New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY)

 - Class of 1949

Page 1 of 110

 

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 110 of the 1949 volume:

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X. , ffl. . 5 H t -:sgifggt1fQL53 .rf,L5,',I V-, Q -E259 4115 N K L -fri.. - -1.55 ,-1xai.T,f.iV mr' .. ,Amar V I .5 , . . L - -., f ff? ' ,,. .Jn f 0 , imgx I lnfmf.. 'Pa 4, . A +V'.g..gfgg',f'f4f-'-f .fe V X FLEUR-0-SCOPE 'FN FN Y xv Sky Y,kJ EMM r FLEUR-O-SCOPE New York Medical College, Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals, New York City YY v DEDICATION ti' X livlf , s y .4,.L: l I W y X Ill X ll! ,N yt, hyxlxixiw t ill' r lllllll 'illuliiii 1lTfilll,l Iifllixlxx lil 'i1x,ii,l'l'i ,,lr'l:!lql'jil.. 1 'xiii it M N . I rl, lh i llilllx , , if. ll ' will Iii lllll i f .. ll i will .55 . V' . ill1lll1ill, 4, ' H? W Xxi XXX lk YA, I x ull' X 1 :W l u X X WI ti, JAMES W. BENJAMIN received his A.B. from Grand Island College, Nebraska in 1923, M.S. 1933 and Ph.D. 1936 from Northwestern University. He came to N. Y. M. C. in 1938 as Asst, Prof. of Anat. after having been Instructor and then Asst. Prof. of Zoology at Northwestern. In 1946, Dr, Ben- jamin was appointed Asst. to the Dean and full Prof. of Anatomy. He has published several papers in Neuroanatomy especially on the structure of the Mesencephalic and Hypo- thalamic centers and structure of peripheral nerves. He is a member of Sigma Xi, the Contin Society, Am. Assoc. of Anatomists, N. Y. Acad, of Med. and others. O james W. Benjamin, teacher, scholar and friend, in gratitude for the faithful service he has rendered our college as Assistant to the Dean, member of the Faculty' Council and the committees on ad- missions and scholarship, for the enlightening lectures and friendly encouragement he, Professor of Histology-Embryology and Neuro Anatomy, gave us, we, the graduating class of 1949 respectfully dedicate this yearbook. ll. Kewl: Une FLOWER AND FIFTH AVENUEWHOSPITALS HE history of the present location of the New York Medi- cal College and Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals began in june, 1938, when the Fifth Avenue Hospital was merged with the New York Medical College, Flower Hospital. In December, 1959, the new, ten-story white-brick building was dedicated, and today, almost io years later, remains one of the best equipped, up-to-date institutions in the land. Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Governor Roswell P. Flower, Mr. David Dows, and Mr. Benjamin C. Van Dyke were prominent among the early benefactors of the Hospital and the Medical College. The entire Flower family contributed generously for the establishment of this great institution. During the year 1947, there were 11,552 admissions and 34,308 dispensary visits. may , 751112 HAH Q--fix 5222+ 1 A 55.1, -1 'H lnllils all l I 'll lllv m ' ,ul 1 ' Q'-' :fm 4:7 ' v , Ji . - x a,? '?-,'.,,,-9 ,-,rf rl., ,., , U ,. af- .-111. ,.- . --M-: ...,. ,.' :QQQL-V.. f- ' U , i 1:4-5-:'5w' 1--if - ia 5? fi- 1, 1' 4 if . H14 -:4, i 'E ' 2a.,.Llj g'.-1 lei Q LLLJEH' .-:., E- lg, :N ,Uh 'ad ..: '- ' bg-Ek.I?E!..5 5-, iid Fl gg K-si i f . fir 1 1-gag r IV V. llli-- fx-ev ra, 124j'3'fj. ' fy if in .K-1, 1 . - . 1 fry. ,mv niirii - irgfjg' 1, , vi- 'mrqx-,r 'Z v-1 E., -1 ' ' .Qu 1- ' H - . .M ,- ' Al l il if-' ' -. E.: ,' tfll- . - , . 4-r 7-l-,U ' ', v V - fil:'l' W l I' ll liiilml l?T7l5d,,fgl,,'5l 1. 17 il l,g'f'14 .ri ma ... E, 'f...:Ll-El'- . - W2 5 WN - - .. . ... ' '- ---1-1' . I ..- ..-:a..- M...-1. -. . Nl?-1,m -4: Q, . r- H - -- I. .L ..i ..,,.- ..1s1 --- .-,rr TAM- . . ,- l M: 14 Proud Heritage . As our college completes its ninth decade of life, we may refiect upon a past of tremendous accomplishment, noted for its great strides and its place of importance in the world of medicine. The evolution of our college to its high place in medicine was not one of uneventful growth, but rather one presenting a picture of success intermingled with obstacles and momentary setbacks. Through it all, New York Medical College emerges as one of the truly outstanding institutions of medical science. The official records show that our college's birth dated from April 12, 1860, when the State of New York granted us our charter. The records do not tell us of the work of a tireless and persevering group of thirty- three physicians. This nucleus of our hrst staff began petitioning the State and conducting a campaign among . the laity as early as 1849, but were not rewarded until eleven years later. Under the able leadership and guidance of the emi- nent Dr. jacob Beakley, Dean and Professor of Surgery, our college began with an entering class of fifty-nine men, and a teaching faculty of eight. At the termination of the first session, twenty-seven men had been grad- uated, and a complete reorganization of the faculty and administration had been invoked. Our college prospered, notwithstanding the depressing influences incident to the Civil War. Our college was a pioneer in the method of clinical as well as didactic teaching. It is interesting to read the 1864 announcement that each candidate for graduation must have applied himself to the study of medicine for three years. He must have attended two courses of medical lectures, and have been, during that time, the private pupil of a respectable practitioner. This is truly remarkable when one considers the deplorably low stand- ards of medical education throughout the United States at that time. In 1866 still more changes were made, the faculty being enlarged so that it consisted of nine professors, one prosector, one demonstrator, and one assistant chemist. Of the eighty students who matriculated in that year, there were two with the degree of A.M. and two with the degree M.D. The students gathered from as far north as Canada,'from as far south as Augusta, Georgia, and as far west as Council Bluffs, Iowa-evi- dence of the tremendous strides the college had made in six short years. The following year was marked by an affiliation with the New York Opthalmic Hospital, ex- tending our clinical facilities even more. The 1869-'70 session marked a complete reorgani- zation in the institution. A new incorporation was effected with William Cullen Bryant, distinguished lib- eral, poet, and statesman, emerging as the new president. Among the outstanding men on the Board of Trustees at the time was Theodore W. Dwight, dean of the Columbia Law School, and one of America's outstand- ing trial lawyers. There were now fourteen professors, and a new department of histology. The announcement for this session states that Samuel A. lones, M.D., professor of histology, will deliver a course of lectures upon Histology, illustrated at every step by the use of the microscope, with which instrument the student will be required to become familiar. We indeed feel proud to announce that a distinct chair of Histology, the basis of Scientific Pathology, has been first established in our college. Thinking of the future, the faculty announced the establishment of a graded course of study with an eye toward elevating the standards of medical teaching. The announcement of 1878 proudly records the fact that this was the first American Medical College to establish a graded course of instruction and the first group with the Graduate College of the New York Opthalmic Hospital to establish systematic instruction in ophthalmology, otology, and rhinolaryngologyf' A new charter was secured in 1887, by which pro- vision was made for the college to have the right to operate its own hospital. In 1888 construction began on the hospital and medical college at York Avenue and Sixty-Third Street, and was completed the following year. Further additions were made to the plant in 1914 and 1917, and in 1932 the New York Opthalmic Hos- pital and dispensary were removed to the college grounds. Three years later the hospital and outpatient activities of these institutions were removed to the Fifth Avenue Hospital Building at 105th Street and Fifth Avenue, where the interests of all groups were com- bined iand centralized. By june, 1939, the merger of these great institutions had been effected, a new medi- cal college had been erected, and the New York Opthal- mic Hospital and graduate college were merged, thus moving forward in the establishment of the new Fifth Avenue Medical Center. Concurrently, authority from the Legislature of the State of New York had been re- ceived to grant the degrees of Master of Medical Science, Doctor of Medical Science, and Doctor of Public Health -again demonstrating its progressiveness by beihg one of the first to adopt a three-year systematic curriculum leading to graduate degrees in the clinical specialties and the basic medical sciences. Today New York Medical College takes her place as one of the foremost institutions in medical learning with a faculty numbering over 1200, one of the largest in the world for an institution of this type, and clinical and hospital affiliations with twelve outstanding insti- tutions with thousands of bed patients. ,V We flags ? n - ai it fg f Q ,A X '-' . V , M nw,g.iwwwc , if as .EQ '5f F'1'?ifa , -1 s . H 4 To lIlem6erA of the graduating C1444 You are very much concerned, I am sure, with the prospect of graduating at the same time that the whole country is being urged to embark on a program ot socialized medicine. The final decision on this subject will have an enormous effect on your medical career and whole professional and economic life. As far as the economic side of it goes I don't think you need to have too much worry as the demand for your abilities is greater now than it has been for some time, and in my opinion will continue to be so in the future, but this governmental program definitely lowers the grade of medical efliciency and research as has been proved in most places where it has been tried. Therefore, I am strongly urging you at this time to so conduct yourselves as to perpetuate the individuality of the medical profession until we can spread 11011111- mrily the hospital and medical insurance to a point where it covers practically everybody. I do not say this from any political prejudice, but I strongly believe that the best method of curative and preventative medicine is to keep it out of governmental control. CHARLES D. l-IALSEY, Cbaii-1115111 Board of Trustees In these days of miracle drugs, atomic energy, dra- matically successful surgery, and political panaceas fwhich somehow always seem to restrict and circum- scribe our liberties more, making life more complex and more costlyj one looks in vain for some endowment by which one may early acquire some advantage, or headstart, in the Race of Life. Such a search is usually futile, for all the evidence so far accumulated indicates that everything medical men possess has been earned by hard work, long hours, painful effort and sacrifice, not only by our contem- poraries but by our medical forebears, for all our rights and institutions have been inherited from previous gen- erations of physicians. liew realize, or seem to compre- hend, the tremendous gifts and contributions our prede- cessors have bestowed upon us. Our temporary posses- sion of these privileges is not a casual responsibility to be lightly regarded, nor is it an ownership to do with as we please, rather, it is a trusteeship which we have no right to damage by alteration, but which we must make every effort to leave improved for our successors. Were I asked for one word of advice for you in To lllemtem of the graduating C'lafAA the practice of your profession, it would paraphrase Churchill's immortal promise of blood, sweat and tears for I would urge that you Plan for more than you can do. Then do it! Arrange more time than you can spare. Then spare it! Wlwole centuries, and generations of men and women, have contributed to medical progress. It will not be easy for you to maintain this growth nor to honorably discharge your obligations which seem to increase day by day, but-you must do itl Let each of you remember that the destiny of your profession is an imlizfidlral as well as a collective re- sponsibility. It :Inav matter what you do. Let each re- member that he is accountable to himself, that he is free to disregard the responsibilities of this trust, to stifle or smother them, yes, to kill them, or to accept, honor, cherish and nurture them to make his a better profes- sion for a better Worlci. J. A. W. 1'lli'I'RlCK ROGER C. GAY Auiflafzr Dean CASSANDRA S. YOHANN AN Recorder DR. JAMES W. BENJAMIN A.l'.l'f.l'ld7ll to the Dean KATHLEEN MacGRADY Smdeul Permmzel Direrlor I 3 m I I f - , . I n i Horace E, Ayer Anson H. Bingham if f . I A Frank j. Borrelli Linn J, Boyd Donald E. Brace Sprague Carleton am, K an I . if ', . Lindsley F. Cocheu Thomas H. Evans HORACE E. AYERS received his M.D. at N. Y. M. C. in 1909 and M.D. at Fordham University in 1912. Is Professor of Obs.- Gyn, He became F.A.C.S. in 1918 and F.I.C.S. in 1947. ANSON H. BINGHAM who in january became Emeritus Prof. is Dir. of the Dept. of Orthopedic Surgery. He received his M.D. from N. Y. M. C, in 1900. Dr. Bingham became a lecturer in Orth. Surgery in 1904 and in 1913 became Pro- fessor of Orthopedic Surgery which post he held until this year. He is a member of A. M. A., State and Co. Soc., Meissen Club and the Helmuth Club. I FRANK I. BORRELLI received his B.S. from the University of Pittsburgh in 1929, his M.D. from N. Y. M. C. in 1933 following which he joined the staff of N. Y. M. C. as Asst. in Anatomy. Certified by the Am. Bd. of Radiologists in 1938, Dr. Borrelli became an Associate in Anatomy and Asst. Prof. of Radiol. In 1944, he became Prof. of Radiol. and Dir, of Dept. of Radiol. He is a Fellow of Coll. of Chest Physicians, Nat'l Gastro-Enterologic Soc., N. Y. Roentgen Soc., Pres. of Ii. Y, M. C. Alumni Soc., and Honorary Grand Vice-Pres. 0 AKK. LINN JOHN BOYD was graduated from the University of Michigan Coll. of Med. in 1918 and joined the faculty there as an Instructor in Medicine. In 1925, he had become Assoc. Prof. of Med. and Director of Research in the South Dept. In 1926, Dr. Boyd was called to N. Y. M, C. as Prof. of Medicine and Pharmacology, and Director of the Dept. of Medicine. Among his many published books are The Simile in Medicine, 19363 Textbook of Electrocardiography and Cardiovascular Disease, written with Dr. David Scherf and lirst published in 1940. He is a member of Sigma Xi, AKK, Alpha Sigma, N. Y. Acad. of Med., N. Y. Acad. of Sci., and Contin Soc. . DONALD EDMUND BRACE who became Prof, of Anes- thesiology in 1937 is a graduate of N. Y. M. C. class of 1914. Dr, Brace first became Dir. of Anesthesia at the Metropolitan Hosp. in 1920 and later the same year joined the staff at N. Y. M. C. He is a member of Phi Alpha Gamma, the Contin Soc., Am. Anesthesia Soc., the Soc. of Analgesia and Anesthesia, and a Diplomate and Fellow Am. Board. SPRAGUE CARLETON, Professor of Urology and Director of the Dept. since 1914, graduated from N, Y. M. C. in 1906, and received an A.M. at Rutgers University in 1918. Dr. Carleton is a Fellow of the Am. Coll. of Surg., the N. Y. Acad. of Med., and a Diplomate of the Am, Bd. of Urology. He has published many papers among them being the 1937 Harvey Lecture at Tufts College Med. School, Something of Wliiit Has Been Going on in Urology the Past 39 Years. LINDSLEY F. COCHEU, Professor and Director of the Dept. of Public Health and Industrial Medicine since 1941, was graduated from N. Y. M. C. in 1904. Dr. Cocheu was an Asst, demonstrator in Histology 1906-07, an instructor in Histology 1907-09, Instructor in Bacteriology 1909-10, In- structor in Bacteriology and Histology 1910-11, Instructor in Clinical Laboratory Methods 1912-14. From 1923-27, he was a Lecturer in Medicine and an Attending physician on the Metabolic Service of Flower Hospital. From 1927-1941, Dr. Cocheu was Professor and Head of the Department of Bac- teriology, Clinical Pathology, and Public Health. He was on the Metropolitan Staff as follows: Appointed assistant physi- cian jan., 19095 to the Auxiliary Staff june, 19149 visiting physician February, 1918g and Consultant in September, 1923, which position he still holds. Dr. Cocheu is a member of the Am. Soc. of Clin. Path., AKK, A. M, A., Am. Public Health Assoc., and Am. Assoc. for Adv. of Sci. THOMAS HORACE EVANS received his M.D. from the Univ, of Penn. in 1899, after having received a Certificate of Music from the Dept. of Fine Arts in 1898. Dr. Evans was Assoc. Prof. of Anat. at Long Island Med. Coll. from 1912 to 1938, and Research Prof. of Anat. at N. Y. M, C. from 1934 until the present. Contributions to Gould's year book series, Cunningham's Anatomy, and articles in many journals have been written by Dr. Evans. J. CLIFFORD HAYNER, Prof. of Anat. and Dir. of Dept., received his B,S. from Amherst Coll. in 1915 and his M.D. from N. Y. M. C. in 1919. As an assistant in Anatomy, Dr. Hayner joined the N. Y. M. C. faculty in 1922, advancing through Asst. Prof., Assoc, Prof. to full Prof. and Dir. of Dept. in 1944. In 1935, Wm. Woods 84 Co. published his Regional Anatomy. A Fellow of the Am. Coll. of Surg., the A. M. A., a member of the Dunham Club, AKK, and Am. Assoc. for the Advancement of Sci., Dr. Hayner is also an Asst. Prof. of Surg. j. A. WERNER HETRICK, Dean and President of N. Y. M, C., Professor and Director of Dept. of Otolaryngology, graduated from N. Y. M. C. in 1918 and received his degree in Eye, Nose, and Throat in 1921 after studying at the Post Graduate College of the N. Y. Ophthalmic Hospital. In 1922, he be- came an instructor in Otolaryngology at N, Y. M. C. and in 1924 acted as registrar in the Administrative Oliices. For post graduate study, Dr. Hetrick went to Vienna in 1927 and also became Assistant Dean in that year. In 1928, he advanced to Professor and head of the Dept. of Otolaryngology. In 1941, Dr. Hetrick became President and Dean of the College. Dr. Hetrick is a fellow of the Am. Coll. of Surgeons and a diplomate of the Board of Otolaryngology. He is a member of Acad. of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology, N. Y. Acad. of Med., N. Y. S. Med. Soc., Med Soc. of the Co. of N. Y., A. M, A., Acad. of Pathological Sciences, Quill Club, Acad. of Political Sci. GEORGE K. HIGGINS came to N. Y. M. C. in 1944 as Asst. Prof. of Pathology, becoming Prof. and Dir. of the Dept. in 1945. In 1925, Dr. Higgins received a B.S. from the U. of Minn. where he later earned an M.D. in 1928, and Ph.D. in Path. in 1943. An Asst. Prof. of Path. there from 1942-1944, his special interests were T. B. and Heart Disease, Dr. Higgins is a member of Am. Soc. of Pathologists and Bacteriologists, Am. Soc. Clin. Path., Sigma Xi, and N. Y. Acad. of Med. THOMAS I, HOEN, Prof. and Dir. of Dept. of Neurology and Neurosurgery was graduated from Catholic Univ. in 1924 and from johns Hopkins Med. School in 1928. Dr. Hoen was a Halstead Fellow in Surgery, johns Hopkins Med. School, Surg. House Otiicer and Asst. Resident Surgeon, Peter Bent Brigham Hosp., Neurosurgical Resident, Peter Bent Brigham Hosp. fDr, Harvey Cushingii Neurosurg. Resident, Royal Victoria Hosp., Montreal, Canada fDr. Wilder Penfieldjg Chief of Neurological and Neurosurgical Services, St. Luke's Hosp., Montreal, Canadag Attending Neurosurgeon, St. Mary's Hosp., Montreal, Canada, Prof. of Neurology and Neurosurg., Dir. of Dept. 1939. He is a member of N. Y. Neuro. Soc., N. Y. Soc. Neurosurgery, F.A.C.S., N. Y. Surg. Soc,, Harvey Soc., Harvey Cushing So., Am, Assoc. for Research in Nervous and Mental Diseases. STEPHEN P. JEWETT, Professor of Psychiatry and Dir. of Dept. at N. Y. M. C. and at Metropolitan Hospital, attended Clark Univ., Columbia Univ., and N. Y. M. C. where he received his M.D. Dr. Jewett was associated with the Millard Fillmore Hosp. in Buffalo, and later Bellevue Hosp. in N. Y. before coming to N. Y. M. C. He is a member of AKK, the' Am. Psychiatric Assoc., Am. Orthopsychiatric Assoc., and ot ers. ISRAEL S. KLEINER came to the N. Y. M. C. in 1919 from the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, where he had been a staff member from 1910 to 1919, He had received a Ph.B. in 1906 and a Ph.D. in 1909 from Yale. He taught at Tulane Univ. for one year. He studied abroad in 1914 and taught at Yale in 1918. He was a staff member of The Bio- logical Laboratory at Cold Spring Harbor for several summers. Dr. Kleiner is the author of Human Biochemistry and co- author of Laboratory Instructions in Biochemistry. Over 100 papers under his authorship have appeared in such publications as The journal of Biological Chem., Am, jour. of Physiology, J. A. M. A., and the Jour. of Experimental Med. LEON S. LOIZEAUX, Prof. of Obs. and Gvn., and Dir. of the Dept. spent his undergraduate days at U. of Iowa and received his M.D. degree at Halmemann Med. Coll. of Chi- cago in 1904. Dr. Loizeaux is F.A.C.S., Am. Bd. of Obs, and Gyn., the N. Y. Acad. of Med., N. Y. Obstetrical Soc., and an Allied Fellow of the Acad. of Dentistry. His most recent published papers have been on The Cervix in Labor and The Infected Cervix. . M.. J. Clifford Hayner J. A. Werner Hetrick , . :A ' if George K. Higgins Thomas I. Hoen Stephen P, jewgtf Israel S. Kleiner 1 Leon S. Loizeaux Thomas H. McGavack Philip J. R. Schmahl Francis D. Speer l l l l James M. Winheld John S. O. Herrlin Lawrence B. Slobody Eugene F. Traub Charles Haig Arthur J. Herzig THOMAS HODGE MCGAVACK, Dir. of the N. Y. M. C., Metropolitan Hosp, Research Unit and Professor of Clinical Medicine at N. Y. M. C., received his B.A. degree at Hampden- Sydney Coll. in 1917, and M.D. at Hahnemann Med. Coll. in 1923. Dr. McGavack specializes in Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases, has published chapters on these subjects in Tice's Practice of Medicine and Piersol's Pract. of Medicine. More than 150 papers have appeared under his name in na- tionally known medical journals between 1925 and 1948. A diplomate of Am. Bd. of Internal Med., and F.A.C.S. Dr. McGavack is Secy, of N. Y. Diab. Assoc., Vice-Pres. of Clinical Soc. of N. Y. Diab. Assoc., and Fellow of N. Y. Acad. of Med. PHILIP J. R. SCHMAHL attended Gymnasium at Frankfort- Am-Main, Germany, before becoming a medical student at N. Y, M. C. from which he received his M.D. in 1911. Dr. Schmahl was successively an instructor, lecturer, Asst. Prof. and Prof. at N. Y. M. C. He is a member of the A. M. A., N. Y, Diab. Assoc., and the N. Y. State, N. Y. County Med. Soc., Fellow of Am. Coll. of Physicians, and Diplomate in Internal Medicine. LAWRENCE B. SLOBODY, Prof. of Pediatrics and acting Director of the Dept., graduated from N. Y. M. C. in 1936, and has been associated with the college ever since, A dip- lomate of the Am. Bd. of Pediatrics, Fellow of the Am. Acad. of Pediatrics, and Secy. to the Infant Mortality Comm. of the Med. Soc. of the Co. of N. Y., Dr. Slobody has published more than 30 papers on Vitamin C, Chemotherapy and on other subjects, FRANCIS DAVIS SPEER, Assoc. Prof. of Pathology, Dir. of Clinical Laboratory and Blood Bank. Dr. Speer studied at Hahnemann School of Science in Philadelphia 1927-1929 and received his M.D. degree at Hahnemann Med. Coll. in 1933. He joined the staff of N. Y. M, C. in 1934 as an instructor in Pathology and since then has become successively Asst. Pathologist at the Flower and Fifth Ave. Hosps., Surgical Pathologist, and Assoc. Pathologist at Flower and Fifth Ave. Hosps. Finally in 1942 he became Dir. of the Clinical Labora- tory. Dr. Speer is a member of the Am. Soc, of Clinical Pathologists, Am. Coll. of Pathologists, Am. Bacteriological ?c., N. Y. S. Soc. of Pathologists, the Harvey Soc., and the KK. EUGENE F. TRAUB, recently appointed Director of the Dept. of Dermatology, came to N. Y. M. C. from the University of Vermont, where he had been Prof. of Dermatology. Dr. Traub received his B.S. in 1916 and M.D. in 1918 at the University of Michigan, He has been Clinical Prof. of Derm. at N. Y. Post Graduate Hosp., and Columbia University and has published many articles in the Archives of Derm. and Syph., and other journals. JAMES MACFARLANE WINFIELD received his A.B. at Princeton University in 1922, M.D. at the Univ. of Pennsyl- vania in 1926. He was a member of the Faculty of the Univ, of Michigan, Univ. of Penn., Assoc. Prof. of Surgery at Wayne Univ. College of Medicine from 1937 to 1946, and became Prof. of Surgery at N. Y. M. C. in 1946. Dr, Winheld is a member of the American Surgical Association, Societe In- ternationale de Chirugie, New York Surgical Society, Am. Coll. of Surgeons, and many other National Surgical organiza- tions., He has published many papers on various subjects in the field of general surgery, his specialty. CHARLES HAIG, Columbia B.S. in 1927, M,A. in 1928, and Ph.D. in 1935, became Assoc. Prof. of Physiol. and Bio- chemistry at N. Y. M. C. in 1942. Dr, Haig was recently placed in charge of Physiology. He taught at C. C. N. Y. from 1927-1931, Columbia from 1931-1937, and P. 8: S., Research Division from 1937-1942, A member of Sigma Xi, N. Y. Acad. of Sci., N. Y. Acad. of Med., Am. Physiol. Soc., a Fellow of A. A. A. S,, Harvey Soc., and Soc. for Experi- mental Biology and Medicine. Dr. Haig has published over 30 papers between 1929 and 1948. JOHN S. O. HERRLIN graduated from N. Y. and is an Associate Professor of Surgery, Dr. Herrlin specializes in gen- eral surgery and is a Fellow of the Am. Coll. of Surg. ARTHUR J. HERZIG received his B.S. in 1908 from C. C. N. Y., his M.D. from Columbia, P. 84 S. in 1912. He came to N. Y. M. C. in 1940 as Asst. Prof. of Otolaryngology, and in 1944 he became Assoc. Prof. Dr. Herzig has been an instructor in Ophth. at N. Y. Polyclinic Hosp,, a member of the E. N. T. staff at Sydenham, St. Luke's, Beth Israel, and director at Gouverneur Hospital. Dr. Herzig is a member of A. M. A., Am. Acad. of Ophthal., and Otolaryngology and is certihed by the Am. Bd. of Otolaryngology. LOUIS HIRSCHHORN came to N. Y. M. C. in 1944 as Associate Clinical Prof. of Medicine and Lecturer in Thera- peutics. Dr, Hirschhorn received his A.B. from Columbia College in 1921, his M.D. from Columbia, P. 84 S. in 1924, following which he taught Pharmacology and Therapeutics at P. tk S. from 1927 to 1944. He is medical director of Man- hasset Hospital. He has contributed articles to Am. Heart jour,, Arch. Int. Med., Arch. Neurol., and others. He is a member of Sigma Xi, and an assoc. member of Pl1i Delta Epsilon. For the past two years, he has been judge in charge of the Hobby Show. LOIS CAROL LILLICK received her A.B. and M.A. from the University of Cincinnati, and her Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Michigan. After doing research work at Harvard, Dr, Lillick came to N. Y. M. C. as an Instructor in Bacteriology and Parasitology in 1940, advancing to Assoc. Prof. and Acting Director of the Dept. in 1945. Dr. Lillick is interested in working on the immunological aspects of allergy in addition to being a member of the Class of 1952. She is a member of Alpha Epsilon Iota, Soc. of Am. Bacteriologists, Am. Soc. of Tropical Med. and Nat'l Malaria Soc. MICHAEL G, MULINOS was born in Cairo, Egypt, received his A.B. from Columbia College in 1921, M.A. in Physiology in 1922, M.D. in 1924 and Ph.D. in Physiology in 1929 from Columbia. A member of Phi Chi, Sigma Xi, Harvey Soc., N. Y. Acad, of Sci., A. A. A. S., and others, Dr. Mulinos came to N. Y. M. C. in 1944 as Assoc. Prof. of Pharm., after having been a member of the faculties of the Univ. of Minn., Univ. of Chicago, and Columbia Univ, In 1944, the Oxford University Press published his Outline of Pharma- cology which volume represents the smaller part of his published work in the related fields of Pharmacology and Physiology. MILTON JOSEPH RAISBECK was a student at Harvard University and Faculte de Poitiers, France before coming to N. Y. M. C. where he received his M.D. in 1916. Dr. Rais- beck joined the faculty of N. Y, M. C. in 1916 as an In- structor in Materia Medica and Pharmacology becoming suc- cessively, Instructor, Asst. Prof., and Assoc. Prof. of Cardiology. From 1919 to 1923, he worked with Dr. Alfred Cohn at the Rockefeller Institute. Dr. Raisbeck is a member of Phi Alpha Gamma, A. M. A., Am, Heart Assoc., and is a Fellow of the Am. Coll. of Physicians, and the N. Y. Acad. of Med. DAVID SCHERF is co-author of Cardiovascular Diseases which has run six editions and has been translated into eight languages, and Clinical Electro-Cardiography, five editions, and six languages. Dr. Scherf received his M.D, at the Univ. of Vienna and came to N. Y. M. C. in 1938. An Assoc. Prof. of Medicine, Dr. Scherf is an honorary member of the French, Brazilian, and Argentinian Heart Associations, the Argentine Medical Association, and a corresponding member of the Aus- trian Society of Physicians. ISIDORE MAX TARLOV was educated at Clark Univ, where he received his B.A. in 1926, M.D. in 1930 from johns Hop- kins, and McGill Univ., M.S. in 1932. He has studied at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Canada, Montreal Neurol. Institute, University of Chicago Clinics, and National Hosp., London, England. Dr. Tarlov has been a member successively of the staffs of McGill University, Waslmington University, and of N, Y. M. C. since 1940. He is a member of the Contin Soc., Harvey Cushing Soc., and Am. Neuro. Path. Soc., The Am. Jour. of Path., Radiol., and S. G. 8: O., J. A. M. A., Arch. Surg., Am. jour. of Surg. Science, J. Lab. and Clin. Med. have carried articles by Dr. Tarlov. Louis Hirschhorn Michael G. Mulinos David Scherf Samuel A. Thompson Lois C. Lillick Milton j. Raisbeck Isadore M. Tarlov john E. Tritsch Charles A. Turtz Roy Upham Milton J. Wilson Alan R. Cantwell David Lehr Walter L. Mersheimer Tvwdv' john G. Mussio Rosario Terranova SAMUEL ALCOTT THOMPSON, Associate Prof. of Surgery N. Y. M, C. since 1938, received a B.S. at Wake Forest College, North Carolina, and an M.D. at jefferson in 1920, specializing in Thoracic Surgery. Dr. 'Thompson is a Fellow of Am. Coll. of Surgery, Founder Member of the Board of Thoracic Surgery, Fellow of the N. Y. Acad. of Medf, Fellow of the Am, Coll. of Chest Physicians, Member of the N. Y. Surgical Society, and Am. Assoc. for Thoracic Surgery, and is President of the N. Y. Soc. of Thoracic Surgery. JOHN E. TRITSCH studied at N. Y. U. and at N. Y. M, C. where he received his M.D. in 1918. In 1920, he joined the faculty of N. Y. M. C, as an Instructor in Anat. and Surg. In 1921, he was an Instructor in the Dept. of Obs., and became Assoc. Prof. of Obs. in 1925. Dr. Tritsch has written several papers on Oxytoxics, and the alleviation of pain in labor. He is a member of AKK, the Meissen Club, N. Y, County Med. Soc., and F.A.C.S. CHARLES A. TURTZ, Acting Director of Ophthalmology at N. Y. M. C. and at Metropolitan Hosp., received his M.D. at N. Y. M. C. in 1915, after having completed a Ph.G. at the Brooklyn Coll. of Pharmacy, Dr. Turtz is a diplomate of the Am. Bd. of Ophthalmology, Fellow of Am. Coll. of Surg., and Assoc. Clin. Prof. at N. Y. M. C, ROY UPHAM, Associate Prof. of Medicine, graduated from N. Y. M. C. in 1901. Dr, Upham is a Fellow of the Am. Coll. of Surg., International Coll. of Surgeons, an honorary member of the Italian, Argentine, and Mexican Gastro-entero- logical Associations, a Fellow of the International Gastro-entero- logical Associations, and Phi Alpha Gamma. MILTON J. WILSON, Associate Professor of Orthopedic Sur- gery, Director of Orthopedics at Metropolitan Hospital, and Chief of Fracture Service at the Flower and Fifth Ave. Hosps., was graduated from N, Y. M. C. in 1918. Dr. Wilson became F.A.C.S. in 1928. . ALAN RALPH CANTWELL, Assistant Professor of Ortho- pedic Surgery, is a graduate of N. Y. M. C., class of 1928. A diplomate of the Am. Bd. of Orthopedic Surgeons, a Fellow of the Am, Coll. of Surg., and the N. Y. Acad. of Med. Dr. Cantwell has produced several motion pictures for teaching purposes on orthopedic problems. DAVID LEHR received his M.D. at the Univ. of Vienna in 1935. Having served an internship at Krankenhous Wieden, he became an Asst. in the Dept. of Pharm. under Prof. E. P. Pick at the Univ. of Vienna Medical School, In 1939, Dr. Lehr became Instructor in Pharm. at the Royal Univ. of Lund, Sweden. I-Ie was called to N. Y. M. C. in 1941 as an In- structor in Pharm., becoming Asst. Prof. in 1944. Dr, Lehr's most recent and best known research projects are on the low toxicity of sulfonamide mixtures, on which topic he has pub- lished many papers both here and abroad. He has sponsored several convention exhibits on this subject winning the Cer- tificate 'of Merit at the A. M. A. Convention in 1948. Re- cently, he was appointed Consultant to the Council for New and Non-official Remedies of the A. M. A. Dr, Lehr is a member of the A. M. A., Am. Soc. of Pharm. and Exper. Therapeutics, N. Y. Acad, of Sci., Am. Assoc. for the Ad- vancement of Sci., and the Soc. of Exper. Biol. and Med. WALTER LYON MERSHEIMER received his B.S. from Nor- wich Univ. in 1933, his M.D. from N, Y. M. C. in 1937, and Master of Med. Sci. in Surg. at N. Y. M. C. in 1942. Dr. Mersheimer interned at F. F. A. H., and joined the staff of N. Y. M. C. in 1942 as Instructor in Surgery. In 1946, he became Asst. Professor. He is F.A.C.S., member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, AKK, A, M. A., and is certified by Am. Bd. of General Surgeons. JOHN G. MUSSIO, specialist in Obs. and Gyn., received his M.D. from American University of Beirut in 1927. An Asst. Prof. in Obs. and Gyn. at N. Y, M. C., Dr. Mussio is F.I.C.S., and has published several articles in the Am. jour. of Obs. and Gyn. ROSARIO TERRANOVA, who became a Diplomate of the Am. Bd. of Internal Medicine in 1947, was graduated from N. Y. M, C. in 1932. He joined the faculty of N. Y. M. C. in 1935, ancl is now an Instructor in the Dept. of Med. and Pharmacology. Dr. Terranova is also an Assoc. Visiting Physi- cian in Med. at Metropolitan Hosp. since 1947. OFFICERS Preridenl .....,................ ......,.. L eonard Paul Wlershub, '27 14-f Vice-P1'e.ridefzf ........ .............. J ohn Herrlin, jr., '23 2114! Vice-Prerirlem ........ . ,..,..... Lawrence B. Slobody, '36 3rd Vive-Prerideul ....... ,............ J essie Labanowski, '26 Recording Secretary .......... .............. A lan R. Cantwell, '28 C0l'l'x?J'jf70Hdf7Zg Sefy. ....... ,.,......... R aymond L. Liddell, '38 Trea.rm'er ......,..... ..... ........... J . Clifford Hayner, '19 Necrologirl ............ ............. A nson H. Bingham, '00 Execnfirfe Offcer ....,... ....,..... W alter L. Mersheimer, 37 Frank J. Borrelli, '33 Milton J. Wilson, '18 Directors '............ ......... S Prague Carleton, '06 Philipp R. Schmahl, '11 joseph H. Fobes, '01 Van Alstyne H. Cornell, 'OO 14 amni HE Alumni Association of the New York Medi- cal College, Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals was founded on March 15, 1883. At that time our country was in the midst of great industrial and commercial expansion, Chester A. Arthur was the 21st president of the United States. The Brooklyn Bridge was just being completed. john Roebling, the originator of a suspen- sion bridge over the East River, sustained a crushing injury to his foot, tetanus set in, and he succumbed to the infection of which little was known at that time. His son, Wasliington Roebling, took over the work of construction. It is interesting to note that several mem- bers of the Alumni Association were associated with this project, as well as being personal physicians to the Roebling family. In 1880 Thomas Edison developed the incandescent light. This permitted further develop- ment and perfection in medical instruments. Robert Koch astonished the medical world with a paper on Etiology of Tuberculosis. In 1886 Fitz conclusively demonstrated the pathology of performing inflammation of the vermiform appendix, and in 1889 john B. Mur- Nuociation phy of Chicago, and Charles McBurney in New York, made great contributions to a better understanding of a disease to which so many people succumbed. Recent graduates and new members of the Alumni Associa- tion rarely stop to think of those momentous days when each year added many chapters to the history of medi- cine. Now there are over 2400 living graduates of our College. At the present writing there are over 900 ac- tive members-a record envied by most medical alumni associations. The objects of your Alumni Association are: 1:-To promote the interests and extend the influ- ence of the New York Medical College. 2:-To pro- mote the mutual benefit of the members, intellectually, socially and professionally. Including the ten graduates of the class of 1899 who will receive their Gold Diploma this june, there are about 82 living golden graduates of our College. As far as we know, Dr. Grosvenor S. Farmer, Watertowru, N. Y., who graduated in 1874, is our oldest grad- Hate, 98 years of age, and still going strong. ' - 'ax 25.35, Kool: Two METROPOLITAN HOSPITAL AND WELFARE ISLAND DISPENSARY HE College maintains exclusive teaching facilities and staiiing privileges in this 1,050 bed hospital. The Out- patient department, located at 535 East 80th Street, was placed in use in the summer of 1940, and affords students the oppor- tunity of clinic work in all the medical and surgical specialties. Originally situated on Ward's Island, a location occupied by the British Troops in the Revolutionary War, the hospital was transferred to Blackwell's Island in 1894. In 1921, New York's Mayor Hylan, taking the suggestion of Commissioner Coler, changed the name of the location to Welfare Island. During the past fiscal year there were 5,191 ambulance calls, 94,900 visits made to the Out-patient Department, and 124,764 hospital admissions. F3 If Q ,iv ,,u9 1-vf',', Ma I X E. I 'til ,MSM ll ?1i--fd --'.fT f1,., .-. 1 A 735-:Hwy F ll m5 ' . ' - -' A -- , ir ,Ry .4 .-, ,uw ,dx W V I U W .L 1f,35:,'.f,,.-..1. , ..w,...-gfaw : -.gf I ' A z, -1 I PM IIEIIIMI :f fl-Ii Hyllllli , 'iiyilsiqiv - -4,5 ly ' 5. 21 1' W willlqll,-121135 '.E -'f?2g,':4f,,',q41,-4-Jie, Sf -is --il, A' 1' -A -gpg. JW-'1I:',rTl1.I' 1. P I r,:,,,1--I-gaxltif. JU' .Ili 'll' ll' ll f 'n 'pl I-T f,,'i1 : I-lr ww. till: 15.15111 elwlll ll A -me '. ' YW -l' I :3 .1 Z ' -.I-L57 - 3 ' :l,, E' - Ijllgfj, 13 ,-1' 2.1- 1' .A 1 5' mill! ,fl gp 5,1 'ily , 1 in---R -lip 5 1, -, L' ,'f m.e.w.r: -.W '.- gui' it 'lf A .A ...wr tilt- . ' A i i. f. I Y H. il- -:if 'V 'zW.'.Ql l Q- 'l1 .I5'll r,sf.E .'l ..,'. fpllirll I I WL- 1 imltazll,'.1i1:f:'5il:f1I-:4::.--I .. fll ' l ' l J 'l if lif- ,lxw ww an ring, I.l -I-Qf.1..ls'L74yEilltl , -1 --- ' f , - 7 '-'ff ,tiff fj'1i2fF? 3-51' --125 -. , - if-.-, ,- :'L.. ..:' 1 -.1 1 ..- 32-4 l 5 I i 1 I 1 I i I P 1 ,T 'S T., X ! f' af-' MARTIN ALTCHEK 173 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. jewish Hospital of Brooklyn New York University ADELE R. ALTMAN 108-05 70th Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. Queens General Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. University of Michigan B.S. MARGOT AMMANN ' 272 Rockaway Ave., Boonton, N. J. HE appearance of this volume without the cus- T tomary running commentary on class history would probably be greeted with mixed emotions. We consid- ered the idea of establishing such a precedent by hand- 20 Bellevue QCornell Divisionj Vassar College 1 ... E 2 I VIOLA FLORENCE ANDERSON 52 Anderson Ave., Port Richmond, S. I., N. Y. St. johns Episcopal Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. New York University B.A. New York University M.A. Wagner College RICHARD RONALD BASS 835 Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Grasslands Hospital, Valhalla, N. Y. Softball 2g Carnival Committee 1. Cornell University BERNARD BATT 5501 14th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Kings County Hospital Contin Society 3, 4, Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4. College of the City of New York ing the literary editor his walking papers and filling the book with snapshots, captioned, of course. After four years of medical school, however, our minds had been sufhciently conditioned to realize that procuring MYRTON F. BEELER 40 High St., North Wilmington, Mass. Metropolitan Hospital Contin Society 4. Harvard University FRANK R. BEGEN 2787 Hudson Blvd., jersey City, N. J. Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, N. J. AKK 2, 3, 4, Recording Secretary 3, Basketball, Class 1, 2, 3, 4, Varsity 1, 2, Softball 1, 2, 3, 4, Class Vice-President 2, Glee Club 2, 3. Princeton University ROBERT BETHJE 230 East 80th St., New York, N. Y. Charles S. Wilson Memorial Hospital, johnson City, N. Y. Phi Chi-Presiding Senior 4, Phi Alpha Gamma 1, 2, Vice-President 3, Contin Society Secretary these snapshots was much too Herculean a task, thus the reprieved fbut not relievedj literary staff is again in the squirrel cage and will try to infiltrate these pages with literary la-de-da concerning The Great Four Year 3, 4, Senate 4, Interfraternity Council 1, Secre- tary 24, President 3, 4, Carnival Committee 4, Hobby Show 1, 2, 3, 4, Chairman Informal I Dances 4, Fleur-O-Scope-Art Editor 4. College of the City of New York l ALFRED MARTIN BEYER 7144 Harrow St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Queens General Hospital Phi Alpha Gammag Phi Chi. Colgate University BERNICE BLACKMAN 20 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Metropolitan City Hospital Glee Club 15 Phychiatry Club 2, 5. University of Michigan NORMAN BORKEN Rego Park, N. Y. Queens College Trek or How They Brought the Good Students from Haig to Hague. On August 16, 1945, the First atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, on Sept. 2, Gen'l. MacArthur signed 1 1 I fill . , . u EN 0 s r F: I , . A f L all r the Armistice aboard the Missouri in Tokyo Bay and on Sept. 8, 126 prospective physicians met Helen Louise Baker in the lounge of New York Medical College, Flower and Fifth Ave. Hospitals. The initial enroll- ment included some 32 soldiers, 36 sailors, many vet- erans and more women than ever before. Faced with the wartime accelerated schedule, the class was whisked through 3 days of indoctrination, the first faculty-stu- dent tea, exploration of the college under the able guid- ance of one Lew Murdoch and off to class for an early acquaintance with the mysteries of the intimate anatomy of the human body. Those were the days, with the gov- ernment pay checks rolling in every month, New York with all its wonders and a blissful unawareness of the Monday morning ordeal with its dire consequences, Cfor in the early exams everyone passedj. The warm fall weather, military drill on Thursday at 4:00 or Saturday at 8:00, weekends on C. Q. or at Columbia, slipping across the street for beer at Bravo's and bud- ding romance in the anatomy lab between Lil Guglielmi and all the men in the class, who later learned that one did not pass the course no matter how judicious his pump priming. Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard were burning up the gridiron for Army and new automobiles had not yet made an appearance when we took the first Anatomy exam which flunked half, sent two-thirds off to pack trunks and write home to Mother and taught all of us what surface markings were. After the two-week histogenesis course of Mary Stark, Marchioness of Mesenchyme and Defender of Hobo Histiocytes, we began to look for 36-hour chicks in our four-minute eggs. Everyone could imitate her famous can you beat it, but none quite so well as P. C. Zanger, who had been elected class pres. by that time. Dr. Benjamin was climbing into his coat pockets and Dr. Evans was assuring us that we'd all pass too when we received our first introduction to the now famous Student Loan Fund Carnival. Almost everyone came dressed as himself, a not inept disguise in those 24 S-sa Y 2,,,,, days, Two square dances having proved sufficient, many adjourned to the rounder Terpsichore offered by such establishments as Corso's and the Lorelei down on 86th St. fremember?j. Tom Santilli rose to meteoric heights of fame by winning the liquor basket which to share became the unreached ambition of every liquor-loving one of us. Gradually everyone learned to stay home and study on Saturday evening and burn the town down on Mon- day. The one a week brand of examinations began to make its impression upon our lives and only the braver few even went down to Riverside Drive that famous Navy Day Saturday afternoon to watch Pres. Truman review the mighty Atlantic fleet drawn up at anchor in the Hudson River. But Monday night was less crowded downtown. Pictures like Ray Milland's Lost Weekend and Ingrid Bergman's Spellbound were to be seen at the better houses while james Mason was fluttering every female heart with The Seventh Veil. As the weather turned colder and the nights longer, we came to know Dr. Hayner's crystal clear lectures, and his quiet firmness about being prepared to figure out the answer to any problem in the region we were studying. The price of Regional Anatomy continued to climb as one and all realized its sterling worth as a review text. Men were pledged to fraternities on the basis of a loan of that famous, now extinct book. His- tology is remembered chiefly because of Dr. Stark, her tropical storms and calms, her Fawcuss and Con- found you, her benevolent tyranny over dots and dashes, shapes and shadings. No one can ever forget Dr.,Cope's lecture presentations, Dr. Haig's thoughtful chain smoking, Dr. Schein's moustached smile or Dr. Kleiner's smiling zero, but Anatomy was THE course Freshman year to the exclusion of others as we later learned at National Boards. Came Thanksgiving and the news that the wind was to be taken out of the sails of the accelerated program, that there'd be an Easter and a summer vacation and that the service students would be discharged. The pub- lic appearance Of the ruptured duck in ever increas- ing numbers had made this last not unexpected and 5 g 5 ' ,a uw QW 3 ' iw '- -,. W- .V.., ,..,!, ,Y Tw Y i v I Mya ..i t tu I 1, Q , an A H A ,7, Q 491, M' Hi, 31 V -'71 V ,gig ww ff V 5 yT'k fp 'N' wxgkgp vni , . . . r , fa ,s . I . M X 1? . .R V ,I , 5 I .H , K 1 , , , V y, K.. cf KM. 3.4 1 , E . ff' I , ff A f f H f Jw W , if , . rt ,-, 74. -' ,. 4 ' ' ,If 5 1 1 v :I 1. , v , E H 49 x gl! 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'fr:sY'nf'pq'f rf1' ' uf' 4Q'- gl ,M i ',.3, -Af. 7 ,,nf:?k.f' in ,, Hd' If' ,Q3f'1P,zk Iwlffffl ' 'fig rc A1511 .Q , f 1 ' - Vw :dk il4 ',W fm... ' ,J I ,,1..,gw .9 ,r ' .ff Y' Q... ll ,-- X' riff X A., 44,4 ' . j ' 0' ufu IA! ,,, pl? L nu ' r , I' .W , , .V in 'pu .df ff, .9 -v IIN ,f' L . 1 .' fl In J 'IW M: W A A' J Nj QM 5' . U xii 3,4 Eu Q fs rw :fl A ,UV .vw XIX M 7 'I' ff, I 'O' 'H ' ' fu ,, A , ,' im ., L F, HL' , ! 1. ' 51' 5 : s 'V Nfl' my i Y f' U 1,517 . xg' yi-i, ,vp fl Vi W' 'M 'M Neff gy: Qi'-,at.i4 .gel 'ik , I-4 , 1 'A' :wifi 'IQ Ph! fl: '- 'I Ai' WH 4 A114 V,-1 ' wc g iq' Wd 'IV' 'h zu. xwyl.. .Pix xl! M 'fl . ' ie V 1 , .74 A ff' 7 l, V ', H14 'rl ,Xllf 5 uf 'E It It i . 't 5 'Ig I 5 A :Wx I V , ! 1' ig T tif A i . 1 we W , x-kA wif' wyffyx 'nk-uf M I W' ' I I - p 5 I5 4 I 'ij 45. tri ' , ' w 1' 2 - S F R' A K, ' 1, N 3, X , 8 P X 1 J' ' . ' , f , + ' 1 n 'L f 'Y Q. f ' 2 lm H vp 'L V' ' W' . F 'W' ff' 1 . Q-W fy' A 'Hn if f ' ,v v 'V f J I' 1 V, ' ' ,Q M' .V if gf '4 .1 Hi V? x fm' ' 'V WU L ,QA , , 1 W . 1 , , V' ,gg . V U pvv 3 2 x :V jj, i i rx 4 -. A.- J.. mxrn-. ., A -I., M- I U , A 5 Y Y f - . ,. p I ,4,, MM' JAMES E. BOWES 5501 Huntington Parkway, Bethesda, Maryland Mary Immaculate Hospital, jamaica, N. Y. AKK 1-, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 2, 35 Beta Rho Corp. Treasurer 2, 3, 4, Carnival 1, 2, 3, 4, Chairman 4, Chairman Student Loan Fund 4 3 Christmas Toy Committee 2, 3. Georgetown University WILLIAM R. BRADLEY 281 West Rock Ave., New Haven, Conn. Madigan General Hospital, Tacoma, Washington AKK 1, 2, 3, 4, Carnival 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 2, 33 Hobby Shows 3, 4. Yale University HAROLD A. CARLSON yet, we regretted the loss of gov't. checks, half price movies and U. S. O.'s. The saga of Lido Beach began the afternoon of Dr. Evans' famous every finger in the vagina question and ended 3 days later after 25 210 Rockwell Ave., Stratford, Conn. Gorgas General Hospital, Ancon, Panama Canal Zone Alpha Kappa Kappa 2, 3, 4. Colgate University 1 ANTHONY T. CARRELLAS Bliss Mine Rd., Newport, R. I. Worcester City Hospital Phi Chi 3-, 4. Holy Cross College B.S. MARISA CASTRO 367 Padre Rufs St., Hato Rey, P. R. Arecibo District Hospital, Puerto Rico Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. Chestnut Hill College, Pa. University of Puerto Rico MARVIN A. CHERNOW 200-14 Linden Blvd., St. Albans, N. Y. Metropolitan City Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4. Miami University men had stood up dates for the I. F. C. Christmas Formal because liberty had been cancelled, At Christmas everyone went home, the first peace- time Christmas in 5 years. Not bad to be a civilian in I i l M . . 11 ' ! 1.32 ' . - r SHIRLEY ANN COLLINS 6 Lexington Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. Flower Fifth Ave. Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4, Senior Ball Committee 1, Glee Club 2, Carnival Committee 1, 2, Hobby Show Committee 2. Cornell University B.A. BURTON COVERT 11 Lyons Place, Larchmont, N. Y. Central Main General Hospital AKK 2, 3, 4, Hobby Show Assistant Chairman 2, Chairman 3, Class Treasurer 2, Intramural Base- - ball 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 1, 2. Cornell University Columbia University JOHN H. DOHERTY 717 South Fifth Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. St. Vincents Hospital a peaceful world and an advanced freshman in medical school. In january the snows and rains came. Several men had resigned during the vacation and more were think- AKK 1, 2, 3, 4, Contin Society 4, Newman Club 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Softball 1, 2, 3, 4. College of the Holy Cross ing it over. The Navy boys appeared in civvies and Dr. Stark appeared ready to give a final exam in Histology. The schedule changed and we began to concentrate on Physiology. Dr. Cope's Varsities made their letters, and MURRAY LEWIS DORFMAN 5568 Lebanon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 5, 4. Haverford College ROBERT THOMAS DUNN 1 Laurel Dr., Packanack Lake, N. J. St. Vincents Hospital AKK 2, 5, 4. Duke University 4 JOHN F. EGAN P. O. Box 414, Port Chester, N. Y. Baylor University Hospital, Dallas, Texas Class Treasurer 1, AKK 1, 2, 3, 4g Hobby Show 2, Carnival Committee 1, 2, 3, 4. Baldwin-Wallace College B.S. 1 E the famous heart machine that did everything but fall in love was demonstrated. Dr. Hayner retreated into the fastness of the seventh floor sanctus sanctorum to roll his Bull Durham in peace, leaving us to the tender mercies of Dr. Woerner and his scapulae, Dr. Evans' music, anthropology and King Charles, Harry Truman was voted the Man of the Year by Time Magazine and advertisements for the sale of tele- vision sets began to appear in newspapers and maga- zines. We were deep in the grind and worried, despite Dr. Evans' Next year you'll all be Sophomores. Mr. Capps lectured on the G. I. tract and everyone rushed home to look up Dragstedt's Vagotomy which Leo Nolan had read about it in a recent journal. Mr. Gay's secretaries became ever more overpowering and con- servatives estimate that 40 man hours of work were lost each time one walked into the room. Neuroanatomy was Dr. Benjamin's forte. We bent along the neural tube with him and came up with a Jacob's Ladder of scotch taped placards representing the human central nervous system in four colors. Meat was very scarce late that winter and the Hos- pital cafeteria served eggs, hash, fish and eggs. Conse- quently the rush to volunteer for Dr. O'Donohoe's high protein diet with steaks provided, turned into a minor Calgary stampede. In those days, Mulvilhill was chunkier than now so that he received a unanimous mandate from the people for the starvation diet. About all we proved from that deal was that urine came from glomerular filtrate, produced in kidneys owned by people. By the end of March we found ourselves completely reconverted to peacetime usage after the Army boys returned from final shots and mustering out at Fort Dix. Soon afterward more men left school, leaving only about 115 at the end of the month. By this time Dr. Liedke's smoose muzzle was a thing of the past and as winter thawed into spring, we had time to notice the first Kaiser Frazer automobiles on the streets. We tried to get tickets for Laurence Olivier's Old Vic Company which was going to present Shakespeare at the Center Theater. Jane Russell in The Outlaw was finally showing at the Gotham and Aneurin Bevan, British Minister of Health, announced to Parliament and the world his womb to tomb health plan. Because the semester had been lengthened a month by reconversion to a 4-year program the work began to drag. Some of us even began to read the journals and noted the announcement of Blalock and Taussig's first cardiac shunt operation. As we carved into the pickled brains in Anatomy we guffawed, as have all freshman classes since Paracelsus, at the fecal impac- tions of the Circle of Willis gag. Easter passed with a full awakening of spring and a sudden awareness of approaching final exams. It was a hungry spring, living on Veteran Administration promises, but pleasant. A few Monday morning exams were skipped and we began to look forward to the far- off Junior day when there would be no scheduled quizzes. But in the meantime there was a class party to plan for. Can You Beat It, a sequel to As You Like It, was written by Myrt Beeler, directed by Chollie Schwartz, starred Joe Smith and featured the finest players ever to stride the boards and wear the buskin. Dr. Stark attended and loved it, but it was not until we returned as older and wiser Sophomores that we learned this had been the last class party she would attend. , In the midst of the first great nationwide railroad strike, final exams came. In true democratic fashion the class scheduled them over a period of two weeks and beat a hasty retreat to the books. Physiology, Neuro- anatomy, Biochemistry, then last but certainly not least, Anatomy, and the ordeal was over. The sun came out, the tears dried, the trains ran on time and everyone went home to wait, hoping to live happily ever after. HE summer passed like a Fifth Ave. bus at rush hour. The Navy had blown up Bikini Lagoon that july and Secretary of State Jim Byrnes had initiated the get tough with Russia policy. We discovered that Dr. Evans had not been altogether correct in saying we'd all be sophomores. Some 22 of us weren't. Bill Woodward, Murray Dorfman, Doug Ford and Ned Goodrich pioneered the newly opened North G wr- Mq ffl -QI- g num, 1 m -,, g 8, M 1 ,- , lu M Y' 411 'Q 1 N 15 n ,.Af,v-1-yfw' -'lily M ' f I rf, , A ' emi A A .pn kufmdlwdlf, in if K 'x 'w eff fn' .f 'glfw .gflul x 'Q1,1c J' nm.. 11, Ni W I .4143 ff'!17ff' llh 1 CQ a . , vu w ,A 's W .,., 2- -1 .. V -1, ,,,..u-W I 1 '-1-- - 'Or 4 . - I X of K' A .. 'Q lf lil :WH 'f . H I W I N ff ',fl lr nb 1, I . 'I ' iffy, 4 .5 fr ' .i ,, ,, A , -,L 6 . - ' 'L - A ' 5 I ' ' ' - 2 - f n ' Q f , A ' A wx, '1.',4+f12'f . rd .. L., 1 Q. ff' , 1' 1' Q ' 1' ' Q , Af k uf. ,fy ,, A I, , 'if Y , f In N 'Jw ,rp ig mg 4 . f, . ' , f 4 'rf ff' M' L F11 'r'- .,'1'i. '.L Qu.. mf f N . 1 , H .4 ' . 4 M .' fy H M' . I' f IJ - ,, Q , 5 ,JA , vo W' W' .in A rf. , , J v , 1 .U . nu i Brothers Island, while Myrt Beeler, Bob Mosher, Al Fineman, Bob Dunn, Ed Ferguson, Bob Marsh, Hal Carlson, Katie Gardner, Lee Collins and Gertrude Erikson, living in separate rooms, of course, went armed ROSE R. ELLIS 3140 Godwin Terr., Riverdale, N. Y. St. Vincents Hospital Inter-Fraternity Xmas Ball 1, Hobby Show Com- mittee 1, 2, Carnival 1, 2, 3, Glee Club 2, Senior Ball Committee 1, 2, Alpha Epsilon Iota, Record- ing Secretary 3, Senior Advisor 4. College of Mt. St. Vincent NELSON S. ERHART 1030 Park Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. Queens General Hospital Intramural Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Softball 1, 2, 3, 4. St. john's University EDWARD HUGH FERGUSON Duneland Beach, Stop 33, Michigan City, Indiana St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, Ill. , Senior Ball Committee 1, 2, 5-, 4, AKK 1, 2, 3, 4. University of Michigan College of the City of New York 1' I . men,-. 4 l I RITA M. FOLEY 9405 222nd St., Queens Village, N. Y. Meadowbrook Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. Hofstra College CHARLES DOUGLAS FORD 435 W. School Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Percy jones General Hospital Phi Chi 3, 4. Wesleyan University KATHERINE LOUISE GARDNER 542 6th St., San Bernardino, Calif. Research and Educational Hospital, University of Illinois, Chicago, Ill. Carnival Committee 1, 2, Senior Ball 1, 5, 4, f-we itst' Alpha Epsilon Iota 2, 3, 4. University of California to the teeth with D. D. T. and roach powder to reduce the mechanized dandruii' in a newly renovated apart- ment building down on Lexington Ave. Most of the rest of us went back to our old rooms, resubscribed to WILLIAM CARL GITTINGER I New York City, N. Y. Flower Fifth Ave. Hospital AKK 1, 2, 3, 4, Executive Committee 4, Rushing Chairman 2, Senior Dance Committee 2, 3, 4, I.F.C. 2, 3, Secretary 3, Intramural Softball 1, 2, 3. Columbia University MORTON GOLDFARB 40 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. Morrisania City Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4, President 3, Inter- Fraternity Council 2, 3, Basketball 1, 2, Base- ball 2, 3. Massachusetts Institute of Technology SUMNER GOLDSTEIN 445 E. Hudson St., Long Beach, N. Y. Kings County Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, Phychiatry Club 3, 4, the Daily News, dusted OH our I-Iayners and sent the dirty lab coats to the laundry. Within two days we'd bought all the wrong textbooks, met Mr. Gay's new secretary, told 6 freshmen to go back before it was too Intramural Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4, Carnival Commit- tee 2. Columbia University A.B. SANFORD ELIAS GOLDZIER, Ill 320 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Fordham Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 3, 4. College of the City of New York New York University EDWARD O. GOODRICH, JR. 59 Cottage Ave., Ansonia, Conn. Albany Hospital Basketball Manager 2, 35 Senior Dance Committee lg Glee Club 2, 3. Yale University THOMAS W. GREENLEES 49 Primrose Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. Flower Fifth Ave. Hospital AKK 1, 2, 3, 4, Softball 1, 2, 3, 4, Carnival Com- mittee 1, 2. Cornell University late and bought up all the 3 ring loose leaf paper in the neighborhood. With more courses to take than there were dividers in our notebooks, we were too deeply engrossed in co- agulation necrosis to more than note the first place tie in the National League between Brooklyn and St. Louis. Bernie Spector covered all Cardinal bets and had to do without dessert the rest of the semester. Sophomore year brought Saturday classes which were much like Army close order drills, i. e.-they stimulate the soldier's imagination to Hgure out ways of getting out of them. But there was no escaping Dr. Higgins' quiz sections, a new experience. The long drawn out Minnesota enunciation probably produced by the long cold nights the good Doctor had come to New York to escape, gave rise to a new type of back row collab- oration, or as it came to be known popularly, no man need get a zero if he had friends. Naturally, there were slip ups in the technique as Dick Bass and the famous soggy heart incident so graphically revealed. To pathology we owe our acquaintance with Dr. Golden When I was a lad in Minnesota fthe college was just infiltrated with themj Selin. He is the only man living who can draw an inverted kidney tubule behind his back, left-handed, while discussing the foundations of medical ethics. Even Ripley doesn't be- lieve it. It is said that Bernie Batt and Herb Weiss asked for tuition refunds having had to leave class at least every other day for talking. There was Dr, Taub, whose patients made uneven- tual recoveries, and Dr. jacob CMuss my hair and call me-j Werne, Queens County Medical Examiner whose stories of violent death and destruction almost raised hair on the head of joe Horowitz. The forerunner of the compleate combine ap- J l 5 2 peared early in the year in the shape of Bacteriology notes which followed Dr. Lillick's lectures very closely, but not close enough, as we discovered after the first periodic exams. Ned Goodrich almost gave the fastidi- ous Miss Russell the screaming meemies by appearing a precise 25 minutes late for every lecture. It seems Ned sets his watch by the Chicago Observatory time and is consequently 35 minutes early, according to Ned. Later in the year when he developed Osgood Schlatter's disease, a condition which no one else could develop, he began to be only 30 minutes early. The Carnival that year featured a Swiss Village. john Egan was admirable as a Swiss admiral and Dr. McGavack won the prize for best costume, but Marissa Castro stole the show with her very appropriate CPD grass skirt and paper lei. With Laura Morgan as dealer, Black jack was the attraction of the evening. Even then our class was beginning to make its mark on N.Y.M.C. The 1946 election saw an overthrow of legislative power with the Republicans capturing both House and Senate. Price control had been killed two months be- fore, and high priced meat had become plentiful again. Around Christmas of Sophomore year, streptomycin was released for use by general physicians, the,Health Insurance Plan of New York City was put into opera- tion and research men were busily looking for more diseases which the newly discovered anti-histaminics would cure. The I. F. C. Christmas dance was at the Beekman Towers in weather that only New York can produce on the night of a major formal affair. Everyone arrived soaking wet and proceeded forthwith to get wetter. The room was too small that year, but all the cozier for its size. Freshmen danced with seniors' wives and sophomores drank faculty cocktails. The I. F. C. lost money, 'six juniors lost their dates and I lost three teeth getting my coat from the cloakroom in the rush to leave after all the refreshments had disappeared. Tom Greenlees and joe Smith drove to Canada dur- ing Christmas with Ned Goodrich and Dick Ralfman for some Laurentian skiing. Carrying along a full com- pliment of skis, poles and other equipment, including a case of Three Feathers, joe made the trip up suc- cessfully in his ancient automobile, but was forced to Hy home with a tremendous hematoma of the thigh which provided excellent clinical material during the early part of the new quarter which started in january. With January came cold weather, examinations, the telephone strike and Dr. Rosario Terranova. The war of nerves as practised by Dr. Lehr had ended and the terror began. Precise dialectical arguments over whether 1 5 as' 'vi' qh ,ff W H W' q ., ff YW. 'xiA 'gain WW' L, A 5 ui QMW7' ,MS fn ,Q Q A ' .. ln, U if Q wah Pt xv' 4 Q iff 31,3 , W W if. V H Q Q . WN . N P ., Ay. W fp Y. M! t., 4 ,,, A i -f ... ' ' A , 'HMV I ' WA .n'l 'fff, ' X g n - N V V, A 3 FMR, f 5 3-'Q-' M., 'Y' W HTH X 5 ! 2 Q S. Jw- 1 71 t XX i' Q , fifp Z, X .Lf - Q gel' Wh ,M',fvf, 1 A 4 Hs Magix 5 -2 3041 fm ng Lf gk 1 U 34 3 Q-fx Nw. ,I 277 gg , v- v-X ml 4 IF f,,. H5 I gvk V ff V Q U' 1 rm IW . . J ' ' -QM . i fl 4 VR il' 5 V ........- ' STANLEY HABEREK 815 First Ave., New York, N. Y. St. Vincents Hospital Contin Society 4. Manhattan College MURRAY HERMAN 2211 Ditmas Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Morrisania City Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 2, 3, 4, Alumni Committee 4 City College B.S. AUSTIN HOGAN 105 Oxford Rd., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Queens General Hospital ' route fof administrationj should be pronounced as route fof hasty retreatj or root Cof all evilj gave way to flailing cigars, flying G. 8: G.'s and such psychologi- cal gems as If you guys ain't all here next time, I'm 38 Baseball 1, 2, 3, Basketball 3, Phi Chi. Bowdoin College JOSEPH L. HOROWITZ 415 State St., Bridgeport, Conn. St. Vincentis Hospital, Bridgeport, Conn. giving an exam, present or not. Norm Borken dis- covered that not even the supposedly Terranova proof shelter of the very last row was safe during the more turbulent periods of quiz conferences. Doughty jack Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4, Interfraternity Coun- cil, Treasurer 5. Yale University EUGENE THOMAS HUPALOWSKY 2091 Arthur Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Mount Vernon Hospital Phi Alpha Gamma 2, 5, Phi Chi 4, Carnival Senior Ball Committee 3, 4. Columbia College RALPH EMERSON HURST, JR. 116 Chadbourne Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Rochester General Hospital AKK 1, 2, 3, 4, President 4. Wesleyan University 57 45 ' 1 MERLE RAYMOND INGRAHAM 36 Leyden Rd., Greenfield, Mass. Worcester City Hospital, Worcester, Mass Phi Chi 3, 4, Carnival 4. Princeton University HAROLD KAPLAN 375 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. jewish Hospital of Brooklyn Phi Delta Epsilon 3, 4. New York University Columbia University GERALD KAPLAN 375 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Loeffler, whose custom had always been to use the front row, beat a hasty retreat to the relative safety of the fourth after suffering severe losses in the earlier en- counters. Myrt Beeler, attempting to counterattack, 40 Beth Israel Hospital, Newark, N. J. A Phi Delta Epsilon 4. Louisiana State University was thrown back in confusion with, You have my HENRY KEDERSHA 1011 Clinton Ave., Irvington, N. J. Newark City Hospital Rutgers University EDWARD KUSHNER 280 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. Bronx Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 3, 4. University of Nebraska MARGARET LATOURRETTE 114 Morsemere Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers General Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4, I. F. C. 1, 4, Dance Committee 4, Hobby Show Committee 3. Barnard College personal permission to use any book in the library to answer your question, Doctor. During the second half of Sophomore year came our first contact with the clinical subjects such as Minor Surgery, Pediatrics, Obstetrics, Psychiatry and Clinical Pathology. It was then that Francis David Superman Speer came into our lives. If all the pencils worn out in Dr. Speer's exams were linked end to end, they'd form a chain six times around Murray fsee me laterj Dorfman. Standard textbooks for the course were Kol- mer's Clinical Diagnosis and Bartlett's Familiar Quotations. Why, we have a marvelous laboratory here, Doctor, was a dictum pronounced to sophomores and proved all too graphically to rueful seniors two years later. For physical diagnosis we made our first trip to the Met. Dr. Leinoff, fresh from the Army, Dr. Elias and his magic fingers and Dr. Violin had lectured on the subject but confrontation of the patient was something else again. Al Fineman spent his first morning getting name, address and phone number, while rumor has it that George Meyer spent the first morning trying to say Hello. Nevertheless, by working in pairs to bolster our morale, we did manage to complete one good his- tory and physical that semester, probably the best one that patient ever had. As the snow began to melt, General George Mar- shall came home from China to become Secretary of State. Television was becoming the big attraction at the House of Murphy and Dire! in lbe S1111 was the picture to be seen down on 86th St. The U. S. P. H. S. started its BCG inoculation program, the first in America. Parasitology started in March. We began to wear shoes all the time and to eat our pork chops well done down at Joe's on Third Ave. And where we had only been annoyed by the cockroaches in our East Harlem apartments, we now began to worry about them. When the swallows came back to Capistrano, Dr. Lehr returned to lecture on antibiotics and chemother- apy. We felt let in on the ground floor, for in those days, the sulfa combinations were just beginning to attract widespread attention. When the various drug firms suddenly blossomed into a rash of combasul preparations the following year, we realized just how far advanced our lectures had been. Of Bacitracin, Dick Tracin and Suicidin, little more need be said. . 4 j ' . Later in the spring, the Truman Doctrine on Greece and Turkey was proclaimed. Little noticed in the fever heat of final exams was the description read at Harvard by Secretary Marshall of his plan to reconstruct and rehabilitate the nations of Europe. Our own final exams were the logical conclusion to a hectic sophomore year. It had been a year jam packed full of necessary pre-clinical information and now in a short two-week period, we were called upon to re- produce most of it for a final grade. It was an over- whelming task, probably the most strenuous in our medical career and left us all so exhausted that we were perfectly happy to let Part I of the National Boards lapse until our return to school in the fall. HAT summer we fiddled while Rome burned, re- fusing steadfastly to recognize impending Septem- ber with its National Boards. But I've still got six weeks to study reduced itself to the absurdity of, If I get a seat on the subway I can run over Physiology on the way to school, otherwise I'll throw the bull. Unfor- tunately, the subway was crowded and the bull threw too many, for over 602, of the class failed at least one exam. To every action there is an equal and opposite re- action. With Boards over, our fancy lightly turned to thoughts of loaf. Bill Woodward started the renais- sance of battleships, a game of skill and chance. Abe Yahia continued his correspondence course in art and art appreciationg Marty Shearn and Bernie Batt invented written charadesf' Rita Foley and Rose Ellis started the '.'Back Row Women's Bridge and Mah Jong Club and all settled down to a pleasant non-strenuous ride through the junior year. In October, class politics reared its ugly head. After considerable acrimonious electioneering and debate, the class, voting along strict party lines, reelected P. C. Zanger for a third term. George Pelebecky, the H. S. Truman of his time, became Vice President, Hal Nel- son and joe Root, Ruth Strang and Rita Foley were elected senators, secretary, and treasurer in that order, respectively. w +-+ f'Qw-f h M 1 IW sg lr' f. we wi 'Az QQ W 4 Q .N M ,Q M, lm I-M PM MMA! RV in gl' ? VY 'TW if f W A f K' XF: I -f Q , X I 1,, g' g',f'fm'.'f X A fy ' 'Y 'ff 9 Kf'H ' -534 I Yr Ml I 1 ffmwm NlH,gLg ff..',! ., 1 , A f W Ja r Al , M, 'lf U O Vai- I! lcv, M wi A Af ,fy .fm I ' sk, ,,.- 'sf 01 JJ ! ag . wfwr 1 4 Ii I' Q, A A Wing 2' ff' ',,, ff!-, 'Cf 1 ga we 12,4 :f !h?71 ,A? hi ,n.af7M4gllfQ! ful 794 9 1 7 , WM' uf A71 1ff .'f Lf' H V 'WF 'iff Huff haw snow: V uf 1,1 pu 1, ffl, ,ff W Mil mga! ,, pi,Hd,f 'Hr 'W , r Q r f ,W ,eA' IA , 4 e' - ' J.. ,V4 ,wg 1, A' Q., buf, f J , V , 4' , f 'U .4,' . 'fmelff . w J V' , ,K V 5' ,. ,ff , 1, M x xx --. Q? 1 9, ' TW if M, his Vim f 9 V' 54 cuz' fi 'A' '. W, ' ' A' r g 4 .Nw WO M' 4 '44 A, 'f mi M of H. 3 W '. 1 in Hn' 'W ., 7. J , , . , x 4 A 4 . 1 , , 1 ':.?f' 4 'A 3 , , ,Hwvuwwww 5 4 I 1' I ' A ' 5 f 4 F V' t 'H 'Y 1 if ' 5 'U H , ,H r V 7 9 9 .1 4 K fn' 'L 1 ,vf Ai- f f'PQ'l , ff in H' X' Q f. fi if 9' ,L 'ln K' - 'sy . ,. 7 , , ' H .. J A iw! f ' I... '1 ., My Q 11 95? ,IA 'S BERNARD LEVOWITZ New York, N. Y. College of the City of New York B.S. JOSEPH A. LINSK 2509 Boardwalk, Atlantic City-, N. J. Atlantic City Hospital, Atlantic City, N. J. University of Iowa JOHN G. LoEFFLER 3 117 Massachusetts St., Westheld, N. J. Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield, N. J. l To Figure out the junior schedule of classes was a course in itself. With numbers 1 and 2 of Group 5 in Section A reporting to Ward M at Met. on alternate Mondays and to the O. P. D. at Flower every third AKK 2, 3, 4, Corresponding Secretary 3g Contin Society 3, 4g Intramural Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4. Upsala College ROBERT L. MARSH 1614 Ard Evin Ave., Glendale, Calif. Detroit Receiving Hospital Phi Chi 3, 4. Rutgers University ROBERT MASSONNEAU 8 Allen Point, Bay Shore, N. Y. Walter Reed General Hospital, Waslmington, D. C. AKK Recordin Secretar 2 Vice-President 3 8 Y , , President 3g Fleur-O-Scope 2, Literary Editor 4g Hobby Show 3. Hamilton College GEORGE MEYER Metropolitan Hospital Randolph-Macon College Tuesday, we began to spend more time than ever in the tea room looking for conferences no one ever seemed able to find. The third year, according to the catalogue, is half V v l clinical and half didactic, which means basically, half standing up and half sitting down. Dashing from morning classes at College to afternoon clinics and ward rounds for vice versaj at the Met was the domi- LAURA GREY MORGAN 420 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Morrisania City Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4g Glee Club 1. New York University JOHN MULVIHILL 314 East 16th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. , Queens General Hospital Columbia University VINCENT NAVARRE 1932 North 18th St., Milwaukee, Wis. Milwaukee County Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis Phi Chi 5, 4. Rutgers University ELEANOR C. NELSON 3569 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Northwestern Hospital, Minneapolis, Minn. AEI 3, 4, Hobby Show Committee 3. Mt. Holyoke College HAROLD E. NELSON Morristown, Indiana Walter Reed General Hospital AKKg Senate 3, 45 Basketball 2, 3. Princeton 'University LEO NOLAN 112 Melrose St., Auburndale, Mass. Newark City Hospital AKK 3, 45 Carnival Committee 2, 3, 4. New York University nant feature of junior year. Lectures in some 32 courses throughout the year added by pinches and half measur- ingspoonfuls to our fund of knowledge, so that the process of learning became almost imperceptible after the first great plunge into clinical medicine which we all made the very first time we faced a patient, alone, in the calm, cool autumn afternoons. At the insistence of Norm Borken and sidekick Gene Hupulowsky, we began to pick up combine notes, the latest thing on How to be happy though in med school. By Christmas all the single men were looking for two-room apartments, one room for living and one for storing the combine. In newly transferred Ed Kushner, Murray Dorfman and Bernie Batt found the perfect pinochle third. In lengthening twilights of November started a little three- handed game which was to be played in the after cabin of S. S. Welfare, on the Madison Ave. bus, on the Independent subway, in the field and on the streets neverito stop until the very eve of graduation. In November, 1947, Princess Elizabeth married Prince Philip, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty was the big attraction at the 86th St. Grande, Myrt Beeler had discovered Thomas Heggins' book, Mr. Roberts, and Miss Hush, of the first big-time radio give-away show, turned out to be Martha Graham. Also in No- vember Life came to B. B. M. H. C. held in the college. Eleanor Nelson brought the new look to N. Y. M. C. that fall and as the hemlines dropped, the sight of dimpled knees became a cherished memory. The first quarter, or was it fifth? ended just as the women's medical fraternity, Alpha Epsilon Iota, was born. No amount of patient explanation seemed able to impress the denser male population with the fact that this was a woman's fraternity, not sorority, four years of high school Latin notwithstanding. If looks had killed during that trying period, Betty Simons would no doubt have been the female hatchet mur- derer of the century. X With the cold winter wind whipping up the East River, and Mother Sills' Seasick Pills much in demand aboard the Welfare, C. P. C. at the Met was some- thing more than we always attended. Although you can fool some of the people all the time and all the people some of the time, Dr. Saccone fooled all the people at least most of the time, including Dr. Boyd, who always seemed to be in mechanical difhculty at the psychological moment. Very few will ever forget such gorgeous words as a ore ta and meningioma. Mort Goldfarb will recount the anecdote of the congenitally syphilitic infant and the nurse on request to those who've forgotten the details. With Christmas came the I. F. C. formal at the Wal- dorf. Held in the jade Room, Bob Bethje was grand high commissioner and chief arranger. Bill Wagner dragged his fiancee from a recent sick bed and Adele Altman rescued her husband from night calls at Queens General. After the first few, joe Noya failed to live up to his nickname QNoe Joyaj and jack Sergeant hopped the meanest lindy in the joint. It broke up about 3:00 A. M. when the Jade Room had begun to look rather jaded. The great blizzard of '47 with its 24 inches of snow fell the day after Christmas. Two weeks later when we returned, the city was still travelling on dog sleds and snow cats. Queens General for Radiology on Tues- day mornings seemed about as accessible as the North Pole. But it was nice to go home evenings and curl up in bed with a good book like the Kinsey report which was reaching the top of the best seller lists in non-fiction right around then. Nellie Lutcher was fa- mous too with her Hurry on down to my house, baby, and Ralph Knisely had come up with his startling ob- servations on the sludged blood phenomenon. During junior year, P. C. Zanger and his straight men worked out their version of Bartlett's Familiar Quotationsf' Rickery without ruckery is a mockery. A touch here, a touch zere and out comes ze diag- noziz. Bis I call ze chunior murmur. This is a case of, shall we say, Neisserian conjunc- tivitis ?-contracted, shall we say, innocently in a Turk- ish bath ? Why, Doctor, we have a mar-rr-velous laboratory here. Do a Braxton Hicks voision. Put out the fire, Doc. The etiology of the morphological histology of Gynecologic pathology is undoubtedly dependent upon Effi- sfwfwfe' 7 n' 5, ,MI NQUQ 'ZS' 'llflf N., rf,J, 1. ffl, AL fjib mr, 4 kyff' W A I JOSEPH THOMAS NOYA 224 East 122nd St., New York, N. Y. Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospital Phi Chi 2, 3, 4, Class Treasurer 4, Carnival Com mittee 4g Hobby Show 4g Softball 2, 3. Fordham College B.S. ROBERT O'BRIEN 72 Vermilyea Ave., New York, N. Y. Newark City Hospital Phi Chi, Baseball. New York University MILTON OLE the stromatogenous and etiological lymphogenous and hematological factors involved. You are sitting in ze oflice--puff, puff-trying to pay for ze new x-ray machine-puff, puff. In comes a 55 East 196th St., Bronx, N. Y. ' Queens General Hospital Johns Hopkins University JANINE OMINES New York, N. Y. Hunter College A.B. ALBERT MARK ONDRAKO 109 Adams Drive, Sunrise Terr., Binghamton, N. Y. Charles S. Wilson Memorial Hospital, Johnson City, N. Y. Phi Chi 5, 4. Syracuse University Hamilton College GEORGE W. PELEBECKY 2205 Ryer Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Morrisania City Hospital Class Vice-President 5, 45 Phi Chi 5, 45 Class Softball Team 3, 4. Fordham University little boy wiz a very red face-puff, puff-his muzzer is a full-blooded American Indian, What is wrong wiz ze little boy? Winter wore on, the sun hid behind snow clouds for 1 r E RALPH EDWARD PIKE 19 Richard St., Cranston, R. I. Charity Hospital of Louisiana, New Orleans AKK 1, 2, 3, 4. Providence College, Rhode Island CLEMENS E. PROKESCH cfo H. L. Brooks, 170 Linden St., New Haven, Conn. Queens General Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4, American Association for the Advancement of Science 1, 2, 3, 4. Yale University Massachusetts Institute of Technology M.S. FRANK PRUST A R.R. No. 1, Simcol, Ontario, Canada two whole months. The heavy winter underwear was beginning to stand on its own merits when March came in and with it the spring thaw. Suddenly it began to rain, there were Hoods in New England, the dog Harper Hospital, Detroit, Michigan Phi Chi 5, 4, Carnival Committee 3, 4. Rutgers University I MARION AGATHA PUSZCZ 10 Trinity St.-, Yonkers, N. Y. St. Mary's Hospital, Rochester Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4, Psychiatry Club 1, 2 Glee Club 2, Senior Ball Committee 1, Class Secj retary 1. Fordham University JOHN QUIN, JR. 164 E. Hamilton Ave., Flint, Mich. Indiana University Medical Center Phi Alpha Gamma 2, Phi Chi 3, 4. Hamilton College RICHARD ALLEN RAFFMAN 4 Pope Rd., Paterson, N. J. Paterson General Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4, Fleur-O-Scope 1, 2 3, Editor 4, Contin Society 5, 4. Williams College B.A. surgery lab was like the cave beneath Niagara Falls. Jose Saurez spread his coat on Lexington Ave., Raleigh- like, for his wife-to-be, Carmen Castro, and the winter was gone. Wlien we went home for Easter with only seven weeks left until exams, the first early birds were out looking for worms. Now dawned the day of reckoning. With combine notes sorted out, at last we settled down to study our 32 courses for the 52 or so exams scheduled. QNO one has ever determined accurately exarlly how many exams there are in junior yearj. We were almost too busy to notice the passage of the first peacetime draft act in U. S. history, although we'd Probably all be affected eventually. After much acrimonious debate, Congress also passed the European Recovery Act, popularly known as the Marshall Plan, It was around then that people began to see the flying saucers. We felt like little men trapped on the island of Park Avenue as exams flew by us on all sides, leaving us alive and well, but unable to figure out how or why. Finally on june 4th, having been soundly buffed from E. N. T. to Proctology, exams ended. We dragged our- selves to the Senior Ball simply because we'd' already paid for tickets and then slunk off home to try to pre- pare for our two remaining National Boards which came in two weeks. The Boards were an anti-climax, being only two in number and a whole day apart. We did our best and then, much relieved, went home for the last three-month vacation most of us would ever have. ARTY SHEARN, Bernie Batt, B. B. Blackman, Abe Yahia and Bernie Levowitz went to Otis- ville to study chest diseases. Bob Massonneau, Joe Voy- tek, Harold Nelson and other Army boys did some drilling in the hot Texas sun. Ralph Pike took a trip 1 l I to Mexico and California and P, C. Zanger bandaged cuts and bruises at the Boy Scout Ten Mile River Camp.. World events moved forward in great strides that summer. Thomas E. Dewey and Harry S. Truman were nominated to run for the presidency and the Berlin blockade with its now famous air l.ift began late in june. In September, the class met briefly at registra- tion to exchange stories and pick up schedules then silently melted away to hospitals in the five boroughs of New York and overseas to New Jersey. To exotic inaccessible places like City Hospital where Dr. Hirshchorn is said to have done rectal autopsies in his interne years, to the Met with its famous Acid Fast Cafe, to Morrisania in the beautiful Bronx, to improbable places on Public Health like Consolidated Edison and R. H. Macy's, to Willard Parker for con- tagious diseases and to scenic Hudson County for Ob- stetrics at Margaret Hague we journeyed. What with the new ten-cent subway and seven-cent bus fares, senior year became quite an expensive proposition. That year we worked up our own cases, legitimately. Bob Richmond successfully diagnosed a case of aplastic anemia in spite of the opposition of almost the entire F. F. A. house staff. Doug Ford and Mort Goldfarb ran a whole surgical ward at City, all of us lanced boils and prescribed diets in preparation for things to come. October 15th, the internship applications went out. Hospital exams turned up lulu questions like the level of Strontium in spinal fluid and the amount of potas- sium in a quart of boiled milk. Then came November 15th, the day of revelation and we realized with mixed emotions that the end of our formal medical education was in sight. With Joe Root going back to Orange, Calif., Bill Bradley to Tacoma, Wash., john Egan, Houston, Texas, Stu Weiss, New Orleans, La., Vince Navarre to Milwaukee, Wis., and Burt Covert to Port- land, Maine, it seemed that the class would scatter to the four winds whence it came. - In November, jim Bowes' Carnival Committee whipped up a great Gold Rush Days display. Most everyone turned up as a cowpuncher or can can artiste to help put the Student Loan Fund over the top. Rafliing off a Ford '49er proved by far the most successful money raising stunt tried yet. Al Beyer spent the best two bits of his life when he bought the winning ticket and rode home in the new car with a 33300 scholarship in his pocket. Also in November came the most surprising election in the memory of living man when Truman defeated Dewey and the Democrats regained control of both House and Senate. Babe Ruth died and Al Capp's P ll Mp, A 1 '-wifi! '-- I W 15155 'Fl 'f If pl . . F'j l l '2 4s L4-51 '1.g V 1 ' 1 -1 ' il, lf, I bf I, lt' A 1 I' Wu ' mf V, 11,1 lf 1 . ,.. ' If M 1 I 1 f 1 1 I 1, ' IH I 9 ll' Q4 , I ! I g.. ,r .1 1 55, 11,1 'Q 1 , I' 1 1! I' D' ' I f lf' if as ' M I f 1, , 1' 1 ' , 15. 14121 L ff: M' lil' N 1, Q 4 I' ,-. th ,HO ff HA P l 4! P' k ' ffflf H1 'C My 1 w . r 1 r ' 'W I 111 U ,f 1 1- f11.1 ' Mr H' HENRY G. REINHARDT St. Vincents Hospital Phi Chi, Contin 4. Dartmouth College A.B. ROBERT RICHMOND 47 Maplewood Ave., Milford, Conn. Indiana University Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana Basketball 2, 35 AKK 3, 4. University of Connecticut VIRGINIA MARIE ROONEY 3440 92nd St., jackson Heights, N. Y. St. Vincents Hospital shmoos were the rage of smart societ Dizz Gil Y- Y ' lespie and Be Bop reached New York and the A. M. A. levied a 31325 tax on all its members to fight the pro- posed national health insurance plan. Children's Christmas Toys 2, 3, Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. D'Youville College i l The class party down at Hans jaeger's came after JOSEPH LEWRY ROOT, III 215 American Ave., Long Beach, Calif. Orange County Hospital., Orange County, Calif. Whittier College, Calif. JANET RUZZIER 215 East 69th St., New York, N. Y. Metropolitan Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4, Glee Club 2, Psychiatry Club 1, 2, 3, Carnival Committee 2, 4. ' Hunter College THOMAS F. SANTILLI Philadelphia General Hospital Yale University B.S. Thanksgiving. George Pelebecky made the arrange- ments and because not everyone showed up the beer flowed like borscht on May Day. l At Christmas we dragged our tux and tails out of the moth balls to dance at the Ritz Carlton. The seniors rallied around to toast newly engaged Frank Begen and his fiancee. Tom Santilli, Tom Greenlees, Hank Rein- 58 J. H. SERGEANT, JR. 39-61 65th St., Woodside, N. Y. Mary Immaculate Hospital, Jamaica, N. Y. Phi Alpha Gamma 1, 2, Treasurer 2, Phi Chi 3 Treasurer 33 I.F.C. 3, 4. Haverford College, Penna. MARTIN A. SHEARN 2333 Grand Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Bellevue 4th Med. Division, N. Y. U. Fleur-O-Scope 4, Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4 Ohio University BETTY PINELES SIMONS 128 Central Park South, New York, N. Y. Lebanon Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 43 Psychiatry Club 2. New York University ANNE T. SMITH 308 Pondfleld Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. St. Vincents Hospital Alpha Epsilon Iota 3, 4. Vassar College BERNARD SPECTOR 2509 Avenue X, Brooklyn, N. Y. Beth-El Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. johns Hopkins University RUTH H. STRANG 128 Toilsome Hill Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. Flower-Fifth Ave. Hospital Class Secretary 2, 3, 4, Glee Club 2, Annual Dance Committee 3, Chairman 4, Carnival Com- mittee 4g AEI President 5, Executive Committee 4. Wellesley College hardt, Bob Richmond, Ralph Pike, Ed Ferguson and Katie Gardner were among the revelers. What started off as a quiet evening wound up as a rip roaring event after the Christmas cheer had warmed the attendings. Only the two-week Christmas vacation which followed could serve to restore the aplomb of the practicing senior medical student. With january came the cold wet winter known only to New Yorkers. Rheumatic fever weather with its ac- companying epidemics of U. R. I. had the boys hop- ping on Pediatrics and Medicine. Icy streets kept the Orthopedics and fracture services busy while something new was added in an epidemic of virus disease, which Leo Nolan promptly managed to contract. In january, Premier Tojo and other japanese war criminals were hanged. President Truman gave the nation the principal tenets of his new Fair Deal' 'program and on january 20th was inaugurated for his first elected term. Television, which had by then appeared in in- terne quarters and bar rooms all over the East, came fully into its own when the East-West cable to Cleve- land was opened. Milton Berle was quite the rage and it was realized that television in the parlor was a stronger deterrent to study than the children upstairs or the crap game down the hall. The weather turned so warm and mild after Ground Hog day that our thoughts heavily turned to National Boards which had been announced for April 25 and 26. Absenteeism began to increase as we realized that there was a helluva lot of exam worthy medicine that had slipped through our fingers during the junior year. How to start an i. v. and how to treat an upper res- piratory infection may be important skills to the clinical clerk but the National Board of Medical Examiners had been more interested in ill-defined abdominal masses, the pathogenesis of Kimmelstiel Wilson's Disease and descriptions of the Arnold Chiari Syndrome, according to the little blue books we bought from Miss Yohannen. The time for Cecil and Christian-Osler had passed and we offered up many a hosannah to the creator of our previously much maligned and ill-used set of combine notes. - St. Valentine's Day passed with barely a cardiac flut- ter. On Washington's Birthday, we cut clinics legiti- mately. With spring the detail men returned to the ever-fertile helds of Flower senior medical students to distribute samples and sell books. Cigarettes, antacids, salves, pastes and anti-histaminics were distributed with great abandon. The salesmen from Prior proved more irresistible than Betty Grable in a French bathing suit and even joe Linsk bought a copy of Tice. Bob Wolfe didn't. Miss Yohannan collected S515 for National Board fees, Dr. Slobody wanted a dollar for Willard Parker gowns and the front office was demanding six pounds of flesh for unpaid Fleur-O-Scope fees, all of which left everyone too broke to have much fun over Easter vacation, as if such would have been possible with National Boards looming so large on the horizon. We spent the time gathering our forces for the onslaught to COITIC a week after our return to school. The three-day hiatus of school between Easter vaca- tion and our study period was strictly a lost cause. With graduation from college and future licenses to practice at stake, three afternoons at the O. P. D. paled to in- signihcance. Suddenly we were face to face with the end of twenty years of formal education. An almost unbroken series of semesters and final exams stretched out behind us. Beyond the Boards was graduation. And so we came to the end of our days. Time had passed, we had passed, and next year we'd all be doc- tors. School had been a four-year period of conversion and reconversion. Our college had grown and prospered even as we watched fQueens and Morrisania became affiliatedj. We had entered school in a post war period and graduated into an era of atomic energy and im- pending national health legislation. The East-West .cg-5 'T J QR gm fr- A aj? Y Pg ,I vw, CARMEN CASTRO SAUREZ Box 176, Catano, Puerto Rico Municipal City Hospital, San Juan, Puerto Rico Alpha Epsilon Iota 2, 3, 4. Chestnut Hill College, Phila., B.S. JOSE F. SAUREZ Box 176, Catano, Puerto Rico Municipal City Hospital, San juan, Puerto Rico Phi Chi 1, 2, 3, 4. Columbia University JOSEPH VOYTEK 5605 Baring St., Philadelphia, Penna. Walter Reed General Hospital p schism had become an unbridgable chasm and the fu- ture was at best uncertain. But for all that we take with us the memory of Dr. Evans' skull cap, Dr. Hayner's Bull Durham, of nine o'clock lectures, the one o'clock Phi Chi 3, 4. Bucknell University WILLIAM PAUL RVAGNER 108-31 68th Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. Queens General Hospital Phi Alpha Gamma 2, Phi Chi 3, 4, Judge Advo- cate 3, 4. Columbia University STUART A. WEISS 175-27 Wexford Terrace, jamaica, N. Y. Southern Baptist Hospital, New Orleans, La. Phi Chi 3, 4. University of Rochester WILLIAM ALBERT WHYLAND Schaghticoke, New York Albany Hospital, Albany, N. Y. Phi Chi, Newman Club, Carnival 2, 3, 4, Softball 1, 2, 3, Basketball 1, 2. Hamilton College boat to the Met, bridge in the lounge, lunch in the cafeteria, snacks in the tea room and cocktails at the Croydon. The Carnivals, dances, social affairs, fraternity meetings, the outstanding lectures and interesting cases PETER J. WICK T R.F.D. No. 2, Ridgefield, Conn. iNorwalk Hospital, Norwalk, Conn. Phi Chi 3, 4, Fleur-O-Scope Photography Staff 2 5, 43 Softball 2, 3, 4, Basketball 3, 45 Carnival 3 Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio ROBERT CAMERON WOLFE La Anna, Penna. Presbyterian Hospital-, Philadelphia, Penna. Glee Club 2, 5, Hobby Show 3. Princeton University WILLYS LEE WOODWARD Forest Ave., Fulton, N. Y. convinced us that the slow transition from green ma- terial to a finished product capable of going out to really learn medicine had been a process not devoid of pleas- ant moments and fond memories. Toledo Hospital, Toledo, Ohio I Glee Club 2, 55 Basketball 2, 35 Phi Chi 3, 4. Duke University PERCY C. ZANGER 655 W. 16orh St., New York, N. Y. Kings County Hospital Class President 1, 2, 3-, 4, Student Senate 1, 2, 3, 4 President 4, Carnival Committee 1, 2, 5, 4, I. F. C Dance Committee 2, Phi Delta Epsilon 1, 2, 3, 4 Chancellor 2. Emory University ABRAHAM YAHIA 1489 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Metropolitan Hospital American University of Beirut B.A. 1945 y 4 Cor et lllamw OR ET MANUS, founded in 1948 by a group of interested alumni, is an organiza- tion designed to grant recognition to students who have 'rendered outstanding service and revealed a real loyalty and deep devotion to the aims and objectives of this College. Nine students of the class of 1948 were selected and honored at the Annual Ball in june 1948. This year eleven members of the class of 1949 were chosen. Scrolls were presented to them by Dr. Frank Borelli on the occasion of the Dean's Birthday Party. A Cor et Manus bronze plaque on which will be inscribed the names of the organization's members has been erected in the College. Members for 1949 are: Robert Bethje Mefle Ingfaham james E. Bowes Jggeph Noya William R. Bradley Stanley B. Covert john F. Egan Eugene T. Hupalowsky Pefcl' C- Zangef Richard A. Raffman Ruth H. Strang 65 Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital HE clinical facilities of New York Medical College are many and varied, and offer the students, both under- graduate and graduate, tremendous opportunities for observ- ing all types of disease. Both outpatient and ward instruction is given by members of the clinical faculty in these associated institutions. The future for clinical instruction is brightened by the recent announcement that the New York Medical College has been chosen to staff the new Chronic Disease Hospital on Welfare Island. There is also the prospect of a new Municipal Hospital to be constructed on the mainland in the east Nineties. The addition of these two hospitals to the dozen hospitals already affiliated with the Medical Col- lege, will place our clinical facilities at a peak never before realized in the history of the College. Clinical Instruction, by members of the faculty, is provided in the following hospitals: Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals Metropolitan Hospital, Department of Hospitals, City of New York City Hospital, Department of Hospitals, City of New York Morrisania Hospital, Department of Hospitals, City of New York Margaret Hague Maternity Hospital, jersey City, N. J. Manhattan State Hospital, New York State Department of Mental Hygiene r Willard Parker Hospital, Department of Hospitals, City of New York East Harlem Health Center, Department of Health, City of Welfare Island Dispensary New York Queens General Hospital, Department of Hospitals, City of New York Beth David Hospital, New York City Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitorium, Otisville, New York Sea View Hospital, Staten Island, N. Y. Main Building, Manhattan State Hospital .- 1 'Ifi f'i': ' J I .I Pi ' f , 1 Y I ' i s 1 . .-- . , t 66 Staff House-Willard Parker Hospital cle o I lnlfd Seaview Hospital dfjiliativnn East Harlem Health Center X Beth David Hospital Kool: Three CITY HOSPITAL 0 PENED in 1852 as the Charity Hospital for care of the city's indigent sick, the original building on Blackwell's Island Qnow Welfare Islandj burned down in 1865. In 1870 a new four-storied ucommodious granite edifice was erected on the present location of the City Hospital. This hospital of 880 beds, averaging 11,898 admissions last year, has one of the oldest and most noble records of medical teaching in the country. The out-patient department holds clinics at the Welfare Island Dispensary at east Eightieth Street, alternating with the Metropolitan Hospital staff. lin ll ,f If W SSW-'W W ! If- .mx xx Y ' ' Q 'F'- ,f - lf f x + .- .- fl ' .gggxg .L ,.11.,Lg, 4.1 -, ,, A, .5,k-.Q,.,-,g..w.Q,:,,., ,, ,W M. , ..,. . -',. 4 - ,,....--...4L ML, 'Lag M ,gfiggi 1, gm' gif univr N broad sunlit meadows at last, after two years of bewildered groping through dark, treacherous jungles! The never-ending pressure and worry of the first and second years gave way to a placid and care- free existence richly spiced with the variety of more than lebenty-leben clinics and some twenty-odd courses taught by an even greater number of instructors and professors who had apparently forgotten that most effec- tive stimulus to learning-the examination. Although quizzes were a rarity, conferences certainly were not, but, the self-indicting I don't know of previous years was replaced by deft evasion of the subject and substi- tution of almost revelant knowledge recalled from pre- vious years or casually gleaned from pharmaceutical blot- ters. We had become fairly conversant with medical terminology and could understand all the instructors most of the time, but some of the sophomoric confu- sion that still lingered was well demonstrated by the serious answer Dr, Freud received to his questions as to the etiology of meconium ileus in infants- XVhy, er, the baby gets it from eating meconium! Unscheduled study hours that cropped up before and after clinics, and during those not infrequent hours when instructors were too busy saving lives and mak- ing millions to come to lectures, were filled with the happy sounds of riflling bridge decks and slurping of tea room coffee. Interest in extra-curricular activities surged to a new high, whether from an actual desire to participate or whether from the less laudable desire to fill in the gap next to the yearbook pictures in the graduation issue. The midnight oil Hickered low dur- ing the social year and for many it brought a reawak- ening to the joys of feminine companionship and its questg while to others of us, already shackled, it re- vealed the gratifying fact that our wives had waited for us. DAVID PLOTKIN Prefidelzl The Voting Class of '50, in a turbulent class elec- tion early in the year, awarded the presidency to Dave Plotkin, the vice-presidency to Justin Scheer and named Marty Berrigan and John Lukacs its class senators. Kathy Serra became secretary and forthwith contacted most of the pharmaceutical companies with the result that we have the rather dubious pleasure of receiving their torrent of literature years before they would nor- mally have picked up our scent. Slim Somers was treasurer for the third successive year despite rumors that he was keeping double records. Little did we know what was in store when we voted to assess each member of the class five dollars for combine notes. For months we were deluged with folders of mimeographed lecture and conference notes until we searched wild-eyed for a place to keep the mounting heaps. The money was well spent, however, for it reduced the consumption of ink, the incidence of writer's cramp, and the seriousness of occasional cutting, and, certainly the original investment could easily be recovered from the sale of the notes to any junk dealer for scrap paper. Boredom was impossible with clinics every day. There we put to use the things we had learned and were learning and discovered that there was even more to learn. With mixed feelings of compassion for the pa- tient and exasperation at our inability to speak Spanish, we gleefully tapped, listened, prodded, and occasion- ally shrieked delightedly when we discovered a mur- mur or made a correct diagnosis on our own. Aside from an appreciation of the enormity of the city and a working knowledge of New York's transportation sys- tem in getting to and from the Met, Queens General, Manhattan State, and the 80th Street Clinic, the ex- perience we garnered from these visits was invaluable. Each day imprinted indelibly on our minds at least one and usually many more practical bits of informa- tion and clinical pictures that words are so inadequate to describe, Lest our successors be prematurely lulled into a dan- gerous complacency, we must add that the third year demands its share of study. The storm clouds on the horizon hold promise of ia day of reckoning more ter- rible than the finals of previous years. The opportuni- ties for observation and study were provided in abun- dance by conscientious instructors, who guided rather than pushed, and those students who availed themselves fully of all that was presented will undoubtedly reap rich rewards. It was a good year and we look forward impatiently to the senior year which, as our predecessors report, hold even more of the fascination of this won- derful thing of which we are becoming a part. Bramwell Ronald Anthony ............ Forman Theof Bailey, Jr .........,.... Paul Charles Balze ........,............... John Francis Barr ............. Doris Bate ................................................... William Frederick Bauer, Jr ........,.. Martin Robert Benjamin ...............,. Saverio Salvatore Bentivegna ..........,. Elmar Bernard Berngartt ........,. Martin Vincent Berrigan ......... Mildred Virginia G, Black .... Donald Jay Blodgett ...,............... Albert Ferdinand Bonan ............ Edward Charles Bressler ........... Lucille Leonarda Burns .............. ..... Rosemarie Adeline Cantor ..... Beverly Francis Carlyle ................................... Alfred John Casagrande, Jr ........,.... .... David Holmes Chafey ............,.. John Francis Cohane ............... N. .........INew Dorp, N. Y. ...........Asbury Park, N. J. ...................Allentown, Pa. ..........Norwich, N, Y. .............Br0oklyn, N. Y. Orange, N. J. ..............Brooklyn, N. Y. ...-..........Brooklyn, N. Y. .......................Baltimore, Md. ...........New Rochelle, N. Y. ................Neponsit, N. Y. ..............Watertown, N. Y. ..............Brooklyn, N. Y. ..................Teaneck, N. J. York, N. Y. Y. .Kew Gardens Hills, N. Y. River, N. J. ............Bay Head, N. J. ...........New Haven, Conn. Jolm Coniaris ............................ ............................ N ewark, N, J. Noel Lawrence Conrade ............. .......... R ockville Centre, N. Y. Bernard Lewis Conte ............... ........... N ew Haven, Conn. Frank K. Corbett, Jr .......... ................... S l'lClf0l'l, Conn. LeRoy Curtis ......................... ,............ P aterson, N. J. Stanley John Czepiel ...................... ,............. P aterson, N. J. Seney John B. deYoanna ............... ............................. B rooklyn, N. Y. James Matthew Dobbins, Jr. Gertrude Victoria Erikson ....... Simeon Lubell Feigin ...............,... Joseph Michael Fidanza ............. Andrew Thomas Furey ............... William Edward Gatlin ............. Jolm William Geoghegan ...... David Diego Giardina ........... Arthur Emanuel Gillman .......... John Dietrich Gossel, Jr ........... Carl Gottschalk ............................. Michael Green ........................... Hugo Joseph Gruendel ........... Thomas Paul Halky .............. Harriet Faith Hanley ............... Hillard Wheeler Himes ............ Eugene Chamberlin Hohenstein .............. Vivian Clara Hughes .............................. Ann Gibson Keill ................. Paul Joseph Kingston ............ Paul Carl Koether ............ Josef Ivan Kolenski ....... . ............... . Norman George Konicoff .............. Francis Edwin Korn, Jr ............. Long Island City, N. Y. Oakland, Calif. York, N. Y. ...............New York, N. Y. ..............Brooklyn, N. Y. ..........Bronxville, N. Y. ............Providence, R. I. ............New Haven, Conn. ...............Woodmere, N. Y. ...............New York, N. Y. York, N. Y. ..............Newark, N. J. York, N, Y. ............New Rochelle, N. Y. Indiana York, N. Y. ..............Westfield, N. J. ..............New York, N. Y. .............East Orange, N. J. ..............East Hartford, Conn. ..........New York, N. Y, ..............Brooklyn, N. Y. ..............Brooklyn, N. Y. ............Durham, Conn. Verne Gerald La'l'ourrette lr 1 . Peoria, Ariz Paul Vincent Leone ,....4................... .,.,....... I .awrc-nce, Mass Marvin Arthur Linder '......,.... .......... l Brooklyn, N. Y Kathleen Anita Livingston ......,.. .,.,....,., N ew York, N. Y Henry Lubow ,.......,..........,......,..... ..,, ...... N e w York, N. Y john Andrew Lukacs ................,.. .,,........ N ew York, N. Y David Hellyer Lukens, Il ......,..... ..,. ........,. I 3 lheron, N. ,I- Alice Ittner Macaulay .,....,....,.... ,.......... M anhasset, N. Y. Philip Anthony Marraccini ...,,... ............, N ew Dorp, N. Y. George joseph Marshall ....... ,,,... Virginius Dante Mattia, jr ....... Harold Thomas McDonald, j .. .... Providence, ..........,....Newal'k, ,,.........Glenb rook, Hugh Patrick McGrade ...............,....... ........,., N ew York. jolm Palmer Miller '..........,....,.. ......... C ollingswood, john Philip Murphy ,.,...,................,. ,........... M t. Vernon. Alphonse Thomas Mysiewicz ...,......... ......... I Srooklyn, Benjamin Nicotri ......................,......,... .......... N ew York, Robert Wfilliam Niehaus .......... R. I. N. ,I. Conn. N. Y. N. j. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. .........Cincinnati, Ohio Nlorton Robert Omin .............., ,-.---- I -.NUW Yflflii Wfilliam Vincent Palluotto ..,.,..... ........,.. N ew Haven, Albert joseph Paul ..............,.... joseph Peter Petrus ......... David Plotkin ......................,,.,........... Leonard Morton Rapoport ...,... .. john Salvatore Reach .................,. . Audrey Genevieve Regan ............. john Pendas Ryan ..,.........,,........ Robert Lehlang Samilson .....,...., Harold Christian Schaefer ........... justin Scheer .........................,.......... Robert Morrill Schumann .......... Aaron Maurice Schwartz ,.... . .......,. .. Philadelphia, Pa. .........,New York, . ,... ....... j amaica, .......Philadelphia, Pa. ..........New York, Elmhurst, Forest Hills, ,...,.....'l'arrytown, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Conn. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y, N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Y .............,.Brooklyn, N. . N, Y. New York, N. Y, Y .........New York, N. . Michael Harding Scoppetuolo ......., .,...................' N ewa rk, Catherine Gilda Serra. ,.,, ............. john Francis Shea ....................... Rudolph Delroy Shoucair '.......... Ralph Eugene Snyder '.........,. Wfilliam Hill Somers ....... james Henry Spillane ,,....... . David Howard Spodick ,....,.. . Norman M. Stollel '.........,.. Charles Louis Swarts .......... . Donald Rice Thurston .........,... Estelle Traurig ................................, Alexander George Vongries ..... Thomas Hunt Wzllkei '.......,...... Mortimer Weinbe1'g ........... Bernard Viva Wetclmlei '............ ,Ioseph Robert Wlwelaln ........... . Gregory jolm Zann ....,......, Milton Manuel Zaret ............ Wlilliam john Zehrung.: ............. New Rochelle, N. J. N. Y. Y Richmond Hill, N. . Y ............,New York, N. . ,. ...... Herkimer, N. Y, ........,...Salisbury, Conn. Phillipsburg, N. J. . .,....... Hartford, Conn. New York, N, Y. ...............Chicagmw, Ill. ,....Pasadena, Calif. New York, N. Y. . New York, N, Y V ......Co1'nwall, Conn. New York, N. Y. .............Rego Park, N. Y. . .,.,,... Brooklyn, N. Y. ...,.......Brooklyn, N. Y 1 .......,..,.......Passaic, N. I. New York, N. Y, i, Soph vmvreA HIS much-publicized soph year is really a snap and don't permit anyone to tell you differently. Now that I have learned to write with both hands simul- taneously I feel capable of coping with this opus and maintaining a flunking average in 23 subjects. just this morning the senior ghoul, er, I mean edi- tor, of the yearbook forced me to cancel my afternoon golf game with the reminder that the deadline for con- tributions is upon us. Contribution, he calls it! Ha! Well, I smiled graciously, biting my upper plate in half, and fell upon the task. When I awoke, it occurred to me that a work of this sort should reflect for posterity the outstanding characteristic of the sophomore group -which is simply that it is composed of 124 walking anomalies. With that idea Hxed in my last viable grey cell, I turned to my diary which I faithfully kept up- to-date every evening at 4 A. M. after perusing my notes on sewage disposal. Sept. 20, 1948: Upon entering the favorite back door fthe one with the air-pressure lockj and being greeted with the mad rush for the elevator, I was abruptly re- minded that the beer party was over and the grind had begun. Sept. 22: Watched with amazement as the arrival of Foley's charcoal burner shattered the early morning se- renity. As it limped to a halt, Delehanty leaped out and anchored the four wheels to the nearest no parking sign. Sept. 23: Hear that Edan Watchmaker Keith is about to complete a 4000-page work on the art of circumlocution. Sept. 29: The master group in Pharm under the lead- ership of Commander Nelson is determining the ani- mal death rate for Tuesdays this year. Sept. 30: Art Daddy Silverstein amazed Dr. Salz- man with his Why don't they do an anterior episiot- omies? Oct. 6: During class elections Fox was nominated for secretary and nearly pulled a Truman. Oct. 12: Dr. Lillick offered Franklin, Medico and Deutsch a job conducting the quiz sections in Bact. Oct. 14: Don McCaughey developed a process for purifying water by dessication. Oct. 18: Amid all kinds of confusion, Dr. Ayres gave us the junior lecture. Learned of the perils of Bailey Beach. Oct. 19: Deutsch expressed his concern to Dr. Rosen- baum about the homosexuality of the ancient Greeks. Oct. 21: T. Terranova livened up Pharm lec- ture when Kass insisted upon knowing if the tempera- ture drop in anesthesia was measured in centrigade or Z THOMAS ARMOUR President Fahrenheit. Terry, when he had disposed of Kass, delivered a sharp blow to Bogucki's medial malleolus which caused him to suffer from acute insomnia the rest of the hour. Oct. 24: Pathology course started over-maybe we can learn it the second time around. Even Foley is hav- ing trouble: he did a Friedman test on a male rabbit and couldn't End the ovaries. Oct. .291 Deutsch insisted that Brunhilde explain why primary syphilitic lesions aren't found on the leg. This problem has bothered him since he worked in the Navy dispensary and he wants to know. Nov. 5: Observations at the Carnival: 1. The soph girls predominate in the chorus line. 2. McCormack swooned when kissed by Alice Ente. 5. Soph boys serving beer-must have been 70 proof, 4. Wonder how Bob McCann's car got lost? Nov. 6: Day after Carnival: No more 70 proof.. going back to Marihuana. Nove. 10: Fox's diarrhea gave the soph clinicians a bad time. After enumerating some of the symptoms of food poisoning, he changed his mind, He wanted Typhoid. With a grade at stake he pulls a fast one. Tsk. Nov. 17: Embarrassing moments in Physical Diag. nosis. Dr. Leinoff discovered: Lorenc didn't know the color of his socks, Chemris couldn't tell him the num- ber of buttons on his shirt. He now knows there are 8. Bact. exams returned. Discovered I wasn't the only one who didn't include a sterile syringe and needle. Nov. 25: Two Words Glassman looked forward to Physical Diag. for a year. Today they put the girls in another room. Dec. 1: Deutsch extremely worried about turtle bites. Schlussel wondering whether the little live crustacea which you eat can multiply in the gut. Dec. 2: Rita Giralomo and Alta Goalwin studying OB by having a Shirley Temple doll born through the rim of a hat. ,Iacobinski pondering what can happen at term in Pseudocyesis. Dec. 4: Silverstein taking a bact. exam while his wife was having a baby. That paper should be good reading. Dec. 11: Glassman believes that the process of sterli- zation kills the bacteria both dead and alive. Unfor- tunately, Dr. Lillick doesn't agree with him. Maybe he can solve the mystery of joe nature boy Pisarik's stomach. Dec. 16: Charlie I'll blow your house down Rob- bins isn't the only one who is running. There's a differ- ence: he runs through the park while the rest of us run in circles. jan. 3: Milton Smith, the recognized authority on aureomycin, is helping Don jones look for the testis Ctse-tsej Hy. Jan. 4: Gibbs mistook an analeptic drug for one given annually on the recent pharm exam. Kritz, how- ever, got a rise out of Borrelli with his fecal impac- tion in the Circle of Willis. Jan. 12: Schlussel brought Anchovy paste and crack- ers to Rifkin during lecture for the sake of science- couldn't let Phil starve. Jan. 13: Chuck Dr, Schuffnern Lanzieri, the ac- cepted authority on malaria in the back row, seemed to have a little difiiculty with vivax on a recent test. Jan. 14: Event of the season-Blake shaved his mus- tache off and gave it to Bob Baird. , jan. 15: Circuit Judge Armour interrupted the class during a 3-hour exam in Pathology to take a vote. The question- whether or not we should take a vote. Jan. 18: Sign in Cafeteria: This is a cafeteria, not an Imholf tank. Says who? Jan. 50: Today we were introduced to Dr. Speer. I wish it were yesterday. I Feb. 10: Similia similibus currentur --or the best cure for a hangover is a whiskey sour. Feb. 15: Applied for a job to go to the wilds of Tannu Tuva. Must get directions from Evans. My sphygmomanometer is flashing a red light indi- cating that I'm approaching my word limit, So, amid rounds of applause I'll close my little black book. For three Wheaties box tops and 10c in stamps you may have a copy of the key. Arthur joseph Abelson ............... Margaret Adler ................................... Allan Brooke Ainley, jr ............ Franklin Strickland Alcorn ............. Milton David Alter .............................. Thomas Dixon Armour, jr ........... Loretta Azzaretti ................................. Robert William Baird ................... Frank Edward Barnes, jr ........... Henry William Blake, II ............... Howard Rodger Blight ................ Eugene john Bogucki .............. Roy Guerry Bowen ..................... Norman M. Brust .............................. Constance Millette Buncke ............ Harry Jacob Buncke, jr ........... ............South Orange, York, Vernon, ................Freeport, ...............New York, ...............New York, .................Jamaica, Albans, ...............Beechhurst, .............Scarsda1e, ..........Bridgeport, .............Newark, N. J. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. Conn. N. J. ............Hoopeston, Ill. ............Arverne, N. Y. .............Rumford, .............Rumford, Maine Maine John Kenneth Butler ............... ............. N ewark, N. J. Evelyn Mary Carrellas ........... ..................... N ewport, R. I, John Wellington Carrier ............ ............. M illinocket, Maine Marilyn Eileen Chasin ............. ........... N ew York, N. Y. Walter Mark Chemris ...,........ ............... E lizabeth, N. J. Lionel Chertoff .................... ............... B righton, Mass. Albina Angela Claps ....,..,... .......... N ew York, N. Y. Anthony John Colaneri .......... .... ........... J e rsey City, N. J. Constanin Cope ........................ ............... N ew York, N. Y. Stephen Stavros Cost ............... ............... S yracuse, N, Y. Edward James Davis ..................... ............. M t.'Vernon, N. Y. Donald William Delehanty .......... ............... F lushing, N. Y. Frederic Herbert Deutsch .......... ............... N ew York, N. Y. Albert Harold Dolinsky ............. ................ W insted, Conn. Alma C. Dotto ............................... .............. N ewark, N. J. Fred Erlo Eggers .................... ............. R idgefield, N. J. Walter Gustave Elliott ........... ............... N ew York, N. Y. Alice C. Ente ....................................... ........... B ridgeport, Conn. Thomas Raymond Foley, jr .......... ................ F lushing, N. Y. Irwin Fox ..................................,............. ...................... T renton, N. I. jean Francisco ..................................... .............. S taten Island, N. Y. Homer Hastings Franklin .............. ............... S taten Island, N. Y. Robert William Fredrickson ............. ................ N ew Britain, Conn. Gerald Ralph Frolow ........................ .......... W est New York, N. J. Paul Fuchs ......................................... ............... N ew York, N. Y. Alfred Leonard Gandler ............. .......... L archmont, N. Y. Martin joseph Gately .............. ............... N ew York, N. Y. Edward Gerber, jr ..................... .......... N augatuck, Conn. Raymond Weldon Gibbs ........... ............ R oslindale, Mass. Rita Frances Girolamo ............ .............. N ew York, N. Y. Irving Glassman ................. ...................,. W est Haven, Conn. Alta Tresa Goalwin ............. Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. jesse Greenwald ........................... ..............., F orest Hills, N. Y. Myron Bertram Harkavy ............ .............. B rooklyn, N. Y. Arthur Max Harrison .............. ............. N ewark, N, J. Herbert Hillemeir ....................... ............. B rooklyn, N. Y. Donald Harry Horsman .............. .......... A ugusta, Maine Joseph Philip jacobinski ............ ....,............... A masa, Mich. Mortimer -Iagust ................................ ..........,... N ew York, N. Y. William john Jameson, Jr ........... ............ S chenectady, N. Y. Kenneth Johnson, Jr ..................... ........... G reat Neck, N. Y. Donald Charles Jones ............. ............. B rooklyn, N. Y, Gerald Herbert Kass ............ ............. P ittsburgh, Pa. Eaden Francis Keith ........... ............. P awtucket, R. I. Robert Daniel Kelly ............ .............. N ew York, N. Y. Edgar Kogan ........,.......,.... Marion Lois Koomey '...,...,.. David Kritz ,.................,..,,,.,........,., Philip joseph Landry, jr ......... Robert Lane ..........,....,...........,......... Charles Henry Lanzieri ..,......,... Matthew IBenjamin Lesser ...... .............Newark, .,.........New York, .........New York, .......,..Cl1icopee, ......lBrooklyn, .......,,.Waterbu ry, ..,.,,......Hewlett, N. j. N. Y. N. Y. Mass. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Paul joseph LiIBassi .,.................... .......... N ew York, N. Y. Margaret Helen Lohrmann .... .........,.. W oodhaven, N. Y. Thomas Irwin Longworth ............. .......,.............. I thaea, N. Y. Theodore Lorem '.......................,. ......................,....,.., U nion, N. j, Maura josephine Lynch ..........,. ,........... W hite Plains, N. Y. George Martin Massell ,......,...... ............. I liehmond Hill, N. Y. Raymond john Maxwell ........... .,.........,....,... N ew York, N. Y. Robert joseph McCann ............, .Long Island City, N. Y. Donald james McCaughey ......,... .......,.... ......... I I oehester, N. Y, john Paul McCloy ,...............,,.............,. ,..,....... Q ueens Village, N. Y. john joseph McCormack, ji '......... .................,,..,, M alverne, N. Y Don Webster McCoy '.................. ........................., C anton, Ohio lBenson Richard McGann ..,..... .... .,.,......... ........... S 4 r n jose, Calif George Francis McVay ......... ............, I lichmond Hill, N. Y Rita Angela Medico ................. ................., N ew York, N. Y Irving Mehlman .........................,.... ......,.. I Brooklyn, N. Y, Henry Edward Milford, jr ......... ...........,...........,.., A menia, N. Y Meredith Montague, III ........... ............................. N ew York, N. Y William Arthur Mooney .........,. ....,....... S outh Ozone Park, N. Y Carver I.. Moosman .....,.,............,....,. ......,................... I Berkeley, Calif Raymond Edward Mortimer ........... ......... S taten Island, N. Y Ann Zaleska Moyes ............................... ..,,....... I Toi-est Hills, N, Y Robert Emmett Mulholland ............ ............. S taten Island, N. Y Philip Groesbeck Nelson ....... ............. I Brooklyn, N. Y Norman joseph Nichols ......,.... . ......... New York, N. Y Gertrude Martha Novak ........ .. ....,,..... New York, N. Y Robert Lee Nutt, sd .............. ................... N orfolk, Va Felicia Carolyn Paccione .......... ......,..,. N ew York, N. Y joseph Andrew Pisarik .......,...... .,....,,....... N ew York, N. Y joseph Aloysius Preston .......... ............ C lilTside Park, N. j Marie Dorothy Pulda ............. .................... B rooklyn, N. Y Robert Quinn Reynolds ................. ............ M anhasset, N. Y Charles Atkins Robbins, jr ............ ..........., A ndover, Conn joseph Philip Rossi .....,............... ........,... W oodside, N. Y Patrick Matthew Scalfaro ...... ,............... W oodside, N. Y Seymour Schlussel .......................,. .......... I Bort Chester, N. Y Frank Thomas Seonzo ..............., .....,.... I Brooklyn, N. Y john Edward Sheridan ............. ...,.,.... N ew York, N. Y William Irving Silvernail, ji '........ ................... S cotia, N. Y Arthur Lee Silverstein ...............,.... ............ I 'assaic, N. j Ray Milton Smith ......................... ............... S eattle, Wash Theodore Stevenson Smith ......... ........., N ew York, N. Y jacques Godfrey Squillaee .....,... .,.,,....,... I Brooklyn, N. Y Paul R. Sukovich, jr .........,...... ................... I Elizabeth, N. j Robert Elliott Svigals ........ ........... W arren Point, N. .I joseph Taubman ......................... ,............... l Brooklyn, N. Y Vernon Everette Thomas ,........ ........... H artford, Conn Charles Vincent Tierney .......... ........... N ew York, N. Y Paul Tucci .............................,..... .......... N ew York, N. Y Henry Thomas Uhrig ............ ............ W oodhaven. N. Y john julius Vagell, jr ............. .......... H ackensaek, N. j George Dean Vlahides ........ ............., l Brooklyn, N. Y Richard Fahy Wagner '.......... ........... S ag Harbor, N. Y IBernard Weiss ........................,.... ........... N ew York, N. Y Robert Hamilton White .......... ...,........,.................. C hester, Pa l.ouis Richard Ziegra, jr ............ .,..,........ D eep River, Conn X1 CD v ' ' f ' ' f .-ff f X, f I ' r xx X X Xi ?reAlaman CADAVER'S EYE VIEW FTER spending a quiet summer on my cool marble slab, 124 howling freshmen, each armed with a scalpel and a small library prescribed by Dr. Booklist, greeted me in the fall. The first week wasn't bad-I wasn't cut up as much as those around me and Hank Waive hadn't started to lean on my nose. They were an odd lot to this old body. When Dr. Hayner asked them about my femoral artery, they claimed to be study- ing embryology but when Dr, Benjamin asked for the development of the Portal vein, they were studying anatomy. Don Weissman tried to turn in Dr. Benja- min's laboratory coat but it was returned marked this could be any one of a thousand things. The freshmen were very nervous until Dr. House eased the tension with a few jokes. That lasted until the freshmen found that it was no joke. By the end of six weeks the embryo was supposed to have been hatched but from what I heard most of them just laid an egg. The leg was dissected with great care but no one dreamed of what mysteries were to lie near the hearts of men. i Boss Pendergast had a disciple at Flower as well as in the White House. Dick Calame organized a political party which swept him into class presidency. Other Calame-party candidates were defeated except for a one- vote plurality given Miss Hedda Hopper Flood Cask her to show you her hatsj, for secretary. Bob jones cunningly connived to take care of the money and Scotty Irwin was elected Vice-President. Senators Reit- nauer and Sullivan were also elected. Rumor has it that the 4 Musky Tars CPowers, Purcell, Polito and Reit- nauerj stuffed the ballot box, Dr. Evans had faith in the class, although I heard more than one freshman express doubt about that Sophomore Train. They didn't seem to realize that we cadavers were all there and we were not 9f10 anom- alies. The whole Class rejoiced when Stanley Wanlass brought back the borrowed bones. It had been said he was building a chamber of horrors to greet his bride, but that talk was ended the day he turned the bones in. Saturday mornings were very dull once Friday night rushing parties started. The stories I heard were weird. The girls drank spiked punch while boys guzzled beer, and the fraternities worked overtime to tell the mort jokes. RICHARD CALAME Preyidem' In '48-'49, pie became a concern nearly as great as the amount of reduction the cashier would give. The W. A. C.-R. O, T. C. had their eye on Chuck Karpos the moment they saw him toot his whistle. Other traditions may have fallen but the '52ers seemed to be jubilant about their basketball prowess. Captained by jack Cryan and with Dolores Fiedler as scorekeeper and cheer leader, the team had a good season. Robert Shick managed to meet Robert Shick and more than once I overheard which Robert Schick do you mean? The problem was solved, however, by call- ing one The Razor and the other The Blade. Toward the end of anatomy, I was a neglected ca- daver and real brainwork was begun. Charts seemed to predominate and Dr. Benjamin told the class to hurry up and make tracts. Dr. House received a tremendous ovation-he had run out of jokes-but examination papers indicated that he might have the last laugh. We cadavers didn't see the freshmen much after this but by this time we were all over, and I managed to piece together a partially complete picture, Physiology and Biochem began and freshmen were aware that many more fibers would have to be myleinated. Nicotine lov- ers began getting ulcers and the WABWCC fWednes- day afternoon Bird Watchers and Croquet Clubj in- creased its membership. Business meetings were held at the local pub after which the loyal members were salted by the tails of pigeons. Most freshmen were astonished and confused in the first physiology laboratory until they found out that the frogs were decorticated and nobody in the lab lisped. Slowly but surely, the freshmen began to grasp the material and even two electrodes--once or twice, and the sophomore train could be heard around the corner. At the advice of many sophomores the Fraser Fat Theory was learned the first week- never know when it'll be on a test, was the cry. The second semester showed many changes. Joe Ventimiglia overpowered his dog and got his books back, john Polito stopped trapping Sir Edwards, and the blackboards in 411 were painted. ' . It was nearly May before somebody washed a win- dow and saw that it was spring and the Sophomore Train was heading for the last few grades before tak- ing its new members on board. Certainly this crew, from this old cadaver's view, knows a great deal more than they did in September. A list of those to whom credit is due would be too lengthy but the freshmen are thankful and look hopefully to the unknown re- cesses of the Sophomore Limited. Ruth Adams ................,............ ........... S outh Euclid, Ohio Robert Hubert Balme ........... ....,................. S herrill, N. Y. Gordon Reaney Barrett ..................... ................... N ew Haven, Conn. Peter James Tillstone Beeton ............ ............. S tapleton, S. I., N. Y. Jean Audrey Binet ............................. ................ W ood-Ridge, N. J. Patricia Lowis Black ............. Lauretta Anne Blake ............ York, Upper Montclair, N, Y. N. J. Robert Phillip Bowen ............... ................... W aterbury, Conn, Addison James Burke ............... .............. N ew York, N. Y. Don Burman ................................ ............. N ew York, N. Y. Stanley Butler .............................. .................. B rooklyn, N. Y. John joseph Cahir ....................... ............ N ew York, N, Y. Richard Jerome Calame ............... ................. A storia, N. Y. Alexander Calder .......................... ...................... U tica, N. Y. joseph Richard Cally ................ ........... R ochester, N. Y. Claudia Elise Cambria .................... ............. N ew York, N. Y. Edwin Alexander Campbell ........... ............ P hiladelphia, Pa. Franklin John Carusone ............... .................... C ranford, N. J. Leonard Howard Charnelle ............ ...............,............ B rooklyn, N. Y. Thomas Patrick Connoly .............. ............. Q ueens Village, N. Y. Stanley james Conway ............... ............... N ew York, N. Y. Gabriel Albert Covo ............. ............. N ew York, N. Y. George james Criares .......... ............. N ew York, N. Y. john Philip Cryan .............. Harold Peter Curran .................. James Henry Davenport ................... Margaret Justine Delaney ........................... Dorothy Gloria A. DeLorenzo .........,.... Daniel Wallace Doctor ........................... ..............Rosedale, ..........Forest Hills, Vernon, ..............New York, ..............New York, York, Harold William Draffen, Jr ............... ............ K ew Gardens, John Lester Duffy .................................. Kenneth Jean Dumas ............... Edward Traylor Dunham .......... William Anthony Eddy .......... Sears Edwin Edwards ........... john Russell Eldridge .............. Dolores Elyse Fiedler ........... Dorothy Alice Flood ............. Frank Stephen Flor ................. Glenn Arthur Folmsbee ...............,..... ...............Northport, .........................jamaica, N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N. Y. N, Y. N. Y. N. Y. ...Miami Beach, Florida ..................Cleveland, Ohio ........Z......Hollrs, N. Y. .....................Trenton, .............Ridgewood, York, ....................Passaic, ..................Philmont, N. J. N. Y. N. Y. N. J. N. Y. James Bernard Turner Foster ............. .............. N ew York, N. Y. Robert Edward Gaffney ................. ............... B ridgeport, Conn. Yale Adolph Gerol ................ ............... N ew Rochelle, N. Y. Eleanor Elaine Griffin ............... ................. A rlington, Mass. Victor Goldin ................................... ............ N ew York, N. Y. Rosalyn Lila Greenwald ............... .............. N ew York, N. Y. Eugene Greider, Jr ....................,, ............. S taten Island, N. Y. Marvin Yaeger Hader ......................... .............. N ew York, N. Y. Margaret Elizabeth Hallock ........... ................. P ittsburgh, Pa. James Anthony john Harkins .......... ............. N ew York, N. Y. joseph Francis Hassenfratz, jr .............. ...................... B uffalo, N, Y. Robert joseph Healy ........................... .............. G arden City, N. Y. Walter john Henry ......................... .................. B rooklyn, N. Y. Vincent Chris Hinck ................................. .............. N ew York, N. Y. Thomas Sylvester Hogan, III ............. Norman Berry Hollingsworth .......... Edward john Homenick .................... james Thomas Hopkins, jr .......... Alexander Powell Hyde .............. James Paul Irwin ..................... Robert Bruce jones, jr ............ Charles Morris Karpas ........,.... ..................Liberty, N. Y. ......................Newark, N. J. York, N. Y, York, N. Y. .................Brookline, Mass. ...........New Rochelle, N. Y. ...............New York, N. Y. York, N. Y. Harvey Earle Kaye ........,...... Arthur Dillon Keefe ............. Francis Edward Kelly ............ Margaret Mary Kenrick ....,...,.... .........,.Brooklyn, rtford, .................Brooklyn, Long Island City, Andrew Matthew Kenlon .......,... .. .....,... Mount Vernon, Barbara Constance Kesicke ............. ..,..,.,........ R hinebeck, Raymond joseph Killian .,.....,....... ,..........,. I Babylon, Robert Brown joseph King 4.......... .....,... I Srooklyll. Bernard Klein .....................,,,.,.............,. Katharine Kranenburg ........... Peter Kurilecz, ji '.,.....,...,.......... Dickler Morton Langer .,...,..,... Edward Francis Lanigan ,,.. Harold Paul I-azar .................... Alfred Charles Levin .............. Carl Levinson ...........4.........,.......... Lois Carol Lillick ,,.......,.,.......,...... Frederick joseph Lowrey .,,,...,...,. Wzxlclcm Emerson Martin .....,...... Ernest Stephen Mathews. .,..,............ . William Bernard McCaH'erty ......,....... Daniel Patrick McCarthy ....,.,......,.... Gerard joseph McGrade ........... joseph Bernard Muenzen ...,......,, ...........Brooklyn, enafiy, ...........,Yonkers, N. N, Y. Conn. N. Y N. Y N. N. N. N. N. Y N- .I .........Pittsburgh, Pa .........,Stam ford, ........,.........Izllenville, ......Kew Gardens, York, .........,New York, .. ....... Man hattz .............Norfolk, ..........I.ockport, . ............ Enfield, ., ....... New York, ..,........New York, ...........Iiergenlield, Genevieve josephine Ney ..........,. .......,,...., R oosevelt, Vincent Anderson O'Brien ......,.. ............ G reat Neck, jean Edna Odenwald ................... joseph Michael Pasquarelli ..,.,.... Daniel Rubin Patrick, jr ......... Margaret Alice Peoples .....,. ............Oceanside, .......,...New York, ..........New York, ...........WiISl1IDQIOII, N. N. ,l N. N. N. ln, Conn. N. N. H. N. Y. N. N. N. N. Y. N. Y, N. Y. N. Y. D. C. Robert l.eSage Pierce ............. ................ M illburn, N. j. john Clarke Polito ...........,....... .......... 'I 'orrington, Conn. Edward Donald Powers ..,.......... .......... I irooklyn, N. Y, john Arjen Pruiksma ........,,,... ......... P aterson, N. j. Robert Edward Purcell ...,..........,...,......... ......... 'I 'renton, N. j. john Stanislaus Reitnauer, jr ................ .......... ' Fenafly, N. j. Robert Broadway Richardson, jr ............ ........... H artford, Conn. Theodore Young Rodgers, III ...,....,...,.. ............. I Jhiladelphia, Pa. Robert Schick ........................, 2 ................ ........... N ew York, N. Y, Robert Winton Schick .................... ........... H 'onkers, N. Y. Robert Williarlii Shackleford .......... ,........... I iochester, N. Y. Earl Lester Shook, jr ......,.............. .................. I iarberton, Ohio Edward Cranwell Sinnott ..........,.. .......... N ew Rochelle, N. Y. Dorothy Phyllis Sirullo .............. ..,.,....,.. M t. Vernon, N. Y. Samuel Solomon .....,..,...,............. ......... N ew York, N. Y, Arthur Glin Sullivan, ji '...,..... ............. I ,awrence, N. Y. Henry Herbert Swope, jr ............ ..,,...,,..... N ew York, N. Y. Edward Arthur Talmage .......... ,........... I -ake Mohawk, N. j. Paul Tartell ...................................... ..................... j amaica, N. Y. Seymour Tobin ............,............ ,............. I irooklyn, N. Y, Andrew V. Tramont ,.......... ....................... B ulfalo, N. Y. Kenneth Wells Trout ...,..,....., .........,... W hite Plains, N. Y. joseph Peter Tumblety ............. ...................... I Jelham, N. Y. joseph john Ventimiglia .............. ....................... Q ueens, N. Y. jolm Alonzo Voshurgh, jr ............. ................... W atervliet, N. Y, Henry john Waive ........,....,................... ............ Q ueens Village, N. Y. Stanley Adrian Wanlass, jr ........... .....,............,..... H arrison, N. Y. Franklyn Pennington Ward ............, .......... S taten Island, N. Y. Donald Rodney Weisiimaxn ......,...... ..,,....,. W aterbury, Conn. Willis john Wendler, jr ......... Diane Harriman Winston ............. Marie Therese Zipf .................. ..........Gibsonburg, Ohio .............Lexington, ...........Whitestone, Mass. N. Y, f 1 Koala flour QUEENS GENERAL HosP1TAL HIRD year students receive practical experience in Roent- genological Interpretation at this Hospital, while fourth year clinical clerks serve here in all branches of medicine and surgery. This institution is one of the newest hospitals in the Department of Hospitals, having been completed in 1939. Modern in every respect, it has a total of 757 beds. Last year there were 4,614 ambulance calls, 99,030 visits to the Out- patient Department, and 16,401 Hospitals admissions. E ri gleutffzlgr in vwfwhf 15 -:T . uiilflliilllill 4 I IH' ff -, l f- ,sul .---4-vm A. .if waz' M. ,J- -f - ln- ' rl , ' 'UQ 1- LH girl. '1 :V p -'isa 4 M 9-ig gin, 'fn ii, w'2,sVg-- Tl c.:f.i..'1 221. 'lk lin -fg fl? 1 EBV' 1 4511 -:I '.. in ii- illl,tL':.' ! . lf. 1 'YiWTfr7i'7!w iv-'f nf 11 LL V ull J li F ' ' un ug ,.,. ,K 1 G .wg asv' Q '- j',,'1,,ffM X ffm' F 'ill um ' if 11.1.23 yr v Sri in lli 1 .Q ...'.i.:i21 ' l'lIlQ1ir'l-' I Lv f'1 Hi.: e:.-..,TE ' I U.1lP.S7?lll' ' it -ill Ia. '- Q f V V' 5. 1.-1 ' -2 '.-'T W SENATE L. lu r.-Reitnauer, Bethje, Sullivan, Miss MacGrady, Zanger, Calame, Harkavy, Lukacs, Plotkin, Berrigan, Nelson. Senate ITH the termination of the 1948-49 session, the Student Senate completes twenty-four years of purposeful and fruitful endeavors on behalf of the stu- dent body of the college, Amidst stormy beginnings, this group, then called the Student Council, was intro- duced to the campus in 1925 to promote better under- standing between faculty and student body. For two years the Council endeavored to coordinate activities, but then it slowly slipped into the back- ground as student interest was more occupied with Gray's Anatomy and Bell's Pathology. It did arise on a few occasions to contribute to the student's welfare, such as a concerted movement to abolish the ferry fare to Welfare Island and to act as go-between in disputes concerning examinations the day after college dances. In 1941, however, the group was completely reor- ganized as the Student Association with the constitu- tion as we now know it. Since then the Senate has maintained a foremost position in college life by co- ordinating all functions, and solving the many prob- lems of extra-curricular life in our school. With the cooperation of Dean Hetrick, all difficulties between the students and faculty have been settled with a mini- mum of friction and better understanding between the faculty and student body has been promoted-as the founders had so ardently hoped. The officers and members of the 1948-49 session were: MEMBERS OF THE STUDENT SENATE ' Seniors Percy Cecil Zanger, President Robert Bethje Harold Eugene Nelson fmziorr David Plotkin, Vice President john A. Lukacs, Sec'y. A Martin Berrigan Sophomore! Thomas Dixon Armour, Jr. Edward ,lames Davis Myron Harkavy F rerbwefz Richard Calame John Reitnauer Arthur Sullivan CONTIN Frrml M143 1. fa 1'.-Rein- hardt, Loeffler, Raffman, Macauley, Batt, Stoller. Smfldiilg-Beelei', Haberek, l-limes, Samilson, Fergu- son, Petrus. In terfmternity Council HE youngest of all college councils is the Inter- Fraternity Council, founded in 1944 to promote the cause of fraternal groups and establish closer co- operation among the existing fraternities. The coun- cil, acting under the power vested in it by the mem- ber fraternities under its own constitution and by-laws, has carried fraternity activities from a state of keen, bitter competition to one of close, friendly cooperation. The council supervises freshmen rushing and pledg- ing periods, determining the dates the newcomers may be approached by the member organizations. The I. li. C. also weighs the applications of new fraternities, investi- gating the applicants and the merits of the petition. During recent years three new fraternities have been added to the original four. The ofhcers for the 1948-49 year were: President ................. ....,,.,.,.. V irginius D. Mattia, jr. Vice-President ,,...... ........ A lexander Von Gries Secretary ..... .,....... E lmar Berngartt Treasurer ........ ......... D avid Spodick Con tin N 'l924 keen student interest in the advances of the medical profession brought about the establishment of a society devoted to informal discussion and study of current medicine. Growing rapidly, Contin soon became an instrument of political pressure groups on campus, and a complete reorganization was forthcoming. From open member- ship to the entire student body, the society decided to restrict entrance to only those students of the upper 10 per cent of the junior class, Bernard Batt '49 Myrton F. Beeler '49 Robert Bethje '49 Edward H. Ferguson '49 Stanley Haberek '49 Edward C. Bressler '50 Hillard W. Himes '50 john A. Lukacs '50 Alice l. Macauley '50 Alphonse T. Mysiewicz '50 -'il' 3 Bernard Levowitz '49 john G. Loefller, jr. '-i9 Richard A. Ralfman '49 Henry G. Reinhardt '49 Martin A. Shearn '49 joseph P. Petrus '50 Robert L. Samilson '50 justin Scheer '50 john F. Shea '50 Norman M. Stoller '50 IFC Serllerf, 1. In r.-La Tou- rette, Spodick, Mattia, Von- gries, Berngart, Macauley. Sllllllfillg. 1. lu r.-Mehl- man, Silverstein, Zaret, Samilson, Bethje, Baines, Lukacs, Berrigan. F LEUR-O-SCOPE Front row, l. to r.-L nch, Massonneau, Raliyman, Bethje, Wick. Standing - Flood, Harkavy, Trout, Samilson, Mattia, Mar- raccini, Vongreis. Wear- 0-Scope Richard A. Raffman ............ .... .............. E d :tor-112-Chief Virginius D. Mattia, Jr ............. ,............. M arzaging Editor Literary Staff Robert Massonneau, Editor Allen Ainley Robert Samilson Henry C. Milford Alexander Von Gries Kenneth Front Simon Feigin Dorothy Flood Alice Macaulay Dolores Fiedler Maura Lynch, Photography S1462 Peter Wick, Editor Philip Marraccini, Assistant Editor john Carrier Bztritzefr Staff Justin Scheer, Manager John Barr Benjamin Nicotri Charles Swartz Robert Svigals Robert Bethje, Art Director Lawrence Slobody, M.D., Faculty Advisor The editor wishes to express his thanks to Marion Puszcz, Thomas Greenlees, john Sergeant, Martin Shearn and Bernard Batt for the pictures they submit- ted, to Raymond Mortimer, Philip Nelson, Margaret Lohrman, Gertrude Novack and Kenneth Front for aid rendered the business staff, to Mr. Ed Hajjar of the College Photography Dept. for prints, cuts, advice and the use of his equipmentg to all Senior class agents for the liaison work they didg to Adrienne Nassau Raffman for typing and proof reading much of the Fleur-O-Scope copy, to Dr. Lawrence Slobody for his invaluable ad- vice, good taste and general steadying influence, and to the entire staff who worked so well to produce this major revision of Fleur-O-Scope. l CARNIVAL COMMITTEE Sealed, l. to r.-Marraccini, Regan, Macauley, Bowes, Miss MacGrady, Strang, Vongrics. Snmdiug. I. lo f. -Leone, Nelson, Ingraham Prust, Zanger, Vlahides Hupalowsky, Wqxlktrr Bethjc. s 9 1 Carnival Committee dnnual bance Committee james E. Bowes ......,.... .... Alice I. Macaulay .......... ,,....., Thomas Walker ....... Robert Bethje William Bradley Peter Becton john Egan Eugene Hupalowski Merle Ingraham Paul Leone Philip Marraccini ......................................,...Chairman Chairman of S1zb.rcripti0n.r ...........jzmior Chairman joseph Noya Frank Prust Audrey Regan Ruth Strang George Vlahides Alexander Vongries Percy C. Zanger john Coniaris DANCE COMMITTEE Fran! row, I. In 1'.-vSolo- man, Matthews, Chasin, Strung, Vongries, Chemris. Smudifzg. Z. lu r.-Snyder, Trout, Samilson, Lesser, Buncke, Bcrngart, Hupa- lowsky, Marraccini. Ruth H. Strang ........... Eugene Hupalowsky Ralph E. Hurst Margaret LaTourrette William Bauer Robert Samilson Ralph Snyder Alexander Von Gries Joseph Buncke ...........Cl7dlHlld71 Marilyn Chasin Walter Chemris Matthew Lesser Thomas Connolly Margaret Delaney Ernest Matthews Samuel Solomon Kenneth Trout dnnual Carnival IX years ago the undergraduate student body of New York Medi- cal College, realizing that hardship occasionally strikes some medi- cal students, decided that a fund should be raised for the use of needy students. As a double-barrelled activity, it was decided that any funds should be invested in War Bonds for the duration of the war. Thus was launched a project for student benefit under student direc- tion. In October, 1945, the first annual party, a Hallowe'en Carnival, proved to be a magnificent affair, with gaiety, fun and finance the re- sult. In 1946, the, theme adopted was Swiss Alpine, and an even greater party, from all standpoints, ensued. Due to these successful parties, it was immediately planned to stage an affair each year. So the Circus came to New York Medical Col- lege on November 7, 1947, more particularly, Bungling Bros. Medi- cine Hat Circus, with tonic, games, midway, main tent and the big- gest and best artists, performers and clowns in gala and stupendous acts never before attempted under our tent flaps. The Gold Rush of '48 outstripped all previous Carnivals in finan- cial return with a net income of more than 355500. A goodly number of prospectors staked their claims on golden enjoyment. The fund now stands at j517,000, more than one-third of the original goal of 335o,ooo. 88 ,--,.- -ff, ff. A + 4 ,f M, Q 'app I, Ly 4, nr Q4 514, 84' Q' . rn' 'ff' 5 fr' pf ' U 1, UQ .,' V N-'. Jr S , 1 37: 97 me 5'- nf F. .4 :nf i O'- 'J ., S if It I 4 Hu, If . 2.-'A l'34Of'ig'9 fzgfff' A .Vg-,fl-gn iQJf'..- Ulf 1 'I' wmv A' 1 b .gff 114, gg: ff l7Hi.ZMP'k4fQ35E if .mf f 1 fgfglklxc wk' 'JS l .Q':.J'f '31-iff? H L' I' Qi. I Tull :71jll'Q ff- 7 as If Wi la' 154 hgh. 1,1 Q. 1,44 'fjjvl J , N 055' ws. P532 r 1 4 .- W' Lfff S fr Mfr ,Z 4,4 rfff' . I' '14 ? I 7:13 4: lm lf! A 5 . rl-M' 1, i, fl -1 ,i 4 If W r' O W f q p JH! ef U I' ,limp 14744-'.f'4f:w4, r, 4, 'ng dur, 149 -r',ff406 i VI ,. ' '99 'ul f N U mill, Y tjflu, 14, Y Ny. 'gym -NL' 5 r 41: plz, , , , M4 24: . 4f,, J, 1 W. 'WZ 4 5 I 1'4 --99' ,WJ un, Il, 'f 1 ',., 4 if 04-24 I .- 4 4 4 4 I 'H' ,g N511 ' 'LL 3 4.' b 'ln I . 44 rf, IM, s Ir' ff, ,4 1 'Q 'fd in . 4. H21 .., Kilo . 4 , ffEgg,,m,4-.:f',4o - ,X MEN: .XVQEUMLZQ QU ,sg M -4 4 , X , ' Q xr fl I 1 -fl ' 4 .x I' '. I 4 V, ' 4 . 4 4, , , . 'Z Z' .J M, M w -'4 ' my .Qi-'lik QV .,. .1 7, M W7 sg-. ip .J , f'4,,4 12 'M ff3 .4 ,544 tl -M455 J +4 1 pl M ?'u' wa I ef' 1 un Ml U 4. ' E 5 ,S 44 H 4 ' H ' 4 I 4 I 4 I H 1 I I3 ' U 5 4 44 Nl, lf' 'l'n4 sv 4 U4 55 4 ' 'K ,f .4 . ,Q 4 r I '- ,l I 4 4, 4, ,I Q 94' ' 4 M 4 4 4- 44 'uf mfr ff ,Sli 4 ll L' uv 1 If , in I ' AaM,...j 'w l Li, 5 QM, , sim nay. ,Winn li mv f pg mxxtg f A..4.',4, 'f' 01:11. I' :Wi 'rf tiff -ew KL--f:'g 4 mhz 5214 J, F .F ,. -4 Q aah P 4, I M :tl typ. ' I if fc: v - f 4 JJ ,in hp: i J f ,J jl f A 4 1 lv., 4 1' rf 4 iwv- 'f 2 i -0' . :P Q N-ra ,,. fad N ' , ,Y K X ' Jr ' T' ,4 A vit: I- if, . 4 if 414 5 ' ,irq f if 4 ' X 1 LH 5 . N 'Hg ff, IW .4 V i . Y Ag: I' 4 9 3 4 A A I. .H 1'.'1,lsf Wy' H0669 Show WELVE years ago a group of faculty and students discovered that many of their colleagues were talented, not only in their respective scientific endeavors, but also in the realm of art and music. Thus the Hobby Show came to our campus, the 1949 show was held from March 8th to 11th in the Student Lounge of the college. The judges made their selections for the most outstanding entrants in their respective fields. The first grand prize, a silver cup, presented by the Alumni Association, was awarded to Dr. John Mussio for his spectacular entry, a technicolor sound film of the 1939 World's Fair. The certificate for the most unusual entry was won by Donald Weis- man, '52, for his composition entitled My l-lobby's a Song. The committee: COMMITTEE Kathleen A. Livingston ...,,,....,.,.........................................,..,. ........,,,,.....,........ C hairman Stephen Cost ........................... A.........,,............................... C 0-Chairman Frederick Deutsch Gertrude Novak Robert Bethje William Bradley Lee Collins john Carrier Burt Covert Ray Gibbs Doris Bate Sears Edwards Bernard Klein Carl Levinson Elmar Berngart Eugene Hohenstein Ann Keill Morton Langer Gregory Zann Margaret Kenrick JUDGES Dr. A. W. Hetrick Mrs. I. Tarlov Dr. Louis Hirschorn Dr. Paul Wershub Miss Kathleen MacGrady Mr. Percy C. Zanger Miss Kathryn McDermott HIS June, among the members of the graduating class, there will be seven who will have completed the first Army Medical ROTC program at Flower. These intrepid cadets, viz: Leo Nolan, Harold Nelson, joseph Voytek, Robert Massonneau, john Sergeant, Gerald Kaplan and Merle Ingraham, joined the senior program in October, 1947. Duty for the first year consisted solely of attendance at weekly meetings conducted by Colonel Heihle. These sessions, dealing with medical or medico-military problems were on many occasions excep- tionally interesting--for example: Dr. Marcus Kogel's discussion of epidemics, or Dr. Berkowitz's lecture on diagnosis and treatment of tropical diseases. However, the entire program was not quite as mellow as this, On july 10, 1948, the boys reported to Ft. Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas, for a six-week training course in the military aspects of medi- cine. As was to be expected, there were some drawbacks to this sojourn -chiefly: QU the heat, and QZJ certain aspects of army life which can never be expected to evoke plaudits from those involved. On the good side of the ledger, the cadets had considerable free time Qevery night, and every week-end from Friday afternoon until Monday morningj. For those who owned cars, this permitted almost unlimited trips, and there were very few among the students down there who failed to visit Monterey, Mexico, or the Gulf fsailhshing in the Gulf is unparalleledj. Also available on The Post, were several theatres, live swimming pools, tennis courts, bowling alleys, and most notable of all, an excellent 18-hole golf course. The program of instruction itself, completely covered military medi- cine. It ran the gamut from how to apply the army leg splint, M-1, to rat control, to an overnight field problem. Many of the lectures and demonstrations, if unmarred by the heat and the noise of dripping perspiration, would have been highly commendable and interesting, judged by any standards. A 91 Kool: ?i e MORRISANIA I-IosPiTAL HIS general hospital is the newest to become afhliated with the Medical College. It admits all types of cases with the exception of mental and contagious diseases. Averaging 14,000 patients annually, there were over 100,000 visits to the out- patient department and 10,254 ambulance calls last year. Clinical clerks, in their fourth year at the College, are assigned to this hospital. cu? A I x v I'-P 'Q-Q, N-.1 'x i y A U A . in A X 0- .y,.,1,fM,'.,,5+5p1g' in , v4 CgLv?1,w.,RfG:,3 .. 4 , W y 'A' I Q 'fx' i -.av aj 'np- ' 1 Q f..x 5? I X 1 5,36- -ez- ,,, , . Z: ' 4 , . I A 1 -.' an W v ,QM 1 x N 'x r ' 13.-QQ, Y Hs. 'Mn' . I x 94 N- 442,14 fpafilvn Iv ta Preriderzl ..,,....... Vice-Preridenf ......,... I' 1'6c1JlH'6l' ...,..................................... C OITEJ pond in g Secrelary .......... Recording S'er1'efm'y ........... SENIORS Adele Altman Viola Anderson Bernice Blackman Marisa Carro Castro Shirley Ann Collins Rose Ellis Rita Foley Katherine I. Gardner Margaret Latourrette Laura Morgan Doris Bate Mildred Black Lucille Burns Rosemarie Cantor Beverly Carlyle Gertrude Erikson Harriet Hanley Eleanor Nelson Janine Omines Marion Puszcz Virginia Rooney Janet Ruzzier Betty Simons Anne Smith Ruth Strang Carmen Suarez Vivian Hughes Ann Keill Kathleen Livingston Alice Macaulay Dorothy Sirullo Audrey Regan Catherine Serra SOPHOMORES Margaret Adler Loretta Azzaretti Evelyn Carrellas Marilyn Chasin Albina Claps Alma Dotto Alice Ente Rita Girolamo Alta Goolwin Marion Kooney Marget Lohrmann Maura Lynch Rita Medico Ann Moyes Gertrude Novak Felicia Paccione Marie Pulda ALICE I. MACAULAY ............AUDREY G. REGAN Ruth Adams Patricia Black Lauretta Blake Peggy Delaney Dolores Fiedler Dorothy Flood Eleanor Griffin Lila Greenwald i...i........ALTA GOALWIN ............ANN G. KEILL ..........R1TA G1RoLAMo FRESHMEN Margaret Hallock Margaret Kenrich Barbara Kisecke Katherine Kranenburg Genevieve J. Ney Mari Zipf Diane Winston 1 k,,,1,,,,, - , . at-my vw wr 5735 47 Ti v i A IWW 433933 rw I 22231.15 Q, ' - A y 'V M S6535 , 4 ,. x .+ N1 V, J .. wad., s ff-:-., I wbfgfffe xl , .1 ,Q , -gif A Si W , fri' al KX gl X .. . '4,.f,v'Hi!f3t Ki 19 'WL e- .vw Q35 Q! 4 Q I 1 M, Ai, ,... km1.,,.,, ! W Ai X I Q E -1, 3.-ga, a ,l :' 1 .. J .WS -K -hr. if - ,auf ,, X .ff ,Y er Q, nf i ETH P342 F 1 pa' 2 , . ,wk xl M 7 g 531 ,A 2 . 12 F' W ,W ' . :,,, rg J ' , : ,.,,.v ffl: W-v , X. L EQ Q X ' 1 7. 'W-'f - W Xl 1 K t I -f 1 'E A 3 ,..... 5 . e. -fa -as ' , K ' ' S mA 'M . , Q u - , . - . . .. ...f L1 M -A 'W 1. ' ' bfi - N-r fi' QW W V '47 is 'Q' 1 A tw : i ti .... A. , A -'L-5y,,,3ik...x ., 1 - ' ' ' 9-s an lg, ,ffff W- M .A 'P 3 J , .. I 7 ,,. 5-fl! 2 1 no --- ' --- vv' ' 1 ' ' . X .fy : N .M I , v 'QP' x ra V A , A i . Chl ' zu . '-95,5 , ,3, gl ge- 1 v V ,U M2 aw ,,,,, ' ' J V A if 1 , K, ., M A! h 'f-,vW i Ylfg, L - mi wi' ' ws V L ,. .,,. I A H7 .ia . Q. X 'aw K ,,, -r ' fp lf . ...ax ' i f . f f Q , 5 - ,fi- Q. ', 34- . gh, ' J, 5 -A ' ,f M A sry I -5 S I .Ax Am' V . KF?-15' ' Q . ' w e .. , V 1 96 MV W. , wwf .1 A N w-Vw f 5. sv K :Q-1, M Q , , , 14 ha Kappa Kappa OFFICERS 1948-'49 Prexiderzz ............. .......... R ALPH E. I-IURST Vice-Prexidenz .....,....... ........... M ARTIN BERRIGAN Rerording Secretary ........... ........ P AUL KINGSTON Con-expanding Sew-emry ......... ........,,....,... W ILLIAM GATLIN Treafw-er ............. .,...... ........... j A Mus M. DOBBINS, JR. Hixlorimz ......... ....,... ........... D 0 NALD JONES 97 I Frank Begen William Bradley James Bowes Harold Carlson Stanley Covert Forman Bailey Paul Balze john Barr Martin Berrigan David Chafey john Cohane Bernard Conte james Dobbins Allan Ainley Frank Alcorn Thomas Armour Norman Brust Walter Chemris Homer Franklyn Martin Gately Alex Calder Franklyn Carusone Thomas Connolly Gabriel Cove George Criares Harold Curran William Eddy Frank Flor Robert Gaffney Eugene Greider john Doherty Robert Dunn john Egan Nelson Erhart Edward Ferguson Andrew Furey William Gatlin David Giardina john Gossel, jr. Eugene Hohenstein Paul Kingston Paul Leone Edward Gerber Don Horsman joseph jacobinski William jameson Donald Jones Eaden Keith Robert Kelly Charles Lanzieri Vincent Hinck SENIORS JUNIORS William Gittinger Thomas Greenless Ralph Hurst john Loelfler Robert Massonneau Hugh McGrade Philip Marraccini john Murphy Al Mysiewicz Robert Niehaus John Ryan Michael Scoppetuolo SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN Norman Hollingsworth Thomas Hogan Ray Killian Robert King Fred Lowrey Waldo Martin joseph Muengen Daniel McCarthy Gerald McGrade 98 Paul LiBassi Thomas Longworth Ted Lorenc George Massel Robert McGann Benson McGann Donald McCaughey Don McCoy Vincent O'Brien joseph Pasquarelli Daniel Patrick john Polito Edward Powers Robert Purcell john Reitnauer Robert Richardson Robert Shackelford Earl Shook Harold Nelson Leo Nolan Ralph Pike Robert Richmond john Shea Ralph Snyder William Somers james Spillane Alexander Vongries Thomas Walker Joseph Whelan George McVay Carver Moosman Raymond Mortimer George Mulholland Theodore Smith George Vlahides Robert White Edward Sinnett Arthur Sullivan Henry Swope Edward Talmadge Andrew Tramont Ken Trout john Vosburgh Frank Ward William Wendler President ....,....... Vice-Pfefideut Secrelary .......... Marvin Linder Aaron Schwartz Edgar Kogan it Phi amMa Kappa OFFICERS 1948-'49 ...MILTON ZARET ..,.DAVID SPODICK ......Ro1aERT LANE Treafurer ........... ................ P AUL Fucus Hiflorimz ............ .......,..., E DGAR KOGAN SENIORS Martin Altchek JUNIORS David Spodick Milton M. Zaret soPHoMoREs A ste Irving Mehlman ki Q Robert Lane 1 , f N , Q er FRESHMEN QQXL4 pi ,400 Yale Gerol IAMBDA 99 r 5 100 SOPHOMORES Phi Chi OFFICERS 1948-'49 Prendefzt ..............., Presiding junior ......... Serrelary ................. Treamrer ...... SEIIIIIILJ ................... fudge Advomle .....,..... Robert Bethje Alfred M. Beyer Anthony Carrellas Charles D. Ford Austin F. Hogan Eugene T, Hupalowsky Merle R. Ingraham Robert L. Marsh john G. Mulvihill Vincent Navarre joseph T. Noya Albert N. Ondrako Bramwell R. Anthony Donald J. Blodgett John Coniaris Frank K. Corbett Hugo Gruendel SENIORS George Pelebecky Frank W. Prust john Quinn Henry G. Reinhardt John Sargent Jose Suarez Joseph Voytek W. Paul Wagner William A. Whyland Peter Wick Willys L. Woodward Stuart A. Weiss JUNIORS john Lukacs David Lukens john P. Miller Donald R. Thurston Gregory Zann Verne G. LaTourette, Jr. Addison Burke joseph Cally Stanley Conway james Erwin James Foster Joseph Hassenfratz james Hopkins Robert Jones Arthur Keefe FRESHMEN Andrew Kenton Francis Kelly Peter Kurilecz Edward Lanigan Ernest Mathews Joseph Pruikma Joseph Tumblety Henry Waive Joseph Ventimiglia ..........Roa13RT BETHJE ..........,..FRANK BARNES .......JOSEPH PRESTON ..........joHN SERGEANT ................Jo1-:N LUKACS .............,.WILLIAM WAGNER Robert W. Baird Frank E. Barnes Henry W. Blake II Howard R. Blight Eugene J. Bogucki Roy G. Bowen john W. Carrier Anthony Colaneri Stephen S. Cost Edward J. Davis Donald W. Delahanty Fred E, Eggers T. Raymond Foley, J Herbert Hillemeir Kenneth Johnson john P. McCloy john McCormack we Egg? x, . i i DW' -L v A DPA' Henry E. Milford William A. Mooney Philip G. Nelson joseph A. Pisarik Joseph A. Preston Robert Q. Reynolds Joseph P. Rossi Patrick M. Scalfaro Frank T. Sconzo john E. Sheridan Paul R, Sukovich Vernon E. Thomas Charles V. Tierney Paul Tucci Henry T. Uhrig Richard F. Wagner Louis R. Ziegra a . T S l I x, K ' ' A X G' 4 1 ff ' ' E F saw ig 1, w if- 1 wx F' 5 bg , mf- fi?-f pe' 'A K ' r Q ' 359 2 5, Q, '-B! L . - Bill 2 . 1 Hr, L :rp ff X sc- E3 ifvfff x ' T: Rx iw' A 3 2 35 J 1. k 1 . MH V I Q . Q Q , PA. Jr.. f WX rsjpwffwm, .mm, , gg -fx' 7 'f I iffi 'W- Q .-J C omni .............. Vice- C 011.5711 .......... Chancellor ..,.,.... Scribe Bernard Batt Norman Borkin Marvin Chernow Murray Dorfman Morton Goldfarb Sanford Golozier Murray Herman joseph Horowitz Martin Benjamin Elmar Berngartt Edward Bressler Simeon Feigan Arthur Gillman Norman Konicoff Henry Lubow Albert Paul David Plotkin SENIORS Phi belta fpafilvn OFFICERS, 194 8-49 ,.......lVlOR'l'ON GOLFARB ..............BlERNARD Lisvowrrz ...,......MAli'I'lN BENJAMIN .,,......l,...ROBERT SCHUM ANN FRESHMEN Gerald Kaplan Harold Kaplan Edward Kushner Bernard Levowitz Clemens Prokesch Richard Raffman Martin Shearn Percy Zanger JUNIORS Leonard Rapoport Robert Samilson Robert Schumann Justin Sheer Rudolph Shoucair Norman Stoller Bernard Wetchler Mortimer Weinberg SOPHOMORES Arthur Abelson Milton Alter Lionel Chertoff Fred Deutsch Albert Dolinsky Irvin Fox Gerald Frolow Alfred Gandler Irwin Glassman Myron Harkavy Arthur Harrison Matthew Lesser Arthur Silverstein Robert Svigals joseph Taubman Bernard Weiss Don Burman Stanley Butler Edwin Campbell Leonard Charmella james Davenport Daniel Doctor Melvin Hader Bernard Klein D. Morton Lazar Carl Levinson Paul Tartell Seymour Tobin QE LT,q Av E 'O 5 ll 5 ll S ,I ll ef N? 1 t'rt 6 AQATERBG It 'Y .hp nf may 3 Q r f Q MB' 'zlilsff 1 514153K QT if ,fyiyjmggf wwf: I ' lkiwm' , -f Jw. , idunammv A L iumumgmq guunugugff J H IH X.. .Y'! I ll 5 5 131 Wigs RL 3, 11 X- 244, , Qu mafnu ,eu U 2: , 5 , ' m? , A WV it 1 v L I W . Wi H? ,QJQY f , ., ' Q, 1 4 ,f ' Lx ff ,ima iw ,MQ I LA !!f5,Qg' .! I -fl 1 '53 Hina 5331 VM. -A 2 J' W' 'M -' K W . Q x wk, Aw ' -' 1' f ,1 -Y m :M fJw'2 WWf?W . 2 f , , ' . Q . - mem- X 'Z 4 f Y M 1 - f ,A XFX New York Medical College Wullard Parker I-losputal Flower ond Fnfth Ave I-lospntals East Har em Health Center Metropolitan Cnty Hospntal 80th St Dtspensary Queens General I-lospntal Mar aret Hague Maternity I-lospatal '- ' ' 7' ' iff ' f ' fm -- 1. , 6. ' ' ' 7. : 2. ' ' 3. . ' 8' . ' 4. ' ' 9- ' 5. . 10. . . . . A 1, N J- N g 00062: E u 0nr 'an 5 5 M 15. 3- f M 40,4 4-6,0 93 54 l e .940 g r l H RN9' gr if 1 o 3 3: 1 a001.ev 00 E is '9 5. C , Y. E 25,3 'C' ZAXQXA 1' ,'1 FUI? ef A M v 1 Saw t A - A X Zxllifl f1f',-' I xv HU 3 DS 0 O 5' cn X 'V 5 X 2 - U X Riva? 2 X , ,, enoanwrw Q ? v.',' . 4 1 X .1-If Fr . 40V S' .1-'Silk H .i.g:!3!5f3'0.-tlcflj-H Ay - ' .qv , gj.1:::E1l:1j.f:E'. 0 -2 , -V ' 1---:-.t'.:e..f ' f--'.:af:f.-1:-,, .. f2:2t5Ef2+f 2' 1- o X., 'll p , ' , .' ' HCM- E A51 RIVE12 'X , , A if A i- 5 .4 . . Er' X . Q 'ga 'jlulrell-4 2 5.5 C 1,4400 Univ? Q so Q QL Q 0 PI 'Z fr Jn -3 49 W4 M I K I 1 i Nj NORTH BROS IS E A S wigs. 4- NORT . -raw N Hem' 94 If QA fyp C 5 H X Q 'BLVD- H E R N N031 Q ? 'Q W f'--uf,-luv AL ,Ax 9 -0 -3' QUEEQS Q y Z .9 E 'i 4 ,Q ,Q w 0' 1 :N 1. + E 45 ? so O BQ? Z 'YL-Q 4' . F .. . ,a-.11-.:,,,..,?Q. -. - . , W. 'E Eiii- Fw . li. 5' 'fp i,v25z:,: F 4 NEW YORK Msn: ' CAI. LEGE CAMPUS c n.


Suggestions in the New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) collection:

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 48

1949, pg 48

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 68

1949, pg 68

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 73

1949, pg 73

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 7

1949, pg 7


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