New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1972

Page 1 of 200

 

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1972 volume:

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W., . . ..,..... .4 --- fi l-.r U.,N...... .- l ? UNIVF RSI IY IIOSI I IM u - -mms 5 I I' I-.I U V, I 2. H . I V x. , .. ,, gl I U! .!l1-- II r ,l I1 1 Il j- Q 1 I A ul 5 I h- 1 NU milf? will rv 1 l I --u il ,gi ' 1 i lu . Q ll I - , A 1 1 F. -H H i- H d' h Q W -ll' Nl I l- M.. M ll uuli Il I I I . , - 1 ' , li 5 'ul 'I-:lk YI ! 'll 1 ll I mar QL E ,,.v '1 swf. ' 1 N NXT -I : w , , E. , l ll kg H- vi 3 :Q-B -- l 1 H-.- Ian mi ll Q- H u r - . 1.5! U Q' 7 'i - ' ., Q 5 - R ' WW 1 mn ua l-l I H! J pq -ll 4- ,K-I I1 ,1 Q 1 1 I , .... , , . -Q-..-T I -? 5, 11. . lwffll Imlhxxll ' af' A ----QW W- r fu E Patients may arrive at the hospital with unequalleo' majesty or misery, but, whatever the mode, the doors are always open. Pm ' M 1 , l . LIL J ny.. -,4V'., E ff 1, is ,Af ,nm E. ! X Q, .. ,X K 5 ' ff ' '-Q I ?E7fffi'1f.. n ., -A-1.11 tiff -e 'f TQfE3w,8. E 1 :,, I . 1111: V' f - It 'qua xv ' a BELLEVUE MVAH UH. N BEM Wk' A E '- .,+,r'fv Q ,s , ' r E?-4 ' f .,s . 1 num l .um 1 .I.f'...,. . W ' fi'--5.1 K Aus. BELLEVUE 1 U.H. v I ' 5- s 4' ' 34 . BELLEVUE dmissions - 'K qv W 4 M.V.A.H. l ed. H A l I,-. -..I-I-- .I-,.-.,-.. ,V ...i I, .. V.,Vv. ,, . . V V ,M- .l . f 23423 r ,ff WZ' ,9 9 4 .wif ' 'L..t.2:Z.T ' 3 9 ,,.., ..., - .-.. lv--.'. ,- ...V...a.L:::'.:: MM, ,,,.,,, A,,,. ,I , X V . E A I 'fill'-fr 'IM r I 1 Q E Snack Ba x i , A Commotion, Confusion, and a never ending stream of new faces. E E BELLEVUE CLS W I f ff: M.V.A. H. U H The Main Corridors :--':r:i ':'1:-::-: 7fL'f1:::f: .Y . ...,,.- .. 2fwWHfvwfvfXff QDBQMNEW BELLEVUE Patient and Vnsltor Lounges I - ,...i? W' fn ,,,, A 50 1f ' 41 wwf L ' W ELLEVUE 23: 113 A X vs 4 U.H BIN s Q lx LD House Staff Rounds Oh, no! It Can't be time for rounds again, we just finished rounds 75 minutes ago! BELLEVUE BELLEVUE snoxmo NOTXPERMITTED iN common ' VAYGRS W! .W ,JO , 4 fy, AN , f LLIL RS AND ELE WSYTURSUU QEALEVQXTOBSE E EA RE EIDE T QEMPLOYEES DB PAUENTS ONLY EE NO SMOKINGEE' L OXYGEN IN USE FOR 5 ,EX YAT PLEASE SEE' NU wlm THE PATIEIEEIE BELLEVUE BELLEVUE UH MVAH 1.. ,.-,W.....4-Ma.-naps--.Q-.... ., .....-L , .. . .. .,.,.,,................,---W--- --4 . , . ... . .....,..f....I..-,., ,...L,,. MEDICAL WALK IN CLINIC x , ag Oif Q K f,, J. . AJ., , UIQ lisgf I CLINICA DE MEDICINA I -f Q I Y XV X , v+:i,T'xI fiy'ff, - I' 5 I A v It ,Qw-ff. I lg mfg, ,wg - ' -Nw' -. ,' I- , ,bf 1- ' .., N ,, 'gint -i V' ' -1 X, V Q, 871, 1. A-I , -I xgglk, -g f 45 i1.',4,'x,,. ,VI ,N I 1, ng: M I w K -Jniifw fr :rx A 9 I vb: , A wg I 4 W xy r IW -5 ,w i ,Um 54- mv, I, an M' x if L PM I. ' 1 , A , . Th, gi A M, 1 ,.-F' ' - PI 1. JITHPE- ' I ,I iv Pg I-ff - , - , ' X IL AQ! '. I . , -x,. f' ,Y- 555 3, , , , Y I 5, I Q 'X ', -I--. if , ' Wife '1i,,F '1'ff2' A -ff. -'F . - X K 'X ' f,. .m5- L, ,1,.'ff'f: A 42. 1 - . .II 'P . 4 I BELLEVUE MVAH i . A-6 NO SMOKING 'M IN THE HOSPITAL A-e . I Mfummf il-9 BELLEVUE EIERGENCY ELEVATUI SERVICE CALL EXT. 6l82 MVAH UH THIRD FLOOR CHEMISTRY 'P FACULTY PRACTICE HEARING AND SPEECH UNIT HEMATOLOGY 4 MICROBIOLOGY 'O OPHTHALMOLOGY SUITE-G OTOLARYNGOLOGY PEDIATRICS I I o HEARING!-SPEECH unrri I I oPH'rHAuvlol.oGv I QOTOLARYNGOLQGY J Vita Signs . .- .,,. . .- -V. . - ' ' ' ' na. -. ' Nw... ... - - .t. .- .. ,- ---- 1 1 :,::z-v.',- T. -,. ,e::1.r.:lL:.:::::t:--L.-..-frefigzg.-1:-1 , e , -N -. -- ,J --11,-1-.--: - .:- 2' 1. -- xf.::,L5'!i:'1 S11LI 1-1-1-f---'- '-n 'A ' Z- ' - rkfaivei - .1-is :.::'ef,:si,.-K-:ssg-hzs:-m,ff.a:sz.smss:. -- -- - 1- ' -' , o o On Institutions Called Hospitals Our first two years were spent in the relative comfort and security of the Medical Science Building, going to lectures, studying in the libra- ry, slicing up various orders of phyla and plating out endless numbers of petri dishes in intermi- nable lab sessions. Bellevue, University, Veterans Administration were just names, elements of a different mathematical set, places with no ap- parent connection to what we were doing or were expected to be doing. To be sure, there were contacts with this other world even then. Clinical correlation took us to the hospital week- ly tthough we appreciated it more as a departure from the dreary routine of pre-clinical life than as an introduction to the hospitalj, and physical diagnosis afforded us the opportunity for uncer- tainty and fear in the clinical setting as we intro- duced ourselves to the patient prior to our first history and physical. But we were simply tempo- rary intruders in the sphere of hospitals and medical practice. Our reality was 690 MSB, the room where we could smoke cigarettes and stretch out and let our minds deteriorate, and where we spent more and more time as dissec- tions became more and more tedious. Our real- ity was Classroom B the first year and Classroom A the second. Gur reality was the Wyckoff Stu- dent Lounge. The third year tand the fourth along with itj changed all that. By pushing us south across 30th street, it forced us to come to terms with the heretofore alien world of the hospital. How, or indeed whether, we adjusted to this is not clear. What is clear is that we began to see the hospital as a rather imprecise interaction between its physical plant, its patients, and its staff and stu- dents. Bellevue, University, Veterans Administra- tion became real entities, and the sum of our participation in them became our medigal school experience. Yet each offered us a differ- ent modus operandi, and our perceptions were accordingly unique to each hospital. University was an old acquaintance. We had in essence already been patients in its ground floor appendage known as the Student Health Service for admission physicals several years back. And hadn't most of us been in to see Dr. Ruoff con- vinced that gg infectious mono slide would yield Reed-Sternberg cells or fearful that in our complaints some cause for sigmoidoscopy might be found? But UH was more. It was a private hospital, the only one in our program. It was the Great White Tower for patients from Westchester, Connecticut, and Murray Hill. Uni- versity was where the faculty sent their patients. And where a patient's chief complaint might just as easily be idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis tat least that's what his private doctor had told himj as tiredness on exertion or swelling of the legs. 'University was where it probably -ii worth meeting the daughters of mothers who Had a daughter for you. It was where rounds could be conducted without ever seeing the patients just by stopping at each name plate near each door. University was ape- diatric floor so filled with familial dysautonomia patients that a work-up protocol for this condi- tion was available, an obstetrics wing where our reception as third year clerks ranged from disint- erest to disgust, and an operating suite run with the efficiency of a Pentagon war room where we got our moment in the sun with the cardiover- sion paddles. University was where all the lab slips had spaces with dollar signs in them. It was 4 +2 +14 H4 Sh-+iifi+frk1iiiii+iSi1zlEsi!s .+tsx+ 14-uhm ff him: ff u+.+iss+mmll1.:1.s.....zm. in nm :sm Q i Wiz t i Q 1.7,EQZ?Z:g22'5E:gL':::27:1:txt-:::.::.r::1:4-vzaw.-:-:..L-.+ Q-du- 4. 4 ,. IH. A - . - Q r . A ,, . L?,,2,A,,4,.,i,, lt.-gli- , -.-.-...-,..- 1-- 3 z,.1:,,::1,..,-.1 -'4s,:,.q!-E'-,-Ig52.2 --,i'f5.,2?1i4I,5t5-,,:.,,,35 ,.,'4,,,.-.,,.,,, ,dz 'i..,35i,,: - x vp. M - - l , V 1 3 Q vim! 'Q W-A H... . . . . , , . - - ., .,- . - . ., 1- .--..-...-.... ' f - --'- '- -V ---- VA. . -.... . .. ..... -Q .. ..4'eS'!.,1r,. !.!. . .,,, -V Q X3 J I ,.5+'ix.:nxx. nqydi. --. -M A1 a check cashing service that was always either the doctors cafeteria It was the tunnel with ' .k,V' , T lx W - . . . .. . . . . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' Pic i V iffy I - If if' S ' ' ' 1 - II ll ' Phi. wi Wim I wt Ct. Mui Sm Huuih lt. hmm i M N ll UH hu was a pin m It wash llells Ml 'fav Hi Uri 'li P395 N WEN lil hir Sllbllli mate dotwf ex2f!i00' 0' nawww gwghrers 0' iou.' ll rv wilhwl CW' gpg at earl' iw WZS 3 r9Ul0n0mla r INS Candi s 'W W' dlSllll' newnmm we 11 Wllele 3 Cafdioveg hem, Ir WHS closed or out of cash. Most vividly, though, Uni- versity was men washing and waxing every cor- ner of every floor, at every moment every day. Veterans Administration was somewhat less familiar. But whether it was during neurology or surgery clerkships, subinternships or fourth-year electives, nearly all of us had at one time or an- other walked through the swinging doors to be confronted on the way to the elevator by the President's photograph. VA was six elevators in a row going up when you wanted to go down. VA was the second floor canteen, the home of ter- rific discounts on shaving cream and shirts where cigarettes were 26 cents per pack. VA was the doctors and the many well patients eating together in the cafeteria, but it was also too many veterans in wheelchairs minus their limb tsl. VA was also where the depressing reality of chronic progressive neurological disorders such as multiple sclerosis was brought home to us. VA was the odd child at NYU. lt was legally part of the medical center and struggling to become a full part, yet it remained an outpost geographi- cally and temperamentally. VA was a force which NYU somehow did not completely grasp. Bellevue. Above all there was Bellevue. Belle- vue was a city, a world, a universe unto itself. Each of us has a hundred stories about Bellevue, and we shall probably make up hundreds more after we leave. And all of them will be true. lf they didn't happen to us, they did for soon willy happen to others. Bellevue was our third year. Bellevue was quaint pages such as Anyone speaking Roumanian please report to the AES stat, and The F and C cars are out of service. Please use the I and K cars instead. It was the EW alive and bustling at 4:00 a.m. Bellevue was a continuous struggle trying to get free lunches in its collection of cats. It was the F-2 dressing of- fice. Bellevue was the male and female prison wards. Bellevue was Bel-Snack. It was IMCU that magic land where we sent many of our pa- tients and from where they periodically returned as they spiked minor temps. Bellevue was the Arturo's Pizza man bringing a pizza into the deli- very room during a delivery! It was finding the back stairs up to the 5th Floor Obstetrics wing and the Ob-Cyn offices. Bellevue was 4 o'cIock tea in the L-2 Surgery Library, and liver rounds in the A-1 Lounge. It was the Surgery on-call room. lt was being awakened at 5:00 a.m. after one hour of sleep by the phone ringing and being asked to come check a to keep open IV that had infiltrated. Bellevue was Saturday mornings with Dr. Farber. Bellevue was being second as- sistant in the O.R. It was trying to read urine sediments on the microscope in the A-1 student lab. Bellevue was Q.C.s, Q.T.s, and A.O.T.s. Bellevue was three chapels. It was the Well-Baby Clinic. lt was Central Chemistry, originators of the term QNS and Lab Accident. Bellevue was seven thousand telephone extensions. Belle- vue was the cirrhotic patient with tattoos over his entire body, including faith, hope, and char- ity on his genitals. It was the octogenarian woman with only one tooth speaking only Polish who came into the hospital because her hus- band was admitted and she had no other place to stay. Bellevue was all her patients, nearly all poor, many not speaking or understanding Eng- lish, most requiring medical care, and all need- ing understanding and help. Bellevue was our joking about these patients, frequently being condescending, but very happy when they thanked us in their own small ways and when they left healthier than when they arrived. Belle- vue was all these things, it was anything at all, and it was everything- to us. I .- , ... -.- 5 .1!-.. ., -- 1 I 'Physician as God Pathology Write an exam . . . put a random number on the exam . . . take a blank sheet of paper . . . write the number on the paper and place it in an envelope . . . seal the envelope . . . sign the seal . . . take your exam, and give it to Gary . . . and give envelope to Department!! Brown out Free radicals. Hyperkeratosis, Acanthosis, and Palisading Epithelium. 8 a.m. Bucket of Organs. 'Physician as Angel . rl Departmental Memories W r'l , N' . liijlf Obstetrics and Gynecology gil + Chandelier Sign Back in the saddle again. . '13-H, F-2 Distressing Room ,gf l You finish the deliver-y, ' ' Pierre Cardin is having a sale.! , Give this lady V.l.P. -M! treatment. 214 Q And the score after 5, Apgar 7. 1 pgvl'-1 TW Clinical Psychiatry Impression: - Paranoid Schizophrenia: - Chronic Undifferentiated - Chronic Simple ll l1Pick onel - Hebephrenic I - Catatonic Dr. Angrist, can l borrow a carton of cigarettes? Pharmacology il-i111 . . . and then you sacrifice the dog!! inject norepinephrine, epinephrine, i l isoproterenol, propranolol, Phenoxybenzamlne, histamine, peanut butter and jelly, cytochrome P450 . . . cut the vagus and run. Genetics li Asparagus!!! lf-V1 Biochemistry I - nn' p uhhhhhhhhh H uhh . .. Bullet Bob or Captain Chemistry W-- Electron Transport Lectures !! According to my 24 hour urine creatinine, I weigh 412 pounds. Wahba v- 'El Surgery If 119. Give me the top 45 causes of paronychia . . . What's that? Why, that's number 15, , down by the chalk holder line . . . , la l want number 1. it Procedure of choice for . lu- is cannulation of the Thoracic Duct. V N Au Contraire Q' Surgery Cn-Call Room ' W Primary indication for a Iaparotomy is the presence of an abdomen. It When in doubt, cut it out. A By my calculation, this patient has burns covering 110'Zs of his body and ' 32'Zs of the man next to him. ' O I! St. X I I L rl F 1 , , . .. - - ,- ,.-. ,-f,,-f.f. -J-- .. ... .. . A .-. - .+. wr.:-,,w- . . - -:. .., Anatomy and Histology Pediatrics Your Anatomy lab coat. perry ferry Prosection? Do you want to give an I.M., . .so called renorenorigament. boobie? fortuitous section. silirubin 5 laps around the Histo lab . . 16 year old girl with a'cardiac coach? murmur x 14 years. What would P.A.S. . . .Periodic Acid Schiff you do if she wanted to play . . . P for Periodic, A for Acid rugby? Would you operate? If she and S for Schiff . . .P.A.S. . . . wanted to play lacrosse, would Periodic Acid Schiff. you still operate? The investigating finger. Medicine What am I thinking? Infectious, Metabolic, Toxic, Traumatic . . . Routine 4 a.m. fever work up. Howto get from an E. coli UTI to non-pigmented Serratia septicemia in 4 days. The microscope in the A-1 lab! 2 for LFT's,1 for B8tL,1 for CBC1 for ESR.1 for Pro-time,1 for serology,1 for T4, . . .now what brought you to the Hospital? . . . I'm visiting!!l How do you think about Saturday morning conferences? Neuroanatomy Saran raps Microbiology I Parasitology you he lshei PILT Bug and worm flicks We Dracunculus they Treat Kwabs with Kwell. l am giving you these sheets gratis! Psychiatry McFaIlouts Fungi . . .diarrhea . . .and Roquefort The Black Box Cheese. HElGal'1Ol' Exam Number 2, question three. M.D. On October 16th, 1969, V2 of you did V2 What is affect? of the following experiment . . .What were the results of the other M? slowwwww viruses. 'Allegory of the Medical Profession U I Reproduced from Medicine 81 The Artist Mrs Medical by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. ' 1'-: f -1 '1N 3'!'.. , , . ,g, - I!! fgllllg F. e' ' ,ly Ntllllilz Al X , lflfgll llill' 'l.,.u'ff:i-L 6 :ag 1 1' 'I 'Physician as Man Physiology . f.,,4,,r. 1st BHA for this 62 year old squid axon CFR? Gamble grams? porceau en glace Frank-Starling is alive and well and living in Stony Brook. 'fPhysician as Devil 514-LSE!! 3-f2T:v . , ' ' - -- .- .- sci ' WARD ROUNDS QROBERT RICGSJ Reproduced from Medicine 81 The Artist Mrs Medical by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. O -1-. FD 9 Q. 3 CD X i 1 . N. ' aaG1C'f 7 I 5 J I I if wi ,AWD Department of Surgery LL.. ff ff 5 fd K i Q .f x J, , I I pl 1 Y . ,x A N..- wxi- N Kg, ws 'Ly lu ,Af 15, x1f',, -TX X n f'f5.:,4211Q 1 f- Faq - ,e VILLAGE SURGEON QCORNELIUS DUSARTQ Reproduced from Medicine 8 The Artist Mrs Medicaj by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art . -'V' 5x l 1 1 f . F BERTHA RADER ANDREW MILANO LAWRENCE HOROWITZ l 1 HERBERT KAYDEN I CQ MKRIIN mow DNNID INNO Qi STEPHEN CUMPORT U IAY CROSSFEL D hl'IiA 7' l A I H hr' ALEX SOLOWEY HAROLD SAGE ARTHUR TESSLER Af' 1 .O V GENE! -C07 3 K xt A, X H ff X 'A- .W g ,aye-at I xx 'Z-f':: E?-. VA LOUIS SLATTERY S, ARTHUR LOCALIO 1 -4 9 1 L, In vw. ANTHONY IMPARATO 0 f ' DONALD DAVIS .J L 3-7 MATTHEW HARRIS MELVIN WDP' L L l SAL'l UKRHIR SHUUNOUI7 lKXNRlNC'l Chgnnngn I NORTON SPRITZ RANDOLPH CHASE MICHAEL RUOFF JAMSHID DQRQTHEA IAXID ZUCKER- FRANKLIN 4 - ARTHUR Fox ROBERTA COLDRINC FIT -1 W V Z i A., W '33 lw:'x::x::ux'.zA.,.,.-, 31: WM, -A W ,--::x'::',:1::- H- T -MM' ,mruzzzzzgzzzzfzu Z , 9 fb 1. ff YT! my f, . ,,,,, .. ,N I YV '7 'i l 'r' MELVIN NNORTH VN My DAVID TICE 'O 'Q 4 g 1. 1 O --'N g I I v f x x X X All .gy IM NH JN! :B X FRANK C SPENCIR, Chanrmgn Yi . :ES gg-, I XNIHIKM STAHI 'll'L THE PHYSICIAN CURING FANTASY QFRENCH SCHO Reproduced from Medicine 81 The Artis! Mrs Medicaj by permission o OL xvu CENU ' f the Philadelphia Museum of Art. -1-1 'U U7 N4 m 2' on f'f' -1 A A 'vt A I if ' I 42 x A 1 '-X' ,xv f-y ' ,bk .K I Ili -5' . 51:3 ' ft' MORRIS HERMAN Chairman W' I WILLIAM FROSCH MARTIN KESSELMAN I Z! ti' 9. Haw! x I Q ' I ,Q Ii ftavmxv' fl ,A.. WN' ' j6,V,:,'1?.Q .ff ,ff I , MXN ' ' I .f - . 2 ,gffl ' , V. I I, . I, ,fun f' e I 1 1- Qygi 0 I 9' A W, I A MARVIN STERN ARTHUR ZITRIN - . .- --.r--1:-:J 'AAA I' w -h U5 r-1' r'1' 3 E cn Q-9 3 3 O ki 1 '43 3 ., Y 'N s s A 5. L I 's Q I 1 1 ' 1 X11 N S K V -...iv 1 G GORDON DOUGLAS Chairman ROBERT MORRIS if Y 1 4 Y iii , V ,L Vi' I 1 ALVIN WESELY CHARLES DEBROVNER Ik'-NG M LILA NAGHTIGALL STANLEY ZINBERG A f ROBERT PORGES fk .0 . ,fm KL 5? 1,5 T, . s EQ? ,X E Y EJ i BRUCE YOUNG, FRITZ BELLER . ,n 1 Department of Pediatrics VACCINATION fLeopoIdo Mendezb Reproduced from Medicine and the Artist 1Art Medical by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. 2' , J - CLAUDE SANSARICQ I SAUL KRUCMAN X A EMILIA SEDUS Chairman 4,250 ,I ll-2, f wiv 4 -Q4 N5 SIDNEY COHLAN SHIRLEY STONE NANCY BRANOM V,r, Y A ', f, K '14 ,',, ' a ANN FALBO 73, Some Pre-Clinical Pac I ,V Q , - X M ff A 1 . A L! R 7 FREDERICK BECKER HARRY DEMOPOULOS Su-F '? : . 1 's ' ' SARAN IONAS ALAN BERNHEIMER IEANETTE WINTER X xxx - Arkmwm .E.1.,,. GEORGE TEEBOR Mm M m, 1- Facult A'-wudv LAWRENCE PRUTKIN .q CHANDLER STETSON - 4, f ,P-f 11 --I. liz. A 23 MILTON SALTON HOWARD RUSK Chairman l The class of 1972 has close bonds to the Institute of Reha- bilitation Medicine. Here, peo- ple disabled by disease, and be- lieved to be beyond hope, re- learn to function for a return to a productive life. REHABILITATION MEDICINE its OU' an end' E the W uilleled that IW' timidale ical W' gomelto onli' If ite SUD' The Si ISC X599 hard W with it again ti the san the hrs signific change Ol deaf The strain lighte OU! dSSun Ddsse in Qu ti-it ckfxoufxtirsic ctfxss pfbicwrion T0 THE CLASS oF1972 As our four years of medical school approach an end, a time for reflection and a look toward the future seems appropriate. Our first year was ushered in with trepidations of the arduous task that loomed ahead. From the outset, we were in- timidated bythe staggering amount of pre-clin- ical materiaI , we were expected to digest. Somehow, book-vvorn, bleary-eyed, and with only the slightest taste of the clinician's world, we survived. The second year was as tedious as the first, but we were comforted by the knowledge that our hard work would pay off the following year. With the National Boards in the past, we were again transformed into neophytes possessed of the same fearful anticipation we had harbored the first year. We were about to undergo a most significant metamorphosis, representing the change from books to the complex artfscience of dealing with patients. The third year was a continuum of physical Strain, emotional turmoil, and academic en- lightenment unequalled by any experience in OUT Past. Aspects of our first two years began to assume much greater relevance. As the months passed, we started to gain a sense of confidence in our performance. Where weaknesses had ex- l5lGd, strengths began to develop. By the fourth year, all that remained was in some way to or- ganize the tremendous quantity of clinical mate- rial accumulated during the third year. Toward this end, we were offered a broad spectrum of electives for more concentrated study. Many took the opportunity to gain experiences in other health institutions around the country and around the world. This is where we are now. Some of us have al- ready selected our fields of specialization, all of us have at least given this prospect considerable thought. As the fourth year draws to a close, we prepare to become neophytes once more. A great deal lays behind us, but a greater challenge awaits. We shall soon receive a diploma entitling us to practice what years of study have prepared us for. The roads that lie ahead are tortuous but fraught with excitement. The accomplishments of modern medicine continue to progress at a dizzying pace, and we have the distinguished honor and serious responsibility of sharing in them. Undoubtedly, when man ceases to destroy himself, the fight against disease will be under- taken with renewed vigor. Hopefully, our gen- eration of physicians will assume leadership in this quest. But only time will tell. 25 ERT ACK HN J Z 5 'Q 52 EQ? M is 1 154 W if if, X Z, , I 4 5 2 x I ' H 2 95'- 1'-1'7 1 S ' 2 V 4 J M Q fq4,7Qg,,! I 'Ulf I xg!! 7. 774 Q 5 X, , V X Y 9 'V -1:1 , -ul-H f 'VZZOWZ ' , l 2 0 nl IZ? LI M we L ,L 'f'w,r -Q- ,..4ll J . 'M o f I L X A! -cf - -sg. I A f D1 'd I K Y :Q Y if U an I Z 15 , 4 5 X x Q 5 I 3.5 .lxd A4 - 'x ,gf- l, A1 f 1 f . 1 Q A , o X x a 4? ei' V7 H n 9' ...L Mf .ff wi N' D VID ARO -1 I -.4 fm f .. 1.7 Www, W , 1 ' 1 2 F-. x I WJ, y,, fin-L rf- I i' Q., 1 A7 Q 'S' K Ali? ' ii, RQ .. f SLS i ,,- .W .3 , .- vu,-fn , .- ,,.1-h' , v ,, 1. .A .:- , f , ' 1. I , K . 2 . Q1 1 I f f x 1 3 Q , , , v ' , 0' cz. , 2 f. 1 M. 4 , A P' 5 1 , , I , .. 'I . rj ' . ' . , If 5 f 1 9' J ' 4 f ,. ' if , , .LY 'xi ill . f . 25.15 ff f ' in .. vi 1' S K.: i , A 5.1 A .I 1 V' -5 ' J xi 'E - , , .3 , A, , 1 4- Q 4 . KM ' Y, 4 t .L -A , .Hwy ...MZ xr- znpg,-f H ,, uf t f 4' 1 1. v 'V 0 V 1 '-N-,if .,..,. 7:.V,, . I '4'7. wwwfm.-M l 'HM l'I ' s i , I ' f '47 It I Y ., Z, Wilzx ..,, , - .W f ,wffhu W' M' , My ,,,,,,,W If 4Qk'v,,,, , , A 'LW f W., M ,X V , ., ,gm -1 f ff g, hx mf ,,ff4Af9nnwg7f JOHN BACKMAN E5 2533 24275 xfi Zz 24 . , ' rf g 1 , M sb .171-.Lg . ,G+ 'S-'J-. .- 'P 1 ,P UQ A-ttf. S+? M' 2 f 4 . A . QL-:Q L- 1 .. V ii 1 . sua at 3 : ' 5'3- f X2 K A, , W ,- ,V ' 55 291 if , ' .,,,. M . -I 'Tift ., yf , '21 I . V: WW 4,3 1 'MW'-f I - 12 5-ml '- f ,I f l . 9 v I, c g 1 5 5 I -I T-4-an S 5 Q 5 ? Q' 'fi f '?7n'i7' NN- 'Q 'V M , A,A q '- if - ' .Wm Ji., - A , V 4 ,WWI J ,iff ' f ,M , , ,M . J 1 Vwf ' ff, Qf DV ' lf' ' ya' ,ffl fp! 2 ,f W y- W ff , 12212 J f 562. ,, U-I an MARC BLACKMAN LI DA ,...- ' .Ag . . 'Mis-,, .iffy -. u- --.4 F K 'm R Ri' :v- ., N33 P J I .,V, 'J di,- gs REED BOOTH - ROBIN What is needed, suggests Op- penheimer, is harsh modesty, an af- firmation that common men cannot, in fact, understand most things and that the realities of which even a highly trained intellect has cogni- zance are few and far between. With respect to the sciences, this somber view seems unassailable. And perhaps it dooms most knowl- edge to fragmentation. But we should not readily accede to it in his- tory, ethics, economics, or the analy- sis and formulation of social and po- litical conduct. Here literacy must reaffirm its authority against jargon. l do not know whether this can be done, but the stakes are high. ln our time, the language of politics has be- come infected with obscurity and madness. No lie is too gross for stren- uous expression, no cruelty too abject to find apologia in the verbi- age of historicism. Unless we can re- store to the words in our newspa- pers, laws, and political acts to some measure of clarity and stringency of meaning, our lives will draw yet nearer to chaos. There will then come to pass a new Dark Ages. George Steiner, Language and Silence: Essays on Language, Literature, and the inhuman. She was a good deal frightened by this very sud- den change, but as she could not shrink any fur- ther. . . she did not give up hope yet. There was hardly room to open her mouth, with her chin pressing against her foot, but she did at last, and managed to bite off a little bit of the top of the mushroom. Carroll Sooner or later, one of us must know. Dylan Turning and turning in the widening gyre The falcon cannot hear the falconer. Yeats ln a vivid insight, a flash of black lightning, he saw that all life was parallel: that evolution was not vertical, ascending to a perfection, but horizontal. All those painted screens... mere opium fan- tasies. Fowles I am moved by fancies that are curled around these images, and cling, Eliot They are willing to invest something of them- selves, they may not play at all, but when they do play, they know the odds. Didion For I am in the dust- in the sunlight Arms sparkling bronze and bare Tossing lemons against the sky. Hetherington Next time, anagrams. Borak JONATHAN BORAK ---4 ---- -4- - --- -0- ----- ' .....-1 . --. ' -:- avfsmf, A i f '1f i' -, , . BILL BORKO SKY Z fi Q, -l, ,, I W S 9511. sl' Alas, The Condition is-hopeIess, but not serious. 'ky' 1 -Fl With us ther was a Doctour of Physik: In al this world ne was ther noon him lik To apeken of physik and of surgerye. For he was grounded in astronomye, He kepte his pacient a ful greet deel In houres by his magik naturel. Wel coude he fortenen the ascendent Of his images for his pacient. He knew the cause of every maladye, Were it of hoot or cold or moiste or drye, And where engendred and of what humour: He was a verry parfit praktisour. The cause yknowe, and of his harm the roote Anoon he yaf the sike man his Boote. . . . In sanguin and in pers he clad was al, Lined with taffata and with Sendal And yit he was but esy of dispenceg He kepte that he wan in pestilence. For gold in physik is a cordial, Therefore he loved gold in special. Geoffrey Chaucer 11343-l400l STEI BR SET :Vim .f... ,.,,, ' -s AU J., 5.1-1-.. .. TAEHI-lS Even the birds come to Bellevue to roost or Is Bellevue really for the birds? rr' ef-- e NEIL BRODY ,a 4 . ,av J,-4' This world that is so filled with Of evil cause, because of non-objection conscientious non-objectors To lavvs so far remote Who breed contempt on all who stand, From any even the oldest goat should still In way of freedom and the land, espouse. They bark at beauty, And most, they worship Scorn at grace, Without relent Destroy the land, And by it, see our breath so often bent Its bountiful face, That it amazes me that life persists To them aesthetics is denial So heartily, and can inhale Of all that's been from days ago Through bending pipe Life is only continuity - mistakes of past That very thing that gives us strength Are brought again, To make our next breath, And again are mistakes Almost impossible to take. , , -II , ..,-..- -- II.-. rf:-I-.-1.11::rr :-11:11-1-0,3-5'11-f315-f'I21:'r1'r3f11T!f2I12'22T:21 51TT1f1': txt, 11::Liz-2::-1:-:-::L:i:?F:-::g,EEj ROBERT BRUCKSTEIN - IUDY nfinflll X owl N 4. xiii Yak-' -- Rf 'lm-4 1- . ,v. -nil MILTON BURCLASS As we live, we are transmitters of life. And when we fail to transmit life, life fails to flow through us. But giving is not so easyQ It doesn't mean handing life out to some mean fool, or letting the living dead Eat you up. It means kindling the life quality where it was not. D. H. Lawrence , , if f ' X .. M-Q , ' 368134 miam i fr: V74'? fWfw4.L,,Wf . V ag. . - .... . FL DOUGLAS CINES - BRE DA' 42 , l 'uf::1r1??:54::5E:L-:5i?:' 3iiE'tt: .i1 ..... ,. ..,. ..,,.,.,, .,. .-,.,. ..,.: 4 Q Q f, 2 Q M ZZ WZT 4 1 ,pf , ,, 744, 'WQQ ::'5'::. 4 x ivuu., 'llluu Dwi, aw nf 1. .mls Ribh. POQW If QC , Barclay III lANNA CGLLINS - BARCLAY ,f zz , 2 - W! ' f -t t , M 1 y, 'Y 1 , 1 A' ' M V X ,Wa They were having a rest in a small sand-pit on the top Ot the Forest. Pooh was getting rather tired of that sand- Dllaand suspected it of following them about, because Whichever direction they started in, they always ended up at ll, and each time, as it came through the mist at them, Eabbli Said triumphantly, 'Now I know where we arel' and t:O51 said sadly, 'So do l,' and Piglet said nothing. He had 9 IO think of something to say, but the only thing he could think of was, 'Help, helpl' and it seemed silly to say that, when he had Pooh and Rabbit with him. QA. A. Milnel I sit in my window with a tommy gun across my knees. When they lift their heads I shall let them have it. CKenneth Patchenj '7!lo FREDERICK CONNELL -QE. g S 2 4 f 9 , gg A Q Y Q H .fl 'f . 9 uv 5 is h Q 7, , fix so ofa I sit on a man's back, choking him and making him carry me, and yet assure myself and others that I am very very sorry for him and wish to lighten his load by all possible means - except by getting off his back. Tolstoi wi? E STEPHEN DELL ANDREW DREXLER S MF- X Y X K '-' - ax .P ' ', ffl bf: .L4. tix' Xa ff, th,- X, ., Q., 1 an ' T11 ,. 4.- 'S - x 1735 ' 'Hifi-' U W' 1:55 X R f- . w if V F' ' l 5. -. Q 'wx' xi L .,. ' ,W.s'4'T . Q Hxn ff X 1 w f T5 K MURRAY EHRINPREIS - ALICE MARK EI-IRMAN WZ ming, CD L Y-asians.. 1 ' PHILIP EICHLING ,K -. On the whole, men are more good than bad: that however, isn't the real point. But they are more or less ig: norant, and it is this that we call vice or virtue, the most in- corrigible vice being that of an ignorance that fancies it knows everything and therefore claims for itself the right to kill. The soul of the murderer is blind, and there can be no true love without the utmost clearsightedness . . . No, Father, I've a very different idea of love. And until my dying day I shall refuse -to love a scheme of things in which children are put to torture.' 'Yes, yes,' he said, 'you, too, are working for man's salva- tion.' 'Salvation's much too big a word for me. I don't aim so high. I'm concerned with man's health, and for me his health comes first.' Albert Camus, The Plague Three o'clock in the morning December 119395. North China, with the Eight Route Army . . . Four japanese pris- oners . . . In this community of pain there are no ene- mies . . . Are these soldiers professional man-killers? No, amateurs-in-arms . . . ls it possible that a few rich men, a small class of men, have persuaded a million poor men to attack and attempt to destroy, another million men as poor as they? So that the rich may be richer? How did they persuade these poor men to come to China? By telling them the truth? . . . No, they told them that this brutal war was the 'the destiny of the Race,' it was for the 'Glory of the Emperor' . . . False. False as Hell! Norman Bethune, Wounds if V ,N -m 1 1 I 7 , , v 3 1 , 4 Y 11 fi W Z2 owfw 21 ' 4. ,,, , 5' 4 if ,. x K' ,W 1' PV ,V dv d? .,.. , ,g , I 4 I ,K f If lf I 'L ,f f lg, ' I 'E' in ANET RENCE FALTZ LA 'ff .Q 1, 'fm' f 0' 3- , 4 adv' 5 yum FREDERICK FEIN I A , ' H 1 To all of my friendsg those of you vvho have taught me, those whom I have taught, those vvho I've worked with and those who I've played vvithg - Good luck and best wishes. To my colleaguesg - As first year students we all demanded that each patient be treat- ed with the utmost respect. Now as physi- cians, let us never forget this. FREDERICK FEIT 5 'ni A A 'V' lx' '56 3 51 - C012 fl I if-. s, 'OW' If 'x 1 Q Qty GEGRGE FELDMAN Z-f i I I X if Q .A N fxg ' x Y E , V ? e .. I ,f xi ? I , 1' XV SQ A y I I yL,,n A X263 A X fs-,Q F11 X f We f 3 2 , Jw X 4x 3 fi ,fm RICHARD FINKELSTEIN BGNNIE rf? I is i :Mg S l I Z' fx ,f -'. 4-SN-A ik X 5 F 1 3 N . x 4 4 . , .1 - my 4 M VS QNQ ffm f 2 S. ,W1xQ-iififfx f' K 1' Ae s ' -2 'f' 2 f 1 H ll LO H Nl-ISH N Bl N AN cu 3 3 O 5 no C- O E. 5' na 'C 'Cl N4 3 5 self to the duties of my profession. Support me, Almighty God, in these great labors that they may benefit mankind, for without thy help not even the least thing will succeed . . . Let me be contented in every- thing except in the great science of my profession. Never allow the thought to arise in me that I have attained to sufficient knowledge but vouchsafe to me the strength, the leisure, and the ambition even to extend my knowledge. From Oath of Maimonides 'l 57 Every age, every culture, every custom and tradition has its own strength its beauties and uglinessg accepts certain sufferings as mat- ters ofcourse, puts up patiently with certain evils. Human life is re- duced to real suffering, to hell only when two ages two cultures and religions overlap. A man of the Classical Age who had to live in medieval times would suffocate miserably just as a savage does in the midst of our civilization. Now there are times when a whole genera- tion is caught in this way between two ages, two modes of life with the consequence that it loses all power to understand itself and has no standard, no security no simp one does not feel this equally strongly. A nature such as Nietzsche s . . . d had to suffer our present ills more than a generation in a vance. What he had to go through alone and misunderstood, thousands suf- fer today. le acquiescence. Naturally every Hermann Hesse Steppenwolf bl. ,-,Q - P fig KENNETH FRANK - SHEII-A H, ' 'ii .-Q..-., . Elf . '5 ,mf ' if ...M I4 , l' lull , if ' I l i ,K ug- ? v ' . f ii S' i 'Q ll lf 'Il lu it if !. ri l I , 4 0 ' T ,rf nl: .,4. fi .Sf i i I , .in T Q l . 'n .IZ 'O v I 2 I l nv .J i 54 .u l fl, 4 if Ilxbg ffl' iw xi lu. :id Liiiisi irtiizftvxiziz.-fqp,+, gg ylixuqn vqvndg t W 3 gnu X I f' i Wilfiwlzsgrgls ..Y... .,. -,. ,, . If 56 l r l I Tl GREGORY FRIED - LINDA But I don't want to go among mad people, Alice remarked. Oh, you can't help that, said the Cat. We're all mad here. l'm mad. You're mad. I-low do you know l'm mad? You must be, said the Cat or you wouldn't have come here. Levvrs Carroll . v JT 1, , A I 4 KEN FRISCDF ELL? 8 -NN' .----1. M .... .. ELLEN B I-I RT H ER EL DAN! -sa 'S- 2 s LJ RWM 9 V .QA yw 3? ? wx , X Ziff ' f f F .1 M I- .1 u '1 55 if 5, ,xg 'll' 1, ff, X2 tw, - W ff f , fl f 1 W , ff' WW' l,, 'W f 1 ,ff f W f fd V W9f4o W f ff V f fo' f f f ,iff 'iff 0 -'V' f . wwf f. yfiwf V I' ffwff mo'-'f,,r , it ' I M ff ,:wW!4fM,'f: , 4. fqfkn 7W4,ff7Wf , ,M4..y,Ww,f,,wf:,. 'af.:.Z,a4 l'd like to know what this whole is all about before it's out. Piet l-lein Excerpt from intern 5 transfer note: This was one of many hosp tal admissions for a 45 year old male alcoholic who came in for a total body overhaul I '77 CLAUDE GERSTLE - ELLE f 1 , , I ,, ,XIUV Q!! I 'W f fl ', y, , 4 51 ,, f Qf, V , 3 ff, Z.,-fm4f . 'WA H WZVW ,Qin WM., M L ,, 1 'f 7f 4 MZ fcjy ?4 G ,H :z-3?2.ffa?, 'gpm , k ,, 'fm , 3 I ii- xv, WK 4 SIDNEY GLANZ - MALA H, 41 65 K 9 1 hh. zagxgiby Z if, , 1 A 4 in W N s. .1 7 . ati, 5-..,. ' . PAUL GLUCK M .x .z......,,,N I ' . V ...., .., .lxg.:c',.-'i-,R '4 M Q. Ki-49 Iffwvffwl iw? 1 3 I RW ,,:- 10A GLUCK ,hm 407 x l V , A 2 wqwgfypx, Lf' Z.f' I wr f , f , XM M V 14 68 Q -., vmvtytb 'vq.'+.u'+Qf 'yon-44,03 , 'oo++ooE+ Q.. P-bvvve-1-v' bx-s. 5 O Q A 0 A , E 4'+ + o v 4'-'4 o 4 ff. . . . '.' ... ..- Q-... 9:XvLLE2Q512 :S zg,j.,r l' ,A,,,,,.,1g 4 i HU! I f ,affv 35 If f lj Muni ,l6,,...u.rnl ll' M513 ':! ? f 6 X- ll I. i 2555! ,Pkg I3 i l5r'i'iu:E: fa Elll jffifgfpfi' iHIl!,l,.iwj.!-I M L: w I 1 V pkg' lllfllrpggf-f+f,1 ,.g.g.s-fail'- i 'W' 'V ' 'v'. r-ff , ! fV 'I'I'T 'I I'c Ill u'l'U ' ' x:'t'b'r'n'Ar:4o'o'.'.. 22:22 E ll?'f1'I'.i'1li-i'f'Z'3:l 3---Z 4 ,w1-:e:+i- :L v.:-'::- f:::f i -f f4'4':gH5:: 41,41 -QQ 'O lug: lgl ff ,zg:1:.:':,.,.b1.g,. iiilei N-Fl 1 no 4 E-'s'4'-'-if-'-1,-.Ill f may-u1'f,.A'.f..j,7.'.f.,f.75:.,::: ,' ' 1 xo . ,ngnunsi c.,:...,, un., .V J I U. 1 f QL 'I zllIHll...-,a:6 FDI: li' i l I I 'i j i'::5l:' ,-.E-3 IS f N:-.g-.: ...vin Ill 3g-E!-El. :2'f:':3: ' 'H E ' ' :f:: 5 .2 ggliggugn I -1 PLEASE oo Nor :ip I I Slgigiigs , FEED THE Banos :gh A, Q Y Q, , . u ws- - E,-::-:-:-:: 'r l1w- unlvik '.:.:.l X5K lKiiullll s'- sig ..:: is FRANK GOLDBERC. . .5 , A ,.. .Stn Z .ar i 4 f Q, ELIZABETH KREEGER GQLDMA QQ' N ku I Ax X Q 5 1- 4--V SAE ,Q , ,, V ,. ,NX kv X 2 4,7 '- f x . A ' 'S vilw Q f . X5 , ,, 3' ' ' Z Q M 1 N ,AQHQNSQE1filiy'-MiN2Q 3- aff' f Q ,fx-,1:ff1vf ' - 1 vw. ,A N- . ,, .Xb,.xL X .TV X, ,, , 1. 'MY f ,W 2 f N , , ,fww A ., J N ,Ni x - ' ' f W - - . N' ww, X1 , , 'Z - . -r..2fJ151 y ' ' V, ,, 5 3 .. ,f N , ij.. ' X y .... if m,, X , ,VA, f , 2 f X. ,, x xg - xx 1 we-fwvgkig , , f , f V, , 0 I , V Z , Mif-,wx,,,.5,,V,:,,QQ --Qlmsgkx -J I wg W if ,, 3' s 1 K ,, N ,xggm ' F i b 1 3' T f ,f M, f X, , ,.., A Av. x-.ix-W. , .X., :Af 4 g N ,V , H M .. ., xx wa. ' aa. fx - N P. x 4, ,, H f , ,, 5xXQ,,,h 1 X 'N MX f 1,1 A, . .F,1f,gE,-4 N. f ff 5, . - X Jirf I y f f qf yi'-Y 1 f 1 , ' , f, f as W ' W I 4 ff, ' I P ' 5 f , f, Y '- Z V, ' V , , f , , ,f 'f 2. 5. ' ' K v l :' f' 2 f Q -W., .1 . t ff ,f f r ,J , , , ,, ' . 1 , M J f V Mi! f 741, 1' m, aw' J, , FFT ---. . , -f'rf:, 'L' '1f' ...,... -.,--.-w....., Y Ng' ,K CARY GOLDSMITI-I shazam 4 5 TTR- -10 :fe- 1 x D93 T Kev- her 7 r YN :Hg Y I IE? K L m-Q :zz I: QS' I I 3 Nfl ..-7-- it Vg? 4 1 fl I .wi ' LNVEID AQCI AHNOI-l .Q ' wp A medical education is composed of many experiences, but the ones that I re- member best were those of the last two years in vvhich lectures were finally abandoned and we vvere placed in the hands of the best of teachers: the pa- tient. While most of them provided valuable experience, some rose above and beyond the call of duty, and to them I offer special accolades: To the ladies on C-2 vvho responded in various ways to my first probing at- tempts to extract histories and blood from them, l'm sorry about those hematomas. . To the woman on C-5 on whom I performed my first episiotomy repair, my sincerest apologies to you, and especially to your husband. 'To the 6'7 , 250 lb. schizophrenic on N-5 who heard voices telling him to kill lWIS mother and a cop, thank you for not hearing voices telling you to kill a med- ical student, Finally, Special thanks must be offered to some vvonderful people. First, to my WON and dad vvho have sacrificed so much over the years so that I could con- UIWUG my education, I cannot even begin to express my gratitude. And to you, HOVWQY, who over the last three years have provided me vvith encouragement and comfort in trying times, I offer you my love and a bright future together. DCDNALD GREEN 11 A ,.. 1--.. 429' 4 1 X, fwys' DAVID I-IAMBURGER 5' l 3 My , 1A I A The greater the ignorance the f NNffifffgQQf4:E,,g31ff f Y f'??f, ,f:f'Wr greater the dogmatismf' r . :1?152qw,, 1.0, I ,, , , 5 1, ffzrf' Sur William Osler ' If r..r, , In Montreal Medical journal 119023 V rf ' ,WMM X lww I ' Y 1 29, , f z f if 12 -M 4 f f I , ff H235 I ff, ' , K w f X wg, W, 1, ,W , 1 HJ! f f , 1 W , ,. QV fi , 'mf ,, v,. 1 f' N, . mf Tv Quan, ,hw gymfiff r Lfhfzgr f Jig' rYFQ,itY,.i .Q M ' fs 7 +V 4 M . zz , 3 Q, I 'K I I fi if w '17 , Ur, f' Yqfikx QL, - '-.vw . Pi at 7 ' 'J' E-4' U. ,X .- , . ---V'-j L , . r. ' Ah 1, -'f,.qLY..-, - -4 x 2, ., Q , im ,S l :Alf .,,.1. , f V 2 .11 . KM V, 4. ' ' - ' '2.:f:'ff.a. , -1 - . -.1 -- :- ., Q 1 'i,:.ys,t4f: A. , .. 1 . A: .C M I I ,ww :X h- . ,.,'N.- 3,5 V Y , it , , ,--,4 ' 1 ,- -- '.xT-flfxrvsfw '- I W . f Qu? . 4- .J.,f1'Q'ffu 3,1 -. ff, . ' V M' , 6'1 E115-F+lfff,,' TTA' lf5'e,, I ' 1 , ' .', wF'fv.1',:'5 ' . fa., 49. '. ' - - f r-, , , ., ' , , - A 4 sf ' , f- A , A. .. M x .Q Y' 'UD IFN! .V cgi PHILIP HELLER , 1 wvgvr- : L 1 ' 226.21 ,, av' .9 24 ,,. 1 1 'A . 1 ,Q x I 0 6' 753 -3 o C' 000' 52 f 9 0 If I were ever sure of anything, l'ye probably forgotten what it was by novv T. Paxton RQBERT HEUERMANN Bo' '23 F' 1. STEPHEN HILTON MARY - NYU CLASS QF 1974 QM iiixivx? L+ I V5 5 f 31. ov .- A . - -if V X Q 2.41. ll ,G-ai.,-A , 'f Q'- V ul 1 - 12 1 Q ,ly ts, me 1 V 4 ! 5 ,.,- W ' 1 Www? .Q-5 V. HM J'-ng,,.wafi ROBERT HOFFMANN - SARAH He who knows nothing, loves noth- ing. He who can do nothing under- stands nothing. He who understands nothing is worthless. But he who un- derstands also loves, notices, sees . . . The more knowledge is in- herent in a thing, the greater the love . . . Anyone who imagines that all fruits ripen at the same time as the strawberries knows nothing about grapes. Csource unknownl 77 RICHARD HUBERMAN u ...Q C Q' If A I :S iN2H12f111-- ' . E ' S 225.2252a:a1ae,25eai1f5?:-4- 'W' x jpllifn 5-PM HOWARD ISENBERG kan A., turns from the great writers of classical Any one who Athens, say Sophocles or Aristotle, to those of the Chris- tian era must be conscious of a great difference in tone. There is a change in the whole relation of the writer to the world about him. The new quality is not specifically Christian: it is just as marked in the Gnostics and Mithras - worshippers . . . It is a rise of asceticism, of mysticism, in a sense, of pessi- mismg a loss of self-confidence, of hope in this life and of faith in normal human effort, a despair of patient inquiry, ALAN lACOBS - RISETTA a cry for infallible revelation, an indifference to the wel- fare of the state, a conversion of the soul to God. lt is an atmosphere in which the aim of the good man is not 50 much to live justly, to help the society to which he belongs and enjoy the esteem of his fellow creatures- but rather, by means of a burning faith, by ecstasy, guffeirjng and martyrdom, to granted pardon for his unspeakable un: worthiness, his immeasurable sins. There is an intensifying of certain spiritual emotions, an increase of sensitivenegg a failure of nerve. ' ' 'Gilbert Murray, Five Stages of Greek Religion iNew Yorkg Doubleday Anchor Books, 19553 p. 119 E .mb il -av' 6 '-L11-il.1.h LESLIE JAFFE bin- N BRAHAM IELI A M4 4 .1 kfayfffz Q kiwi ,,,,,w ' ,f4oW9K fd famunwf N1 X W J 5 2 W. ff' Q 1 avi. ff I W , if ' f f ff' ' V Wfif fi I diff Q , ff , ,- 15 f x f I' k 2 9 f 4' y f, , f W ax , f Z3 I ' lf? 1 F 1 f 4 'I all f fi Z if fig: r 1 X I 41 1 ' 155252 ..1 1 ,figs 4 K K f f: A , 27 inf :57X.Z ROBERT KAHN F' ,.' .4 no J is I U 1 1, -1 C - in N- ' 1 4 44 If if x X S 55:-Q9 ,... ,... RICHARD KAPIT R ll N- Mm 'X :w ks N w'---5. X .wig-,W , ,Q,G,MX5,,i X: ,f gpm XM: . 1 xx ke! 6? sw , 1 , 142 4 ,gf mv? fhf Y-aamzz wg - swf ff, 2 iS-.. 2.- - ,IQ x N, xx My It X -M-.,-' R 9 5,.,' f LEX? MARTIN KAPLAN - CINDY , is Af we ,, ,S , ,Q . UQ I W,- F23 I li X3 X El A4 1' TN i'lg..,f Wink! K 9. 'u .vxw ,v- E N N RICHARD KATZ MV. Q wx- EU CJ s .ai as 1 H i K L , X x X X X -Amikfffy fNfSL5 'W9 5 S . S 1 ii v 5 Q f e Y' e l Y . ..N-,..a ., . ,. ,,.. ,,,.,, ,..-...- x. '? 5 - QQ 3L,.4g1'- M vi fix: Y 1 1554 : 5 ' Y J A 4 'S NN UFMA KA TZ KA L ERY CI-I IAMES KENNEDY df? ww, My I All yy f , ff., M , .5471 M. A w- X-p , , , X. ..lA.v,fp1f , , Qi, ,X X., ,. if-, , - 'wg f-,Mffffxy , , -f f f f ,,.fff: Until the twelfth of Never . . . . ..x, ,.,.,.... Y.- ..,.,..-..., Y - CONNIE MICHAEL KESSLER e E X W . J , v M if .I mi li 7 v Y 0' . ol wwf , M 'S N. 1 JF 3 WOVEII-ISE! DI I-ILEINNEIPI 'N+-fr f A gf ' .0 1 ? S An! ' I-I, 'ig I a -e ' ' . 'z,a. 5. y ' .Q m.'Q'. ' -I I .' 4,-0 t , E . H 101. 83. A-,, sn 'G , ,, n - . 'U - 'J . f, ' ,, 152 jx, x , - . V, Q ,l '. I g v J In ,'4 3' -- A' 2.-.r .. , , :l V, Jil fl' ,.lfj'.' 1,764 name mmm fnllwlizfivltlf V' 4. 9, -5 K ,sr ,O 5. 'Jul f ' I D 'c Q1 s Y x 4 Mi , xi , ,, 4 Y ,fn sip ff 'Ti -, 54+- ' 1 in 1, I I .,,-it RGBERT KIRSTEI f., R, 59 M ig I ,Xl L r ENVT SIN Nl EI P650 39348 2 g3O Sf ZQFDQN 345-'UJQN Egg H rw :s'. no oo' gg CD. U51 vii? U13-I 0 fD:?. mm, 330 25-55. 30231 Q32' 5: 1' ig-3 QJ1 OTN4 H Pooh and Dragonfly E. H. Shepard fig 11 ' 4fx'v 1 Jff,-.ffglh-m.. ,4 ,', 67' 4 f, '4A7 V, gf- -q'7?fyT,W,y b' N- -,T ., I - ss w Mf Q xx F221 -'L 31' F f' '. ! 4 iz- ' V- 'A-.'1- igilff ,' 11153. . 'A 'vr3'7xq l I ' 1 4 Q , 1 I I O , ' - . -ffa 4- up. 7 F 9- . -X 1 ' fix' 6 ,, ... . 7 4, fl -vi nf-J r,,..Ab' H !I,,, fx' Xzxkgkf 1,1 -- ,M T 4' 9 925 ,H X 5 1 I 1 X f ' fj ' 'I 1 -gk .- S f1 '75 K f ' CN ,!f'l ff ' f E N4 A f ffl fn' 'aP41,a44'.f' l , ay f ' yr, ,v. 1 ,un 9 , 2 P x 4? -T hu f ,f -f'J1vWW , V -JL w.-xr ' f LZN ' 175' fa ,ff 0:'x ' , - ' -f54 'Q 543254 - o 4 iiG?i'?'FlfP EEF ik , Q, ' ' il I, 'A W . 4 N if . -f ,,75, if-?ffA3f?7 yqm o 1 5, f-,' ff? .5731 9, ry? ,,, , . ,, ,vw ALAN KLEIN -n., ww? 2 Z Wgl 7 iffy? 151 1 fi. f 1 I of if M f I f ,fuff 172 . ,,,. 'L--v' ELIQ TTL 'vuf -. ..1 1 5 I ': 11 E 'iii '4' v. , 4 Q ,,, xii . X A 'X Elm A in A-.H 4 KENNETH KRAMER rg.:-I ' F. Ill -l Lg flxixxm 'H fr? E t X , VJ' , , ' Q s xv I 5 ' ' f E ,.., v 'I 5 Q' 14. ' UN ' -M N' x' We ' If-,l X it N I X I 5 1 1 1 4 I Q 1 W 1 I 1 Q ASTE 1 E . V I 5 . ' I X x 1 7 I 'r E r i :E 1 E , EE ? .1 YE if iinq,-Q , , . , 1 -A+- - ' i 'a -' -A J V W, , W sk . ' g 1 mi ,E.Q zu-.M ,. A ANTO KRO E - PAMELA ANN , ' 7 if 4 , ,, f A KWAVKQW' wg PETER LEFKQVV Famous quotes I remember All cells have a nucleus. There is a nucleus in every cell. What I meant to say was . . , L. Prutkin Anol the heart tells the sympathetic nervous system to wait in the car. l-l. Levy By the vvay, vve're thinking of not having a final exam. C. Stetson Bellevue is a lAg Harvard is a1B. S. Farber That's why vve're all here, Rifkin. S. Lawrence You reach up the aorta and feel for the nodes. Beckman Now l'm going to sock it to you. Robinson The exam vvill be based on the last tvvo lectures. S. lonas Try again! F. Spencer S4 122 t, - ,V if, If , vs, ff n, f f 'L Q . 5 ,if V Q ,V W yy, ' I, K' Z , ig 'l Out of the night that covers me, Black as the pit from pole to pole. I thank whatever gods may be For my unconquerable soul. In the fell clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud. Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody but unbowed Beyond this place of wrath and tears Looms but the horror of the shade, And yet the menace of the years Finds, and shall find me unafraid. It matters not how straight the gate How charged with punishments the I am the master of my fate. I am the captain of my soul. William Ernest Henley STEVEN LESHAW Q ll . f ,ff X in Z ft! ' . Ps .3 , ' 'xt .- 4 fa , :sw ' G, - .ivi V' ,n,, 3 ff-271 6 L '1.5'j32f: 91' , ,ua-,' fy Qfgg,-: QQ J.,-.d ' 5 1 52112-.f g 1 ' a, 11a-- . 5 1 , . 'ff 1 1391 P54 jg j , ' L55 , ' f . A 1 h is f k. pw ,tr I. , Q . r-' ,- ,- , .. Vg fn S J -T f. Y ' - ' 7 1, W ' 1 J ' 4' , f,.f ,ff-V , in ' ' J v 9' 'Aida' Q- ' . A.'xfJm! 4 4 -4 ln, ,W I I ua, N. 3 Q 4 5 3 5: r s 2 x, Qi! tx it XXX.. ' 'A i'x ' L Q.-4 , ,,., Wi YK ERIC LESSI C-ER L., git 1 , 5. x f if R, Q . ggi IAY Ltviu L, ,,n,,, q H '5 f'Zn.Lv' Most of the outstanding moments of my N.Y.U. career oc- curred during the third year when I learned ten times as much as my first two years combined. The most important thing I learned was that I should never think of patients as cases instead of human beings, however strong the tendency to think that way. I remember in particular a successful lawyer who had an M.l. and spent three weeks on A-1. I-le disdained transfer to more comfortable surroundings because he felt that the house staff and nurses cared about his well being. Every day on rounds we would pass his bed and the resident would tell him something which I would later explain to him. Eventually, we talked more and he began asking me how he should reorder his life after leaving the hospital. The incongruity of the situation was appar- ent and troubling to me. As he got more privileges and recovered, this very dignified gentleman began helping the aides and nurses with the most menial tasks and wanted to know about the other patients' health. He particularly seemed to enjoy when his business asso- ciates had to sit uncomfortably around his bed amid the every- day commotion on the ward. Before he left, he told me that he felt that I really knew what I was doing and I should be more aggressive on rounds. When he left the ward after his three week recovery period, the nurse told me he was crying. 101 .D- 1 1 I yw.-1 WN! RAYM N D LEVI NE 0 I i I V, :gin .ii ,V Q, ,, - .Vx 1' s I My 1 f . If B l ' .4 Si ,I Ni J' M 57 2. fl fs r Q 1' b . ..A., .H .,,. .. ,,,A - -A ., . ..,, .. , x X 5 wma., :sg ..x.:: ...-.-. 1 5 , I 1 I 1 W f f ,fm ,W ,,4Q,,,,, f ff f fi' f ff -2 f ff f N M, 54' 1 W ,L -I 1 if 6,0 ,Q y',y,ffy ,,'v X , ,.!,W,!,, fm '- 1- fy Q 'ff WZ WLM! f' ff' 52, 2 , f ,W , , ,f xi..':...,, f N www 1 X M ,.,y311w,y ,M My Q A f , 1: 11 ll! Wfw 'pw KI-PF I A - 1 wx, -, -1-- Y V2 N. .Hx fi F .1l f...-5.5: - g . I0 4 ,-.J fr I . f- RL N EDWARD J- LIPINSKY . ' A . V 'fr I . , .s 5 -1 EDWARD LIPINSKY Ni ! ' 'Flri 1 s MJ... 3 5 I n RONALD LITEPLG :EEL P3 ,021 ,w ' M'- W 'IO 06 DAYNA LUCAS u Xfa'1 . Siitaasxwsrfr 1 4 I ., .,....m. 3 .. L J l , 4 4 E 7 ax Q x 1 . . Q 4 i 2 5 i 2 c Q E- ::f: z nn-- Q 1..- X ! 3 is E 1 a . 55 ii 'S Q ' f Er: . x N' fm 1 E 'K x ' ' -L mx 6 N ANDRE MANGANARO 'if 1 . , 4 f ,'f Z ,Q 'fi , JK 7::::: :: rrrrtz'-.-:r:1:' 107 . , .x:..,..: W. W------Q ----- ::.-:::-na:-:zzz A V 1 A x W ' i ,z 4-..., , ,, ! 42.4 1, . I -mf- ls I 1 0 l 'C 1 U WILLIAM MASON My first clerkship in my third year was on OB. One night, two weeks into the clerkship, I found myself all alone in the C5 examining room, admitting a woman whom the resident had assured me would not deliver for at least another three hours. After a brief history and physical, I concluded that the woman was indeed pregnant, and was in the process of writing up my findings when I heard a call from my patient on the stretcher: Doctor, I'm bIeeding! I looked around, decided she must be referring to me, and went over to investigate. In actuality, she was not bleeding. She was delivering. I became very busy. First I called for help. None came. Next I looked for gloves and instruments, which I could not find. Time was now getting short, and I came to the con- clusion that if I didn't do something quickly, this delivery was going to go on without me. Luckily, the baby did most of the work, and came out looking pink, if somewhat bewildered. The mother was speechless. Could this be the way all deliveries were han- dled at Bellevue? Was this guy really a doctor? Unfortunately, I had never delivered a placenta before. I therefore decided that this would be a good time to en- list the help of a nurse. I handed the astounded mother her baby by its feet, and explained that she was to hold on very tightly, and that I would be back shortly. I hastily left the room, ran to the ward, and returned with a nurse. Five minutes later I delivered the placenta. The mother was then taken to the ward, the baby was brought to the nursery, and I took myself back to my room to lay down and recuperate. Only in Bellevue could this have happened. '9-4354. .84 -, .t 1 . 1 ' if '52 -,gt x .f '5 -1 , . ,..,,f,.yf5 ts, TZ,7Q,1, 05 , t 'A ,4- Z. 109 .T.'.?. E:.ZLI'1. SYDNEY MEHL 95 1,- ww' 1 5 ,,., fl ,n 'S X 4 ug' Ngwff 7 , 'In 6 ' l 66-'I 0 WM ' I fm, V, un-QW, I r ,Af GREGORY MEYER M sg, -s xi-,,..-- ' --X.. ' QA., 4, 4,1 Q... is I, 112 s. fi' ...A 1-1-Y'-342533: ':.x-::: ::.3g:..aL.:q1- K x , A . , , MATTHEW MILLER - TINA I P 7 dv 1, ,gk Q'- Og, X L 'yi W 1 - AH- i::: 1 . ..E3, F525 if w 113 - ' - -- E1Z'f1:::TTL2 S: ,, X ,ax ,. pw: f ., N, va,-v,Q..,' , x N35 XX iw t i fait- .3 X . ff ?'5?ff,wiQL.'f I K,-s wxfw- Q k gyvf .5 f-w, y5x,x .iigiifxifff Qfk 9. 'f sw Q - - nl-4 .x mmf, ,.,5.X zfxwf' '35 Q xyjt l.,wwp..- N.. , wvuw- ,,w.,g,w.. f, .N fb Y., , . v I ,W 1 rf- . 4 O v I ! .mf Mx, .' Us-X. 344133 ky 'V Wf- .gd ' gr-,.., ...G gp 5 gw ' , , ,D- ,L 5 2 ? it 5 4. aw a '! I 0 , '1 I W r 4 r Hfizxsn ' ' 'w'vv41-xwzrx 'ff .Rid-G1 rx11ri'r:3srxLxvav-ivwrvrvniw:xr:'S2:'il'5. 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V A 1 1 , 5 if 'pm-Aw!-, 1 .P+ 445,21-'A+ er - ii. -.gy - ' -. I ., ln 1 p4 , s. S 4 t A f v f I , a rf QW, 3' if 5 a K 'K v 4 1. -Y: . al :, , . 41- tl , . , Q rr, ' . 1 - J v1 -W - 4 ', - ' -,.f ,-pf f , 5 -L- . f,,.g,y,3g., ' . . 9 , - ..f. ,, . I, , W' 5: -1 ., I :ls . , If-I ,zu ,. M.: Avlfq ip A X. 1 -A .. 1 A 1- I, , U fr N Q4 '15 ' , , im ,W TQ I 2 ' 47' ' ' - :il h As? sv i ,, - , . , , ' in . 'fy' rf? 1 a , - Ar , 4 'iw .1 ,gf .. - f 1 '-uv? Q ' . .',' 1' Q ,J - .. 'lj 5 . A , . - , . . , A- Q -x ., ' Y - -' P-.1 V hx .- an , ' . -. , N- - Z-Q ,I- an I , . , , k gy A ..'1q.L X i Q , ,., - -KI 1V' 171, ?H2'T f1f14vffHs ' f y 4 f.,,.'li I 1. f 'fj- Sw- l 4' Eric: Q, -- Dai:-.fi -- if - 3 -1 Gestur- ,Aw , .p-. '.1,:1 Q M- , . -V 1 - -f- '- A 2, ., - gl- lt .Q , .1 i I -5 MICHAEL OPPE HEIM I have nothing banal to say. 477 .Go X- 4, ,M f' , egg Q Q , PETER PEFF - MARIORIE I want to thank those attendings, house staff nurs- es and others who went out of their way to teach us. These Clinical years have been the most frustrating but also the most exciting and satisfying years of my life. 11 9 0 LARRY PELLISH -- MNE if I remember - a middle-aged man with Stage IV I-Iodgkins on .NIUPP therapy fighting a bout of pneumocystis tarinii pneumonia - an elderly lady with stasis ulcers refusing Io enter the hospital because she had to look after her JI tear old grandson - a Cushingoid Chinese man, who did not speak Inglish, wondering why, alter coming to t linit tor a skin rash, he was occupying a lied on A2 I remember - meeting new people, making a Iew tlose tiientls -being fascinated and repulsed hy the liig tilt -falling in love and getting inarrietl liour years of growth and thange W may it tonlintie. S... A x 'ILL K x sg 9 1 I ....,.-..x xg D. 2 iig?-E X V , MXL: 3- -.-, ..... ..-..... A-X-A -fs S 1 n' -Q 'Y , gx-' ' gg .fy :QV .ui 5 ,.... ... ' ,,,,.L., .,A,l,..j zixzzcf xt 1: ' 1- 'h--. ffk.. MN., 4, ss' .! L E 1 -Y x vS,,',QiQ,-.9,'g:.. Ayes . X 4,5 .:.3 '.' , T-lj SWXQ www 32 Y' N-g5fTx'J - - E a Q. il-Q-sqm Y E 3 'E-55 QVELFTQZJ' W '- Y- , LAWRENCE PETERS 12:4 -:i::-sz: ,?1:.3,a3gffi. ' A'- 5 'di -S fi-., -JA PHILIP PODRID '-X X JvwiW,,,,.f,aa2-A wwvtfw Armed with a pair of high-powered infrared-beam super binoculars from my 13th floor residence hall observatory, I have followed with delight the progress in construction of the new Bellevue. Some observations from my formerly secret log are now revealed to you. The innate intelligence and foresight of Sam tthe construction worker whose job is to singlehandedly complete the new Bellevuel, is as- tounding. For instance: Of 400 beds devoted to the de- partment of medicine, Sam has relagated 4 to acute medi- cine. The rest will go to IMCU. The new l.C.U., the most advanced of its kind, will have one water-bed equipped for continuous monitoring of ANA titers, stool guaiacs and Rumpel-Leedes. Optional patient hookup for instant fever and anemia workups will be available. Prophylaxis with IV infusions of gentamicin, Paraldehyde, Kwell and transfer factor, will be routine. As for hospital communications, interns will be equipped with ultrasound dog whistles for which each student will have an appropriate receiver. An efficient messenger service will be maintained utilizing Phantom jets, making shuttle flights to all wards and hourly flights to Camp La Guardia. If all this sounds impossible, try to be patient. lust re- member, the new Harlem hospital wasn't built in a day. STEVEN PRICE .df X WI, i'. LAWRENCE PRICI-IEP As I look forward to graduation, I look back upon my two years in Bellevue with fond memories. I remember the first time I pried my way into a white uniform. I didn't mind that my pants legs came to the top of my socks and my jacket sleeves to the bot- tom of my fingers. I remember my first en- counter with Mystery Meat in the staff din- ing room and the interminable debates over which were better, the cinnamon or coconut dessert rolls. I remember how difficult the learning process could be. One day, my sur- gery intern collared me and told me that we had an admission with a rectal mass. I donned a rubber glove, and was about to do a rectal, when I noticed that the patient was incontinent of feces. Under the gentle prod- ding of the intern, who made some remark about flunking the clerkship, I rolled the pa- tient onto his side. With the gentleness of a feather floating onto newly fallen snow, I breeched the anal sphincter. Curses split the air, and like a great ship capsizing, the pa- tient rolled over onto his back, trapping my finger in his bowels, my hand beneath his body, and turning my sleeve guaiac +. I re- member my patients: middle class people with M.I.'s and outcast people on drugs. I re- member their complaints, and I remember their thank you's. Goodbye Bellevue . . . l'll remember you. 1- -, ... 8 Q Qiix vu, u I Q s KENNETH RAITEN YW? 5 ., .. M g, r: N S 5 May the long time sun shine upon you All love surround you And the pure light within you Guide you all the way on. The Incredible String Band PAUL REINSTEIN - MARDI fi 6 1. 1 157' t 4 A jg' 'Q .ws sg., t,,..y7f.gfSiJ,J Kerio' ,- I ff' R ' F71 qngq . .. ,... 1 1 Q sizmzsaiwnnxeasmnz-assess, .m.N,v- 2-av fm-9 1 -.. '- A X1 ss, - i vp Nw L ' ' .z 1:-:wuz 1 K4 1.7.'X?1 -r-,-1. 1 is-'E S1-I RCDBERT RIFKIN 1 egg'-1' Q n ag L!! all ll l28 ' -.W I I 'f -0034 L v, ' 4 A+ ,ig I W . ..... , I, v... ...,- ,,,k 55:-L-w....... .. ..... ...... ,Q h 'R E,?h?Ai'3isL5?i?i?i?iEi?a!iER?i?1!2'riHIEi125ff,iii135 2 P1 -ii 22.315531 15: : 1: 1 ' --'A ---....-.. . ..Z1.CXL22 l 1 ' t 7 C J 1 1 L ' Q LANNY ROSENWASSER 1 '-- --U ...... . If Cx eg-!'r N -' .+A ' AP f , - .xr -3- 2, pl: Q f .. 1 y ' , , - gy, ,V . 'fn 'I 1 - - '1 7 ' , . , ,' Zfiy, ,AHL 4 la 3 N' ,V , ' elif' 4,5kj,:1,5!9f, i.:1 MQ I I 'g , ---U . W :fri f:--- '-- -u :.:-1 --Z' :JE A -,, ff riaxz-::z':E::, ' '- L7..,:.:,.r.::.....,1... 2 555' 1 0 Kfwf I 1 , X 5 '.,,.,,.-f fs I S ts v GILBERT ROSS - IANE A 2 RGBERT RGTHBERG 1 1 'X sf 9' 'QMiQ' A x - N ' 7 QQQESg ICDHN RGTROSEN - ,gr -.-lg -'c .1 -fe' A ? - Z, X xgfl R1 . , l SX mm: ' -K-X X +QX.w.uN, ' ,...,,.. D 1 1 4 4 JAMES RUBENSTEIN - TERRY ,,..,,.,..N ,,,. . W ,Mx We were talking - about the space between us all And the people - who hide themselves behind a wall of illusion Never glimpse the truth -then it's far too late - when they pass away. We were talking - about the love we all could share - when we find it To try our best to hold it there - with our love With our love - we could save the world - if they only knew. Try to realize it's all within yourself No one else can make you change - And to see you're really only very small And life flows on within you and without you. We were talking - about the love that's gone so cold and the people, Who gain the world and lose their soul - they don't know -they can't see - are you one of them? When you've seen beyond yourself- then you may find peace of mind is waiting there - And the time will come when you see we're all one, and life flows on, Within you and without you. George Harrison i DAVID SAFIR - KIM 2 f .suns S ,I 5' z 9 l 135 -gf' 136 HELEN SASS O H N, ,,,.,, .. ..,...4, 'T 5 3 Wm :fl .. 7.1 ,,,f nfhx Nj ' r' V o ,. ...pf . 1 I M I I R . D. H 3...-Q Y 1 tif' ' ,,.v' A-1 D' 'f A 'rllff -Av - ,- -i Y al' -. -dn -u N. v . - 1 .. K' r I ......N.., N- V - .., ,1:,: 1 :.:::':1g1': 2:11 ':::'L:z: ,r :: 'i,g- 1. 1 3331223.33 1 1 ' , zzz:-::1:::!:'..::f::: g::Y:x',::t grfhjifvz' 4 .J n 1 K ' l .-- , 1 l ,ff ' ,MW Z V , f f 2 3 1 Z ? . f 1 , 4 ' 1' Wm EI S LEIHEI IH HEI EI X 4 -- 'gnu-.p'.- .1r..,- 'ffffffl' z 232.22252 2E?iTf:f?': flfff? -113: I QEQFTLEZEE T -L .525 S E25 1 EEEEE:3E?E'E?'ii5 ' ' lTIf.' ' r:-:::1: f-:gnc :ggg::5g5S E7-f5?'22:P: i i,-.L , L..-.-.. : .. .: . ,'. ff 9.-s15E'rE1EE5iSiiEE 'I37 STAN LEY SCHQENBACH - ELIANE lg 45 ' s .th gg , ffm -' Ai Sgs. ' . 1,836 . 33 ' x,. ,A Q. MZ 43. 15- ali .Q v The talmudic question of What constitutes a wise man and the answer, He who learns from every man points up the process by which we, young men and women, were transformed into physicians. The fact that so many fine examples of physi- cians were available at N.Y.U. to be taught by and emulated is, in good part, responsible forthe grad- uation of our class with a clear idea of what con- stitutes excellence - both in medical technique and manner. To all my professors l can offer no higher award than the simple, yet sincerely and deeply felt and meant, Thank you. UK! H AV NCD G S HD CD NCD V HN H AGOi There is nothing more frightful than ig- norance, especially one's own, in action. 9 PAMELA SCKOLNICK I myself learned that the treasures found in travel, the chance rewards of travel which make it worth the while, cannot be accounted beforehand, and seldom are matters a listener would care to hear about afterwards for they have no sub- stance. They are no matter . . . These oc- casions are not on your itinerary. They have no names. They cannot be found on the best maps. Not you nor any other will ever discover them again. Nor do they fill the hunger which sent you travellingg they are not provender for notebooks. H. M. Tomlinson The Sea and the jungle ere. xx XN . 2234 QW Q , A JW Z3 ,..x4 f 1 A Q f ff A 0 yfwafff , 4 21 f A X ,, Q ,M 1 2 - 'Z - 1 wg DONALD SELCER - BQBBI ix- , xx wtf 1 755 .' 'F ,fl .5 q mix' Growing up in a cruel and greedy society hasn't been easy. Tragically, we may never com- pletely rid ourselves of the destructive values that vve have unwittingly inherited from such a past. Novv, as freshly trained doctors, we find ourselves faced with yet another handicap - the burden of our automatic association with an elitest guild that has dared to consider human health as merely another marketable commodity. At this moment in our lives, vve are being invited to continue a medical tradition that, by its very design, has assured that injury and disease remain more profitable for its prac- titioners than the maintenance of good health. The true measure of our worth as physicians, in fact our ultimate vvorth as decent human may very well be determined by hovv far we are vvill- ing to depart from such a self-serving legacy. JACK SCHQNKOFF - FREDI M., M ima g 14 44 DAVID SIMON ' , X , ,.f fi eb P V 1 if 2 i S ,,,. Q7 if 1 i r 5 . 3 Y: Iv P, P r . 1 p v V 1 w 5 Q w Y T ICK N L SK E NC RE LA f' ua IW , , , , 3'. in , A jfiwg ,. , '- f fl IN.: V N .1 L ai gf' .gg 3 3 'LR-4 1'iW'F'ipihf55'i,, ' t ff V -i'ibf ., ,Q , A K R t., ', . T73 W P Y' ' f 4 11 ' ,' '- '-fri? 1 f A I ' ', ,,a. Vai E. 5. w -A -.JO f A H 6 N ii al 5 . F 4 I , 3' ,.fv' 4 'F' 'zgvg-guxgxsgxrv-r - Q . Q X 1 u 5 J 'PW -2-im-121i:'5 fezzi-LE:-1-QQQQQQfeLaaz1as+.f2s11z1lleaevaaif41fves-.g-Qwaazeze2',s1a4z.-V-as-124' ' f !L.t! l-! .2'S-2 -.. !-!'2-23-Z' !'32S ?i!-.r3vrL:.r--1,-l1'L'L-..4::. ::.: z-'::'::': :. :::.: zE.:::' :i:::-::::::.:::.:::::: .:,:E:. nz ::::Eg' HI: 42? 5. i. E , 1 Z - .-t' - -- :.-'...-H -:..,.:.... - . xt. 3,..-Visiil-,xr-L . .. A .. . - 1 . .- :I :F -. .Env .li Q-5 Lv.-nv! v, .,.... 5 c J I L: . rr-: , .f . . .. . . 1 ,sz QF! k xxx i, Y z ,e- IQ 147 .ff .r 5 X , ! ' Mg!-g.1,g . - 4 V -f - W P- ' '1:1i?+flT-?'S1-.Q:g E,5.i. 12'wQ,??'Jf'T 1 V, ' - ff? figgzgfsrv j J , f - f f. fff1T f . Ax -' f 5 .,.,, 5 A ,f-' 0 V X L '-'- A t' ' Q, . apgg ...A P M A fin -,,.,,.,..-.--....,......,-L.---::f::.::r:::1:x.L.. . --5112 --:rin gi.:-r:'.::5riE?EE , ,,,f,-,, ..-.-.....- ..Y--. -.:::::::1gf:f:r:---3:7:15:13-:gg---'::::::'::.:.:::nasa:z1:::r.1 z:'. T: -1111--::':..:7:I:1:-1:11 33g'E52ggg?EE '1325igg5Q5g.igi1-sg-:ggegggg55ggQijQigg5:g:3?g3:1::zegf: 143353-pgfqggr':':-::::3:5g-f 535:-I wg5'33gfg--'zgxzgz-37:17:73-:W' f - :Yr ff-f- lm . ,:.ltL.d,., L - -. - - - - - ' 4 1- X JON SNYDER 'X 1 an .ii h Three Laws tthe last whole earth catalogj Everything is connected to evervthing. Ex'erything's get tn go somewhere. There's no such thing, as a tree lunch. v 9 . X r u gl n L. m .U .f In I l I 1 1 V f 0 i' ' ..lf4n! f Y ' ff 35. e it 7-CT? cv 4542 9 gf 7 S, tv Ht ,ff I' it Q EI CI M-ll S NDO I I Z . Q--0--M-, 'I49 . 1 4 'fn ' ' ,431 if Q' .uf F- .4 V ? .iq ,aff-it I KENNETH SPAULDING ,W 'E r I I. 5, ,, .35 b 7 L While working on female medicine during my third year at Bellevue, I was always amazed at the patients' interest in the mid-afternoon soap operas depicting the trials and tribulations of the modern day TV doctor. Gne day I asked one of the patients how she could be so captivated by these programs when the real thing surrounded her every day. I-Ier reply: Yes, I know this is real. I just don't want to believe it. ISI P1 ffm J A , : V - 1 uf' +C sy ' l c I L' 4 C ll 9,1 n', 1 f fy .Ll U I U 1 l 5 . :Qi e ' 1 k'lk .F ll Ss xnxx: 1 1 J x v Q '1.: i ,od las. VJ fs ar fl. K- . A W 4 ,- Q' , ,-Q r ,ws . fs ll I. ' -x. Q., . . ,, ' nh- ', ,.. ' ,p 1.5 'H 1' S . Q I I ' '?ws-d- 1 W Q Q .. ' s W qpx' 4 ,, Q ' - vw 'T 4 ' E ' , o ' 'i C it A' . 4 ' f -a0- '- LI - i L .5 5 A ,, ,A K 1 1, ' Q 9 . M . ... rf Q. . g 'Q L'-J ,0- as X WUYW ' ' - ' fu s-- ' s 5 ' ' 1 A Q. ' ' ' 1 Q n fi' f -.D . ia, il. Q9 's. Ns.- NNNK fa ,ua WMM 4 my - 1 92 V ,, 'MQ ? X .fm , my Q 939103 UQ UOQIPQDOSSV QULUIWIV uaH uC1- J A93 A DJ Q Q. -1 FD Suas Sql WSUH VV pa L23 H HV EIHEINEILS wnq4o UP seasgp Il.3 'U 3 9.m 3 9: H0 5-E. m'U 2-1 wil -4 m 'Ln -42. :TO m 3 'Gr-+ 910 f'? 3.195 Q5 0 2. qqcn Y: 3' OZ' -hw lfl-h Q C Q.: 2.9 C 5.9, mm 99,-+ W o Br-+ C 3' O m :'m I-'-Y 3'3 m 4 E2 226' H n 5 ' 3 2. U7 SLQ. H m :': m 0 3-'D m D' Q.: E'f. 9-L3 32 m 33 m 4 'K Q m F5 0 m -O0 m G 3.-. QPF' 52 Onan -4 H QQLH LUQ1 I 9 eau? s AP SQ SJ M uaq 1 O QQ d efquo PJ U9 QD Su ,sAqd 5. DJ 3 an DJ !P DS 91 UP Z O f-P O 2. '4 :- DJ LD f-r 3- FD f I, fum A, ,, fy! , 2fm' wffW f W C, f' V rf W , vw ,f fff 44911 ,il IWW gg- 1 1 V. fyl' As war Con- tinues, both sides come more and more to resemble each other. The uroborus eats its own tail. The wheel turns full Circle. Shall we re- alize that We and They are shadows of each other? We are They to Them as They are They to Us. When will the veil be lifted? When will the Charade turn to carnival? Saints may still be kissing lepers. lt is high that the leper kissed the saint. R. D. Laing 4 ,.. -MJ, .., , .3 K'glf' 1 .... :AN -xv-asm Nwgwwb, 2 ,z 1 . . ,cgi 2 4 , X 3, ,.,. S , ,A 41' ' s X 1.2 , H. fy v.x V A 'x V K, 5? Z rn Cf? Cn -I 75 JP C Q I rn SET WAX +235 9' ' r ,aff My , mf, . ,f , ff ,f 3 , 7 5 ?'? , img? jg ' T526 W9-ff iix f FST. 3-3 fu- ci h Z4 .. I '. wi. in . a.. .- J 0 . ka! . - . l. 51 'H 'A r,- 41. . Y a -.- -. ,1 1 .1 M1 ' A1 4 ' L?.'! I, ..- 1--. -q ff n w Q' 1 'fl 'I 'H l'a'. I L.: 'rr en, I rr fl 4- -1 4. VU 1 -li' 1 'v I -4 3 -A l la 1 V9 1 pqt 4 A , L. 'ur-- T5' r ' .9 1 O 'flu fn 8 'o 0-6 . I ' I x W' i '- ' The cysto kid. i ' Q f I 5 . x Q bf s s we , ' ' XX . - ....-A Hitch your wagon to a star Emerson SW Bunnie and Clod. ,gefijiffi fart. - 415 TR1 .'Z2 The shortest distance between two points is spanned most easily by arnbition, dedication, and a good cystoscope. 'I57 T.f.i.1,5Z.I1fiLL2TLEL.Tt.: DANIEL TANNER 18 4 xx LEONARD THQMAS - PATTI 'K r 9 6 RQNALD TIETIEN - MARY In those rare moments when I look hack to the disappointing first and second wars at school here, I re- member when I wondered why so many diverse .Nl.lD,'s choose to com- ment on their experiences at Belle- vue Hospital. Well, now I am in that position, and it is my opportunity to immortalize a few words about this experience called Bellevue. Per- haps it is just that attitude - that Bellevue Hospital is a unique experi- ence only to each person -that has permitted so many similar S and F's. Rationally we all realize that every write-up, every CBC, every B and L, every learning experience has es- sentially been repeated many many times. But it is more. It is that sharing of ourselves with a hospital for many good and bad hours in exchange for the opportunity to become very Competent in a profession -that is really Bellevue. 0 I sew Q x , , 'yn-' , f f I I I I I I I I I - ll 1 .-a..,,w DL Q4 u.1 U3 .J an f? Wig re not X M4 '2'?'rkg0 ' Q 4 L5 x f g f 115:-tizy i .1 ff' f if MMM ? K fffif' - A 4 1 T X' fa 'Q , -L ,. f,,f. f . L mf. 'ffl ,fy 1 163 STEVEN WASSNER 4'7l'L- ,Y f' 1 L Fi.. Z' ,f' 10 A mtl., 1 I 0 fy ' X ia? ff: ilk ' 2952 In ,, ' 'rs ,':y ?'::1w4' ' - - Q4 ,I , A, Q' Q, 25 I JY , TP P ,l..'m -eq: , ,,, 'I g rw ' 5' A if J 6551, .I 4 E ix 5 ,A ., x . A L. l'1 4' VS .L -w,1:,Q. vi , wr ltalvfl - ' 94' Q' RSX WJ ff 1 , Q fffhy 4 e ,uf V 9 , -yall. w f f , ' WZQG ,ZW Q , wgfwff4fy1?1fff2, ,f WWW. ,Q Qjiyktz 'jf :ff A1114 f' WM' f , 'H ,WWW W f A A I4 HV' Cl SFHH Hi NI H113 N 16 ' 4 W -lb P -Q i : E I z. : 42' 's 2 . Q M1 1 if ff. ?1 '5 ii? 31 . O , ' L' -BTV Z 1 , o i 4 w I - THEQDORE VVERBLI 1 9 3 166 1 A ! i K f . F ,Qlig in V, ,..,....'g.v x .5 -I' ,Q 1 fl 11f k 'Hoi' ., .Ui-r ', 1.1.2112 7. fix, I' I I. offfi-3 .,5u,m 1.41.3 'rpm 5 .-Zi: :S H5 -:. , Lffiifze 'g.i'72g?4 L-f21Y'F 9.163 T 1- 31532 r'-Fiji .' ,.,,e9,f ' 1 Q ,V I ,- Lggjg Q-11 A 1 fi ' Y. ,,' gg, H.: .-,. , , f'.'.Lf 'zu' Q. ' 1 ,Q-.-1. n i. . s, Q s :QV 1'1 s ,tv A , ,A4 f L. 167 - - H: ' SHN ':Ni.zi --'3'-'1i. L-1-i'C:ii:T'f':.'!.L...'..L..:Z::.1-il'vliiilt-QZLLS ' .'t:: ' : ' 'LAW' 3211.1 1 is-ass-, -n.-M -v-+ I-pq-3-. ,1 5, r -1- L, tg -.2 . :z ::w.:.: :iz lzlltlii'T3il2f:ilf'frE.E.-Ill:L1222'1'Z'E2 Ei2Q.EE'.vE1l'2''32LLi.1l'1 5l'L:L3'7 I 1 s .'! 'KW Q 1 1 N 1. . 1. 5 -. . . , , ' ' U 5 ' gg, 1 ' . ' ' ' ' ' 1 : :' 2 s 5 ' '- -3 -E: --- I un- -Q vm- rua 2 Q-SJ -nn1':f.::1?::'az5Z.:.K::.:.:t:.15'-.':.i1:.-:.rr.zxzhhzurzpzzazf-4.2::g:g3:.:7:SZ'::3:gEg:51:.t:f:zzhg--1::Q:::5g:: :ri.:5:i:.E1j:g:E:p:E1.:Z2, SEEEH ' 2- '- '. 3 'I M ju s 1 1 h F wQX 3 1 I I x I 1 5 5. E L ? ,R S 2 I E Q v E Q i 5 .f 1 .i 1 1 2 Q 'J Iv K 4 '1 I I 3 1 1 1 I A A 2 s 4 1 4 9 1 rf 3 I 1 1 3 1 i ... g . , N... .1. e,..,,-4.111 .ws .QQ 3:1 LONNA YEC-E -1 -3 ugx A --g-1 ...rr , I 1 4. sm.. 4 4 ,L-. ---- Y .7..- ..--...---v -Y--..Y..--.-Y-A -- --------- --Q -'-----'---f'-- . -:::'31:1:-':T:i:22 ' 2.11212-ZZI. .'.'..'. '-?l-iii-I i?.ff2E ff7Z2:',-Q-xg-:fir : J,.':: :ff1A?T: 34.4 -LF!-gn-'E:.: ::::tE -::::a :.- 11 !i7i'::Y:::::'Z1Z7.''IJILIEEI-T:7l1 ' :::::::::::-...:.--.:.5::.t,:::::.::L-..1:::,::,::-lr z lzziltlzl-:L VM' -T--N.-Uu,,,,, ........T...,,,:. I L 'fn-if 5:-' C 31 0 -:7:E 1:5--iffnfg rf 3g3:17E:::::::Ei:::332?E?T??2Z5,FE.E?'E5'?'E?5'Z??f'1::E?55221211:Ig::::1::.:L??::?Ztjf?iE1221 fT?7,2?Lfl' - '.1'1i 1f i1 'E-'-T1577'-E'??5-1'-?7r' f A Tu. .. L ..,. - ,, ., .1, ...LH .- ...,--,,--yu, - - , . X 1 -, , ,J . .-. .N , - , H-H - 1 X -. - - p JGSEPH ZELICS 1 V 70 SOL ZIMMERMAN - DIANA The practice of medicine in its broadest sense includes the whole relationship ofthe physician with his patient. It is an art, based to an increasing extent on the medical sci- ences, but comprising much that still remains outside the realm of any science. The art of medicine and the science of medicine are not antagonistic but supplementary to each other. The good physician knows his patients through and through, and his knowledge is bought dearly. Time, sym- pathy and understanding must be lavishly dispensed, but the reward is to be found in that personal bond which forms the greatest satisfaction of the practice of medicine. One of the essential qualities of the clinician is interest in humanity, for the secret of the care of the patient is in car- ing forthe patient. Both quotes are from The Care of the Patient by Francis W. Peabody, MD., l.AM.A. Vol 88 4112 1927 gm!! s.. .. .mug 171 J .rs Y A . 7 Nltftlit ine utilizes nohlx the human trtiaturt-'s int rt-tlihle uniout' intellect. lantastit ohstat les disintegrate at its ap- plit ation, Hut this talent tor reason is utilizetl most trea- tixtely lor the allevia- tion ot' human mis- ery hy those physi- cians who perceive the human c'reature's harmony with Na- ture ancl perform humbly with inner tranquillity. Man is but a small piece of the Earth. Man knows this in his soul, but God gave him a brain which can do so much that his thoughts are far from his link to the Earth. Through crude toil and deep love for all Life he may know once more his true place in our world: to use his great gift for the good of both Man and Earth. kr -4' 1 P' '-fin NORMAN ZUCKER ., in 7 P Ikea' E-'C .rg X , -ily, uh' me, QF' iv 4. O! id ,M .Xl ff- 'Q Q 1 f' S I :X '.x'ni': 'i-'l'l'?'-?'!' '-W'- ' 3 K W' - '- -- - ,-----Q--Q -,---hi--1 r' -- -L '-L-L4::,s:-'a:iiLs' .Lu n:.:.::'.:.::':1a:. i::4:-..':.'.1:.'.x'.-:1.z:p::'-- , I ,-ffx-fLvfFf2.2: ffT'f'ff1'1 f'kf1'1f'?1'1'LY3199 f- . .-NP-BV I I ' eaa4x.:ssS-22-'ia 1 :1,.- ':saff2r1w?-53:ii.fse,aRzesa:aas'ss?eza'a'aszsezei3i3f2:2azfzazeseseziiaiaaiiafcf 2 LL ! I i i w x i p w N L 1 l x.SYa.,. ,. AQ.. xx ,. ' N- 'K iin kffgxi X x- - ' fe . .-R . 1 .X x'f:f.: i3gH N laik-in SSX 1 :.x.g.g X 5 .xx tv 1 '-Q1 .. ,N , NN 2 ,- 5 EW? 7 '1' E,.L: ' I, ily a . Q- - Y s W i Early Graduate .fy Ulu' 4 QQ! vw i ' f ' W ' vu w..4,xg,,4W 4 ,, W If ww qu-,,,..,. M, 2 1 ' f ,few , 2 H, 2 'a 75' 2 ya- 2 ' , Z, , ,f ,iw 6 im K - 7 X If , K A ,mf , , Q' ,, A V f r 1 e M' ,ny ,fx f ,A 2. ' f ,Z ,, '15, ' 2' f f. X BRUCE BARRO f 1 7 .,.,:..g-........::..-....-4.:::u:.i:f.:-:1::S1-,----1-xg -, ,, gzgziff- ' fjE3E'PX?,Lf5,fE?fE3iS?l5E?E'E . x 5, 2 : -- Qgj.fE.2-2E- 1EgE5fgfgiE:11??g 3211231 if '. -f.: '-v ' ..- - ,,-- ' - 3 Z?::I::-:g ':'.. -1... . .......- j - '---1 r' fini ' Y T? . . :umfzw --P' 12fffF1.'-2 -' f- 21 3 Sonne Crood Friends of the Class of 1972 ' 'ts Av- ' vi 3' 5 Qs! 23:3 X DIANA SHANE ,, owmoolvw ofrwfre ps - ' 'S IOSEPHINE MCMONAGLE ANDREA5 HAMPSAS G-A WM f f K.. DIANA MARSELLO Y 'L ' 7 Lx KL' .1 GRACE HEALY LAURIE CHIARELLI and all the E-W nurses r Z sizggw'-lg rfu:xY A frfzgg gap ll 1 r 5: ' H , ,' ' '-X -g 5. A -A1 -9. as Q ' l l R Also Special Thanks to: ,l ' f 3 I sw or. David rice ,' - 1 - 1 Dr. D. Rednor 1 f i 1 is x Dr: Harry Demopolous -v, ' -r lrvlng Wilmot Shirley Kempner 74 fl I' di' 'IL A The A and B elevator when it's running. SUSAN RAIN PATRICIA BYRNE '-xvft'-' DOC Admmustratlon 3 gi 1 1 , ff f' . ff 'Z For Future Reference: Th e H os p I tal ,n d m, lass! L I st 2 '1 ft, lift 1,1.:3:fa oatif ,ak fl 'K - This is the ram, nsth, 23rdJ tBHA, UHA,VljglAg5aQVAl:iQf 1QlQ'ilf4:jg1Q.gg,ieFlQ,FQiaijlgf-lff'2tr Cl'0'eCYSf f nepltf-leftomv. '- A-:'5 QTfv f.i2a?'a1,ff f ff--of 'WTF f 1' ' - tless than 'I00, greater than 1005 year oldn,tmale,,at51ffelm3lgpi fa. PUb'C -CYSY lotomv. Shunts otherl who was ltransferred from Beth lsraQE3l'l,OQ5Qpl YO flgllti end t0 endl- . z,-P va X fo, as ,. ,lingo f,-M-of he-?'maJs3:,3e-a.'3':.'-',gW Q to shortage of beds, found sleeping underfaakclgrihg it . . :fn ' '- ff, ,Ji 'jf-of - Efmycyiff- 'FV W . - ,V ' gl ' - sleeping under a carl. Patient twalked, stagRgege.dn,2efaWlQfi, DHUGIN responds via l ur- . 1 gnu .Q jwxix V qgCia.,, ff- 4, - -,1Wfr m, 5 f4,,2.,:'gwN 'W ,Mn slid, never made ntl to the Emergency SeryLggea,galLc45?,glg1gn1o - - it x V19 ,. , s S ! ft 4 with a chief complaint of progressive tmQlaiSTet,qQ2-lQrfEyfl F l' -GQ, If f X ' ' ' ' RIWWVTN.-,o,o,,a, Fi' Z ll lla 'en' 1 I' D' ' ' fatigue, anorexia, scrapiel since 4:30 a.m. 0Ai?F'sCiQMg9wi3Ldga, Hema-Q . 3 5 USU 'ni ISOXWL LHSIX, 5-FU, l n lx - E. of' l . Q xx: ,,,f:.w..'-Hijrll if X ,Qt 1 'F a . 3 r ag-w fgw i, iii hor - lnformantg Patient through lself, translato far' , if Y -111 i 2 -a 1.21 ,rf - ff T55 .aw-, .. was M 'Wn '.g.l.QXf' ,, aa, r llill, ' , y ff, , iZifj,..fZ'!l,fa 14532 fwai . .. . we wi? f f 5 Reliability: Patient - good ml at s Translator - poor ' mW5 xxxttgoxtE S Wan T J ' .,,,:, so X of Q 1-f 40:42 l' if . S ia n HPI: Patient was in a usual state of heal? ftaH:i4eyxffQ'f Q is 0 , r?Lffe s.,t1M4M! wg , T X -1 'ZMI 75.1 V ,Z ,Zn I ttransferred from Beth Israel due to sh rage otllfbf dgsj KQx,lP2,ia aaiwferggfgtw jgVPN,SGOTfSC,PTj person an . . i - V f , n ' if 'f r-:af f . . . etc.l The Patient denies CCHF, Ci , sos, Mi, Hcr, VMA, NBC, IRT, cm, no . , 5. vs . . . . . . . ff- ll 'ff 'A1,fff'-,Jia , jljfw, v ' J 'M - My gn admits to lsocnal drinking, unsoclal drin '. 4 1 : Cfge gs . . . 1 1 X , , qxg, -QW! Train Robbery, acts of high treason agalns ,- , a ' lf 5555745 'f fftyoqaly .,, ff:-M-W - f 4 Mi ' ' 'X 4 f fa X QW, TE' in th ' ' . 2, ' .J ' -' , i t 'Q'-Wo? ag g e Spanish American Warl li JWQfQ fanaaa,,,, , P ,Ana ftlllp 722 Neck' Be .egath aa Q - mes alwa s, neverl . - - f l 1 xx' , ,QMLQCQJ KK 1... Q J f QQ! , PMH: Medical: Patient denies CTBC, hea l V W grgy' f r faol',aa,t55' 'aaa 'aoavf -,ff g i g Cancer Tsutsu amushi fe l Q . . f 3 Ve' - , Kxaiaaiiaaacwii ak l s rel? xafmlner, Patient J dull to per- . w usually is unrevealin g, Trauma: Patient received crease wound' to skull an tWorld was hampered by cerumen in examiner's earsl trales, War I' World War ll' Central Parkl' 47 Hospital fiiteri,ofl'lQE1Ql3:lEJa Y5kl3nQ6a2l?QzoNW9tllE3Wl- Surgical: Patient claims to have had the following proce- Breasts: lA,B,C D or greaterl cup. Reproduced from Medicine and The Artist Mrs Medical by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art 1 l t ,, 1 f :pall gh lllll sollll lell. 4 Mg ll' , 1 I Malltll I ltlllllllln Raclal:ll9! K W lienlatl lxlremilie, lout. HC W lles, li Cranial lllNl,l Motor: Sensor ltouth ation l W liomln llellen Pathol Cludn Holt l l UM, HAM STIILPW aw H 3 at to 99 k ufjfiilng' ries, 5 I Mn A, .Q lt :W ' Y '6 T 1 1 w-1x'q.rwx :un-z bln: :ax up: 4' M- - 2,11-f--. Vg- 1 1 f.-,.---... . -.-.... -.. .., . ...- ...-.... . .. fa 3:2 . 22 fi: EE-1' i 1 1 szfig:ezizszfifiififsszsziaziififiisiiiiiiii5223253?5E+E?33r3ii3'5??54?i97'Pf ,Q1Hf?QQEW1?'41RBQi8P,gwiiii212iR1had - ' ' ' ' ' 1 1 T A 'T'2 T ' ' Q.. 11-'17 7 1 -231 . :.': i . 7-1 . 52213 - t1.-1:z , , ,lAv'Aj,,j,A.,.. . Y..V i- iieef.-ee-s ,Mem some NL K mm, OA VLA? . lru. 5,57 Fax' W A A ?WAAAAA::AA!WW 1 k,-. 264- ' ,f.- ff ' fi 'aff- ' .. izi lf if W' ,' . , , . . Wm fat--' .. 13 it -wi - . E 4' f- ' ,..-.f::::::rL1ef:f -M- A --f' J A f u QQT4 l Q , LA, -by Qs. ,mat-Q s hift j i A ,,... A t A, f l ' ' Fi 1434? -I :,., ' ,?f,f,ffff ' f9,f'7 M 'NXx 'lkgflflz Q, i Q l-1?l f2 f ff' '2'1 'Ssaf' NP?r?7fr7?f f f ' f A is lit fw fr Q, Q .Q S 15 - L.s f:'. W Jn is '4 ' ii , I ik5kmoS:A..N Y AJ' Qszful? 1 p X f, 7 if A . A .:. ff V1 ,.t,1 , , 1 Cor. PMI . A4,5wQ,,,,s -Q.: , i fj 1 4th T Afspace, .. fi-?a'5T67r FQ! .Z-fqftif ' ' Q 'L-fx , L - f W e f ,A,A-, it unnecessar . Sounds 'Ti 'Bi' C jg, ' Y, 'fl-'I t .SA ' - f iw - ff ,,:: ' :2i11.,q l ww-M094 ' Y ' fi, ,iff-,N At: N'Bi4U bb l iffy: ' V A, I-W'-W..,., f. , , ,,l. B Ck- f - ff tl-ff it ' rganismsfHPF. 3 - it tl1XliLb,-b -'c f,glH'0f 5 ,aff yfmf ,frm i i ,ea -er: Xxf' 1 2 , l fe, f . leo' ,.a ff .. 4 1 ' I a gative organ- l , t ' 2' M l l affix V . ' JP, l,. 'l H f f ff' - . ,W ten glfglsgis 3 , 5 many gramagga . XHPF tie . lo, , , lift 2 ,' l j Mg amsms ' Q? 1 -I E d ' . ' 1 air 4255 A' lh 4 V C -vtli-N rf'-ffZL'T L4,4. 1 54 -fr .U . v ' a fn L M9 -' Al'M. xc J f and many i 211 i f 1 ' A ' ' ' at , 1 it ,+A e YES 'ara -112, M j Rectal: gui N ' QA gg, ' I ,,,, K, ,g A' 1 l l i A if 5. X-fa Y- avg Q3 J' derpeneti-ated Gen'tal'a5 D JOY it '05f g, 5? ' 4 nd a ices Hem 522552 335 sm M 349'-' l' 5 TBCD II fail?- -1,. .fy .VV5V,.. 5 2, 4.,kbb I Eh 1? -V fs. ,,,, , 1:2 ji: .fi A I ,V '20, af Y' 352' V I 4 a O li . A s A M' bq,V, L ij it b f if : jf A .Vb. I , 1 E I I sg Vf-fVVV Z V - ,,.,V Q , 5, 1-J-iq 'gf gif H og ,Q JA ,, Q 0 A A fxffemfffe l 2. l es f - fam : ' My rtla - if c f four -xl, rst li t - . J lg, 14 ,-1 A ' M V.:, '55 QA. -AA 553, is ' l - Z.,-'!,.!, .3 1:' ' '- . 'L 1, f '1 ,A l ,I f' A,, ...f wx W ww, ' jfj f,','.fA, 4' 41' if MA Y' ,V A ,,-v . a .M 'f-1--f ' it ., A- mfr' ti l-its ' ' f-i I f gs Neurolog' f' 5:75 I A t . Wes, J A, J ' 5: wang, Ai A sasparulla, plasma C,a,,,a, , gl, f . tm l i p r -' is 1 .Xata0n,tsww+p , a f, ff ' :rf f WNL, 'L f a if We ' 1 'ff' 'A ' 1 '2 i':. ?' -.,, X, 1 ig , E kpl, 5 , ,AA Af' I A , . -M , N Motor: uf' 'r 6g .. 533552 the- bv Column, T4 bE Hagan' , ' f , Av WIT.-: i . I ',- L '!,f' 'ish ,.,, ' pmw A . . M ' , in . , Sensoryl 9 4,-,l ffgq.- av ' Qurts Of the pauenvf . .yghg .U A, AA, 4, .mn A ,AQ V ,, I A A, Z' ,t -,v-, Vt A Y A, : Q , t h we: f f - wi - Case anyone else car 4 CUC f 31 ' 'H' W1'f5m5a'Ff99 l- l bil f x ' f ' . ' f 59 ' N l if ef Q ' Cefebell ,. 0A! TQs gf 553 fi ? l lfo X t. if I ,,.G vi A . V A I QJ , I 'fd 4 ,,,. ,li II log, au, Romber 74 3 , Q ,Qf11 w t :uv iz? if :iqq if , Reflexegi 2+ bilate ., , A i,1 .,l ,g, i g 2 Li' ,Ad F i lly X A SOUK ANTT Q ,, f + ' N' W- 'W 'ZZ 'V 5 ll , Pathologi pre Qw rqqjf. .9 J I . , cluding , Wt-Ioffman, V U f A ff t N twat Z ac f ,fc'f'1 1aff M 'lf ' no I e l fl My ft 'V WZ 'W at ' 1 was ff' 1 -f - . aa.- Aff ?2fx' W f ff1fQ,f, yi A, ,f , if ' .M l ff! pf,-f f ,wfsfffa Qst wgif 324 fa! ,AAA 'K We nev W ,I ,wr A iwwffg ,f .VV ,ff AWX 4 5,21 if , 'lfaitnf W ff' 11' . QZW , fi wa f Wi' at ,f 5 1 :'e Q i 'W f',,,, W . RWM 'wtitff -: 'a- if Q' f ? Qfllll WM'W' -. iff ,l?'7f??? ?f4 ff fff of fri , a aaa c . Y 'Www-+ A 'M-v'-w77.3LTZf,,'w'fj,jA'h W -v-W.fffl', mWA 1' .f ' ff, rf' if , 1 :aka 'lvmz 2,349 7 is 'MQ1 - U : at fifii 31651 Ea H fl A' , Reproduced from Medicine and The Artist lArs Medical by permission of the Philadelphia Museum of Art .na-4 'H v -v - .Ii - - ------ Q-,+ve Q-.,- . Y ,Y-.- - -5--f-v--'-1-g-- ------f- -fy- -. 'f' ' - -- ' '1141 11.15 W 7' W 'Arai' ' . 3' -- v- --'-W -- 'I'1'-' ' '- ':1t ' -1.1 Q. secs.: - .- - - r .1 ,4 if- 2-i'5,em,:5g. .,,,. ..., ,..,..-.,5 L :55 I f , I if flmf. ' ::ki1'l1'l E'-itli' 15 0' HA - 1-s -fL t ' 'f':':1 0-: :-:f':'--'g-21. .:'.. Q .4.-- -.-A ....... .-...- .. .......-. ,. .. -. :,- z.: 'La - ' ' f'-:.:'::: 5-Zl'!L'L. IT1 iilihii' 5 ifvziikfliizii-Lil: ':FZ?1?': ?5'? iE ?:'- . .. Star , ' 4-:r'::::' -1-zTJ:':.:'Lft.-.--A 'V' ' . , :3 ' 1 8-1 . ' 1 - -.' : - - ..- ' ., .1 an f:- 1:1 gxrif '-,,1.::a:r?:s:1 Sn: :. ,.-4z43:zaf:::v5:Qz:4zi1?!'C:'if3?E-E3:s?3:fk'54:61-x111252 , - sf-3- Sir? vY1::343'1 e.13:i is azfzsf. A ,,,A - ' ' 2 'f f ., , , - , A. , A , 1' , . 7 Nrtiff ACKERT, lohnl ARNOLD, Daxidf BACKMAN, lohn R BERLIN, Arnold W. BERLIN, lo Ann BICINI, Patricia E. BLACKMAN, Marc R. BLOOM, leffrey N. BOOTH, I. Reed BORAK, lonathan B. BORKOWSKY, William BRAUN, Kenneth BRAUNSTEIN, Seth N. BRODY, Neil I. BRUCKSTEIN, Robert L. BURGLASS, Milton E. CINES, Douglas B. COLLINS, lanna C. CONNELL, Frederick A. CUYIET, Aloysius B. DELL, Stephen O. DREXLER, Andrew I. ECKMAN, Peter R. EHRINPREIS, Murray N. EHRMAN, Mark L. EICHLINC, Philip s. FALTZ, Lawrence L. FEIN, Frederick S. FEIT, Frederick FELDMAN, George M. FINKELSTEIN, Richard M. FISHKIN, Ellioth H. FRANK, Kenneth I. FRIED, Gregory FRISOF, Kenneth B. FROHWIRTH, Daniel H. GALATI, Victor G. GERSTENBLITH, lay GERSTLE, Claude L. GLANZ, Sidney GLUCK, loan C. GLUCK, Paul A. GOLDBERG, Frank E. GOLDMAN, Elizabeth K. GOLDSMITH, Gary O. GRANT, Dov Z. GREEN, Donald H. HAMBURGER, David P. HELLER, Philip H. HEUERMANN, Robert P. HILTON, Stephen B. HOFFMANN, Robert M. HUBERMAN, Richard A. ISENBERG, Howard W. IACOBS, Alan N. IAFFE, Leslie R. IANOWITZ, Warren R. IELIN, Abraham KAHN, Robert H. KAPIT, Richard M. KAPLAN, Martin P. KATZ, Richard l. KAUFMANN, Cheryl S. KENNEDY, lames T. KESSLER, Michael S. KIRSHBAUM, Kenneth D. KIRSTEIN, Robert H. KISTLER, Lane A. KLEIN, Alan KOVE, lulie S. KRAMER, Kenneth KRONE, Anton M. LEFKOW, Peter A. Internships HOSPITAL Bellevue Hospital Cenlef Univ. of Michigan - University Hospital Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center Children's Hospital of San Francisco Bellevue Hospital Center Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Mount Sinai Hospital New York University Medical Center tUniversity-V.A.l Royal Victoria Hospital Bellevue Hospital Center Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center Univ. 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Servicel Bellevue Hospital Center Bellevue Hospital Center New York University Medical Center tUniversity-V.A.l Presbyterian Hospital Bronx Municipal Hospital Center University Hospital Bellevue Hospital Center Univ. of Maryland Hospital Buffalo General Hospital - E. I. Meyer Memorial North Carolina Memorial Hospital Bellevue Hospital Center Hillside Hospital Buffalo General Hospital - E.. l. 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Y. Houston, Texas New York, N. Y. Bronx, N. Y. Madison, Wis. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Philadelphia. Pa- New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. I I Iwi tall if illlwgial M' Rtlmm i iivY,lIleRA Y ldlll illlll' it iiilllojo urit Ulm l l it itlll liiiitllli lll50N'diei lilllll' ldi Illlslhdiegt Mlllli ll illlli Ma iiiiiiitlilla llowiii NICHIIG iolllcki M iiilfllfl' ptli. PM lllll5Hilaf iiiililigl PRICE. 5lf ' PRIEHIP. U tilill. ill RLINSIIIN. ticclllft tittiiiltl IIOSENWN ROSS, Gilli ll0lHBllll ROIROSEI llUllNSll llUllENSll LSAFIR, Da' SASS, Heli SCHEINBI SCHOINI SCHOON SCKOINI Sllflll, l SHERll,C SHONKO 1 SlMON,l siii0N,i sitottit I siiviiisl i SNYDLR, sooitt solltii silutn Sllllill, sitiiilt stititi Sltiut li 5lRiIllS 4 lAlB,ti lltiiti i lH0iii i llllltt ioitii USHtt, vistoi Wtssl WIIN5' Wtlti WlN0i Witt 3 . 4 YEGEN V Zlllgg l Zlllllt t ZUCKE l Vi ezeva-em11.sf.!:t 21552-21-e'1-isliaiafsfsfaeS.!afi1'-if-1Tvfst'2 Pu' uflssu' fefefsf'-fi 1 'fem' 'sw 'Mfr' 'inf 1 uf -1-'few-1 ' - 1 - vi l . A H i - - A i : - - 3 Q. .- ...A .--sEs.e.e...q....t2s.s.z.fz.s.s.1.2.121:23233.131352152121ziiiilsisszse1.?Sg5S?3siEi?s21552?-sazeifii-izfigfz1232223.21: SiQE3gi5?3z'iiEESZe5zZii1 I Q , ,.,N . . . . - . .. .,N. --., -....,-.,..,.,.-...--.-.-..-.-.-..-.-..-..-......,.,-, , - -.--...... -'IVV -X LN 'ini tri., 1 i l 'Nil i st, sir., N y j f t x i u-ivlv in -14 N' 'ws ,my X .lx 'qp,..NX -.M Hn .nh xl jtliriji K-,M . L -7 V' rn X. sjrrrl, X in a. llgjgivlizi V' 'lm gi Y' ':n, x . lm? We 432' vi M: lf' ':n, xi 'FW' illij YI 'zn xi fi' HT sr .Sus vig, W' rex: Ca ircm, x '- W :n. Xl Mfr veg ze--f XC im Qi we-4- m.xl .gs 'refs Ci' fairer 1 F1 5i':i:u.'i N. l ia'i15e'.asC2' 'srl V' IN. N r for-:lf VF! P1 arecf 1 fi Qt. 5:91. X vi-Vi ri fjffflg Wi it-'frm N l snrl fl wrl 1 l'1b'!'gT'D'C Y, tffi, N- jj- w'UrN'j' wlfn- N65 lin' X jj 3-ffl 'jg esrf W ,- sae lin' N' A 52' flfff. swf ll ' ,'-5? HN' Nyc Q., isfl- N' f ef I 56.20 x, l. mb.. Fa 'f aria wr: Lizcflf QI C il 1: - . Q' Mask irgri- N3 g Y. Lei- lin' 'l. W Mrk' N. vt 135 qjuffirhjiy Y. vw, YC . swf N' ' ., illi- Mg ,V Y. .ew lcd' xl- ,gtw YQ 'ia P1 -glen 7 Y vi 20 N. .ew lm' w Y' wfr, ' Z Q -. -'-155.-'.-'. LESHAW, Steven M. LESSINGER, Eric LEVINE, jay M. LEVINE, Raymond LEVY, Bruce R. LIPINSKY, Edward j. LITEPLO, Ronald R. LUCAS, Dayna E. MANGANARO, Andrew j. MANGANARO, Patricia R. MASON, R. William MEHL, Sydney j. MESSING, Edward M. MEYER, Gregory C. MILLER, Matthew A. MITNICK, Hal j. MOSS, joel NACHTIGALL, Robert D. NOVICK, Isaac M. OPPENHEIM, Michael D. PEFF, Peter j. PELLISH, Larry j. PETERS, Lawrence S. PODRID, Philip j. PRICE, Steven M. PRICHEP, Lawrence S. RAITEN, Kenneth A. REINSTEIN, Paul R. RICCI, Russell j. RIFKIN, Robert D. ROSENWASSER, Lanny j. ROSS, Gilbert L. ROTHBERG, Robert M. ROTROSEN, john P. RUBENSTEIN, Howard M. RUBENSTEIN, james SAFIR, David E. SASS, Helen j. SCHEINBERG, Robert S. SCHOENBACH, Stanley F. SCHOONMAKER, Raymond SCKOLNICK, Pamela B. SELCER, Donald M. SHERR, Charles j. SHONKOFF, jack P. SIMON, David G. SIMON, Roberta S. SKOLNICK, Lawrence M. SLIVINSKI, Charles A. SNYDER, jon R. SOGN, Dorothy D. SORRELL, Stephan j. SPAULDING, Kenneth F., jr. SPIELER, Phyllis N. STEINBERG, Howard R. STERN, Robert M. STRAUCHEN, james A. STRAUSS, james F. TABB, Lloyd A. TANNER, Daniel 1. THOMAS, Leonard C. TlETjEN, Ronald TOLCHIN, joan B. USHER, Sol M. VISCOMI, Gregory N. WASSNER, Steven j. WEINSTEIN, Howard M. WERBLIN, Theodore P. WINOGRAD, Stephen A. WOLF, jeffrey A. YEGEN, Lonna K. ZELIGS, joseph D. ZIMMERMAN, Sol S. ZUCKER, Norman Bellevue Hospital Center - ' ' Lincoln Hospital Edcigcrllcjjrgejvjedjcjne EjrizVnlxYcNrkYN' Y' Univ. of Miami Affiliated Hospitals Medicine Miami Fla ' Prii2LESgf2225r:i!rUke S Obstetrics!Gynecology ikesidencyj Chicago, Ill. Mznetgfgoaaecgosglital and Psychiatry lResidencyj Bronx, N, Y, Washington Hos ital Center ' Buffalo General ljglospital - ixegtlrcrljne llgrjirggjlrjjgrilorjf D' C' V Eg. fsgteyeg Memorial ' ' ' an er l t niversity Pedi ' - Affiliated Hospitals atm Nasjwjje' Tenn' Bellevue Hospital Center Surgery New york N y Bellevue Hospital Center Radiology lResidencyj New York, N' Y' Univ. of Miami Affiliated Hospitals Rotating-Pediatrics Miami Fld ' l Bellevue Hospital Center Medicine New York 'N Y Bellevue Hospital Center Surgery New york' N' y' Children's Hospital of Pediatrics Los Angeles Calif Los Angeles ' ' Bellevue Hospital Center Medicine New York N Y Bellevue Hospital Center Medicine New York' N' Y' johns Hopkins Hospital Medicine Baltimore'Md Q Bellevue l'l0SDital Center Rotating-Obstetrics!Gynecology New York' N. Maimonides Hospital Center Medicine Brooklyn jsi, Y ' 5a2lattBafb-ga C?f1f?l'8l - Rotating-Medicine Santa Barbara,'Calif. o age osplta s Sl- IOSGDWS Hospital Family Practice lResidencyj Syracuse, N. Y. lSUNY Upstate Medicalj University Hospitals of Cleveland Medicine Cleveland O, Duke University Medical Center Medicine Durham, C. Montefiore Hospital and Medicine Bronx, N, Y, Medical Center University of Miami Medicine Miami, Fla. Affiliated Hospitals Montefiore Hospital and Surgery Bronx, N. Y. Medical Center Bellevue Hospital Center Rotating-Pathology New York, N. Y. Duke University Medical Center Pediatrics Durham, N. C. McLean Hospital Psychiatry iResidencyj Belmont, Mass. Boston City Hospital Medicine Boston, Mass. lBoston University Servicej H. C. Moffitt-University of Medicine San Francisco, Calif. California Hospitals Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Medicine Bronx, N. Y. Bellevue Hospital Center Medicine New York, N. Y. not participating Bellevue Hospital Center Psychiatry lResidencyj New York, N. Y. johns Hopkins Hospital Pediatrics Baltimore, Md. Children's Hospital of Pediatrics Los Angeles, Calif. Los Angeles Bellevue Hospital Center Pediatrics New York, N. Y. University Hospital of Surgery San Diego, Calif. San Diego County Montefiore Hospital and Surgery Bronx, N. Y. Medical Center Stanford University Medicine Stanford, Calif. Affiliated Hospitals Medical College of Virginia Hospitals Pediatrics Richmond, Va. Children's Hospital Medical Center Pediatrics Oakland, Calif. Bellevue Hospital Center Pathology New York, N. Y. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Pediatrics Bronx, N. Y. Bellevue Hospital Center Rotating-Pathology New York, N. Y. Lenox Hill Hospital Medicine New York, N. Y. Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Pediatrics ElronxQNkYN Y Bellevue Hos ital Center Me icine ew or , . . Bellevue Hosgital Center Obstetrics!Gynecology iResidencyj New York, N. Y. New York Hospital - Memorial Pediatrics New York, N- Y- Hospital New England Medical Center Hospitals Pathology Boston, Mass. . Children's Hospital of Los Angeles Pediatrics ' LOS Angeles, Calif. Beth Israel Hospital Internal Medicine lResldencyj New York, N. Y. Boston City Hospital lBoston Medicine Boston, M355- hunjvergtlz-iseniiicej I P h' i QR 'd j Cambridge Mass T e Cam ri ge osplta SYC la FY 95' GDCY t, -, H. C. Moffitt - University of Medicine San FFHDCISCO, Calif- California Hospitals Q u , Los Angeles County - U.S.C. Medicine l-OS AUBSICS, Calif- Medical Center Long Island jewish Hospital 5Ul'8?l'Y lReSldenCYl New HYd9 Pafk, N- Y- Mount Sinai Hospital Medicine New York, N. Y. Montefiore Hospital and Medicine BFOHX, N- Y- Medical Center . Bellevue Hospital Center 5Ul'S9fY , New York- N' Y' Bronx Municipal Hospital Center PSYCNHUY lRe5'd9nCYl Bronx, N- Y- Mount Sinai Hospital SUFSGVY New York, N. Y. North Carolina Memorial Hospital Surgery Chapel Hlll, N. Children's Hospital of PedlaUlC5 L05 Angeles' Cam' Belfgzifxrlilefjiriiial center Obst,etricsfGvneC0I0sv lR6Sidef1CYl New Yofki N- Y- Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Medicine Bronx, N. Y. - - H05 ital Medicine Boston, Mass.. Fojsjlfrlgjelles Copunty Harbor Rotating Torrance' Cam' General Hospital . I Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Pediatrics BI'0l'1X,kN- Yl- h University of Utah Medicine Salt La e CILY, Uta Affiliated Hospitals l , Bellevue Hospital Center Pediatrics New Y'?jfk6N- Y- Good Samaritan Hospital and Medicine Portlan , re. Medical Center 'I7 .2011 :f--Q -,rI...,.-.. ' ..--.7 'JI.....',Ei.1'1'EiTl':31'.'L. '4?ff::5+ w3g3 -E3 - -ag-it his .z:::f:r-11:-::.:-.:.1s:-:5::::f:::.:5. .1-:.::,::1+T- - JYSQT- - :---Q rw- .1z:.:r1Tr- 'ffirii-T1-TM11'T---A -v'--:gxznt- 1..: -L:.z-L:- -'-. :1-'-:rt -z - . ...:1::::: . 1 : -..:-...,..-..-,.. - ,-. '.TlZ.:-l:::.---:ee-f 4- -v--+13 - ff-'41 - .C ..- .- -.-. f.. 4. --i Q-er : 2' LPV . ..-. . . W 5 Y - , , ,,, ,g,,,.,,.,,,. . itae:i13zi151-::335,iis?? '11was51-ass1sailawsefmweeeseesshgszaggsiszgr-ess-ee zf.. -mee-essizsfifa--. T . . - - . - -. - .. . .. .L of - - - -- Medical Violet 1972 Staff Gregory Fried Howard Steinberg Lane Kistler l0n 5nYdeV Philip Podrid Donald Selcer Pamela Sckolnick Matthew Miller Neil Brody Howard Rubenstein Isaac Novick Murray Ehrenpreis Michael Kessler Linda Fried Howard Weinstein lanei Faltz l l I Alpha Omega Alpha Class of 1972 john Backman Marc Blackman jeffrey Bloom Kenneth Braun Douglas Cines Michael Eisenstadt Lawrence Faltz Claude Gerstle Cheryl Kaufmann Robert Kirstein Lane Kistler Steven Leshaw Mark Levin Andrew Manganaro Edward Messing Gregory Meyers Lawrence Peters Lanny Rosenwasser Dorothy Sogn james Strauchen Lloyd Tabb joan Tolchin jeffrey Wolf Sol Zimmerman Class of 1973 Freddy Epstein Alan Lieberman Martin Weintraub Student Government Class of 1972 'President -- Peter Lefkow Vice President - Bruce Levy Treasurer - Gilbert Ross Class of 1973 I President - Barry Skussman Vice President- Linda Laubenstein Secretary-treasurer - Phillipa Newfield Class of 1974 . President - jeffrey Mitchel Vice President - Laura Wachsman Secretary-Treasurer - Ann Marie Eckhardt. Class of 1975 President - Steven Goldstein Vice President - Linda Barzelay Secretary-Treasurer -- john Butler, lll Student Council President- Bruce Biller Vice President- Russell Ricci Secretary - Sidney Friedman Treasurer - Kenneth Selbst M.D. - PHD Representative - Robert PreSS ft il BEST WISHES TQ!!-5'u3P'1i '-z. THE CLASS OF 1972 New York University U ,, . '. - . . , . , ., . . .-. . , , - . 11.11 . ' ,- ' 1' 4, - ' 5 . :x::a.1Lt:ti:gi.r.2-rr:-zikagfgfffiffi?:E?EiE3?liifEEE?Ef:1'iI4E- ...Ql.,i.'i.f'liEiE'?i2ff-4- T:-,fqgggfq B:-:3-2Qi ' . ' - -V ' 7 X ' '- V ' A 5: 1 - 7: :T 5 : E: ' : ' , 1: .1 :t:..1':: 3 1.1: 2- . , : ,z .,. f' ?1 -T 3 1'?'7-17113 22' 4 .22'iFEi?i1i?i:?z1:1'.i1:7:,.:1:r:1.:1L1: 4:-1: 11:17:79: 1 ..1. gg. 1111:51.3g:g5T3...h-3,-31:1 21-3:33-1:1315 --'4-1g:5 51,174 3 :,:1:1 IITIGHI :Ya Q Qgld ,A -P' f Edwltafdl' in 5 n rr Robe ,- 14 525153-lfs..fS1i5.i2f?x,Z School of Medicine Parents Association OFFICERS OF PARENTS ASSOCIATION Chairman ............................................. ...Mr. Leo Werblin Vice Chairman ........... ........ D r. Murray Krone Secretary .................. ............ M rs. Edith Carp Treasurer ..................... ....... M rs. William Leistner Chairman Theater Benefit ............................ Mrs. William Leistner Co-Chairman Theater Benefit ....................... Mrs. Ashton C. Cuckler CHAIRMEN-ELECT Dr. Herbert Lippsett M44 M rs. William Leistner Congratulations to the Class of 1972 on the Occasion of Your Graduation ALUMNI ASSOCIATION New York University School of Medicine , ,., --- ...ff-4 --Q-Q--.-1. ., 1.33: 4 3 .. ..,.. L ..- -:Ljg--'31 -,,,. - ,.-,-...-. - - , T- ---.1...., T.L':Lt1:::.-p. . . . - - 1 --.... .z.: -.- 'Y ..L7'.IJ.L.-.qgxr-7-x-Q' - 'L ' - 4 V ,.,,,.. , ....l. , gv- - l' ' , -.--fi - , ,, A . . .,,,.- -1 .17-.--..-as-f --fs---'Y-- 1 , V g f 't ' A' ' i 1972 Medical Violet Yearbook Scholarship Fund - Honor Roll. of Sponsors Seth Abramson Fidel A. Aguirre Burton Angrist George Anopol William Antopol Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Arond M. E. Cytryn John F. Daly Aoseph Dancis Delores Danilowicz -ouise M. Dantuono Morton Davidson Mrs. T. W. Avruskin Mansoor B. Day Edward H. Axelrod Prof. and Mrs. jules Backman Rudolf L. Baer Howard C. Baron Arthur F. Battista Frederick F. Becker E. Mark Beckman Fritz K. Beller judith E. Belsky Marvin E. Belsky S. L. Beranbaum Mrs. Louis Berlin Anthony A. Bianco Saul Blau Manfred Blum Mr. and Mrs. james Elias Botvinick jordan S. Brown james B. Campbell Henry Chin Noel L. Cohen Sidney Q. Cohlan e Charles Clay Dahlb 2 Dhanagopal Datta Donald A. Davis Charles H. Debrovner Arthur C. DeCraff Bennett M. Derby Martin Dolgin Cordon W. Douglas Eugenie F. Doyle Marvin S. Eiger Manfred Epstein Mr. and Mrs. Clair E. Fall Saul l. Farber Dr. and Mrs. Bert Feldman William Filler Mr. and Mrs. Louis Finkelstein H. Booth joseph Florio Mr. and Mrs. Sol Frank H. Paul Gabriel Victor Cialati Morton Caldston Mr. and Mrs. Louis Carelick Maxwell L. Celfand V8 Arnold Cerson afel Fall mall nkelstein ik icli 1972 Medical Violet Yearbook Scholarship Fund - Honor Roll of Sponsors Gustave Gerstle Alfred l. Kaltman Menard M. Gertler Abraharn I. Kaplan Charles P. Giel Herbert l. Kayden Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gluck Tibor A. Kiss S. Irwin Goldberg Wilson S. Kistler William Goldring Albert L. Goodgold joseph Goodgold Leon Gottfried Lester Grant Sandra Grant Harold Grossman Stephen L. Gumport Henry H. Guy Rosa A. Hagin Herbert Hamburger Matthew N. Harris Michael Heidelberger Milton Helpern Charles Hoffmann Louis R. Hott Victor Huberman l. F. Huddleston Anthony lmparato Saul Krugman Henrietta Lackner Bert La Du Ira l. Laufer Mr. and Mrs. Leo Lefkovv Michael 1. Lepore Mr. and Mrs. joseph Levine Arthur E. Lindner Mr. and Mrs. Sam Liteplo S. Arthur Localio lerome Lovvenstein Gluwatope A. Mabogunje Grlando L. Manfredi William Muir Manger Richard Margolis Aaron G. Meislin Martin Meltzer William F. Mitty, lr. Robert H. Morris Dr. and Mrs. joseph A. Elizabeth Muchmore Manganaro Lila E. Nachtigall Dr. and Mrs. Morris Isenberg Henry B. Nachtigall Mr. and Mrs. Barcus laffe Thomas F. Nealon, lr. lamshid lavid . Severo Ochoa Sophia Kakari-Dimitriou Robert B. Pfeffer D. if r . Q 1 1 I u , , I . .V ' ' I A l 'f l I b . F 5. ' . if ' Q l , . af p 9 if l 1.1 in. Q ,


Suggestions in the New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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New York University School of Medicine - Medical Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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