for the senior portraits and the photographs of the underclassmeng to Mr. Charles Pep- ine for the pen and ink sketch of the Medical Center which appears on pages two and three, to Mr. Emil Schmidt and the staff of Bradbury, Sayles, O,Neill, Inc. for their valuable technical assistance, and finally to our patrons and advertisers, for without their generous finan- cial assistance publication of this volume would not have been possible. The Editors INDEX Acknowledgements . . . Activities .......... Administration . . , Advertising .... Anatomy ...... Biochemistry ..... Board of Trustees .. CHART, THE . .. Dean .......... Faculty, The Freshmen ............... Governor ................. Gynecology and Obstetrics . .. History, Class ............. JOURNAL, THE . . . Iuniors .......... Medicine ...... Microbiology . . . Pathology ...... Patrons, The . . . Pediatrics ....... Pharmacology .... Phi Rho Sigma . .. Physiology ...., Preface ....... President . . . Psychiatry .... Radiology .... Rat Race ..,... SAMA ........... Seal, The Great .... Seniors, The ,.... Sophomores ..... Surgery ...,.......... Year, The ............,. Year, Pictorial History .... Printed by BRADBURY, SAYLES, O'NElLL, INC. Chrysler Building, New York, N.Y. 10017 uname w t ' ,L . X-v- 1.- M -Qv55Qq5,f,Z,,w,-mKg.mm,,,,m
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