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

 - Class of 1967

Page 1 of 204

 

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



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Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1967 volume:

Mouse Seminiferous Tubule Electron Microgroph X'l0,000 Courtesy Dr. J. Rhodin, Dept. of Anatomy am f , , .,.,,......L., ,Am an w . f. ' ' 1 -5-bikri 1 ., FLE R-0-SCOPE 1967 Presented by the Senior Class NEW YORK MEDICAL COLLEGE HE Right Practice of Medicine requires the perfect union of art and science. Medical education has as its goal the consummation of science and art in the individual. In essence, then, this is our aim. It is most serious and most noble. It requires steadfastness of purpose. It necessitates un- ending hours of toil in the classroom, the laboratory, the clinic and at the bedside. It evokes a kaleidoscope of emotions. In the pages to follow we hope to recall some of these hours and some of these emo- tions. In so doing let not the lavishness of our humor ofend the sobriety of your moti- vation. Rather, let it serve to remind us that he who can appreciate humor in the face of severist austerity will be its master. In that hour of reminiscence that will come to each of us let these words and pictures relive the things we have done, let them recall our colleagues, let them recapture memories of our professors, our fathers in the practice of medicine. The Editors Theme of the Tarot Cards ... . . . .ci .wi',- . , f l We, the Class of 1967, gratefully and his ontemporary medical science shares its origins with the common deck of playing cards, both arose in antiquity as the products of man's first attempt to comprehend and alter environment through sorcery, mysticism '.. af., ,v'vA'!7wy, , ' .WW , r V 1 Q V,,,,.-.,. .,,.,V A J .,,, w 1. LE SQLFIL 1 Seek the Silver Lining: Happiness and divination. With the decline of superstition and advent of reason the pack of cards lost its status as a text of arcane magical prescriptions, being relegated to its present position as a vehicle for games of chance. The older and more classical form of playing cards still used by the fortune teller is the Tarot Deck. The Tarot cards are divided into four suits: cups, pentacles, swords and clubs analogous to T VIII the present day spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs. In addition there is an extra court card and twenty-two trump cards which symbolize the major forces and experiences acting upon man throughout life. We have employed this deck and the interpretation given to each of these cards as the leitmotif of this yearbook. The microcosmic world of the medical student has similar forces - teachers, friends, experiences - that have molded, are now shaping and will, in the future, determine his lot. The four years of medical education are determinants for the future. How each of us chooses to use them, how each of us arranges his hand of cards, will decide what the future holds for us. . DA LUKE - - Pain Gives Birth to the Creative: Danger CONTE NTS Theme of the Tarot Cards ,..,.4,A4 .... Dedication ...A..A.A............,..,...........,..,......A.A..........,...A...........,.,...,.......... Our New President .Ae,A.A....,,.,,....,A..........,..,...A.,.,....e,..,....,.....,.......,.... Letters from the Chairman of the Board and the Acting Dean The Administration .,..,.....,..A.......,.......,.,...,..,.....,.....,............4.4,......... New York Medical College History ...4..4,...n4,....n.nn, .. The Faculty ...,.....,..,......l.ll,..,....4..4,.4...... .,.n Anatomy ,.,n..l.,.l.....4..,.4,.4, ,..,....., .... Biochemistry .......,4.,.,n .,.. Clinical Pathology l.4,...4 ,... Microbiology ..4,..,4.,.,.. ,... Pathology ..,..,.......,... ..4. Pharmacology ..... ,.,. Physiology ....... .... Neurology ..,.... ,,,, Medicine .l.... ..n. Surgery ..,nr. ,,,, Pediatrics ...,......n......,.4......,n4.. .,.. Psychiatry .,..,..n......n.l.....4,.4,.4,nl.n4, .nl. Obstetrics and Gynecology ,.,n..n4 .,n4 Radiology n...l........,.......,.n...n..n.... ..., Orthopedics ......,. .... Urology ......,.4.. ..4, Dermatology ..4..,. .n,. Ophthalmology ....... .... Anesthesiology ,..l..n.,l.... ..,. Preventive Medicine ....,.4 ..., Otolaryngology ,,.......nn,...,.. .... Rehabilitation Medicine ...4. .... Faculty Humor ..4.4...4,...,4....,4.4.., .4.. In Appreciation ...l................ ..,. Oath of Hippocrates .,,.... A... Class of 1967 .,........4.. .,.. In Memoriam ......... ........ Homework,' Class of 1968 ,..... Class of 1969 ...........,..,.. ..,.s,.. Class of 1970 ,.....,....,............ .....s,. FLEUB-O-SCOPE Staff ...... ...,..,. Cor Et Manus ..,..,..,.....,... ...,.., Alpha Omega Alpha ......., .....s.s. ..,....... . ,.....s , Student Senate ,.s.ss,.s,....4........,..........,....s....... .....s.. American Medical Women's Association ,r.rs.. ......, Alpha Kappa Kappa .,.,..,..,..........s..,.s,.s..,..,.. ........ Phi Chi ,.....,..........,..... ........ Phi Delta Epsilon .,... .....s.. Student Wives Club .....,..,..,... .,...,., Intern,s Directory ..,...r.......r...,r.,..,.... .,..,.., Sponsors, Patrons, and Boosters ...,.. .....r , . Susan E. G. Gordon, M.D DEDICATION o Susan E. G. Gordon, M.D.: Devoted Teacher, Respected Counselor, and Sincere Friend, We, the Class of 1967, gratefully and proudly dedicate our yearbook. The physician needs a clear head and a kind heart, his work is arduous and complex, requiring the exercise of the very highest facilities of the mind, while constantly appealing to the emotions and fine feelings. William Osler 61849-19192 ,I if M T 0 Members of The Graduating C lass: The graduation of a new class is the high moment of any academic year because it is the moment of privilege and achievement for which the institution has worked as hopefully and pridefully as the graduates themselves. In saluting the members of the Class of 1967, then, we salute both the men and the rank, to restate the familiar military maxim. There is a particular word in the oath which all of you are taking, a word which perhaps symbolizes the relationship between each of you, and all of you, and the careers which lie ahead of you as doctors, and your College as educator. It is the word nindenturef, We, as educators, have made a contract with society on your behalf, a contract to which our honor and yours are pledged. It is one of the noble contracts, just as your fe! 5. ,, 0, . Q, 'I oath is one of the ultimate pledges which a man can give to his fellows. The indenture will never run out for you, as our con- tract with you and society will never expire. A doctoris life is a supreme life which lasts as long as the man does. You have given much to your College, and I believe that the College has given you occasion for satisfaction as well, and the core of your contribution to the College is a reaffirmation of the rightness of its existence. In the years ahead, I am confident that New York Medical College will build upon the great foundation already established. In that task, too, you can help us, by pre- cept, by experience, by participation in the future. Good luck, ladies and gentlemen. I can only wish that I was one of your number. David Denker President Gur New President ew York Medical College has a new Presi- dent. On October 26, 1966, David D. Den- ker was appointed to the position, a posi- tion to which he is bringing vast experience and knowledge. He is a graduate of Yale University, Class of 1948, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. As a student at Yale he was especially interested in History and received honors and exceptional distinction in this field. After graduation he con- tinued his studies at Yale and received his doc- torate in 1951. He became an instructor in His- tory and Rockefeller Fellow there for the 1951- 1952 term. While at Yale he participated in that school's program of American Studies for Foreign Scholars and, in fact, was its Director for a time. In 1952 he went to Rutgers but maintained his connec- tion with this program. In his first year at Rutgers he was Assistant Professor of American Civilization and Acting Director of the American Civilization Program. From the beginning he was interested in expand- ing educational experience as he worked to broad- en the existing American Civilization Program. His interest in education for foreign scholars caused him to be made Counselor to Foreign Students and director of the bureau of informa- tion on fellowships, scholarships, and special grants in 1955. From 1956 to 1958 he was the Assistant Provost of Rutgers and Associate Pro- fessor of Social Science. The development of the graduate school and the initiation of the univer- sityis first overall lecture series were two of his major achievements at Rutgers. He has been editor of several scholarly works dealing with education, foreign scholars and his- tory, these include, Seven Summers: A History of American Studies for Foreign Scholars at Yale f1955Q, Higher Education in the United States: A Report of a Fulbright Conference at Rutgers 119601 and Current History. In 1954 Omnibus, a nationally televised program on NBC, commis- sioned him to write and participate in The Luck- iest Cenerationf, a study of the developments which have transformed the American civilization in the recent past. In establishing the Rutgers Urban Studies Cen- ter in 1959, Dr. Denker acted as the priciple ne- gotiator with the Ford Foundation to obtain its support. And in 1962 he was responsible for re- locating Yaleis Center of Alcohol Studies on the Rutgers campus. To help finance the program he negotiated with the National Institute of Mental Health for a grant of more than 81,000,000 and obtained another 81,000,000 from private gifts and Federal matching funds. Most significant among his many achievements has been his role in the creation of Rutgers Medi- cal School. He led the search for the Dean of the Medical School and conducted, for the President and the Board of Governors of the University, the interviews which culminated in the appointment of one Dean. He was also instrumental in raising 312,000,000 for the school. We are quite fortunate to have Dr. Denker here with us. An individual deeply interested in man, influential and totally committed to progress in education, we welcome him to New York Medi- cal College. l I -EMPEREIJR ,I Man is Intelligence: Will Power .a,a-Sf,ltli,,l . - To the Senior Class: It is very gratifying to me to have the opportunity of conveying to each member of the class of 1967 my sin- cerest good wishes on the occasion of his graduation from New York Medical College. You have completed your work in medical college during a time of much ferment both at your college and in the country at large. The coming into being of Medi- care and the developing implementation of Title XIX will make for profound changes in the practice of medi- cine and in public attitudes toward the medical profes- sion. That you chose the practice of medicine as a profes- sion is a tribute to your ambition and your dedication. During your lifetime as a doctor you will have responsi- bility for birth, growth and life, for the advancement of knowledge through research, for the sharing of knowl- edge through teaching. Whether your principal concern ultimately is to prac- tice, to teach or to do research, you will find a gradual increase in your own responsibility. You will have to make decisions that reach beyond your immediate sphere. I hope that you will make these decisions and contrib- l X, l l r , . , , Y As A Man Sows: Balance ute your efforts to the full extent of your potentialities. You will know the joy of work well done and you will earn and be awarded the recognition and appreciation of your colleagues. Perhaps most important of all, I hope that you will think of yourselves as members of an ever-changing, evolving profession, that you will be constantly seeking a greater awareness of the complex needs of the com- munity you serve whatever its size and wherever it may be. As you enter into the medical profession, pledge your- self to: 1. Service to a single patient and to the whole com- munity. 2. Commitment to the expanding needs of a chang- ing world. 3. Integrity in your decisions and judgments. 4. Excellence in the quality of your personal life. I am happy to offer to each and every one of you the sincerest congratulations and best wishes from each member of the Board of Trustees and from myself. Iackson E. Spears Chairman, Board of Trustees X IIII ugh I TE MJPERAN Seek the Middle Path: Economy To The M embers of The Graduating Class: You have now completed the first phase of your medical education and are about to begin the continuing educational process which char- acterizes the responsible physician so long as he lives. Now that your professors have become your colleagues and the aca- demic problems posed on examination papers have been superceded by the human beings who will reach out to you for help, the responsibility for your successes and failures will lie with you alone. You, and only you, will be able to determine your competence in making the decisions which will affect the Well-being of those entrusted to your care. Each day of your life you will be called upon to meet the often lonely challenge of our profession with self-confidence, discipline, and leader- ship. The never-ending pursuit of excellence required of you must be inwardly motivated with integrity. We, your teachers and colleagues, believe that you will move forward in the best traditions of our noble profession and we entrust to you our complete confidence and our highest hopes. Lawrence B. Slobody, M.D. Acting Dean and Vice-President ADMINISTRATIO mam .,. Wwymmmmv zzwmmmawfaumwnm ARTHUR V. JENSEN Associate Dean Ls JUF?T!'3R' 1 Man the Creator: Inspiration ROBERT A. O'CONNOR Associate Dean Mm mfg, ALVIN F. COBURN Assistant Dean IOSEPH C. BAMFORD, IR. ARTHUR T. STEPHAN Assistant Dean Registrar The progressive academic character of the College has been constant and noteworthy. It was among the first of the medical colleges to develop a three-year graded and scheduled curriculum. It was also one of the iirst insti- tutions to utilize bedside teaching extensively as an in- structional technique. It is among the leaders in the Held in permitting undergraduate students to pursue suitable research projects, or to participate in those which are normally part of the college program. It constantly seeks to improve all phases of professional education, and it is presently broadening its program for graduate instruc- tion. In this respect, the College was one of the first to adopt a three-year systematic curriculum leading to graduate degrees in the clinical specialties and the basic medical sciences. The College is empowered to grant the graduate degrees of Master of Medical Science, Doctor of Medical Science, Doctor of Public Health, and Doctor of Dental Surgery. It is also authorized to award bacca- laureate degrees in the fields of Medical Technology, as well as honorary degrees in the fields of Science and the Humanities. an Q 11 li Il 33 T EHIJHINQ Metropolitan Hospital Bird S. Coler Hospital ll! I ! E 5 5 e in L 1 i 4- i Mis. New York Medical College, Flower and Fifth Avenue Hospitals, and the Cohen Research Building ,af Proposed New York Medical College Hospital Center showing the Matemal Child Health Center Wing, Residency Wing and the Hospital Wing. -y -?p-ummm'-firm-1174 -1 ' T17-diff V 1 f.:wwc: v - ---f' .. 1 'fe-1 frzvsvw-w ' 'Milk' fr A' t t t VIIII t Q EHMITE With Maturity, Sagacity: Prudence I i il DEPARTME T OF ANATOMY 1 K I. Clifford Hayner ' Louis L. Bergmann Professor Emeritus Professor Arthur V. Jensen Pentti T. Iokelainen Associate Professor Assistant Professor E. Lawrence House Professor Alfred H. Iason Assocrkzte 'QQ' Johannes A. G. Rhodin Professor and Chairman Edward I. Reith Professor John H. Abel, Ir Instructor W. Ward Pigman Professor and Chairman Isidore Danishefsky Professor ffm William T. Burke Associate Professor Milton Tabachnick Associate Professor DEPARTME T OF BIGCHEMISTRY WZ Sm 53 S5 3:-1 'UCC 39, Tye 25. Sa' f 'ff' Y - A .3 la JJ .f W fi 9! Harold D. Appleton Assistant Professor Q. A , Vzvlu Pl.o.l ,IEP A .... 5 , -f A Q J , 7 N? iii. cr-1 Frank S. Parker Associate Professor Sara Schiller Associate Professor Mary I. Clark Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Anthony Herp DEPARTME T OF CLINICAL PATHOLOGY Alan L. Portnoy Helga P. Kleinberger Ruth Weiss Clinical Instructor Clinical Instructor Clinical Instructor Francis D. Speer Professor and Chairman Iosefa A. Alicea Clinical Instructor Irving Rappaport Professor and Acting Chairman Alvin F. Cob11rn Professor Mervyn Franklin Associate Professor Lawrence A. Cone Assistant Professor DEPARTME T OF NIICROHIOLOGY Richard E. Hartman Associate Professor may Maxine Franklin Assistant Professor A Roberta S. Hartman Associate Professor Robert G. Krueger Assistant Professor Felix Wassermann Assoicate Professor x 1 Eileen H. Pike Assistant Professor Maurice M. Black if Professor and Acting Chairman Oscar Auerbach Clinical Professor Hi Soo Kim Associate Professor Robert Lev Assistant Professor Edward Gendel Clinical Professor A iiii 2 7 J Steven C. Mohos Associate Professor Alexander Sedlis Assistant Professor DEPARTME T CF PATHOLOGY 4 K ii l i ll. Sara Schiller Professor ' L-'Tr William T. Burke Associate Professor j 4. Hudson R. Ansley Assistant Professor 1 S. Ralph F. Strebel Assistant Professor Victor Tchertkoff Professor . I gh. Joseph A. Daino Associate Professor Ada Chabon Assistant Professor Eric I. Wake Assistant Professor A sw iw., 7 Fredrick C. Zak Professor William Cutstein ,X Associate Professor -A , .f, 5 ,.:,f . Vi s if E R S Q as Rene I. Cirerd Assistant Professor Camille Mallouh Instructor DEPARTME T OF PHARMACULCGY David Lehr Professor and Chairman William H. Beinfield Professor . .. I-. Sis XX- Mario A. Inchiosa Associate Professor Joseph Seifter Research Professor Associate Professor B. D. Bhagat Assistant Professor Sigmund E. Lasker Assistant Professor Yoshiaka Omura Assistant Professor Matthew I. Freund George B. Ierzy Class Associate Professor ,J 1 Marilyn Krukowski Assistant Professor Stanley Z. Kramer Assistant Professor I is r s ... E A A i Q!! Rudolph N. Peterson Cornelius G. VanDongen Assistant Professor Assistant Professor DEPARTME T GF PHYSIOLCGY Alan B. Rothballer Research Professor Fred E. Horvath Assistant Professor Hiroshi Asanuma Associate Professor David L. Maude Assistant Professor Vernon B. Brooks Professor and Chairman Leif Hom Associate Professor Fred Rosenthal Assistant Professor Gabor Kaley Morton H. Frank Associate Professor Assistant Professor 5. S. David Stoney, Jr. Richard Weiner Instructor Instructor DEPARTME T OF EUROLOGY Robert I. Strobos A Professor and Chairman L. Edward Cendel Norman Cohen Dorothy C. Y. Yang Herbert Ribner Associate Clinical Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Professor Charles Shornstein Robert I. Blankfein Pablo L. Pimentel ,lay A. Rosenblum Clinical Associate Instructor Instructor Instructor DEPARTME OF MEDICIN Harry Friedman Professor Samuel Rubin Professor jacob Brener Associate Professor 1-,qw ,S .fl George B. Jerzy Glass Professor Bemard Straus Professor 'Uls- ie Af '1. Rafael A. Camerini Associate Professor Rachmiel Levine David Scherf Professor and Chairman P'0feSS0' Emefifu-9 Robert Goldstein Arthur Grishman Kurt Lange Professor Professor Professor Morton Smith Alfred Vogl David Schwimmer Professor Professor Clinical Professor Israeli Jaffe A. Louis Southren Norman Deane Associate Professor Associate Professor Associate Clinical Professor Norman Diamond Associate Clinical Professor Edmund T. Lonergan Assistant Professor Er Yi Ting Assistant Professor Charles Cherubin Instructor Harvey Cooper Clinical Instructor Edward Gendel Associate Clinical Professor Robert Ostrove Assistant Professor David Katz Assistant Clinical Professor Joseph Feldschuh Instructor Edward N. Ebin Clinical Instructor CQD David M. Myers Associate Clinical Professor Owen S. Roath Assistant Professor Walter E. Strauss Assistant Clinical Professor ii X . Richard I. Mahler Instructor Eugene Harbalis Clinical Instructor Rosario Terranova Associate Clinical Professor Sheldon P. Rothenberg Assistant Professor Peter A. Douvrez Clinical Associkzte Gerhard Treser Instructor Bemard Rosenbaum Clinical Instructor Lawrence Cone Assistant Professor ' fre, 7 , si in I fi ' . . ' I I Ffif'lifZ5Qf Ft , .,.,, I I ii,i .V t W I MW 1 My , I ,, ,X f Abraham I. Schaffer Assistant Professor Edward A. Stem Clinical Associate David Blackman Clinical Instructor Melvin Rosenzweig Clinical Instructor DE PARTME T OF SURGERY Irving A. Sarot Professor 1'q .,,,, i E . Sheldon O. Burman Assocuzte Professor C. joseph Delaney Clinical Professor Fey Chu Associate Professor Alan B. Rothballer Professor and Chairman Neurosurgery Henry P. Leis Clinical Professor Ian Campbell Cree Associate Professor Walter L. Mersheimer Professor and Chairman Wilfred F. Ruggiero Professor Samuel A. Thompson Professor of Clinical Surgery Sherwood A. Jacobson Assocuzte Professor Neurosurgery William P. McKinnon Associate Professor Irving S. Shiner Associate Clinical Professor E Edward E. Rockey Assistant Clinical Professor Joseph F. Dursi Instructor Kirk K. Kazarian Clinical Instructor Irving M. Ariel Associate Clinical Professor Ciro Armellini Assistant Professor Paul C. Chenet Clinical Associate Iohn M. Marino Instructor 'Nz john F. Kustmp Clinical Instructor 1 rr' :- Ivan Kempner Associate Clinical Professor Robert E. Madden Associate Professor .fv- S Q.: .. ri ff? 41 3 Saverio Bentivegna john B. Casale Assistant Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Charles B. Dunaif Clinical Associate Frank B. Callipari Instructor E ' Angelo Cammarata Tano S. Carbonaro Clinical Instructor Clinical Instructor . i.-- 24. fi Iohn C. Munna Stanley Taub Clinical Instructor Clinical Instructor Harmon T. Rhoads Associate Clinical Professor X is 1 fi it si - Qs v ' ' X it Q ir X Q XS X X 'B g Xi vt 2 3 iw ' N str I sf? xg serif- Ralph A. Olson Assistant Clinical Professor Neurosurgery james T. Drew Instructor Peter A. Fauci, Ir. Clinical Instructor Vernon E. Thomas Clinical Instructor DEPARTME T OF PEDIATRICS Paul Freud Harold Abramson Professor Emeritus Professor Kurt Lange Clinical Professor Robert Kahn Associate Professor Carl Zelson Clinical Professor Miriam Lending Associate Professor Margaret I. Giannini Professor Edward Wasserman Professor and Chairman Adrian L. Luhby Professor Alvin F. Cobum Associate Professor Harold S. Cole Associate Professor A Louis Southren Associate Professor Dorothy C. Y. Yang Associate Professor fi 1 .,.. ., . . osa I sm: il fa miss f . X ' - K 2:55 QB. wp Harold Michal-Smith Professor Jack M. Cooperman Associate Professor Cyrille R. Halkin Associate Clinical Professor Ralph Schwartz Donald Feinberg Alta Goalwin Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor ,wifi 'S ,gf rw Marvin Green Carol B. Heimer Eric Wake Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Maclyn Cagan Robert Feldman Donald S. Gromisch Assistant Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Magdalena Fuchs Rafael Lopez Arnold I. Slovis Associate Associate Associate John P. Curran Harry Romero James T. Drew Clinical Associate Clinical Associate Instructor Susan E. C. Cordon Assistant Professor vu E f'-1 EY is Ayse M. Yuceoglu Assistant Professor Catherine G. Serra Assistant Clinical Professor Harold V. Winters Associate Inge Sagel Instructor l 1 i DEPARTME UF PSYCI-IIATRY Maximilian Fink Harold Kaplan Professor Professor Herman C. B. Denber Simon H. Nagler Clinical Professor Clinical Professor Rema Lapouse Gerald Tannenbaum Associate Professor Associate Professor Alfred M. Freedman Professor and Chairman Harold Michal-Smith Professor Lewis R. Wolberg Clinical Professor William Wainwright Associate Professor E. Roy John Research Professor Irving Bieber Clinical Professor Leonard Gold Associate Professor Henry Pinsker Associate Professor -mm Robert L. Sharolf Associate Professor Carl L. McGahee Assistant Professor Hilda L. Mosse Assistant Clinical Professor Martin Kishner Associate Paul Hansch Clinical Associate Alfred H. Rifkin Moses Naftalin Helen S. Kaplan Associate Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Professor William C. Nonnand Assistant Professor Alexander Schusdek William B. Payn Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Harry G. Wallenstein Assistant Clinical Professor Associate Associate Benjamin J. Sadock Richard B. Resnick Paul E. Schneck Herbert Bengelsdorf Gloria Clare Associate Clinical Associate Clinical Associate Alan Kaye Isabel M. Wolf Lenore Newman Instructor Clinical Instructor Assistant Instructor Martin L. Stone Professor and Chairman William B. Silberblatt Clinical Professor Myron Gordon Assistant Professor Marvin Zuckerman Clinical Instructor Abner I. Weisman Clinical Professor Richard D. Grimaldi Assistant Professor Robert I. Murphy Assistant Clinical Instructor DEPARTME OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNECCLOGY Louis I. Salerno Professor Alexander Sedlis Associate Professor Allan B. Weingold Assistant Professor Edwin M. Cold Professor joseph C. Bamford, Ir. Assistant Professor Gustave Moreno Clinical Associate Sanford Sall Assistant Clinical Instructor Martin Salzman Assistant Clinical Instructor John G. Mussio Clinical Professor Iii Elizabeth B. Connell Assistant Professor William G. F. Jung Instructor Richard X. Sands Assistant Clinical Instructor DEPARTME OF RADIOLOGY Frank I. Borrelli Professor and Chairman Stanley H. Craig Rita F. Girolamo Adele R. Altman Arnold Berret Professor Professor Associate Professor Associate Professor Louis M. Sod Hyman A. Hauptman Leonard N. Ebin William A. Miles Associate Professor Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor ,vs -- me .. - f. awww-mwziz .... . t . . . . . . K 1 , 2. - :gf -i -7 K Q... O 1. . i- .. K, Marilyn Pearl Max Rakofsky Elio F. Vieira Robert M. D'Andrea Vicente F. Maza Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Instructor Assistant Instructor Assistant Instructor DEPARTME OF GRTHOPEDICS Arthur A. Michele X We , A ws is 7:94241 ik Milton I. Wilson Harvey M. Lewis Alan R. Cantwell Clinical Professor Associate Professor Associate Clinwal Professor Leon Katowicz Leon Root Martin W. Siegal Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Professor Clinical Instructor Professor and Chairman Theodore K. Himelstein C linical Professor Leo A. Green Associate Clinical Professor Alvin Stein Assistant Clinical Instructor DEPARTME T CF URO LOGY George R. Nagamatsu Professor and Chairman Sprague Carleton Professor Emeritus Joseph M. Andronaco Associate Clinical Professor Leonard P. Wershub Clinical Professor 5 1 . i-,l 7 'r?i'?SS1w W 1 , A. . Q I 6 2 Harold L. Edgehill Gerald M. Litzky Clinical Instructor Clinical Instructor .i F 'X vu ' 5 Camille Mallouh Instructor Thomas W. Baylek Clinical Associate Carl M. Pellman David T. Mininberg Clinical Instructor Fellow DEPARTME T OF DERMATOLUGY NRS-. .N Ioseph L. Morse Professor and Chairman srimlm.. ,Ag Howard T. Behrman Alexander Borota Clinical Professor Clinical Professor Irwin I. Lubowe Edward H. Mandel Herbert I. Spoor Gustav Weissberg Ellen Reiner Clinical Professor Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor Assocuzte Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor .sir Lilianna S. Sauter Vidalino Gonzalez Albert M. Lefkovits Morris A. Raif Herbert Ross Clinical Associate Assistant Clinical Instructor Assistant Clinical Instructor Assistant Clinical Instructor Assistant Clinical Instructor Miles A. Galin DE PARTME T OF OPHTHALMGLOGY Professor and Chairman Arnold I. Turtz Clinical Professor Benjamin Friedman Professor Emeritus Irving Baras G. Peter Halberg Bernard Kronenberg Associate Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor Emanuel Krimsky Milton Best Greta Spanierman Assistant Clinical Profegsgr Instructor Clinical Instructor 1 W as Kenneth R. Barasch Herve M. Byron Assistant Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor W X 4. . X ' ' A '-i k is . f :sets , l I y, ,Q?.i,jgg'3i5 l iz, - .4 Michael M. Miller Frank A. Vesey Clinical Instructor Clinical Assistant DEPARTME T OF ANESTHESIOIJOG pg, Dante V. Bizzarri Joseph G. Giulfrida Associate Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor k X' x . Albert Schmookler Louis E. Fierro Assistant Clinical Professor Clinical Associate Frank E. Fierro Professor and Chairman Frank L. Latteri Assistant Clinical Professor i C, i A f s R. I. Schweitzer Clinical Associate Jonas N. Muller C DEPARTME T OF PREVE TIVE MEDICIN Professor and Chairman Edwin M. Gold Milton Tetris Professor Professor Rema Lapouse Charles E. Cherubin Associate Professor Assistant Professor Harold T. Fuerst Clinical Professor - I! Bemard Carol Associate DEPARTME T QF OTO LARYNGO LOGY Richard I. Bellucci Abraham P. Matusow Professor James D. Lake Clinical Associate Professor and Chairman Clarence R. Straatsma Otto Broones Milton Ingerman E. Gordon Bell Associate Clinical Professor Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Clinical Professor Clinical Associate Q. .V I Jerome Rosenthal Felix Shiifman Iohn I. Starke Simon Malowist Clinical Associate Clinical Associate Clinical Associate Clinical Instructor Milton Lowenthal Professor and Chairman Iulian E. Rosenthal Professor s 2 I 3 E Thomas H. Fay, Ir. Assistant Professor DEPARTME T OF RE I-IABILITATIO MEDICIN Joseph B. Rogoff Clinical Professor , ,M Phoebe Satu.ren Assistant Professor Osvaldo E. Miglietta Associate Professor Sit Martha DeBrown I nstructor Lawrence I. Bemstein Assistant Professor Ioj i Sakuma Instructor , q kA W MMM 2 Z You Reaps What You Sows. Why do they have the same damned captions every year? xl .0 My scanty panties are pinker than yours, you old lecher! Here! Use my head as a flashbulb. Allen Funt Terry-Thomas Jacob Iavitts 1 3 Wx gig f K . S1525 X .. x - f . as R A My Cod, I'm going to re-enlist in the R.A.F.l Eight-ball in the side pocket. W I haven't had a bowel movement in seven days. I U A K V , W ,l l T , if , W i ne,n , a ,A r nee,, a, a s A ' '13 .. . i i - 7 ' a CJ 1 !X- . . . . . V lv I 1ust put a Trichuns mums in her drink. in ,., ,, I 9 ,Q gg-is This cigar is actually compressed, dried meconium. Now that Berniels gone we no longer have to believe in Aschoff Bodies. 45 viva l gi wi He talks British but most scrutably thinks Yiddish. Q.N.S., Specimen clotted, No reagent, Lab accident . . . S 5 Hey Ruggie, smile for Mr. Ringling! Hey Eric, where are those damned egg shells? It says here alopecia is an early sign of impotence. And another precipitant delivery is imminent 'F -s ,ii XY 2. e HZV, f - NN . g ii,.. wa , - sud ,, Marquis de Sod after Now that they've all signed we don't have to smile anymore. That picture up on top 120 days in SODom. is not very funny, chaps! Bela Lugosi .lik X -H' s iw fi 3 , Li'l Abner and the Valley of the Dolls. Jgnihizqwl ,AQQQHSEQXA ml PM 1 is' 'fr 14.533 I M1 A B, 'w i ' m 3' ,... W ,w,l,gl',ri,:i.x: mini' -W , , Broderick Crawford Buffalo Bill is . 3 1 f .5 . . N ...L, M . gs -..--Sme g : ss , ' . ., ,, .3 -a s Q. 1 Oni- Roy Rogers Burrrpl!! William Buckley . J l E X X Shelly and I only operate on Szo, it vas you who told Herr Thaler about my biopsies? the Beautiful People. 47 Last year only Eddy Wasserman of the U.N. Pediatrics Department smoked L5zM Let me tell YOU about my wartime V.D. experiences Butcher? Baker? Candlestick maker? Charming little Italian fellow - Isn't he Al? .........Butcher! Answer A if one of Answer B if two or more Answer C if C and H are Pick out one in column A the above is true of the above are false related but not by blood that is related to four out of five in column B EFA , Gruffy La Tuff Hello sweetie - Listen, I've Cot A Secret. - 3 eee I - e.kQ I A Sermon on the Mons. As Dr. Ivy taught me when I was in Chicago, the chemotherapeutic agent of choice is Kre ....... O.K. folks, follow along with me now, Heart of my Heart . . . Yes, I heard he was at Boston Children's, but he didn't tell you he was a patient there! AA-A 5' A Say the secret word and divide S100 Six Q.R.S. complexes in search No, I havenit seen either between you. It's a common word .... of a ventricle. Mr. Bluster or Flub-a-dub. fl Brucey, Brucey, quite obtusey, In the Babylonian Medical Journal how does your vegetable garden grow? of Trephining and Divination it stated that .... I'm now going to sing Indian Love Call with Jeanette Ramchandani. Work it on out Baby, Twist and Shoutln Stone Willked at me today! 'V . , ., 4 x .tw c U . 105 .2 'T' F Let me see . . . 5 kids at 600 dollars deduction apiece . . . . What do you mean, the Mersh has the shower first? mamma. s we J ' il f , g 5 Ac l, P 1' When did you first notice they were getting smaller, because I have the same problem too? Keen, Konlident, Kheerful Kirk Krikor After lunch you can wheel Kazarian Konsiders a Khart me to my room, interne. Karefully and Kautiously. ,M ,.,r,, N ,,,, M, d !A,AV 1 ' N N K F ,l 3, g, 1 n . ,tw my if i W f ..... f A lf ...N 5 g Q, ,Wi , Hey Stu, they voted you the Most Unpopular President and Acting Bedman of Martin I. Bertman and me the. F urriestl the Department of Nani-Nani. George Washington University, B.S Phi Chi Class Yenta-Laureate 'D' 'gp-v Moses Naftalin, M.B., Ch.B., M.D. Leon Root, B.S., M.D. Associate Clinical Professor Assistant Professor Department of Psychiatry Department of Orthopedic Surgery In Appreciation For their Sellless Devotion For their Clinical and Administrative Guidance For the Pleasure of Knowing and Working with them The Class of 1967 Sincerely Thanks You Samuel H. Rubin, A.B., M.S., M.D. Wilfred F. Ruggiero, B.S., M.D. Professor Professor Department of Medicine Department of Surgery QW? JW ' A LM' , - , 4:41 iii M A ,,,,, ,W .V Wm My Nw . q , , ,G ,.1.zf4-fm, H , fflwiw y f ? GERALDINE LOUISE AHNEMAN JOAN DIANE ALBIN Fordham University, B.S. Cornell University, B.S. Deanis List, 2 Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List 2,3g American Medical Women's Association American Medical Womcnis Association St. Vincenfs H ospital and Medical Center, N ew York Medical College- New York City Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. MICHELLE JESSICA ALMAN ROY PHILIP ANS New York University, B.A. Washington College, B.S. American Medical Women's Association, New York Medical C ollege- President of junior Branch. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. Monmouth Medical Center, Long Beach, N .I . W mn Q x Q Q , , 2 9? www M X WWW WW, QM 5' ,Q PHILIP MICHAEL ARIES FRANK ANTHONY ARIOSTA Adelphi University, B.A. Wagner College, B.S. Dean,s List 3, Class Secretary 2, Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y Alpha Kappa Kappa, Christmas Party 2. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . PAUL CHARLES ATKINS BARRY FRANKLIN BADER Syracuse University, B.A. Adelphi College, B.A. Beth Israel Hospital, N .Y,C . U.S. Public Health Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y. 12 A f f ? 4. ' f'5f T 'W 'v!Pf f' ' 'V'-v:i '-- W fr ?'QQ'r 'F1 'Ev'ys'rJ -- H- 'fa -Q-avg-A17 1-.,.-V 4-1, A I ALBERT JOSEPH BAJOHR, JR. NANCY DOROTHY BAKER St. Iohn's University, B.S. Long Island University, B.S. Deanls List 1, Alpha Kappa Kappa. Deanls List 1, Alpha Epsilon Iota, Lenox Hill Hospital, N .Y.C . American Medical Womenls Association. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y MARTIN JAY BARSCHI PAUL BAXT Lafayette College, B.A. Brooklyn College, B.A. Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal. Alpha Omega Alpha, President, Dean's List 1,2,3. Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Mo. A.U,,,,, wwf' ' h i - , , ., ' ' , , W' , PHILIP MICHAEL ARIES FRANK ANTHONY ARIOSTA Adelphi University, B.A. Wlagner College, B.S. Dean's List 3, Class Secretary 2, Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, N.Y Alpha Kappa Kappa, Christmas Party 2. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. PAUL CHARLES ATKINS BARRY FRANKLIN BADER Syracuse University, B.A. Adelphi College, B.A. Beth Israel Hospital, N.Y.C. U.S. Public Health Hospital, Staten Island, N.Y. IQWMWM , ,, 0 1. M STEPHEN BERGER BASIL BERNSTEIN Brooklyn College, B.A. New York University, B.A. Dean's List 3, Phi Chi, Phi Delta Epsilon, Historian. Freshman Show 1, Christmas Show 2. Beth Israel Hospital, N.Y.C. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . ,ff MAE BRUCE MICHAEL BILDER STEPHEN LEONARD BLOOM Siena College, B.S, Dartmouth College, B.A. Freshman Show 1, Christmas Show 2, Deanls List 1. St. Lukeis' Hospital Center, N .Y.C . St. Maryls H ospital, Duluth, M inn ? 51 , , --nwnw' --ff w P M , .,,. ,, 1 Wi fAf,,,g4 2627. g , C f ,, 'WLZ4 uf fri! Q R if 5 f L Q W , 4. ' L, ' , 3 -' ' ' 'gg ,, W , ,Z aff 12,1 afl , A A 'f eww PAUL ANDERS BOSTROM NICHOLAS RICHARD BREYAN Upsala College, B.S. Tufts University, B.S. Lenox Hill Hospital, N.Y.C. Class Vice-President 3,4. St. Vincentls H ospital, Bridgeport, Conn. BRUCE LOUIS BROFMAN MICHAEL BROOKS Brooklyn College, B.S. New York University, B.A. New York Medical College- St. Vincenfs H ospital, Bridgeport, Conn Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. 1' ,I ii? ,, +5 4 wwsw LESLIE BERNARD BUNCHER EDWARD THOMAS BUTLER Harvard University, B.A. San Diego County-University Hospital, San Diego, Calif. NORMAN ARTHUR CAGIN Rutgers University of Pharmacy, B.S. Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List 1,2,3. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Georgetown University, B.S. Alpha Omega Alpha, Deanls List 1. Chicago lifesley Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Ill. MARIE BARONE CASALINO Hofstra University, B.A. American Medical Womerfs Association Hospital of St. Raphael, New Haoen, Conn ,,--wagmfw f W , ,A . I nh . Z 1 Y Q x X sg 1 ,V ,W T Zz M vii v m? 5 , x2 K 4 5 1 Hy, M, ,, 1 , , ii fy 4 E Z sv 5 ff n k ,NYM X N :N - W, 1 ,Wm ffm. 3 -4: :Wil ff' if, ff f af I K ,,,,, ,M M ji-IL, , ty, WZ? ff V ' 7' .,i5'5f3'w ' 'z K' wif f ff , . 9 L' 1 W ' VI- I Nw SALVATORE VINCENT CATENA VINCENT JULIAN CATRINI St. Iohnls University, B.S. The City College of New York, B.S. New York Medical C ollege- University of Bologna, Italy, Faculty of Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. Medicine New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. g 1-. 4 ROBERT VINCENT CATTANI CHARLES GENE. CAYTEN Georgetown University, B.S. Cornell University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean,s List l,2,3g New York Medical College- Class Senator 3,4. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, Pa. w wifwf W M1 f f ff f ? AQ! M w fy if 'T 'f'l 6 ROGER STEPHEN CHALLOP Brooklyn College, B.S. Phi Chi New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N.Y.C. ALLAN BARRY COHEN Lafayette College, B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Cent er, N.Y,C fm JOEL COHEN SHERWOOD SONNY DANOFF Wagner College, B.S. Clark University, B.A. New York Medical College- U.S. Public Health Hospital, Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . Staten Island, N .Y. gy , iw- 5 www , :i 'flJf: 195 :Ulf 'uf Vi? ' ,WW M17 , W' .Sf ra 'ss' A FRANCES RUTH DAREY ELAINE VIRGINIA DIGRANDE Pembroke College, B.A. Boston University, M.A. American Medical Womenis Association, Alpha Epsilon Iota, Christmas Show 2. New England Deaconess Hospital, Boston, Mass. New York University, B.A. American Medical Vlomenis Association, Christmas Show 2. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y www, M ,Many DONALD EDWARD DOYLE VICTOR GEORGE ETTINGER St. Peter's College, B.S. Middlebury College, B.A. Creighton University School of Medicine FLEUR-O-SCOPE 4, Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4 Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4 Cedars of Lebanon Hospital, Los Angeles, Cal. New York M edieal College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . M www M '42 Y Jw. W Q H 2 ! , A ff f wa if 2 i f Fwy, . :exam-wp W X A f A-eff V ,.,, X W W' W aw L az, V652 ,W 1 v , W-uw,,-wmv BERNARD HAROLD FAGIN Adelphi University, B.A. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y. ALAN STUART FEIT Fairleigh Dickinson University, B.S. Class Secretary 3,4g Phi Delta Epsilon, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 3, Photography Editor 4, Christmas Show 4. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. iliiih V.iLi I EDWARD IRA FEIL Western Reserve University, B.A. Dean's List 3, Phi Chi. Cleveland Clinic H ospital, Cleveland, Ohio JUDITH HARRIET FIEDLER Vassar College, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Deanis List 1,2,3g College Ball Committee 1,2,3, Co-Chairman 4 American Medical WVomen,s Association, V-P. Bronx M anicipal Hospital Center, N .Y.C . E'U'ff-ffi,5235Y?Qi?js3W?i5VIi5??4ii?H J 3 S . W fe, 2 Mwmwwf '-922711511293 -:4?'iLg!'Efi2Z5fY H ' , M f,,., Www ' M-,W JONATHAN HAROLD FISH HOWARD MARVIN FLEISSIG Brown University, B.A. Brooklyn College, B.S. Deanis List 2,3 New York Medical College- Los Angeles County General Hospital, Unit 1, Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C Los Angeles, Calif. MARIO JOSEPH FRACASSO ARTHUR MICHAEL FREEDMAN St. Iohn,s University, B.S. Brandeis University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa Kaiser Foundation Hospital New York Medical College- San Francisco, Calif. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . 1 x f f if ?, . W., W 4 WL wwwwMMA.,,,m ', , ,ff f' 1 35:-W Af ,W EDWARD LYONS GALLAGHER EDWARD MICHAEL GENOVESE Manhattan College, B.S. St. Iohn,s University, B.S. Madigan General Hospital at Fort Lewis, New York Medical College- Tacoma, IVash. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . ,,,.N.,,,aln:n i 'NSS' MICHAEL T. GILBERT JOHN FRANCIS GILES New York University, B.A. Boston College, B.A. Dean's List 3 New York Medical College- U.S. Public Health Hospital, Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C Staten Island, N .Y. fmy,Zy,,,mWWM Z ? I .. www iwmwwawwwfmwfwff fl ff fffwffwvwmhe WMM MMM 9 'sk Wuwmm LEONARD GLASER PAUL AARON GOLDBERG Duke University, B.A. Colby College, B.A. Lenox Hill Hospital, N .Y.C . Beth Israel Hospital, N .Y.C . fe- LEONARD IRWIN GOLDSTEIN STUART ALAN GREEN Lafayette College, B.A. Lafayette College, B.A. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. Hospital fofr I oint Diseases, N .Y.C 2?E w'mH , , ,,,A WARREN MARK GREENBERG PATRICK ANTHONY GRISAFI Lafayette College, B.A. St. Iohnls University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon Alpha Kappa Kappa Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. JANE NANCY HAHER PAUL ANTHONY HAMLIN Catholic University, B.A. St. John University, B.S. American Medical Women's Association Dean's List 1,35 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Lenox Hill Hospital, N .Y.C . Christmas Show 1,2. St. Vincentis Hospital and Medical Center New York City 9 uw 4 'z 2 ,7 jg, A ,z ,A sill? . .Z,.. BRUCE HUNTER HECKMAN THOMAS BRILL HEFLIN College of VVilliam and Mary, B.S. Washington and Iefferson College, B.A Dean's List l Dean's List 1 New York Medical College- Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Conn. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. LLOYD RAY HOFFMAN LOUIS FRANK IACUEO University of Vermont, B.A. Columbia College, B.A. Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y. Alpha Kappa Kappa Lenox Hill Hospital, N .Y.C. xi X9 3 , mi ge E as fo, Z ami l 1 PETER GERARD JAMES ANDREW KAGAN University of Rhode Island College of Clark University, B.A. Pharmacy, B.S. Dean's List 3 Phi Chi, Treasurer, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 4, Lenox Hill Hospital, N.Y.C. Christmas Party 3,4, Fields Club, College Ball 1,2,3, Co-Chairman 4. Lenox Hill H ospital, N .Y.C. STEVEN PAUL KAHN STEVEN KANTOR Duke University, B.A. Columbia University, B.A. Deanis List 3 U.S. Public Health Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon Staten Island, N .Y. University H ospital, Ann Arbor, M ich. V 4 ll, 'Mg , ' f xv z ' 5 1 4 f 'I 4' ' W SHELDON DAVID KAPLAN EDMUND ROBERT KAPPY, JR. Providence College, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List l,2,3. Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rl. GARY ALLEN KATZ Colgate University, B.A. Christmas Show 2, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 4. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. Rutgers University, B.A. Deanls List 1, Christmas Show 2. Bellevue-N ew York University Hospital New York City. JOEL RICHARD KATZ Brooklyn College, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List 2, Pathology Thesis Award, Second Prize Beth Israel H ospital, N .Y.C. Mm H6112 w .. ,, M ,ff 'fa , we ,MW I wwwnwh , :zzz ',,,,fs,.M,,4:m.'g,2sg4.. -fa ,W yew, 'yr MICHAEL JOSEPH KAUFMAN BARRY RICHARD KENT New York University, B.S. University of Pennsylvania, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Dearfs List 1,2,3. New York Medical College- New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . RICHARD STEPHEN KLEIN KAREN GRACE KOSTER Queens College, B.S. Vassar College, A.B. University of Rome, Italy, Faculty of Medicineg Dean's List 2,3, Class Treasurer 2,3,4g, Christmas Show 4. American Medical Women,s Association. New York Medical C ollege- Cedars of Lebanon H ospital, Los Angeles, Cal Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . mf Si? W M Q., , W Hifi? JQKWHW YAROSLAV KUSHNIR THOMAS EULNER LEONARD Rutgers University, B.A. Fairfield University, B.S. Beth Israel H ospital, N .Y.C . Alpha Kappa Kappa U.S. Public Health Hospital, San Francisco, Calif. ,N Tax .,., xa. ,P THADDEUS ROBERT LEONIAK HOWARD LEONARD LIFSHUTZ The Citadel, B.S. Ohio University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa Phi Chi New York Medical College- U.S. Public Health Hospital, Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. Staten Island, N .Y. ,Nw Z 9 3 4 5 6 Q 5 Z -ww ww 6 LM,- 5 xp, 1, 'Hina MYLES IAN LIPPE MARC LOWEN Cornell University, B.A. University of Bologna, Italy, Faculty of Medicine New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . CARL BURTON LUNDBORG Trinity College, B.S. Hartford Hospital, Hartford, C onn. University of Buffalo, B.A. Sinai Hospital of Baltimore, Baltimore, Md VINCENT ARTHUR LYNCH University of Pennsylvania, B.A. Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Ill. W! M4215 W f g F 1, WV, 5:52 4-it Wu ,,WWff'Wf 1 QW ' 221 4, Q,, W ,Ki . ,,,,, Z , W, . M1 ,, My 4 JOHN WALTER MAGUIRE JACQUELINE JUDITH MAIER Georgetown University, B.S. Dean's List 1, Alpha Kappa Kappa. St. Vincentis Hospital and Medical Center, New York City. Bard College, B.A. Vlomenis Medical College of Pennsylvania American Medical Women,s Association New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. RANDOLPH DAVID MALONEY STEPHEN HENRY MARCUS Georgetown University, B.S. FLEUR-O-SCOPE 1,2,3, Co-Editor-in-Chief 45 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Treasurer and Chairman of Scholarship Committee, Fields Club, Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4. St. Vincenfs Hospital and Medical Center, New York City. Cornell University, B.A. Alpha Omega Alphag Dean's List 1,2,3g Student Senate 2,3,4, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 1,2,3 Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital Center, Palo Alto, Calif. 5, ll. '12, , 1 , , , Q an Nw gls JOHN STUART MARR JOHN HOWARD MENSHER Yale College, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List 2,3, Pathology Thesis Award, First Prize, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 1,2,3, Co-Editor-in Student Senate 1, Fields Club. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . -Chief 4, Brown University, B.A. Pathology Thesis Award, First Prize, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 3,4, Christmas Show 1,2 Medical Residents Show 4, Fields Club. State University of Iowa Hospitals, Iowa City, Iowa BRUCE ALLAN MILLER ELLIOTT FRASER MORSE Lafayette College, B.A. New York University, B.A. Christmas Show 1, Deanis List 3. Phi Delta Epsilon, Fields Club. University of Washington Hospitals, FLEUR-O-SCOPE, Associate Editor 4, Seattle, Wash. U.S. Public Health Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y. ,W , , ' 1 sn , I AHS, I A BERNARD RICHARD NEWMAN STEPHEN ALLAN OBSTBAUM University of California, B.A. Rutgers University, B.A. University of Bologna, Italy, Faculty of New York Medical College- Medicine Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C. 'NEH- JAMES JOSEPH 0'CONNELL MICHAEL DAVID PARIS Holy Cross College, B.A. Lafayette College, B.A. New York Medical College- U.S. Public Health Hospital, N orfolk, Va Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . xg 1 Q. mi . 1' gf- wk 4 Q Ma: V Big .V A Q wx: W, Q -N-A ,,.. in N N my KATHLEEN MARIE PERRY RONALD GENE PERRY Annhurst College, B.A. St. 1ohn's University, B.S. Deanis List 3g Class Senator lg Class Vice-President 2g American Medical VVomen,s Association. Christmas Show M.C. 2. Staten Island H ospital, Staten Island, N .Y. St. Francis H ospital, H onolula, Hawaii EDWARD JOHN PUTTRE, JR. NEIL EDWARD ROMANOFF St. Iohn,s University, B.S. Moravian College, B.S. Class Vice-President 1, Phi Delta Epsilon, Vice-President 3, Alpha Kappa Kappa. Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4 Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . 'EY f V 1 'hm , af i Q , ,, we k.w- ' f ' it W' My 2' ?,, 12, Q M, M 1 F Us . qwm, -Haw 7, if ga 6 fwf ' X vs 1 ,4 I W? Q 'Vv A W rv ,. X 1 1:7 -'a V . 2.bAi,'!i,4.,s mn A WAV, . W , nag ' Q wi , ..., .,,n,:,, , ,M Q, ,ug E5 ,mtl 9 'wh ,F 4-, M k ,, is 'Z 4 Q- SQ mv 4.-4? uv W, , ,A 4 if -Q, v My Q , V ff? v 5 if my in W an W 6 H' v 4 Q M 1 40 Allis RONALD JOSEPH ROONEY NORMAN SETH ROSENTHAL Seton Hall University, B.S. New York University, B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa Phi Delta Epsilon, Christmas Show 2, St. Vincentis Hospital and Medical Center, Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4 New York City. Beth Israel H ospital, N .Y.C. uasf.N.,..Q t. ROBERT ANGELO SCALICE SANFORD LEWIS SCHATZ St. Iohn,s University, B.S. Drew University, B.A. Student Senate l,2, Christmas Show l,2,4g Dean's List 3 Inter-Fraternity Council Vice-President 3g Brookdale Hospital Center, Brooklyn, N .Y. Alpha Kappa Kappa, President 3, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 3,4. St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center, New York City. 3'- Q mb' PASQUALE JOHN SCOTTI Fordham University, B.S. Dean's List 1, Alpha Kappa Kappa. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . LAWRENCE ELLIOT SKURATON Rutgers University, B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . .,.,,.. ,,,.s--AQ' ROBERT JOHN SILICH Georgetown University, B.A. Deanis List 3, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Department of Medicine Christmas Show 4 Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y. JEROME SOLOMON Georgetown University, B.S. Deanis List 1 David Grant H .S .A.F . Hospital, F air7Qeld, Calif 2 W f M , X iw f if 4 f 76 A, mln K f ,, f f fy an M f eg ' 4 if 6 W f 14,7 ' ,. ,4 M FRIEDA EMILIE SPADY ROBERT MICHAEL STECKLER Wagner College, B.S. Columbia University, B.S.g VVomen's Medical College, American Medical Women,s Association. New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C . 3?- Columbia University, B.A. Dean's List 2,35 Phi Delta Epsilon. Long Island Iewislz Hospital, New Hyde Park, N .Y. MICHAEL RICHARD TESORO ARTHUR ALAN TOPILOW St. Iohn,s University, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa Greenwich Hospital, Greenwich, Conn. Lafayette College, B.A. Dean's List 1, Christmas Show 2, Department of Medicine Christmas Show New York Medical College- Metropolitan Hospital Center, N .Y.C fmf E gf Www Wm in , A 'NW JOHN SAMUEL TRAIN JAMES ANTHONY UMHEY University of Pennsylvania, B.A. University of Notre Dame, B.S. Dean's List 2,35 Phi Delta Epsilon, President 3, Alpha Omega Alpha, Dean's List 1,2,3, Inter-Fraternity Council, President 3. Alpha Kappa Kappa, Christmas Show 2, M ontejiore Hospital and Medical Center, College Ball Committee 1,2,3,4. New York City. Greenwich Hospital, Greenwich, Conn. ANTHONY VAN GROUW, JR. JOSEPH ALFRED VENEZIANO Upsala College, B.A. St. Iohn's University, B.S. Dean's List lg Alpha Kappa Kappa. Class Treasurer 1, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Greenwich H ospital, Greenwich, Conn. Christmas Show 2. St. Vincentis Hospital and Medical Center, New York City. Yr! N. , 4. , fwmmwwwwdmnmwwwwwww MW,gy5,H!mW4 fr W ,Www fmfltfi f W f ,wWM..,,,, , -' WWMW I , M--K N H5 5,..., ,. +mwwW,,,W , , A 7 f ' V - - M 4 I , ' X, . H Sf. ' ,f , 5 ff ,, ,,,, ff f V4 '1 , , 14 ,f H4 ff 'Q M V. I 1 i 1 ' ',,wf:,Wv LV, ' 2 , W4 1, ,, f L 1 ff2Em'1:p: Q ff .Eg V' ' E1 5' .1 .WMTQI9 'WJ H195 7 ff Q . . ' . 1. ' W ' I V Q M , W ey ,iw M Mm A , 'W nz' 1 W, ,. g g , A W5 ff , f ,M .. X ,if , f A ff! ffwh sw-trsg5,N,Q!,5 FRANCIS XAVIER WALSH College of the Holy Cross, B.A. Dean's List 3, Class President l,2,3,4g Student Senate 1,2, V-P. 3, Pres. 4, Senior Ball Commit- tee l,2,3,4, FLEUR-O-SCOPE 1,2,3, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Rush Chm. 2, V-P. 3, Class Show 2, Fr. Dance Chm. Greenwich Hospital, Greenwich, Conn. E STUART LOUIS WANUCK Fairleigh Dickinson University, B.S. Mount Sinai Hospital, Miami Beach, Fla. JOSEPH MAURICE ZICARELLI Villanova University, B.A. Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, N .Y. RAYMOND ZUKERMAN Hobart College, B.A. University of Brussels, Belgium, Faculty of Medicine Deanls List 3 Mount Sinai Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif IN JOHN KEVIN BERTLES St. Iohn,s University, B.S. May 4, 1942 - November 30, 1964 MEMGRIAM JAMES EDWARD HUXTABLE Utica College of Syracuse University, A.B. july 4, 1935 - Iune 6, 1966 BENJAMIN HARRIS SUM Lafayette College, A.B. December 13, 1941 - August 23, 1964 115 1 SENIOR CLASS Companionship iving for four years -prolonged gestation-only now being born. A growing process -maturing, hopefully - but aging just the same. About to emerge - multifaced - enigmatic expressions mir- ror the uncertainty of the future. The protected, mother-warmed, structured environment sheltering the fertilized and developing embryo has all but fallen away. Here now stands the product - virtually naked - sup- posedly germ-free but certainly germinal, quite suscepti- ble to the whims of the new life - ready to be tested by those who have long since made the journey into being. He contemplates his past, his years of growth and de- velopment - shivers at the thought of prior trials - smiles over the triumphs - failures displease but strengthen him. He holds out his ideals as a spearhead. The noblest profession - he is only now beginning to wonder at its abounding greatness -the power he will wield - the awe he will engender - but always aware of his basic finiteness in the infinite universe - how he must atune himself to nature to work with it, to heal, and, when necssary, to grapple with it when destruction is its aim. Responsibility - a fellow being will entrust him with life -incredible challenge - to meet, to decipher the un- known, to assemble the jigsaw of a thousand varied shapes, no two alike, to arrive at the answer - this is the goal. The success, hopefully, will outweigh the failure. The frustration not impede him. There is no room for the Pyrrhic victory here. But amid this serious contemplation the frivolous past President ...,..,,.... ...... F rancis X. Walsh Vice-President ..,.,.. .,..,.... N icholas R. Breyan Senator ............ .,.......... C . Gene Cayten Senator ......... ...... S tephen H. Marcus Secretary ......... ......,... K aren G. Koster Treasurer ..,,.... .......,,. A lan S. Feit is there - orgiastic possibly -mindless and, by contrast, carefree. Here, poised on the brink of being four years within, the womb beckon to be remembered. The first day we were still floating free, but we were not long in receiving the dictum -never get behind in your yord-the work of burrowing into the enriched medium - to latch onto extract nutrient knowledge and to grow. With an avid appetite of our own we eagerly accepted what was fed us. We saluted a whale of a source of knowledge and called him a good guy. We marvelled at the master of blunt dissection and felt honored if he,d measure the various dimensions of our hands. In spite of the early warnings by the powers that be, we were soon behind in our work. VVho could forget those long awaited, highly feared shot-gunv quizzes in neuroanatomy which never were given. Was he too busy? Did he think we were too smart or lamentably, too dull to merit the quiz? Or, did this quiz exist at all? Was it all a hoax designed to instill fear into the timid soul of the unknowing? A dead body-by some cavalierly treated-named and defamed-bits and pieces preserved for posterity. For some it was the first encounter with the opposite sex in the altogether.', Soon it became an object- de- humanized. This helped the strong empathizers in the group. Operating on a live patient, albeit a dog, gave Mr. Amory fits but delighted us. Those who would excel in vascular surgery were quickly selected, and those who wouldnit failed to cannulate the carotids, but did suc- ceed in transecting them fif they found theml. To make fudge - or rather, simply, to fudge - this we learned in Biochemistry. And if you didn't know how to pipette - well - then you had to know how to make the most delectable fudge. Amazing how it was that some few never came to the lab and yet still handed in their results. A. C. Gilbert sets at home? We loved the little woman who doled out glass equipment. Turn on the charm and you got it free in exchange for what you had broken. The lab fee refund at yearis end was new-found money. Sperm mobility studies occupied the interest of our teacher. Give all to science! Some did and were paid well for it. Bidding the self of anxiety, increasing manis knowl- edge of himself and making a profit-what could be better - so long as you had warm arm pits. Entering the second year of our confinement we were a bit more heady - but quite wary of the trials to come. One perpetual exam for more than thirty weeks caused malaise. Pathology, Pharmacology, Microbiology, et al., took turns humiliating us. Frivolity - yes, frivolity - those parties at the Plaza be- came too rowdy - the neighbors complained at the noise -we were acting like the people up the street. And so parental rules, those revolting things we thought we had gotten away from when we graduated from college, were imposed. The party had to be registered - size was limited. The asmallv courses in the second semester were in- describable. They were there - we attended - took notes -and in the months between second and third terms forgot almost everything we had once crammed into our pea-sized brains for final exams. Oh, yes -you passed them -even if you flunked them. Strange? If you pass the big courses, you pass the small courses, if you donit pass the abigv courses, then you flunk the Ksmallv courses. Simple. And if you flunked them, might as well go to Law School-or, even better-join the Navy- see the world. The second year- it passed and most of us did too. A summer ahead to study for the boards. Our school historically doesnit stand well in the first part of the boards. So we were told by those who went before us. But since when did history affect our class -we were unlike all others - unique - special. We would study diligently and improve the record. Yet the warm sunny days came - we traveled - swam - roared and cavorted - and study seemed to be an occupation which did not at all fit in with the general tone of the time. And so - we frantically crammed for the few weeks prior to the boards when fear precluded frivolity. After taking them we never did learn exactly where we stood among the ranks. Two days after the boards we began the third year, and since we had exhausted our supply of study energy, we were rather lax in picking up the pace of learning once again. Sluggish, flabby and confronted by a torrent of lectures, we began the second half of our medical education. The clinical years had begun and we went to clinics observing, palpating, percussing and ausculating. Sig- moidoscopy, laryngoscopy, gastroscopy, fundoscopy and many other -oscopies became well known to us. In the second year we had a small taste of ward work in physi- cal diagnosis, but now we were exposed more - the awk- ward feeling carrying that little black bag still stiff and crammed with the tangible tools of the trade - approach- ing the patient. Hi, I'm Dr .... 'i flf they believe that, they'll believe anythingl. A white coat, a black bag, and mostly a desire to know and help the patient seemed to be the keys to establishing the needed relationship. And there were exams which came almost as regularly as the proverbial twenty-eight day cycle. Lectures never ceased - notes taken were prolific in multicolors, yellow, blue, red, green - felt-tipped pens were the thing, Xerox, Inc. flourished. Changes had been made in the year. Supposedly things were better, We were a class on the brink of changes. After we went through, departments fell and new ones replaced them. The year ended as another began, the fourth and final - and again changes were made. Now we had only one month of elective -this made things more unified and whole, a sort of grand universal symmetry which we failed to recognize. This, yes this, was the pleasure domei' decreed in ages past by our forerunners. The year to end all years - a student intern, but neither a student nor an intern- rather, something in between-indescribable. At times it meant great power was in our hands, at times exhilara- tion, achievement and a sense of well-being were pos- sible - but our position in no-manis land made us vul- nerable-to be used and abused-as special nurses, practicals and nurses aids, and as objects subjected to the hostility of some nurses who were not willing to voice their complaints to the Residents - You tell that . . . We were to learn by doing, truly progressive educa- tion. And in many instances it worked. In any system, however, faults are bound to exist. How could anyone speak of an experience such as ours and have only good or only bad to say of it? This is unreal. But the more sensitive, the more idealistic among us felt all the let- downs more acutely, and became more disgusted when visions of what was supposed to be vanished in the light or, rather, the haze of reality. We have become older - we have aged and matured too. There is no one among us who will say he has learned nothing. And, of course, when sitting down to evaluate the experience, it will be inevitable to find mixed reactions. What can be said with a sincere tongue is: there are those who loved it-there are those who did not love it so well-but, there are those who will never know what they missed. John H. Mensher vdgzfzztzsl ,A fb. ', 'fm ffilwglm 'Qu I never use that greasy kid's stuff. Dr. E. Morse congratulated by Dr. S. Rini after successfully delivering a 534 pound fecal impaction with Piper forceps. , Ji. ...md 14 W.. f-1 The Dump Truck. Hirsute, hairsuit Goldberg. The Mose attempts to speculate Why is this man sleeping? Now thatfs what we call radical surgery! 9 ,if ,, gg j The rise . . . and fall . . . of Bruce Bilder 14 x Q It,s my beautiful body they all love. The Class Pole W Q f' it And when YOU Wake UP Y0l1,H be in HHIY' shall we try the deep dorsal pulse next? Q fs Y K 1 , Sw Exif Repeated from last year's yearbook by popular request. XE . What is a hemicorporectomy, doctor? V , , A Vg rg '4' , Moby Dick Fastest Foley in the West 'S ASI? - Wersi. .ff ik I'll study for the Boards tomorrow. But Mom, she's a nice Jewish girl. an.: f ,gl WU- I told her I'd put her picture in the yearbook this year! X is NES X ' QQ! I 1 , X 'til ti Si ' cw . X I've come to lecture from my personal experi- ence with G.A.P.O., commonly known as go- ir . . is When did you say your L.N.M.P. was? N Y X Xl? X if SK S N' ',:.' 2 Q I k r 5,-1 H . ,i Y Why do they all reject me? rilla armpit odor. Scorpio Rising Why is this man sleeping? They convinced me, I'm staying here as the only intern in Pediatrics K l 3 A little bit faster now, Judy? My God! I left the blood pressure cuH Richest man in the pumped up on her arm last night. class steals again, L as ' is The lizard has his 20,000 mile checkup. Metropolitan Bath and Tennis Club. do U mi Listen Al, I want a hospital with no nights and no weekends. tl . Ps Four X looks good in the seventh at Aqueduct. i was X 1 lf fl No matter what you do to me I Wonit come back here for an intemship. 'SM 2 Z mm , ,A Q , She's fully dilated now, After you finish your bottle I'1l give you an enema. Let's cultivate our gardens. Rini drove me to this. 41-77, X! QC hw. Waiting for the Hoover. Modess because . . . Oh no, 117 requests for Fertility and Sterility elective this year. 121 141 V, Did you ever get it in the ear before? People used to kick sand in my face , ..W,,,W,hWMMmMV q ,wwwmamammww NfN,A, A grade IVXVI holosystolic murmur heard best at the apex. ,.,..-f I think I'll borrow the vacuum cleaner ,lu if Mg, Why I just love Cozy Cole! QltMElNsl'1 uns W.,,.,,m, ,,,,, W.,W,WwMWm L fill? lcflllllflll D135 UQSIHS .f ' Now try and get out of there. But doctor, we don't carry Enovid on the Pediatric Ward . . . yet. Why yes, here at Flower we cure Cancer everyday. Q eww! What will it be tonight, Staph or E. Cali? ,r f-,E Why is this man sleeping? i +V i VXI FT ll M' ' L Lf gf ' fMnmM,wwm,wM,.WfW.a,Mw,W 0Wfmmw,WawMw,.,nMmm,mM..f .wm..i1-f-- .,:.,-:view-.bw - is .. , , .. .. .. , . , .. -. S 4 4,,l . . ,gf X. -wrfiy Q 'ig .. L. .G , ..,,.. ,.. if .. eeus I'm the Wooley Burger. .Q... WW 2 ,. l llfiifiifgliifxt. ' 51 i Qlflliffieiffkffifigriifill ' ! 5 ii:?52EFZkf-if ' r f- :.ii53i55iQ:S7. ilkiiilffw 1 . 2255553511 K7 K' f- - .f.sE.W-is fsigf-fggg-,: v,t.v:-w-- - -.1fi,..j2 :i51 ' .su - ..,:.1, . -:Wye .N X 8 X t vnavvw .. . Mig..ig-r,f5,-,f,8..3g5l ,ss5-.Q . f::fw.fm:u93:f. 121110 Things go better with Coke! If he gets out this tonight I'll give him 200mg of Thorazine. ..... gf Q W xggg 'isis f: si- f-2 Q .t,ii gig . I - ' A-B, seventh floor lounge, A-B, seventh floor lounge. '-+s-...Lux .ei it su L Then Little Red Riding Hood took her whip . . Let's get something straight between us. Indiscretion of the American wife QW mil , Oh Ciro! Can I be a Beautiful Person like you? Hello Bologna? Listen, How'd ya like that! I,m 'a comin, back. It wasn't on last year,s exam. 1 - Q 5 My D f ' I I I told you not to drink that serum! Guess what Gerry? And here,s the part where I run on stage with my pants off screaming Nami-Nanin. Come on downl 125 ii? R45 m -,Qc wif- X i I an K ,A-,qigx g . a-gi Q g L . 5 S Var . . M- S SIS K ' K 5 4 V ,H 4 LV,,x: Lvbli.L Q Ei N NP If Department of Medlcme Christmas Show 680-my auf ff 'LIL' 4 ' m ...,, . in-1 -..-4 .., Q, al' OK Boys, when I count to three charge! ,- ,:X,'. sw i i Qm'A Q' Y 7 Lenzo, you left a journal in the stall again. So you wanna join the Mafia? I'1l ask Sal. Good night umbilical twin wherever you are. You can drink it and we use it to clean the floors as well. One potato, two p0fat0, Nurse, why does the Doctor have that stupid smile on his three potato, four. You don't know what a Pap smear is, Numa: Yes, that's right-you will be the only pedia- trics interne at Met next year and Dr. Fein- berg will be your advisor. Does he or doesn't he? He does. sci? o wr.. ,,.:-- ul- .E Qi X5 , Miss? Yes, this is the Budha speaking. Golly, I forgot to take my Enovid this morning. Off to C-rossinger's with the schiksa. magnum' x She was two finger breadths dilated. Why is this man Sleeping? 129 5 - I X Nw M e 9 he Smkgi, ,S Do you know the number of a good toupee Shoppe? No! I don't but I wish I did. Deaf Mama mia mwmipnww I 1 2 .X .Q-WM , 4... 'V 5 A I J xi' Si xl x H And now a touch of vermouth. The same to you, fella! 3'2- ,L ,,. The spoiler. What was that? me QN WN gi if Hey Mose let s go up and Wflte some more grafl'itt1 m the stalls Omph Omph Lynch Ir Ha! Cot the Horn and Hardart truck And after the operatlon Hlet m1gnon for everyone' Soft souille. Thatls two dollars at 10 to 1 that the building won,t ever be built. Hey Mom! This is one of the dirtiest books Ilve ever read! Mr. Jude the Obscure. He's counting giant pandas in his sleep. is ,wk is , r I L And please Dear God, Please, no admission tonight. I just did my Hrst circumcision. Why do they call me Ha seed Y s A K If you apply to Stanford then I'11 apply to Yale. fn 73 I donit think he realizes my son is upside down! prune SPY-w.f Say, Iive never seen it from this angle before! Flower's answer to Jean Paul Belmondo. in he ug M, Sink Test negative History - negative, Physical - negative. Easy Lennie, thefre all under 18. Goodnight Dr. Ostrove. If t 4 Ectopic thyroid nodule? First my face that always charms, then I'll shave my under arms. E sv X, x x 4. ff X Xue. W - sr. . E S ik X X X K x S f,,,, .X Ns f... She says she is Salls Kid! Xfi Friday night Met, Cuisine I've taken 500mg. of Dexidrine especially for this picture. You don't have to be Jewish to love Ol, dopey is asleep up there again. Stevy CBut it certainly helpsjl 134 ,guv f 1 ne, Via ' W ,'f., 2 W, 1 fii M' H www!! EQ W fn am malmf ' I Wu I. L .,,. ., ,. .1 'T Q32 P if gf if , 1 4 4, 5 WCM, :,, V 1 Q N W3 4, ,Q 1 'if' ff , 'Q' C7 Im, 'Z 1 Q? we fn 7: gi? gi iw, ' W., 2 EBM I, , I ff X, .- ? 1 s I 31:7 'E' W Q fl? 'W-W, ' ,M 4 f,,,,,,,, ,,, ,,. 45 A f, 1,47 Ly WL H V A 'Nah L? M wma 4, MVW .1 ADVISORSU ,,.Frf sww ? I f VFW wif -fra I X... .. vw-li-F . . A 5 I ev-Q' ww M I ... Rm 1...-ff ! if tw 'B Q .X,, fi 5 HUM . N: ,rw-5, 33, QW Eden Lynette Ans Rise Carrie Ans Leanne Ariosta 2 A ' Sherri Cohen Daniel Gary Atkins Alecia Buncher Edward Genovese wi ,3 A :wtf f 15 3 - svgifziwiys: , :lf .Eff x fa 'ir Q A .Wx ,..., il .L 5 5 ,md 'Y Mx A ,emu mei? X Cwenn Susan Kantor Robin and Stacey Kantor 0RK Elyse and Brian Klein Lori Felice Lowen Jesse Obstbaum 1 N or E 5 ssss . Q X X... X Q s Edward Anthony Puttre Michael Gerard Puttre Robert Christopher Silich 3. Q my leee a a i Y , 11,, 5 NX. xx Eg -if- af'-Q ' no 5 - 5 Jefferson Jay Spady Michael Richard Tesoro Francis X. Walsh, Ir. , BATELEURJ CLASS OF 1968 nz iff 4 7 'Q 4 2f if 5 QQ fr ! f B f f M F V V ,A wif f f ,W W 4,253 X If if f W , H52 06 f , ffef L' Yzjifgwiwf W ff,,f , M W H , UNIOR CLASS President ,.,...4,..,... Vice-President ........ Senator .,.......,... Senator .,.,.. Q... Secretary , .... . Treasurer .,,r..... Practical Health Kenneth B. Iuechter john F. O,Brien Arthur P. Birnkrant Robert S. Schwartz Ellen S. Philips Judith Friedman unior year was scheduled to start at 8 a.m. Monday, September 12, 1966. However life is not that simple. The medical establishment knowing that most students quit summer jobs before Labor Day has devised a scheme to occupy would-be juniors until school starts -the National Boards. We felt right at home on those two warm September days. We took up exactly where we had left off in June - taking short answer exams. It saddened us to look at our schedule. It called for no exams. Not even the devilish surgery quizzes were mentioned. However in spite of our disappoint- ment we resolutely decided to apply ourselves. Iimior year began with a bang, or perhaps with a tick-tock as our first lecture block was cardiology. It can emphatically be stated that we really mastered the philosophy of cardiology. Perhaps we never will leam to read an ECG but we've certainly found the true essence of cardiac failure. The genius of the integrated lecture schedule astounded us: 1. The Normal Heart 2. The Management of the Failing Heart 3. Inflammatory Disorders of the Breast It was obvious from the beginning that junior year was going to be a rare treat. In a well conceived plan to decrease the amount of lecture time, much course material was shifted to clinical situations. Instead of being lectured at from 8 to 12 in the 6th floor auditorium, we could leave at 10 a.m. and walk to the 9th floor, resume our seats and listen to two hours of . . . er . . . um . . . clinical seminars. Most of us found the lecture series interesting and informative. We learned for example that according to Masters and johnson our wives had about four- teen years to go to reach the pinnacle of their sexual activity. Unfortunately we had reached our peak eight years ago. We can also remember the classic lecture and demonstrations of asthma and allergy that was coordinated with the paint- ing of the back of the lecture hall. The lecture proceeded, but for some unknown reason the asthmatic patients left early. That allergy stuff is confusing anyway. Lectures are alright but we juniors really longed for some exams. Things looked bad until the announcement of mid-year exams in january. Some of us were saddened by the fact that there were to be only three exams -hardly enough to get warmed up on. After arming ourselves with special pencils and stop watches fto time the departures of our two well known flying exam finish- ers? we began to take exams. Most of the questions were routine and could be answered from reading material and lecture notes but ENT questions were like nothing we had ever seen before. Throughout the year we glued our eyes on the bulletin board to learn of such earthshaking developments as the preventive medicine schedule, an announce- ment of a guest lecture in the immunospeciflcity of the rat glial cell ribosome, the Pediatric Departmentis interview list, the date of Ground Hog Day and an oifer for a summer externship between junior and seniors years. Clinical work was stressed during the year and thi ssatisfied just about every- one in the class. The clerkships on Medicine and Surgery were marked by many histories and physicals. Those on Psychiatry and Physical Medicine were marked by much needed endurance. Each clinical block assumed a unique personality- some more clinical than others. In large extent the program was look but don't touchg this was especially true in dermatology. Periodically during the year the cry of heart murmur would be sounded and an eager army of neophyte cardiologists would descend on some poor unsuspecting patient. It has also been reported that at least three juniors were critically injured when they got in the way of a code 99 battle wagon. However trying the workload was, there were brief respites available to the young doctors. Some of the athletically minded junior students turned to touch football and basketball for relaxation. Lunchtime was often the highpoint of our day. If the decor at the Metropolitan restaurant left something to be desired, the haute cuisine and excellent service certainly could not be matched. The one common complaint was high prices but everyone knows that you only get what you pay for. The coffee shoppe provided more intimate dining fseven or eight in a boothl. In either case the food was of equal quality. In spite of traditional student grumbling, we thoroughly enjoyed our first year of clinical medicine at Metropolitan Hospital. It proved diflicult to prepare for final exams in May because our minds were full of expectations and antici- pation of the rapidly approaching senior clerkships. Iirn McGroarty Q .: K 4 . Y H . Q wg - if' N X so ' . W' C .... . E:-, . 2 2 S l 'Q .5.. , K 5 7 is : 'S + 'H sf Ei .. P 1 l'. 7 X ' . iw Y s .Q 4 V ? I ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl-S. Steinbach, N. Borelli, C. Livoti, P. P. Wilk, I. Garfinkle, I. O'Brien. ROW 3 CLeft to Rightj - Ciardina, L. Heckman, V. Oronzi, I. Polito. ROW 2 fLeft to R. Carey, I. Bonamo, L. Berger, F. Bruno, K. Murdock, F. Right-S. Erlanger, M. MacDuf'l7, A. Birnkrant, P. Vernaglia, Manpoli, R. Lorenc. l . .1 Mil . rirrr 1 . . : l V W -..: , 3 if Q, ,,,,, F N G 3 1 -grb P r r X . I :Q Vi : k k i . . .. 555 ...K f. ,,,. K A L Q.. .. ' ' K 1, 5 K S ' W. ss .. . K - 5, . wx, we . NW' 'F f I , ROW 1 CLeft to Rightj - P. Shalen, F. Rosenberg, M. Leeds, K. Loughlin, M. Schwartz. ROW 3 CLeft to Rightl - R. Lap- G. Daniels, E. Philips, S. Landy, R. Clatzer, S. Steinberg, F. kin, A. Kristensen, T. Connolly, K. Nevins, P. Donshik, I. Wit- Galioto. ROVV 2 CLeft to Rightj - A. Amecluri, T. Eisenstat, ten, M. Krieger, R. Stone, I. Kessler, K. Iuechter. K. Cohn, M. Jacobs, G. Krulik, P. Latkin, I. Laskoff, S. Cold, 144 . X K 5 . . if af. Q: I S .-,'1' 1 . Q S . b t ::..!: S :Q .. :,, N f L 'S 1 Q ,,. b e : . .. a -xii . . 1. . . X .. 'X r .L me A. sz -N .- . s 1 'ii ' , . -'-- -. .H-H. 1 t- l X 3 1 X V fl 'S' Q . . ::L,. cw aw r 3 Si if xg lg -.. ., g f - . H ,-as 2 - - - F . . .K 4 .Eg - , M. K A - I f .vs ' l 5 K . Q.: 2 so gi .- 15' ,E -4- ' ,s '- Qs 2 ,L .K ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl -R. Fogler, D. Fischer, S. Masket, Angelo, G. Crenshaw, J. Gaffney. ROW 3 fLeft to Rightj - V. Cer, C. Sackler, E. Muss, S. Friedman, F. Cold. RONV 2 N. Silversmith, R. Hoffman, M. Stone, R. Masters, C. Wilson, CLeft to Right? - P. Karver, B. Pansky, H. Rofsky, R. Margo- I. Fay, E. Friedman, M. Block, M. Dellman. lin, I. Ferayorni, C. Fenton, L. Feder, V. D,Amico, R. D,- F M - . M. it s F 0 .,,,q K ' . . . :', QQVV . .. .,l: k 'Q If e tt: ... 'iit 5 .rf R 4 . - :,:, 3 . if Z' S ' ,v A -- . I, v 3 3 . ROW 1 fLeft to Rightl -M. MacDuff, J. McCroarty, M. man, R. Siragusa, W. O'Brien, H. Bruce, I. Ameres. ROW 3 Mellow, A. Chisolm, R. Schwartz, R. Rosenthal, W. Perlow. fLeft to Rightl - P. Sergi, A. DiSciullo, J. DiBartolo, C. Ba- ROW 2 CLeft to Rightl - C. McNally, Q. Mallinger, R. Sher- rone, A. Chancre, S. Katz. 145 i - So what if we're fat, We heat Seton Hall didrft we? Oh Boy! A PieCC Of Chalk! Heads we play cards, tails we go skiing and You wonit be tested on this material, so pay attention. if it lands on its side we go to the lecture. There must he another syndrome. Will the following students . . . A letter, more parisitology and now a positive A-Z! 146 Sm Picture donated courtesy of the Department of Anatomy. I think his name is Bucholz. Sure. It says in Merck that Priapism can be familial. Yeah, it says ustewv but I had 2 AB,s this morning We'll take the one who gave her tail in the raffle. li Skis, boots, poles, lifts . . . l 147 Xian-w if if Y .?f: it 555 ' Wwi. ' Psychiatric walk in Clinic, I know you said you had an earache but it might be referred pain. Now pay attention because this will be the G-C-, ChH1'1Cf0id, and S9C0f1dafY 11165 Rfld first and last time youill ever see me. YOU Want me ffl Check f01' h9I'Hia5? rr www .ww ,sin uni if H in 3613 Well I did it and I'm glad Sure itys tight but you wrapped my linger in there, too. I think I'm going to be sick. Come in, Come in, my dear. I think I saw the hash move. Q .F ' Q elif i if f f if Question, write, question, write, question, question . . . Today's subject is the thyroid. y sg y i 'K Stan, I a lmost had my I.D. Hlled in when you left. This is the Ist Met admission of a 3 year old kiddie who enters with the chief complaint of dysparunia of ten . . . ,v s Place: 5th Floor, Time: Almost anytime. Situation: Oronzi waits in prey. Tumor Conference Funny place for a chnncre. This hand is worth il million. t 'H 7 1 , 3 1 Would you believe, one of us has bad breath? Even his best friends won't tell him. Now put that knife in your left hand. Let's see . . . the heart is on the left and those bones belong on top. So we must have it right. I I'll cut along the dotted line. E I orl 4 He say's her name is Spinny Barkite. You leave me alone Dr. Bieber, you big bully, you. Now you put your hand in this position. 151 L CLASS OF 1969 WWW W mf , W z:l5,?'E' ZQ 1Vff?f113gx72 ,:ff- mia, g+fwWw:,,f ff nffffygfzfgeyfyrzgmfiM, ,,.y:.w'5v'ZQf'5'f4 AMW 1' ' K ilwW'f?3'-f'?iL43i'77 ' 'mf - is 4 ' ,mi wif , -,H SCPHCMCRE CLASS President ...,,..V...... ...... M ichael A. Fitzgerald Vice-President ,..,..A, ..,,A.,A R onald I. Jacoby Senator ..,...V..4,..,... .,........ L ester Borden Senator .n.... ..,.....A. I ames Nielsen Secretary ....... .,..n.... C lare L. Dana Treasurer ..V.,. ........ M . joan Horan Skill ur second year at NYMC did not begin quite so abruptly as had our first. We were prepared to be sophomores, largely by the knowledge acquired as freshmen and perhaps equally as well by all the rumors perpetuated by those who had preceded us. We had heard about Clin. Path. Confer- ences, ten courses second term, underlying Robbins in seven different colors, and of practically every other sophomore plaint. Now we could try it for ourselves. First term brought us, among other things, an ability to take notes at a rate approaching the speed of sound, left index fingers that bled refiexly upon en- tering the sixth fioor lab, live disease-causing bugs with which we could play around, twelve hundred drugs with that number to the hundredth power side- effects, and numerous aphorisms in Pathology - apples not falling far from their trees, the human breast as a precancerous lesion, high-powered pathologists with low-powered microscipes -all as a part of the dance of lifev which, for pur- poses of Pathology, was obviously given to sententiousness. Ambiguity held its place among the major plagues upon us fOne of our colleagues noted that soon we would get IBM sheets and pencils - no question sheets - and be given one hour to mark in the first one hundred answersj and someone,s monkey, trained to answer only true,v passed all but one of the twice-weekly Path quizzes. We were, for the first time, exposed to true medical terminology, which we dis- covered to be largely concerned with an abundance of adjectives, causing us to hope that we too one day could utter not infrequently usually but sometimes, not however, really often, almost never with straight faces. The high point of the term came with Christmastime. Having resolved a scheduling conflict with the pharmaceutical house, and having incorporated Dr. Denker as our first act, we took to the stage to bring the talents of the '69 Players to NYMC. From midterms until Christmas, members of the Sophomore Class developed notably jaundiced eyes, and on the basis of what they saw, indulged in the surreptitious production of doggerel, all with the purpose of combining such matter into the Christmas show which we had so long anticipated. Rehearsals were post-prandial, following quickly-grabbed lunches and dinners. Some scenes were never the same twice. A full run-through was not held until midnight of production day. And yet it came off. We spoofed everyone-faculty, facilities, and ourselves. So heady was our success that someone, complimented on his performance, said, Thanks We're sold out at P813 next week, and it looks good for the rest of the tour toof' But the essence of the Christmas show is the production of laughter, of guf- faws that can be shared by faculty and students. CHave you ever seen Dr. Reith laugh- laugh hardPl Dr. Bergman enjoyed the festivities, except that his wife, who attended, complained after the show, Louis, I keep telling you to stop pulling on your pants. Some time later he said, Next year the faculty will put on a show for the students? Don't they always? Christmas Vacation can be summed up in revived lines from our production: Try to remember the notes from September?!I canit remember the notes from Decemberf for vacation was a harbinger of finals. As we waded through the slough of exam period, some of us were wondering just how seriously Dr. Franklin had meant his famous ten per-cent statement. Curve-clirnbers, curve-riders, and curve-sliders, we all attacked the giant Bell- curve. Still unresolved is the question of whether we built up antibodies to it or to us. Suddenly-in the course of forty-eight hours-it was second term. Person- nel from various clinical departments were appearing in our lectures more fre- quently. Dr. Pike introduced us to the wonny world. Path went from the oral cavity to the other end and back again for the consideration of still other vis- cera. Everywhere sophomores were seen tapping their chests, eliciting resonance -no medical student would ever admit dullness, even dullness to percussion. Dr. Speer lectured at an even faster rate and was somewhat less predictable in his pursuit of the class list in conferences. Ten courses also signified a concomitant increase in the use of audio-visual aids for teaching purposes. The class became versed in two arts it had not pre- viously realized to be consonent with the successful practice of medicine: taking in the coal-dark andfor sleeping as soon as the lights went out, arising alertf?j with their return. So we pressed on, assaulting the cliffs of medical knowledge with the thought that the ascent would become progressively more natural, more of a part of us -with that thought as something of a motive force. The ascent was, for each of us, an individual matter. We would have our share of stragglers as Well as of Bellerophons, but if there was a general lesson to be gotten from the year, it was this: Chaos is the order of Nature!Order the dream of Man. Bruce A. Eissner if S X' k Q. .. sf A r.. ROW 1 -M. Platt, F. Schumacher, E. Rauch, C. Marley, M. Schachter, M. Schwahe, I. Friedman, B. Eissner, P. Conescu. ROW 2- S. Rushton, H. Archer, D. Billings, L. Zimmerman, R. Shugar, I. Andronaco, F. Murphy, W. Arnold, E. Leary, P. Holland, M. Eiselman. ROW 3-R. Koplin, M. Cooper, I. Stangel, F. Silverman, D. Rudick, M. Schoenwald, H. Etess, M. Glasser,, D. Berson, I. Kagan. x - . 11 ' W , . ' ' 'IP - . iw-we ,Q v--: N - , , .,..k- A - x r 5 we K sf R as .se X 6 Q .. .Kgs . . . , . ,,..., 1 3 E 5, . J . . Q 1 1 P' . .Q .... as x iii g 1 Q is . 'Shi ia bf Q R A -4 A 4 ROW 1 - R. Davis, R. Fodor, L. Ackerman, P. Nussbaum, A. Jacobs, M. Reitman, J. DeFilippi, R. DeLuca, N. Gualtieri. ROW 2 - M. Rosenblum, C. Ioshpe, D. Schwartz, I. Carrisques R. Fleischman, R. Schneider, S. Fox, P. Indelicato, D. Kuliclc W. Rosenfeld. ROW 3 - R. Knutson, D. Nugent, A. Villamena, E. Leary, M. Bernstein, K. Hodor, S. Duboff, R. Belsole, M. Henderson. H J W ... 5' U X R ,, :,. fi 1 eis . Y A M Y . lV i 27 4 ' , F r . Row 1-R. Arenson, L. Borden, I. Nielsen, M. Fitzgerald, chia. ROW 3-P. Goodnough, R. Herzlinger, C. Mango, A R. Jacoby, C. Dana, A-M. Shute, M. Rosenblum, F. Cangemi. Curtis, E. Markham, A. Culliford, I. Ramieri, R. Spector, D ROW 2-K. Scheffels, R. Manis, V. Petersons, R. Hirsh, F. Herz, P. Lascelle. Crannis, N. LaRusso, E. Bloch, N. Edison, I. Gaffney, R. Mac- ROW 1 -R. Dolan, R. Scotti, I. DeFilippi, M. Ferrante, S. Cade. ROW 3-R. Memoli, D. Pompa, A. Bernstein, R. Mer- Schaffer, P. Nussbaum, D. Nugent. ROW 2-R. Knutson, J. rick, W. Etra. Nielson, J. Andronaco, S. Rushton, B. Meisel, P. Ziegler, R. Now ve vill demonstrate de neurogenic bladder. Gil ,gf Dear Mom and Dad . . . After considerable thought . . . Boy! This lecture's off the wall! T' 4? by And this Way there's no excise tax. ,dd Well, we passed the practical in OB lab. Stop staring at her and listen to what I'm saying. in 5. 1 M111 MW gybivf wmgl' ' N433 WVhy didn't I go to law school. Inch toward the door. Theyyll never notice the split in your pants. YM M ssl' I fr sa ' So you,re going to have a baby. Ever since I was so high I wanted to be a fireman. f You may be right, Al, but Friday,s a false,' day. The Class of 1969 after the sophomore year. rrrr Oh if only he wasnit married. X 'M ' nr Thatis the last time helll Hunk me! il,- 'es it i 'Q N ,,,, .1 ., Us - X xl? 'P X I think I have cancer. 160 4 JZ or Youire Nuts!! wif Would you repeat that, Dr. Auerbach? .r They'll never get my old exams .0 I have to stick it wherel? as 1--u.. Rb t, 3 ui I donlt believe it. ,YW n... l vying , A, o ' - , ,,,,,, ' Same to you fella! gl '73 Ooh, it's cold!! I'm getting recharged. I'l1 bluff. I just told her, Marry me or sufTer!,' wwf-ww , -. w .,,F,,,a,,.t,.WM,..,.,,t .W H- r,W,,,..M:.v !.,Mfi,,,,, N., .. WWW .. E 5E,r,mMQt,a.,M,- .. ,X ,. Mae ,. . .. .3 MW. wrmri, V- fQj5gg,.1:iX ! q,!,.N,ffv' . r K ' .,a.Q-wwe. -- 1. . f ' ' P f ' it -2 1 A A -fi f ' Q gf V f A ig ! .SX K It's Canadian chaps, it has to be the best. Why lower the projector when you can lower the screen? .0 I thought it was her naval! Kiss me!! V , , MWF' This time through the flaming hoop . . . Tupi, did you make that noise? 1 Maw ef 4 LHR W I d0n't believe this bloody mess we're in. 162 Z? 1 i You must be two people. One person couldn't be so stupid! f 2 , 1 And for another Sl I'll It juSt moved! get you one that Hts. if z Congratulations, DeLuca, she looks just like you. No, Noll Not in my hand you don't! I think I just ate a worm! Q- You know, last summer I worked in a slaughter house. I'm just smarter than you! gnww just think, Ron, if it's compatible we can get married. 'X Missed Lehr's lecture, eh?! Q 10...9...8...7...6... 1 ,. --11: Q- CLASS OF 1970 , . ., .. ,. .fa-.. A--X .- -. x . ....... . - 1.1.1 5- .i-..s:?z:- N -- . - .. . - v-6-.-mai.--1--:MQ.wx .---ww v u l - W... -- -M 2, .Q f X .- .- f -4 - 1. . . ' .5-Q - 51,5 3.5. 1-.523--'15-iffvfff.-1-.K ---23 - Q . f Sv -W i -,s , ,uk Ny ,ff N5 QQ --- -. -- Q . -A r f- A-QL -- s - . ': . --.f-ww. .,.Vkk . . A f .5 -1. . X X 3 X X 'X Tw X -...Eg .. . Q il- Q iz. ::5 5 .r. klxi.. . xy . . 5- ' ' -- X N xr X X Q, R75- - 3- i-45 .Q - Lx- . . Ng... 2 p 53- sw-- . .k-- -gg x SF, ' 'Sw -- -as f i -TJQSJ If? . . . - K. 1: -25111.-..-.5 . 2 -xiii? , - ,,. .-. . . .H-,. . Zi FRESHMAN President ..A,...,... Senator .,,....4...... Senator ..,,.. Secretary ....... Treasurer ..4... F rivolity Vice-President r,,,. ,..,... CLASS Robert R. Meredith Charles B. Mosher . Robert W. Ferrell William H. Isacoif Hollace D. Jackson Alan M. Lesselroth e met in autumn, one-hundred twenty-eight form 'filling out ex-colle- gians mixing euphoria and fear with new white jackets. We accepted our elders, advice, pick a skinny male for gross labg clanked bone boxes home on the IRT5 and signed away millions to Sal in the bookstore. The first weeks were bad. Memory cells which had lain dormant since French II were called on to retain the origin of the Trapezius and the action of the Rhomboids. Reading Baileyis seemed preparation for a medical trivia game. Everything went through the skull in the most unlikely places. Relaxation became debating the relative merits of Scherer's, Grant's and House and Pansky. Compounding our distress were the smiling assurances of upper classmen that this was the easiest semester and the gnawing thought that nothing is worth this much work. Yet we survived. We played find a clean coffee cupv in the cafeteria and worked out ways to avoid touching the door handle in gross lab. Dr. Reith,s drawings made anatomy seem intelligible if not logical, and the pink and blue spots under the microscope began to resemble cells. Coffee breaks grew longer as we faced our first exams. Breathless from running the anatomy maze and bleary eyed from the circle l if only a and c are correctv histology test we ran into a huge backlog of work in neuroanatomy, embryology and genetics. Neuro. lab was especially depress- ing. You looked at either Weigert stains where nuclei didn't show or Nissl stains where everything didn't show. Embyology was a snap-if you already had the course in college. Very few people purchased a genetics book early in the term, but then genetics was clearly a matter of a double helix alphabet spiraled around a handout to make a protein. Clearly. The days settled into a comfortable mt. Co to lecture, take a cotfe break, go to gross lab, eat lunch, go to another lecture fand sleep?j, take another coffee break, go to another lab, eat dinner, study, take a sleep break, go to lecture etc. College began to look better all the time. Midterms passed in a flurry of sleepless nights. And if there was great joy at being one-sixteenth of an M.D., it was dampened considerably by the size of the lines outside Anatomy Department oflices. But he wha has survived five gross labs a week is too strong to be stopped by one F, two D's and a few C's. The long awaited Thanksgiving recess found piles of books and stacks of all I'm going to do is studyv resolutions heading home for four days. The books returned unopened. The good resolutions became guilt complexes. We hadn't studied much, but, viva unity, we hadn't studied much together. A great desire to turn off your mind between Thanksgiving and Christmas was stiffled by the announcement that still another round of tests was approach- ing. But there were compensations: the wonder at watching a delivery, the joy of knowing that next year we'll be getting our little black bags, the calm assurance that Christmas vacation really will come eventually. We decorated a tree with beer cans and angel hair, met Dr. Denker, laughed at the Sophomoreis skit, and explained to the Anatomy department our defi- nitions of happiness. Vacation began in a rush to ski slopes and microscopes, and ended in a dash to the embryology and genetics books that had lain untouched since mid-terms. Finals - Much black coffee and very little sleep. Weucrawled out of school that last Friday vaguely aware that we had only,' seven more semesters to go. But lest we waste time over inter-term, Biochemistry and Psychiatry assignments were posted. Conditioned by college to long inter-term vacations, our psyches were far from rested when the new term began the following Monday. We faced Freud and carbohydrates and something called M.E.N.D. At first physiology seemed difficult. We soon learned it was just impossible. But this time the panic didn,t come C though a few muffled cries of: I want my nice, sweet, friendly Anatomy Department back were heardj. We had made it through one term and we would make it through another! Ann Marie Nardi ROW 1 fLeft to Rightl -P. Albert, P. Berglas, E. Albin, P. Alia, M. Hermele. ROW 3 fLeft to Rightl -F. Fenesterer, Boastberg, I. Adams, D. Arnold, P. Megibow, H. Lantz, M. R. Rogers, S. Springer, I. Pollack, A. Rose, S. Breshin, A. Lewis. ROW 2 fLeft to Right? -V. Kline, J. Palmer, K. Pa- Pollock, D. Micci, I. Gale. taki, G. Pelebecky, N. Krull, L. Sara, P. Reif, L. Newman, R. ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl -B. Shelton. M. Dolin, K. Pozner, Berman, B. Updegraff. ROW 3 fLeft to Rightl-P. Mc- M. Seidenstein, G. Patt, L. Lindquist, E. Zelnick, R. Saltzman, Keller, R. Adams, T. Graboys, R. Dalton, T. Troiano, I. Maz- M. Frank. ROW 2 CLeft to Right? -R. Karp, R. Henry, K. zeo, D. Beccia, R. Crootof, C. Barrett. Fryer, R. Santella, A. Randall, R. Lombardo, A. Gellady, M. ix S n ROW l CLeft to Right?-R. Vitolo, D. Conca, S. Schiff, A. M. Nardi, V. Sadock, H. Higgins, R. Baumgartner, C. Heim ROW 2 fLeft to Right? -D. Chagi, K. Miller, R. Appelman D. Hain, I. Brenner, R. Klein, A. Casella, R. Coldfarb, R 7 Goldhamer, R. Lautin, I. Meehan, H. Rosenkrantz, R. Ferrell C. Brown. ROW 3 CLeft to Right? - F. Gallo, W. Lipsky, L Denmark, W. Muster, A. Newberg, E. Creagan, C. Tarta, I Vetrano, L. Benvenuto, R. Volpe. ROW 1 CLeft to Right? - S. Marks, C. Manberg, C. Mosher, A. Lesselroth, H. Jackson, R. Meredith, N. Maron, D. Kamin- sky, M. Rothman. ROW 2 CLeft to Right? -W. Carroll, W. Walsh, VV. Joseph, D. Sawyer, L. Lateiner, M. Berries, P. Se- ward, I. Caplin, R. Peinert, R. Newman. ROW 3 CLeft to Right? - H. Chester, F. Newman, I. Pollack, A. Rose, S. Din- nerstein, D. Murphy, P. Feuer, C. Thom, M. Bonder. ,,,,,..., W WM-vwmww KKK if I am now demonstrating both gynecomastia and nystagmus . . . a new syndrome I discovered. if wx-N-Q9 YN Ole! How do you do . . . my name is Count Dracula . . . I'm going to drink your blood! Ban takes the worry out of being close. So youlre a nurse at Mt. Sinai? mmwk ,w 'w -nm: -M--QsQ The vein is the one with blue latex in it. He just donated his adrenal cortex. f And if held in this fashion it makes an excellent weapon. i 1 l 554 if W I have enough LSD in this tube for 300 trips. Who,s the smart guy that wrote that the Kreb,s cycle is 28 days long? Q Tea and Company Happiness is . . . Interrupt me again and I'll Hunk you. ufwxl M wfbimlw Mikal . 1. I x.. I X Neuroanatomy visual aid. Add two peyote buttons, a touch of amanita and stir. What do you mean I'm a dirty old man? 7 4 - 1? Each sucker . . er . . freshman nets me eighty dollars clear profit. lim going to examine you all for hernias now. Zu' 1 ' 4 from I just passed this stone. And the frog acourting he did go. ta ! What do you mean I'm two and a half seconds late? And here we have a classical case of phocomelia. 173 This ig 3 helluva 3 date. And this year the prize is awarded to the man with the largest Poupart's ligament. Uncle Miltie. And when I turn on this light youill all he sterilized. I have 6570 blasts in my peripheral smear. What does that mean? I'll take your sandwich as down payment. Do you guys really think this will help my figure? You know these do make great bathtub toys. The Temple of sweat. GUYAI i N6r?555 E ll 3 X What do you mean Rhodin said I canlt go skiing? I have just completed a 17 color, 3 dimensional Homogram which you all must copy in the next 4 minutes. This guy must be kidding. We 1967 FLE R-O-SCOPE nn., ,, C .., .N ., . LAMQRT XV LE DIMM- J Co-Editor-In-Chief .....,... Co-Editor-In-Chief ,...4..,, Associate Editor ,.., Photography Editor ....... Business Manager ....., Faculty Advisor .,..., Randolph D. Maloney John S. Marr Elliott F. Morse Alan S. Feit ,. ,...,..,. ........... , .....,...., N iel J. Borrelli William M. P. McKinnon, M.D. STAFF Charles G. Cayten Victor G. Ettinger Peter C. James Kenneth Juechter Lester Bordon Bruce Eissner Ann Marie Nardi CLASS UF 1967 CLASS UF 1968 Kerry Nevins CLASS UF 1969 CLASS UF 1970 Bruce Shelton ACKNOWLEDGMENT Gary A. Katz John H. Mensher Robert A. Scalice James McCroarty William Etra Frances Moson Robert Meredith It is almost impossible to list each and every name who has contributed to the success of the 1967 FLEUR-O-SCOPE. We are especially grateful to: Rebecca Ellison Mary Alice Fisher Nancy Floyd Arthur V. Jensen, Ph.D. James Keller Joseph Mayotte Ruth Norton Paul Sheffels Lucy Solomon Arthur Stephan To the entire staff and to all those who contributed to this cooperative effort go the heartiest thanks and appreciation of the editors. SENIOR PORTRAITS BY: MURRAY TARR STUDIOS, INC. NEW YORK, NEW YORK PUBLISHER T. O'TOOLE AND SONS, INC. SOUTH NORWALK, CONNECTICUT ...MW Randolph D. Maloney Co-Editor-in-Chief Elliott F. Morse Associate Editor WUWWVWA William M. P. McKinnon Faculty Advisor -nnw.,k John S. Marr Co-Editor-in-Chief Alan S. Feit Photography Editor ., , Niel J. Borrelli Business Manager CCR ET MANUS IMPERATRICCE , Wisdom Rules Us: Action n an effort to honor those students who have contributed much of their time and effort toward furthering activities at the College, and who have dem- onstrated loyalty and devotion to the aims and objectives of the College embodying those qualities that make for the highest type of citizens and physicians, Cor et Manus was founded. Its membership is by election, the results of which are announced at the President's Reception to honor members of the Senior Class. At this time these seniors are called forth to receive their scrolls from the founders of the society. The literal meaning of Cor et Manus is Heart and Hand, and election into the society is a slight repayment by the College for those students who have do- nated their time and efforts so unselfishly CHARLES C. GAYTEN ALAN S. FEIT IUUITH H. FIEDLER -.....,,-.8 PETER G. JAMES RANDOLPH D. MALUNEY -N...-ali' STEPHEN H. MARCUS l0HN S. MARR fm lm nosenr A. scnucs mmzs A. uwmzv mucus x. wALsu ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA T,,mm,xm,,,mw,,,a,,,mWNAmmwnwn11mwnrf Il y J UN ON I s tt: J To Be Worthy To Serve The Suffering President .r...,.......,.. ,..........,....,.,. P aul Baxt Vice-President ....... ...,.....,..... C . Gene Cayten Secretary ....,...4..,..r,, ................,....... F. llen Phillips Faculty Advisor r...... ......,,. F rancis D. Speer, M.D. Faculty Secretary ...,........,.,.,...,............,..,.., , ,..,..........r.....,.,......... Morton Smith, M.D. lpha Omega Alpha is the national medical honor society, the only order of its kind in medical schools on this continent. It was established in 1902. The aims of the society are the promotion of scholarship and re- search in medical schools, the encouragement of a high standard of char- acter and conduct among medical students and graduates, and the rec- ognition of high attainment in medical science, practice and related fields. The New York Medical College chapter, Iota, is a relatively new one, being established in 1957. The new membership is chosen each year by the Alpha Omega Alpha members of the faculty and the student body on the basis of scholarship, personal honesty, and potential leadership. Each year Iota chapter sponsors a lecture by an outstanding person in medicine or related fields. This year Dr. john H. Knowles, Director of the Massachusetts General Hospital spoke on, The Expert in Society. Also faculty members of AOA invite the student members into their homes several times a yearto hold Iournal Clubsv in which the students present reviews of the literature on selected current topics. W . ff I , Xxx. W .519 W. f J . , .4 ...Jr we ROW 1 fLeft to Rightj - E. Philips, J. Fiedler. ROW 2 fLeft to Right, -J. Marr P Baxt M. Kaufman, V. Oronzi, R. Stone. ROW 3 CLeft to Rightl -J. Katz, S. Marcus, S Kaplan S. Steinberg. STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS UF T967 John D. Albin , Paul Baxt Edward T. Butler Norman A. Cagin Charles G. Cayten Judith H. Fiedler Sheldon D. Kaplan Joel R. Katz Michael J. Kaufman Stephen H. Marcus John S. Marr James A. Umhey STUDENT MEMBERS CLASS UF 1968 Steven M. Erlanger Vincent R. Oronzi Ellen S. Philips Steven M. Steinberg Richard K. Stone STUDE T SENATE X LE JL GEMENT All Men's Actions Are Recorded: Advancement President .4......... .......... F rancis X. Walsh Vice-President ..... ..4.,. , .Kenneth B. Iuechter Secretary .........,....,....s..,...................,.4.,.4,..,......,,..,,,...........,.................,.... Lester Borden he Student Senate is an organization composed of three elected ofliecers from each class and a member of the college administration. It functions as the governing body for student activities and acts as liaison between the student body and the faculty and administration. Problems are pre- sented and discussed by members of the Senate. In past years the Senate has been very successful in its endeavors to meet the needs of the students and the Medical College. This year the Senate has even furthered its influence by improving its working relationship with the faculty and increasing the scope of student activities. With the rapid growth and development of the New York Medical College and the constantly changing trends in medical education, the Student Senate is grateful and enthusiastic to serve in its role for the betterment of the college. ROW 1 CLeft to Right? -K. Iuechter, F. Walsh, S. Marcus, G. Cayten, L. Borden. ROW 2 fLeft to Rightj -A. Birnkrant, R. Schwartz, J. Nielson, W. Isacoff, M. Fitzgerald, R. Mere- dith, R. Ferrel. - ' XV ll. A ff? to oooo AM E RI C AN MEDICAL OMEN'S ASSOCIATIO le .i 0 U1 1 By Faith Evil Turns To Good: Hope President ,.,,.,....., .......... M ichele I. Alman Vice-President ,..... .,.,..... I udith H. Fiedler Secretary .....,.... ...,..,.. N ancy D. Baker Treasurer .......,. .i...... I oan D. Albin he Iunior Branch of the American Medical Women's Association is now in its second year at New York Medical College. The group was formed in the spring of 1965 when we felt a need for a women,s professional organi- zation that was afliliated with a national one. Following a tradtion established by the fraternity which preceded us we held a buffet dinner during the first week of school to welcome the new freshmen women. This year's plans included a meeting with women medical students from other medical schools. In March we met with a group from Downstate Medical Col- lege and had a chance to compare experiences both as medical students and more specifically as women medical students. Our meetings with women physicians in training and in practice have been an important aspect of our organization. We have had the chance to learn how other women have handled the problems particular to women in medicine as well as to explore those special contributions that we as women can make to our field. We hope the organization will continue to grow and provide a meaningful opportunity for women medical students to meet with each other and with women in practice. ...F :1 . . . se. A X f . .--N ' an I -v Y- 1-. i - - Jr - . 1 if f S-N Q S NF' .. Q I x R . .1 Q' sf f k' . . ig. . A is X .3 . gg. . f . . I i - 121. K Y ia j .5 we . 1' Q. .V RONV 1 fLeft to Rightl -C. Livoti, P. Giarclina, E. Philips, C. Sackler, L. Heckman. ROW 2 CLeft to Rightj -I. Maier, K. Perry, M. Alman, K. Koster, N. Baker, F. Darey, C. Ahne- rnan. ww' i 1 I ? XF Qi ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl -C. Marley, W. joseph, M. Schwabe. ROW 2 CLeft to Rightl - C. Dana, M. Ferrante, M. Schachter. ROW 3 CLeft to Rightl -H. Higgins, L. Ackerman, D. Arnold, H. Jackson. f 5 .wk A ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA President ..,..,...,.., .,...,.. N iel Borrelli Vice-President ....,.,,,.. ....... H enry Hanff Treasurer ...,...,......,...,.., ..4.,,.,. R obert Siragusa Recording Secretary .A...,r..,. ..,........,..,..4, P aul Vernaglia Corresponding Secretary ....,. ......, A nthony 1. DiSciullo Sophomore Executive ......... ......... I oseph Andronaco l 'T , ,Q it '12, a rf. sni f f- N . 1 15 A lg Q ,ffm uf l ' A.. VY? 1 ll L Q fl . ' ak or the past twenty-nine years AKK Fraternity has been represented at New York Medical College by Beta Rho Chapter, one of thirty-fou ractive chapters in the United States and Canada. The Fraternity, dedicated to fraternalism with a purpose to foster the highest ideals of the medical profession, has grown to become one of the largest medical fraternities in the world. Including the Alpha Club, 'our Alumni and Faculty division, Beta Rho is presently the largest Chapter in the Fraternity. The 1966-67 season of activities, piloted by President Niel Borrelli, has spon- sored functions in addition to the professional activities of the Chapter. High- lighting the activities was the annual Rush, held this year at the Playboy Club of New York. Other annual functions of the Chapter include the Rusheeis Dinner, the Faculty Dinner, and Ladies, Night, held at the end of the season. The Phil Cooper Memorial Scholarship Fund, established in memory of one of our de- ceased Brethren, made its first awards this year. With these diversified activities and functions, Beth Rho Chapter of AKK Fraternity has become the most popular Fraternity at New York Medical College. W W-ws 1 x X Hs 'S X 5 lik , . i L.L1,z:. .. W y : . . 2 W BM WE Y as ,L 3 Q XV 1 I . , ki kkkkh -V . if ' f . , . . ta 5 ' , I X Q31 3 Ag,h X X is K' K - ' x I I . . x.. sf ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl - I. Polito, R. Catani, J. DiBartolo, N. Borelli, K. Nevins, G. Calioto, A. Kristensen. ROW 2 CLeft to Rightl - R. Maloney, F. Bruno, I. McGroarty, P. Vemaglia, R. Siragusa, A. DiSciullo, W. O'Brien, V. Oronzi, G. Crenshaw. ROW 3 fLeft to Right,- C. Barone, T. Connolly, I. Bonamo, P. Sergi, F. Manopoli, R. Lorene, G. Wilson, I. O'Brien. ROW 1 CLeft to Rightj -A. Curtis, F. Pizzi, F. Murphy, J. Andronaco, R. Scotti, J. De- Filippi. ROW 2 fLeft to Rightj -I. Nielson, L. Gennarelli, I. Gaffney, D. Nugent, R. Man- nis, R. Memoli, W. Arnold. ROW 3 CLeft to Rightj -R. Knutson, S. Rushton, L. Borden, G. Campana, V. Petersen, D. Pompa, R. Dolan. 187 PHI CI-II Presiding Senior ........, .,.,... I erome Solomon Secretary .....,.,.,.,... ,..,.., K enneth Murdock Treasurer .,,.....,,,,., ............ P eter G. James Judge Advocate . 4..... ,..,... H oward L. Lifshutz Nr L ll , if., JY' LN' if 'T .L I I Q73 gf.. he Helmouth Society was organized in 1867 to bind together young men of the healing and homeopathic arts. The Phi Chi International Medical Fra- ternity was founded in 1889, and it was in 1948 that the society became affiliated with the Phi Chi Medical Fraternity as the Phi Alpha Chapter. With its sister chapters present in over seventy medical schools, and with its thirty brother alumni chapters, Phi Alpha has become one of the largest chapters and an integral part of the largest medical fraternity in the United States and Canada. As part of the chapter's annual activities there are bi-weekly business meet- ings, a rushing smoker to meet with incoming students and student-faculty dinners. In addition the chapter invites guest speakers for several gatherings throughout the year to provide an opportunity for its members to discuss topics of current interest with highly respected men in the field of medicine. The presentation of awards in recognition of service to the fraternity is an- other of Phi Chi's traditions. Each year at the Induction Day banquet, The Michael Carey Senior Service Award is presented to the brother in the Senior Class who has been outstanding in his efforts for the fraternity as exemplified by his service to the chapter during his active fraternal membership. With this spirit of recognition, The Eban I. Carey Award was created to be presented to the brother attaining the highest scholastic average in the anatomy course in his freshman year. The ideals and purposes of this fraternity are best set forth in the preamble to the constitution: . . . to foster and maintain among medical students and physicians who are socially and professionally compatible and regardless of race, creed, or color, a spirit of fraternalism, mutual aid and moral support, to promote and advance the concepts of the medical sciences, and to encourage activities worthy of the highest precepts of human endeavor. . , ' 1'2 if . 4 :Sr Q. ,I 3,5 x..k,,: .. .kk E K l Q , Q, , KX.. f .V x ,y3 ,,., Q- I f .f ag, We K sf Q Q M Q xx w as 2:11, F f s, ROW 1 CLeft to Rightl -K. Murdock, I. Solomon, M. Dclman. ROW 2 CLeft to Rightl - N. Silversmith, B. Pansky. , ,saw VW ..., 3. Ev f f A . , Q ,QQ fm- iff if CLeft to Right? - J. Coltz, I. Solomon, H. Lifshutz, P. James. PHI DELTA EPSILO PI'6Sid6I1t ....... M0r1'i5 Schwartz Vice-President . Robert Lapkin Secretary ,...... Milton Reitman Treasurer ..,... Historian ..... QE LT,g : 4. g 65 salsa-E -0 if E543 ,es 1 -K 'SZTERYX6 Peter Nussbaum ., Richard Hirsh E Cf lg X hi Delta Epsilon was founded as a non-sectarian medical fraternity in 1904 at Cornell University Medical College. In 1918 Phi Delta Epsilon and Alpha Pi Sigma, a growing western medical fraternity, signed articles of amalgamation. This union created the Phi Delta Epsilon of today which has continued to grow and prosper. It now has more than 16,500 mem- bers and more than 52 chapters from coast to coast including Canada. To honor the founder of the fraternity for his leadership and inspirational guidance, an Aaron Brown memorial lecture is sponsored each year at each of the schools where there is a chapter. In the past we have entertained such men as McDonald Critchley, the noted London neurologist, Edward Annis, a past pres- ident of the A.M.A., and Irving Cooper, the creator of cryogenic surgery. This year our guest speaker was Adrian Kantrowitz, who is doing outstanding re- search in cardiovascular surgery. Our new members, 13 in all, were recently initiated at a meeting of our New York Graduate Club. The ceremony was held at the Hotel Pierre. It was fol- lowed by a dinner which brought together students, interns, residents, faculty men, and practitioners, who are all members of the fraternity. Other activities include regular monthly meetings and several parties strategically spaced be- tween exam periods. In keeping with the fraternal ideas of excellence in leadership, scholarship, and service to the college, a scholarship fund has been established by the na- tional organization so that each year a cash prize may be awarded to the most deserving student. The fraternity has is its main objectives, to promote high scientific and edu- cational standards among its members, to promote fellowship, equality, and unity among its members, and to uphold the highest standards of ethics in the practice of medicine. ' Q 1 Q. ,QI SEE. .... Q, Q 'Wh E ' X 'SQ' Ni? . Q A f' I . . A if ' A 2' e - J ' LQ ' f . ' .+ 5 t . . O gg A Q ,P T J Y . f X . 4 r f .VV 5 A is A . ig .uf 1 i i W .K ROW 1 CLeft to Rightj -A. Feit, L. Skuraton, N. Romanolf, E. Morse, A. Cohen, B. Bern stein. ROW 2 fLeft to Rightj - R. Rosenthal, R. Schwratz, M. Schwartz, P. Heller, S. Stein berg. ROW 3 fLeft to Rightl - R. Lapkin, W. Perlow, S. Katz, R. Stone, Block, R. Fogler fn if '38 X .... s O. . lrf A .J , as ROW l CLeft to Rightj - N. Edison, P. Nussbaum, M. Reitman, A. Jacobs, D. Gluck. ROW R fLeft to Rightj -L. Neman, M. Hermele, I. Gale, R. Coldhamer, R. A. Shugar. ROW 3 fLeft to Right? - M. Cooper, B. Lieberman, M. Glasser, J. Kagan, R. Hirsh. STUDE HTWHVESCHIH3 r,PAM0UREUX- Love President .,...,..,.4.,..,,..,. ...A.,..,......, M rs. Marc Lowen Vice-President 4..4...4.....,. 4,.,.,. M rs. Kenneth Iuechter Recording Secretary ........ ..A.... M rs. Michael Paris he Student Wives Club of New York Medical Col- lege was founded in the spring of 1962. The club functions primarily for the student wives and is sponsored by the college, which also provides refreshments at the close of each meeting. The meetings, which are held the first Tuesday of each month in the Student Lounge of the college, give the wives a chance to share various experiences of daily living. We begin the year with an informal discussion with Dr. Robert O'Connor, Assistant Dean. This lead us off to a good start which was followed by a fashion show presented by Beeline Fashions. Once again Mrs. Schwarz offered for sale her wonderful display of gift items. This enabled us to do our holiday shopping early and in the comfort of our own meeting room. Thus, avoiding the crowds. Both programs were quite successful and the money was donated to the pediatric ward. One of the highlights was an infonnal discussion by Dr. Martin Stone, Chairman of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Other meetings included a make-up demon- stration by Joyce Christopher Salon, a catering demon- stration by the New York Institute of Diatetics, and a film on Foster Children, presented by one of the wives who is associated with the Department of Welfare. The year closed with a buffet dinner and our guest speaker was a faculty wife. She presented the diplomas to the senior wives and offered a few words of advice to launch them on their new careers. Although the Student Wives Club is relatively new it has become a tradition that we hope will continue. As the years go by we hope that the wives who follow will benefit and derive as much pleasure and satisfaction as we have in the past. ,f,.,m,M. fewwaw ,,.-N an Sm Left to right - Mrs. Kenneth Iuechter, Vice-Presidentg Mrs. Marc Lowen, Presidentg Mrs. Michael Paris, Recording Secretary. Internship Directory St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center Geraldine L. Ahneman .....,...,...... rotating 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 Ioan D. Albin ..,.....,.i.. straight medicine Michelle I. Alman ..,. rotating Roy P. Ans ............... .. straight medicine Philip M. Aires .,...... straight medicine Frank A. Ariosta ..,i..... rotating Kmedicinej Paul C. Atkins .....,..... rotating Barry F. Bader ....,.. rotating' Albert I. Bajohr, Ir. rotating fsurgeryj Nancy D. Baker ........... rotating fmedicinej Martin I. Barschi ....... rotating Paul Baxt .................. straight surgery Stephen Berger ........... straight medicine Basil Bernstein ........ rotating Bruce M. Bilder ........... straight surgery Stephen L. Bloom ...,. rotating Paul A. Bostrom ......... rotating Nicholas R. Breyan ....,. ...... rotating Bruce L. Brofman ....... straight medicine Michael Brooks .....,..... rotating Leslie B. Buncher ,...... rotating Edward T. Butler ...,.,. straight medicine Norman A. Cagin .....,. straight medicine Marie B. Casalino ......,... ......,... straight pediatrics Salvatore V. Catena ,...,. .......... straight medicine Vincent I. Catrini ....,.. straight medicine Robert V. Cattani ........ straight medicine Charles C. Cayten ......, straight surgery Roger C. Challop ...... straight medicine New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Monmouth Medical Center 3rd and Pavilion Avenues, Long Branch, NJ. 07740 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Staten Island Hospital 101 Castleton Avenue, Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N. Y. 10304 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 Cedars of Labanon Hospital 4833 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. 90029 Barnes Hospital 600 South Kingshighway Blvd., St. Louis, 'Mo. 63110 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 St. Lukels Hospital Center Amsterdam Avenue at 114th St., New York, N.Y. 10011 St. Mary's Hospital 407 East Third Street, Duluth, Minn. 55805 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 St. Vincent's Hospital 2820 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 St. Vincent,s Hospital 2820 Main Street, Bridgeport, Conn. 06506 San Diego County-University Hospital 225 West Dickinson Street, San Diego, Calif. 92103 Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital 250 East Superior Street, Chicago, Ill. 60611 Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania 3400 Spruce Street, Phidalephia, Penn. 1910g Hospital of St. Raphael 1450 Chapel Street, New Haven, Conn. 06511 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, Penn. 19104 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 4-nun-um-amass: l.-,.,.,....,..,.,.......1 Allan B. Cohen .,........ straight medicine New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Ioel Cohen ,4..,.....i.... .....,.,4 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center straight medicine Sherwood S. Danoif ,. rotating Frances R. Darey ..,... rotating Imedicinej Elaine V. Digrande ,. rotating fmedicinej Donald E. Doyle ...... rotating Victor G. Ettinger ...... straight medicine Bernard H. F agin ...... rotating I medicine Q Edward I. Feil .,....,... straight surgery Alan S. Feit ...,........., straight medicine Iudith H. Fiedler ,..,.. straight pediatrics Jonathan H. Fish ...... straight medicine Howard M. Fleissig ., straight medicine Mario I. Fracasso ,.,... straight surgery Arthur M. Freedman rotating Edward L. Gallagher straight surgery Edward M. Genovese straight medicine Michael T. Gilbert ,..,.. rotating Iohn F. Giles .....,...,,... straight medicine Leonard Glaser .......... rotating fsurgeryj Paul A. Goldberg ....,. rotating Leonard 1. Goldstein .. straight medicine Stuart A. Green .......... rotating C surgery Q Warren M. Greenberg rotating fmedicinei Patrick A. Grisafi ....,. straight surgery Jane N. Haher ....,... rotating Paul A. Hamlin ,...,.,... rotating fmedicinej Bruce H. Heckman ., straight medicine 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N.Y. 10304 New England Deaconess Hospital Deaconess Road, Boston, Massachusetts 02215 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 Cedars of Lebanon Hospital 4833 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. 90029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy, Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 Cleveland Clinic Hospital 2020 East 93rd Street, Cleveland, Ohio 44106 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Pelham Pkwy. and Eastchester Rd., N.Y., N.Y.'10461 Los Angeles County General Hospital, Unit I 1200 North State Street, Los Angeles, Calif. 90033 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Kaiser Foundation Hospital 2425 Geary Blvd., San Francisco, Calif. 94115 United States Army Medical Service, Fort Lewis Madigan General Hospital, Tacoma, Wash. 98431 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N .Y. 10304 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N .Y. 10029 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 Boston City Hospital-Medical Division 5 61 7 818 Harrison Avenue, Boston, Mass. 02118 Hospital for Joint Diseases and Medical Center 1919 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10035 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy., Brooklyn N.Y. 11212 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N .Y. 10021 St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Thomas B. Heflin ....... .,..., , rotating Lloyd R. Hoffman .,.,.,.... .......... rotating K medicine I Louis F. Iacueo ..........,...........,...,. rotating K medicine 2 Peter G. james ....,.....,... ...... rotating I surgery Q Andrew Kagan ,...,..,,.. .......... rotating I surgery Q Steven P. Kahn .,..,...,.. .,......., Straight surgery Steven Kantor ........... rotating Sheldon D. Kaplan ,..... .,,...,... rotating Imedicinej Edmund R. Kappy ,..,..,,.. ........., straight surgery Cary A. Katz ....,............, .......... straight medicine Ioel R. Katz ..,..,.t......... ...,...... straight medicine Michael I. Kaufman ...... ..,....... straight medicine Barry R. Kent ..,........,...,.. .......... straight medicine Richard S. Klein ,...... ,,,,.,.,.. straight medicine Karen C. Koster ........... ,..,,..... rotating Yaroslav Kushnir .....,... ..,.,..,.. rotating Thomas E. Leonard ,..,., ,...... . ,. rotating Thaddeus R. Leon1ak .........,...,.... straight medicine Howard L. Lifshutz ...... ,...,..... rotating Myles I. Lippe ..,.....,.. .......,.. straight medicine Marc Lowen .......,....... ....,..,.. rotating Carl B. Lundborg .....,. ....,,..., rotating Vincent A. Lynch .....,. ,....,,,., rotating Iohn W. Maguire ....... .,....... straight surgery Iacqueline I. Maier ..,... ...,....,, straight medicine Randolph D. Maloney rotating I surgery Q Stephen H. Marcus .,.... ,.......,. straight surgery john S. Marr ...,..,.....,,. .,........ straight medicine Iohn H. Mensher .........,. .,,...,.., rotating I medicine Q Hartford Hospital 80 Seymour Street, Hartford, Conn. 06115 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy., Brooklyn, N .Y. 11212 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 Lenox Hill Hospital 100 East 77th Street, New York, N.Y. 10021 University Hospital 1405 East Ann Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N.Y. 10304 Rhode Island Hospital 593 Eddy Street, Providence, R.I. 02902 Bellevue Hospital Center-3rd and 4th Surgical Divisions First Avenue and 27th Street, New York, N.Y. 10016 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Cedars of Lebanon Hospital 4833 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles, Calif. 90029 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 United States Public Health Service Hospital 15th Avenue and Lake St., San Francisco, Calif. 94118 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N.Y. 10304 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Sinai Hospital of Baltimore Belvedere Ave. at Creenspring, Baltimore, Md. 21215 Hartford Hospital 80 Seymour Street, Hartford, Conn. 06115 Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital 250 East Superior Street, Chicago, Ill. 60611 St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 Palo Alto-Stanford Hospital Center 300 Pasteur Drive, Palo Alto, Calif. 94304 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 State University of Iowa Hospitals Newton Road, Iowa City, Iowa 52240 Bruce A. Miller ....,.A,. rotating Elliott F. Morse ....... rotating Bernard R. Newman .. straight pediatrics Iames I. O'Connell .,.. straight medicine Stephen A.-Obstbaum straight medicine Michael D. Paris ...... rotating Kathleen M. Perry .....i rotating Ronald G. Perry ...,... rotating Edward I. Puttre ...... rotating fmedicinej Neil E. Romanoif ....., straight medicine Ronald I. Rooney .,i.., rotating Norman S. Rosenthal rotating Robert A. Scalice ..,... straight medicine Sanford L. Schatz ...,, rotating Ralph J. Schultz ........, rotating Pasquale I. Scotti ..... straight medicine Robert I. Silich ,,....... rotating Lawrence E. Skuraton straight medicine Jerome Solomon .....,. rotating Frieda E. Spady ......... straight medicine Robert M. Steckler ., rotating Michael R. Tesoro ...... rotating Arthur A. Topilow ., straight medicine john S. Train ..,......,.... rotating fmedicinej james A. Umhey ,..... rotating Anthony Van Grouw rotating joseph A. Veneziano ,. rotating fsurgeryj Francis X. Walsh ...... rotating Ioseph M. Zicarelli .. rotating Raymond Zukerman .. University of Washington Hospitals 1959 North East PaciHc Avenue, Seattle, Wash. 98105 United States Public Health Service Hospital Bay and Vanderbilt Streets, Staten Island, N.Y. 10304 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 United States Public Health Service Hospital 6500 Hampton Blvd., Norfolk, Virginia 23508 Staten Island Hospital 101 Castleton Avenue, Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 St. Francis Hospital 2260 Liliha Street, Honolulu, Hawaii 96817 Staten Island Hospital 101 Castleton Street, Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 St. Vincentis Hospital and Medical Center A 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 Beth Israel Hospital 10 Nathan D. Perlman Place, New York, N.Y. 10003 St Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center 153 West 11th Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 Brookdale Hospital Center Linden Blvd. and Rockaway Pkwy., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11212 Lawrence Hospital 55 Palmer Avenue, Bronxville, New York 10708 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Staten Island Hospital 101 Castleton Street, Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 David Grant U.S.A.F. Hospital Travis Air Force Base, Fairfield, Calif. 94535 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Long Island Iewish Hospital 270-05 76th Avenue, New Hyde Park, N.Y. 11043 Greenwich Hospital Perryridge Road, Greenwich, Conn. 06830 New York Medical College-Metropolitan Hospital Center 1901 First Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10029 Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center 111 East 210th Street, New York, N.Y. 10467 Greenwich Hospital Perryridge Road, Greenwich, Conn. 06830 Greenwich Hospital Perryridge Road, Greenwich, Conn. 06830 St. Vincent's Hospital and Medical Center 153 West llth Street, New York, N.Y. 10011 Greenwich Hospital Perryridge Road, Greenwich, Conn. 06830 Staten Island Hospital 101 Castleton Street, Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 Mount Sinai Hospital ' 8720 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90048 C pvu. , - . 955310 Providence Above Us: Triumph Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bernstein Jacob Bleiberg, M.D. Salo M. Boltuch, M.D. Ada B. deChabon, M.D. Hem'y J. Cutler, M.D. Charles A. Diamond, M.D. Alvin M. Donnenfeld, M.D. Peter A. Douvres, M.D. Joseph F. Dursi, M.D. Francis P. Ferrer, M.D. Frank E. Fierro, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Miguel Figueroa Kurt G. F rachtman, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Frank M. Galioto Eugena E. Gandet, M.D. Nathan Goldberg, M.D. Eli Goldstein, M.D. Judge Aaron F. Goldstein J. Leonard Greif, M.D. SPCNSORS Bernard D. Abers, M.D. Mrs. Anthony E. Ariosta E. Gordon Bell, Jr., M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Irving Bieber Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Bloom Dr. and Mrs. Frank J. Borrelli Arthur P. Capobianco, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. A. Jack Feit Edward D. Fenimore, M.D. Leo A. Green, M.D. Basil Harris, M.D. John W. Harrison, M.D. David B. Hill, M.D. Stephen P. Jewett, M.D. William Jung, M.D. Joseph J. Kaufman, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Armand Leone Mr. and Mrs. Randolph B. Maloney Dr. and Mrs. James P. Marr Dr. and Mrs. Ira Mensher Dr. and Mrs. Walter L. Mersheirner PATRONS Dr. and Mrs. Richard D. Grimaldi Cyrille R. Halkin, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hamlin H. A. Hauptman, M.D. Robert S. Homes, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Pentti T. Jokelainen David Katz, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Francis S. Latteri Thomas E. Lee, M.D. Henry P. Leis, Jr., M.D. Miriam Lending, M.D. Rachmiel Levine, M.D. Capt. George W. Lutz, M.D. Harold Michal-Smith, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Machlis E. R. Maciejewski, M.D. Mrs. Mary Maguire Julius Chasnoff, M.D. Abraham P. Matusow, M.D. Joseph L. Morse, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Moses John C. Mussio, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Alphonse T. Mysiewicz Rafael M. Rivera, M.D. John N. Rizzi, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Rooney Benjamin Sadock, M.D. Irving Sarot, M.D. Charles J. Scala, M.D. Abraham I. Schaffer, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Morton Smith Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Stephan Max Rakofsky, M.D. Irving A. Rosenthal, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Thom Dr. and Mrs. Charles P. Vialotti Dr. and Mrs. Raymond J. Voulo Edward Wasserman, M.D. M. Wishengrad, M.D. Joseph Mellow, M.D. Robert J. Murphy, M.D. Irvin Neufeld, M.D. Bruno Riemer, M.D. E. E. Rockey, M.D. Francis D. Speer, M.D. Albert Rosenblatt, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Samuel H. Rubin Wilfred F. Ruggiero, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Schumann David Schwimmer, M.D. Irving S. Shiner, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. L. Skuraton Mr. and Mrs. William Smolinski Elias R. Stoller, M.D. Drs. C. R. Straatsma and H. T. Rhoads, Jr. Jacob Taub, M.D. ' Mr. and Mrs. Murray A. Winant Gustave Adler, M.D. B. Bruce Alacandri, M.D. I. C. Bamford, Ir., M.D. Dr. and Mrs. F. A. Barone Mr. and Mrs. Roland Baxt Isidore Berger, M.D. Louis L. Bergmann, M.D. Alan R. Bleich, M.D. Janet M. Boog, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Butler John W. Carrier, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Cytryn Frances S. Choper, M.D. Simon Dack, M.D. Norman Deane, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney S. Fiedler W. C. Fields, M.D. Eugene A. Fierro, M.D. Max Fink, M.D. Ioseph Fogel, M.D. Harold Foster, M.D. George E. Froehlich, M.D. Regina Gabler, M.D. Edward Gendel, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Giannotto Dr. and Mrs. Nathan Goldberg Morton Goldfarb, M.D. Jerome I. Goldstein, M.D. Caryl B. Heimer, M.D. Iose F. Helu, M.D. L. Bokhair, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harold R. Iames BOOSTERS Philip E. Henig, M.D. Leo Hess, M.D. Harvey S. Kaplan, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Katz Stanislaw Konarski, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Koster Adolph S. Kramer, M.D. I. Arthur Kramer, M.D. Gerta Kwaszewska, M.D. Kurt Lange, M.D. Anthony M. LaSala, M.D. Paul Leifer, M.D. E. Levokove, M.D. Constantine P. Linardos, M.D. Frederick J. Lowrey, M.D. Alfred C. Lowy, M.D. Eugene I. Lusardi, M.D. David Maeth, M.D. Michael P. Maloney Edward H. Mandel, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Ioseph Manganaro In Memory of Robert L. Marsh, M.D. Hugh F. McCarthy, M.D. Alfred Moldovan, M.D. Hilde L. Mosse, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Moses Naftalin Mr. and Mrs. M. Newman Leon Paris, M.D. Ward Pigman, Ph.D. Eileen H. Pike, Ph.D. Barry C. Maloney Laure Grey Morgan, M.D. Walter F. Pizzi, M.D. Charles A. Priviteri, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Romanoff Leon Root, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. I. S. Rosen Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon Rothenberg Dr. and Mrs. I. W. Rutledge Dr. and Mrs. Herman W. Schweizer Dr. and Mrs. Alexander Sedlis W. Fawcett Shaw, M.D. Benjamin Silberg, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Pincus A. Stahl Dr. and Mrs. David Steinberg Norman D. Stevens, M.D. Bernard Straus, M.D. Ciro S. Tarta, M.D. Samuel A. Thompson, M.D. Er Yi Ting, M.D. Andrew V. Tramont, M.D. Arnold I. Turtz, M.D. C. Twillie, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Max Wachsman Martin Wanuck, D.D.S. Aaron D. Weiner, M.D. Allan B. Weingold, M.D. Francis S. Weinstein, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Zak Carl Zelson, M.D. Wolf Zukerman, M.D. Edward I. McCabe, M.D. Iohn I. McGuire Fw Wfqw 3031.100 .IA0lG PIBOY XXQQAA I' w Q 1. Maw Q f if , A f -is ' N' 3 ' wi . f ' Mi VV VZVV.. V7 , 1-. if ,f-if '9. ' ?fw- ' 4' an , . X. . Q he M Qpw , 4 fm 0. iz, Vg 'wi U, 7 ni 'Gr 'V Ku 5 Ax: 2 V VV 11 in we . .. ,V , VV. , V rn L J! 'cw if f Z F-Q? 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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, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 166

1967, pg 166

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 80

1967, pg 80

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 51

1967, pg 51

New York Medical College - Fleuroscope Yearbook (Valhalla, NY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 172

1967, pg 172


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