Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 148

 

Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 148 of the 1947 volume:

os Fim mpi g a © Bry: fs h — Two “There are men and classes of men that stand above the common herd: the soldier, the sailor, and the shepherd not infrequently; the artist rarely; rarelier still, th e clergyman; the physician almost as a rule. He is the flower (such as it is) of our civilization; and when that stage of man is done with, and only to be marvelled at in history, he will be thought to have shared as little as any in the defects of the period, and most notably exhibited the virtues of the race. Generosity he has, such as is possible to those who practise an art, never to those who drive a trade; discretion, tested by a hundred secrets; tact, tried in a thousand embar- rassments; and what are more important, Heraclean cheerfulness and courage. So that he brings air and cheer into the sick room, and often enough, though not so often as he wishes, brings healing.” Rosert Louis STEVENSON iam nies i 19 emer oe na cae eS PS REE E R (SEE PAGE 105) Courtesy of Skidmore, Owings Merrill, Architects, Edwin A. Salmon, Consultant. Presenting the Caducean Nineteen Hundred and Forty-seven “Medicine is the only profession that labors incessantly to destroy the reason for its own existence.” JAMES BRYCE Published Annually by the Senior Class College of Medicine Ohio State University R. W. Gifford, Jr. a Editor Paul Hatfield_ Business Manager Volume 2 March, 194 Three ame pie ® oes Foreword One year ago the graduating class of the Ohio State University College of Medicine published the first volume of the CADUCEAN—a yearbook devoted entirely to the activities of the College and the asso- ciated School of Nursing. Despite many handicaps, Grover Swoyer, editor of the 1946 CADUCEAN pro- duced a book which was a credit to the school it represented and worthy of perpetuation. The Class of 1947 accepts the challenge handed us by our pioneering predecessors. We are not jour- nalists—we do not profess to be—but if the 1947 CADUCEAN will benefit the College of Medicine in any way; and if it will inspire those who follow to make the CADUCEAN a permanent institution, then it will have served its purpose and will stand as an adequate memorial to the Class that published it. EDITOR Five é Se Sew eone i. Time: 19'72 Scene: Fireside Dr. Don M. Hosier Reminisces “Infinitely swift is the flight of time, as they see who look back at it.” SENECA °O, Call Back Yesterday, Bid Time Return’’ “How well I remember that day in January, 1944 when our class of 85 bewildered members first assembled! “What a varied and scared aggregation we were! Most of us were either in Army or Navy uniforms ... there were 17 civilians 5 of whom were girls . . . Connie Connors, Faith Cooper, Clotilde Dent (later to become Clotilde Bowen), Maryjo Roth and Martha Southard. There was Tony Enriquez-Navarro from Panama... and Cloe was the second negro woman ever to be admitted to the Ohio State Medical School. Faith Cooper and Al Day were former school teachers and Jack Riddle was a Ph.D. in bacteri- ology. There were Jews, Catholics and Protes- tants ... all strangers then . . . but soon to be classmates for four years of intensive study that brought us close together and finally made us colleagues in a profession that is bigger than race, creed or sect. “Acting Dean Baker was out of town so, Dr. Brown gave us a short welcoming speech before launching into a lecture about how much air we had breathed in our young lives. But despite ‘J. B.'s’ admonition that nobody who studied would flunk, there was an air of apprehension hanging over our first gathering as each to him- self wondered if he would be present four years later to receive his coveted ‘M.D.’ “Then came Dr. Knouff’s lecture on the four principles of Bichat ... it only lasted an hour and ten minutes . . . how misleading! “The greatest thrill of the freshman year, the unveiling of our cadavers in anatomy, was soon lost as the novelty wore off and was replaced by the drudgery of tedious dissection and the pun- gent odor of formalin. Even the posting of class standings became monotonous with Ray Brown always first. “There were many things I’ll never forget. . . the morning after Dr. Graves’ son was born he passed out cigarettes and it was during the war when they were hard to get ... Jack Riddle’s bursted appendix soon after the first quarter started ... our first attempts at venipuncture in Chemistry lab... Dr. Ruggy’s lecture on diabetes . our quartet of Dan Bloch, Paul Hatfield, Vic Emery and George Clauer singing ‘If I Had My Way’ to relieve the tension as we waited in the amphitheater to file into anatomy and neurology practicals . . . our diet survey ... Lew Ingram borrowing a dollar from each of us so he could go out to Washington to bring his bride home. . the treks over to the Bacteriology Building where venerable ‘Pappy’ Starin tried to teach us about microorganisms ... and the day in histol- ogy when Jack Wiltberger naively asked why all the cats in the neighborhood came around the house when his cat was in heat... our election of officers—Dad Huston was president, Jim Sim- mons vice-president and Martha Southard secre- tary. “But it wasn’t all studying and lab work... we took time out for a cigarette in the hall... or a “bull session” in the men’s room on the fourth floor where sitting ‘behind those swinging doors’ we usually found the faculty member who had been the object of our latest tirade ... there were fraternity rushing parties, initiation, house par- ties, poker games and dances .. . and the tradi- tional freshman picnic at the Graves’ country home where Bob Murnane entertained us with his unique sense of humor—and all the beer that was left over because Dr. Ruggy had undergone an appendectomy the night before. “The ASTP men were moved into barracks at Canfield Hall . . . Normandy was invaded the morning we took our second quarter Anatomy final .. . and in the blistering heat of late August, 1944 our freshman year ended.” Seven The Man of the Year -- 194'7 UT COT tm 0200000) 01 Dwight Miller Palmer, B.S., M.S., M.D. The Man ot the Year -- 194'7 The class of 1947 of The Ohio State University College of Medicine proudly presents Dr. Dwight M. Palmer as its “Man of the Year”. Early in our freshman year in medical school, we recognized that he was a man with superior training, excellent teaching ability and a unique interest in the prob- lems of each student. He has exhibited these 2 ea de a a gy qualities repeatedly, which justify his worthiness to receive this annual recognition and our pride in this choice. We first became associated with Dr. Palmer during “Here I am, about six our first week in medical school, when he introduced months old, looking rachitic and hydroceph- alic.” himself to the class in our first lecture in gross anatomy. Little did we realize how closely we were to become associated with him in the ensuing few years. During that first and hectic year we came to know him and he to know us, and we marveled at and admired the huge storehouse of knowledge from which he frequently drew to impart bits of ‘wisdom to us. Our initiation into the intricacies of the central nervous system came at the close of the freshman year, when we studied neuroanatomy, using Dr. Palmer’s “The Human Nervous System” as our text- book. Again by means of his guidance, vast knowl- edge and interesting presentation of the subject, we became well informed of this increasingly im- portant field of medicine. In this course Dr. Palmer introduced us to the fields of neurology and psychi- atry, of which he was to teach us more during our remaining years in school. During these latter years he did much to impress upon us the importance of psychosomatic medicine in the diagnosis and treat- eG Oe ment of many disorders, besides imparting freely to the ROTC at us his knowledge of psychiatry. It is in the field of In Carlisle Barracks, summer of 1928. Nine The Man ot the Year -- 1947 (continued) “T have condensed seven books into this sentence: 3 33 ‘The brain is essential to life’. DwicHTt M. PALMER As camp physician, Camp Lazarus, 1929. neurology and psychiatry that Dr. Palmer is espe- cially proficient. He is a diplomate of The American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, and Chairman of the Department of Neurology and Psychiatry in the College of Medicine. This Department was formed in January 1946, and much of the organiza- tion and administrative work was his responsibility. Dwight Miller Palmer was born to William A. and Jennie A. Palmer at Scio, Ohio on February 14, 1906. His childhood was spent in Scio and he grad- uated from the local high school in 1924. Following the completion of his high school edu- cation, he enrolled as a pre-medical student at The Ohio State University where he became a member of Theta Nu Sigma social fraternity. Two years hence, the fall of 1926, he was admitted to the Col- lege of Medicine at The Ohio State University. After his freshman year, because of his intense in- terest and excellent record in gross anatomy, he accepted an assistantship in that subject for the school year 1927-28. The following year he was made an instructor in that department, a position he held until 1934. However his interest in anatomy was secondary, proclaiming his ambition to be a path- ologist. Toward that end he began working with Dr. Scott in 1930 in the Department of Pathology on Ten The Man ot the Year -- 1947 (continued) “You will have one minute to orient yourselves as to the section of spinal cord, decide on your answers to the 5 questions, each of which has three parts, and write them down.” Dwicut M. PALMER Dr. and Mrs. Palmer on their wedding day, Aug- ust 22, 1934. neuropathological problems. Thus it can be seen that his interest in the nervous system was evident early in his medical career. Although Dr. Scott died the following year, Dr. Palmer continued his study of neuropathology until his graduation in 1932, when he received his Bachelor of Science and Doctor of Medicine degrees. Because of his duties in the Anatomy and Pathology Departments he took only a part-time schedule in medical school, thereby de- laying his graduation until the year 1932. For internship, Dr. Palmer chose White Cross Hospital in Columbus. However, he soon realized that he was more interested in teaching and in neuropathology than in the actual practice of medi- cine, and he resigned. He returned to Ohio State and resumed his teaching of anatomy and his work in neuropathology. Therefore in 1933 he received his Master of Science degree in pathology, the sub- ject for his dissertation being “Intrathoracic Sym- patheticoblastomatas.” The year 1934 is a memorable one. Besides be- ing chosen as one of the charter faculty members of Alpha Omega Alpha on this campus, and being ap- Eleven The Man ot the Year --- 194'7 (continued) “If anybody breaks one of these serial brain slides he might as well drop the course!” DwicHt M. PALMER Dr. Palmer, holding Bobby, with Mrs. Pal- mer, Patty and Tommy. pointed an Assistant Professor of anatomy, he mar- ried Miss Virginia Grey of Cadiz, Ohio, culminating a romance which began in a summer school session here at the University. The Palmer family has been blessed with three children, Tommy, Patty, and Bobby. Since 1934 Dr. Palmer has held the following posi- tions in the College of Medicine: Instructor of Medi- cine, Associate Professor in Medicine, Associate Professor of Anatomy, Professor of Anatomy, Pro- fessor of Neurology and Psychiatry. At present he holds the rank of Professor in the Department of Anatomy, and of Professor and Chairman of the De- partment of Neurology and Psychiatry. To us Dr. Palmer has been and will continue to be a guiding light throughout our medical careers. We admire him for his vast learning, expert teach— ing, and as a friend. We salute him as our “Man of the Year.” Twelve The Pre-Clinical Years “Those who are enamoured of practice without science, are like a pilot who goes into a ship with- out rudder or compas ss LEONARDO DA VINCI wan aa he wa aval 7 FE ft ‘ = =f te Pe wat nay Eihok ava. hy bo Tee es Wants ° : pein: ‘Se RE Wa ir TaN SB ig Cee a a eee ree ea BE A Sar eo WSS Sao ONES OT BSE RA ome Frid al Li ladicd. Sdisdae te ee ee. a a 2 iy | a Administrative Officer: DEAN “Reason and judgment are the quali- ties of a leader.” TACITUS Dr. Doan JUNIOR DEAN SECRETARY Dr. Ruggy Dr. Baker Assistant to the Dean Mrs. Etta Mae Sherman Mrs. Margaret R. Colburn Secretary Mrs. Mary Frame Secretary to the Dean Fourteen d Why They Administrate CHARLES A. DOAN, M.D. B.S. 1918, Hiram College; M.D. 1923, Johns Hop- kins; Resident House Officer, Johns Hopkins, 1923; Asst. Dept. of Anatomy, J.H., 1924; Asst., Dept. of Medicine, Harvard; Asst. Physician, Boston City Hospital; Asst., Thorndike Memorial Lab., 1925; Assoc. in Med. Res., Rockefeller Institute, 1925-30; Professor of Medicine, O.S.U. since 1930. Director, Dept. of Med. and Surg. Res., 1930-36; Chairman of Dept. of Med., Physician in Chief, Univ. Hosp., St. Francis Hosp., 1937-44; Director of Med. Res. since 1936; Dean of the College of Medicine and Med. Director of University Hospital since 1944. Regular Army M.C., 1917-19; Lt. Col., M.C. (Res.) AUS, 1940- 42. Member: Committee on Growth, Nat’l. Res. Council, Amer. Cancer Soc., the Panel on Blood and Blood Forming Organs. Chairman, Hematology Study Sec. U. S. Public Health Service. Honoraries: Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha. Societies: F.A.C.P., N.Y. Acad. of Med., A.A.A.S., A.M.A. GEORGE H. RUGGY, Ph.D., M.D. B.A., 1932, Col. of Wooster; M.A. 1934 and Ph.D. 1936 from O.S.U..; M.D. 1940, U. of Chicago (Div. of Biol. Sciences). House officer, Blod- gett Mem. Hosp., Grand Rapids, Mich., 1940-41; Graduate Asst. in Physiol. Chem., O.S.U., 1932-36; In- structor in Physiol. Chem. and Pharm., 1936-39 and 1941-42; Asst. Prof. since 1942; Assoc. Prof. of Medi- cine, O.S.U., since 1946; Junior Dean of College of Medicine since January, 1945. Research: Clinical toxicity of atabrine (unpublished). Member: Phi Lambda Upsilon; Sigma Xi; Alpha Omega Alpha. ROLLO C. BAKER, M.A., Ph.D. B.A;1915° and M.A, 1917; -O.S;U;; Bhp. 1927U;. of. Chig¢aco-rat O5,0. since 1915 as Asst., Instructor, Asst. and Assoc. Prof. of Anatomy; Prof. of Anatomy since 1932; Chairman of Dept. of Anatomy, 1933-42; Secretary of College of Medicine, 1934-43 and since Jan. 1, 1945. Acting Dean of College of Medicine, 1943-45. Has made contributions in study of the C.N.S. Member: Alpha Omega Alpha, Sigma Xi. Hobby: pitching horseshoes. Fifteen “Serendipity” The Zest of Adventurous Living ! by CHARLES A. DOAN, M.D., Dean Once upon a time three Princes of Serendip,—the ancient name for the island of Ceylon,—journeyed together through their homeland. By accident or Sagacity these congenial and observant companions made one interesting and amazing discovery after another, quite without special effort or design. Hor- ace Walpole upon reading this delightful fairy tale, wrote to his friend, Horace Mann, in 1754 proposing the addition to our vocabulary of a new word, “serendipity.” Found only in unabridged dictiona- ries today, this expression, nevertheless, has come to mean to the initiated the fortuitous discovery of un- foreseen evidence in support of one’s own evolving ideas, or the recognition of unanticipated new rela- tionships, or concepts, or objectives with surprise and pleasure. Undoubtedly the most unique instance of ‘acci- dental discovery’ within the mind of man was the finding of the Western Hemisphere. Columbus, sail- ing west from Spain, firm in the faith that he would find a shorter route to the East Indies, quite un- expectedly encountered a whole new continent. Though he obviously did not know at the time where he was going, nor where he was when he arrived, nor where he had been after his return, he did realize that he had had a remarkable experience, and through the recording and sharing of his expe- riences with others, he provided the basic founda- tions upon which many subsequent generations have builded,—geographically, economically, socially. The more modern scientific version of the Serendip philosophy is Pasteur’s: Dans les champs de l‘observ- ation, le hasard ne favorise que les esprits preparés.” —chance favors the prepared mind. And before Pas- teur, Joseph Henry, an American pioneer physicist, had observed that “the seeds of great discoveries are constantly floating about us, but they only take root in minds well prepared to receive them.” Many a man floated in water before Archimedes noted one day, by chance, the buoyancy of his body in his bath, and the concept of specific gravity emerged; apples fell from trees long before Isaac Newton conceived the universal law of gravitational force while resting on the grass in an orchard; and steam has continued to escape from boiling kettles ever since the dis- covery of fire, but the possibility of the steam engine was supposedly born in the mind of James Watt from this particular observation. In medicine, whether it be the successful con- summation of a difficult diagnosis, or a new thera- peutic discovery,—the so-called “lucky hunch” which may alleviate human suffering or save human lives, —there is involved both the phenomenon to be ob- served, and the appreciative, intelligent observer. Alexander Flemming was not in search of an anti- biotic in 1929, when he “observed” a contaminated culture plate; nor was Pasteur aware of the relation- Sixteen ship between attenuated virulence and induced im- munity, when he “accidentally” used an old for- gotten laboratory culture in the inoculation of some fowls. Charles Richet, the French Nobel laureate, testifies that it was in spite of his better judgment that he “discovered” induced sensitization—allergy, anaphylaxis—while learning the toxic dose of an extract of the tenacles of a sea anemone. Starting at any time, anywhere in the life span, the human mind with an alerted, insatiable curiosity is ready for “serendipity,” the pleasant surprise of a new and stimulating experience, unpredictable but always fascinatingly intriguing. At this particular moment in world history the challenge to adventur- ous living is well-nigh irresistible, with new knowl- edge, revealing the fundamental secrets of the Uni- verse, unfolding at an unprecedented, dizzily accel- erating tempo. The medical scientist, the physician, stands at the crossroads of today’s World, with congenial compan- ions beckoning him on every hand to join in a jour- ney of vicarious, as well as personal discovery, satis- fying to the intellect and appealing in the best sense to the highest human emotions. Though one’s life apparently be cast in ordinary and potentially un- exciting channels, the unexpected is frequently hap- pening. Chance throws unanticipated opportunities repeatedly in each individual’s pathway, and in the affairs of every one of us there is “a tide, which taken at the flood,” leads on to abundant success. Avoid fixed ideas. “To persons, who live according to pattern, adventures in ideas are impossible. Ac- tually, we dwell in a world which is not settled, not stationary, not finally immobilized. It presents all manner of possibilities of novel and unprecedented combinations and _ readjustments. Consequently, wisdom counsels keeping our minds open and recip- ient, hospitable to new views and fresh advances. We err if we dismiss the extraordinary aspects of ex- perience as unworthy of attention; they may be the little beginnings of trails leading to unexplored heights of human progress—. Unless we are willing to weigh novel ideas and methods on their merits, and to judge them justly, we may not be participants in momentous decisions, but instead may be worried and unhappy bystanders.” (Cannon). “Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore, get wis- dom: but with all thy getting get understanding.” The sagacious physician will utilize the chances of “serendipity,” as he journeys with pleasant and stim- ulating companions through the ‘homeland’ of his medical career. Humanity eagerly welcomes the new physicians of the class of ’47, and your faculty tutors salute you, as comrades deemed worthy of the high calling of the Healing Art for which you have so faithfully prepared. Freshmen “In the first place, acquire early the art of detach- ment, by which I mean the faculty of isolating your- selves from the pursuits and pleasures incident to youth.” Sir WILLIAM OSLER Freshmen John L. Babb, Jr. Ruth M. Baxter William L. Berson William R. Blesch John D. Bloom Charles E. Bope Roscoe C. Brand, Jr. William E. Brown William H. Campbell Michael A. Capobianco Doris Newell Carson Bennie W. Chiles George Cornish Charles V. Cox David J. Crosby Robert I. Curry John R. Daniels Mary A. Davis Thomas M. Faehnle George H. Freetage Remy Fulsher Bernard Glass William H. Goff Thomas W. Graham Oren Gum Eighteen John W. Heffelfinger Lester E. Imboden Dean H. Johnson William A. Keleman Marvin I. Kohn George Landis Robert Levine Charles W. Loughry John D. Lovett Lloyd Mark James E. Matson James H. McClure Charles H. McMullen Saul L. Meyers Gordon L. Miles Marvin L. Mitchell Paul Montalto Gordon F. Morkel Carl J. Nehrer Gordon F. Ogram Frank G. Plymire John Polsley Thomas M. Prescott Jack M. Randall Richard W. Reiman Lucille Richardson James R. Romaker Alfred G. Runner Marvin J. Sakol Richard E. Sand Richard A. Schroeder William R. Shaw Robert C. Sheahan William G. Simonis Robert D. Slaughter Anna M. Stahly Byron Stinson William L. Taylor Dean S. Thomas Miller F. Toombs Jewell E. VanDeWater George Van Harlingen Carol D. Varner James M. Walters Edwin M. Weiss John K. Williams Edwin C. Winzeler John M. Worthman William V. Zartman Class of 1950 PME fs soe = vt : Fi | Fiat ae =} me | First Row: David Crosby, Robert Hay, John Daniels, George Cornish, Robert Curry, Wil- liam Goff, Charles Cox, John Bloom, Marvin Kohn, Doris Carson, Mary Davis, Ruth Baxter, Bill Lehecka. Second Row: Panost Hountras, Harold Copley, Oren Gum, John Babb, Jr., William Brown, Frank Harold, Howard Bron- ner, Bennie Chiles, Thomas Faehnle, James First Row: Robert Sheahan, Charles McMullen, Alfred Runner, Gordon Ogram, William Zart- man, Gordon Miles, Thomas Prescott, Paul Montalto, Anna Stahly, Carol Varner, Lucille Richardson. Second Row: Louis O’Desky, Wil- liam Shaw, William Simonis, John Polsley, Richard Reiman, Gordon Morkel, Jack Randall, Marvin Sakol, James Walters. Third Row: Matson, Lester Imboden. Third Row: Michael Capobianco, Dean Johnson, William Blesch, Roscoe Brand, Jr., William Keleman, John Heffelfinger, Lloyd Mark, Robert Levine. Fourth Row: Bill Loughry, John Lovett, Wil- liam Berson, William Campbell. Fifth Row: George Freetage, Thomas Graham, George Landis, Charles Bope, Bernard Glass. ALi Marvin Mitchell, William Taylor, James Mc- Clure, Carl Nehrer, Byron Stinson, Richard Sand, Doyle Roebuck, James Romaker, John Williams. Fourth Row: Robert Slaughter, Edwin Weiss, Saul Meyers, Richard Schroeder, Jewell VanDeWater, Edwin Winzeler, John Worthman. Fifth Row: Dean Thomas, Frank Plymire, George Van Harlingen, Miller Toombs. Nineteen l. “They can’t ask that on a practical!” (Famous last words.) 2. “Now oleomar- gerine...” 3. “Oh, about this long.” 4, The }Cat diz rects. 5S. Maybe we should have read this last night.” 6. “I can’t find it now, but if you will dissect a little farther .. .” 7. Why scrub fel- lows? 8. “I'll be damned if this looks blue to me!” 9. What! No legs? 10. While a for- mer medical stu- dent looks on.... l. It’s not in the books, girls. 2. “I looked = at that damned thing 5 times and sfill didn’t know!” pee ra Rice sasinginy j 3. All “fagged” out. 4.”And I was just about ready to give her the thrill ae of her life when... 5. As “J.B.” raves on. 6 Now you know we have to Tomk 10% 2... 7. Minutia. 8. Amoozin’ but confoozin’. 9. “Tell me what this is, Yo-yo.” 10. Cook-book chemists. ll. “Can't you see Department of Anatomy “Today we will consider the anus and rectum as a whole.” Ro.Lto C. BAKER First row: Rollo C. Baker, M.A., Ph.D., Pro- fessor; Linden F. Edwards, M.S., Ph.D., Pro- fessor; Ralph A. Knouff, M.A., Ph.D., Professor; Hugh Setterfield, M.S., Ph.D., Associate Profes- sor. Second row: John R. Wilson, D.D.S., Twenty-two Assistant Professor; Grant O. Graves, M.A., M.D., Associate Professor; Paul H. Ralph, Ph.D., Instructor; Darwin Phelps, B.S., Assistant In- structor; Clinton M. Osborn, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor. RALPH A. KNOUFF, M.A., Ph.D.. CHAIRMAN B.A. 1915 and M.A. 1916, O.S.U.; Ph.D. 1927, U. of Chicago. Has been on faculty at O.S.U. since 1915, serving as Asst. in Physiology and Asst., Instructor, Asst. Prof., Assoc. Prof. of Anatomy; Professor of Anatomy since 1931; Chairman of Dept. of Anatomy since 1941. Has done research on origin of cranial ganglia, the early development of C.N.S., and the adrenal cortex. Member: Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Amer. Assn. of Anat., Amer. Assn. for the Ad- vancement of Science and the Ohio Acad. of Med. Department of Bacteriology “Now we'll spend a few minutes today finishing up diphtheria.” W. A. STARIN Sumner Morrison, M.S. William A. Starin, Mathew Hunter, Carolyn Hilles, Assistant M.A., Ph.D. M.S., M.S., Professor Assistant Assistant WILLIAM A. STARIN, M.A., Ph.D., ACTING CHAIRMAN B.A. and M.A., U. of Kansas, 1906 and 1908; Ph.D., 1923 U. of Chicago; Graduate student, Co- lumbia, 1923; Prof. of Bact., O.S.U. since 1925; Act- ing Chairman, 1943-45 and since 1946. Honorary Fellow of the Johns Hopkins Univ. School Hygiene and Public Health. Has written research papers on immunology, food poisoning and botulism. Member: Sigma Xi; Nu Sigma Nu; Soc. of Amer. Bact.; Fellow Amer. Public Health Assn. and other scientific organizations. Twenty-three Department of Pharmacology and Physiological Chemistry “Dese drugs is your friends and when dey are definitely indicated dey are very efficacious.” SAMUEL ROSENFELD Seated: Clayton S. Smith, M.Sc., Professor; George H. Ruggy, Ph.D., Ph.D., M.D., Professor and Chairman M.D., Assistant Professor; Samuel of Department; Standing: Helen L. Rosenfeld, Jr., M.A., M.D., Assistant Wikoff, M.Sc., Ph.D., Associate Pro- Professor. fessor; John B. Brown, M.Sc., Ph.D., CLAYTON S. SMITH, Ph.D., M.D.,. CHAIRMAN B.S. 1909 and M.S. 1912 from Rutgers; Ph.D. 1913, Columbia; M.D. 1920, Northwestern; Asst. in Biochem. at Columbia; Assoc. in Physiol. Chem., U. of Illinois; Assoc. in Physiology, Northwestern; Asst. Prof. of Physiol. Chem. and Pharm., O.S.U., 1920-21; Prof. and Chairman of Dept. of Physiol. Chem. and Pharm. since 1921. Member: Sigma Xi, Nu Sigma Nu, Alpha Omega Alpha, Soc. for Scientific Detection of Crime, Amer. Instit. Chem- ists, and Optimists’ Club. Fellow A.M.A. Twenty-four taternities “I have yet to meet a medical student, the hey-dey in whose blood had been quite tamed in his college days.” Sir WILLIAM OSLER Officers: President: Paul Hatfield Vice President: Malcolm Maclvor Corresponding Secretary: Timothy Caris . - - plus our ten per cent brings his bill to..” Is that boogey-woogey? Alpha Kappa Kappa Recording Secretary: Marion Detrick Historian: Gerald Schreiber Chaplain: Douglas McCampbell “I don’t believe in this germ theory.” “No, no, I won't go to his old lecture!” RK bottle a day keeps the doctor away.” Seniors: Raymond E. Beitzel Ray K. Brown Timothy N. Caris George Clauer Vernon Cotterman Marion Detrick John Elliott John V. Emery Antonio Enriquez- Navarro Paul Hatfield Robert Murnane Donn Tippett John Zintsmaster Juniors: Aris Franklin Robert Gardner Alvis Hambrick William Haynes Lewis Ingram Malcolm MaclIvor Jerome Rini Stanley Willer Thomas Wilson Sophomores: Warren Brown Ray Carroll Neil Cummins James Forgerson Douglas McCampbell Robert Mayer Wesley Pignolet Gerald Schreiber Lawrence Thompson David Thornburgh Freshmen: John Bloom Michael Capobianco George Cornish John Daniels James McClure Paul Montalto Jack Randall William Shaw Alpha Kappa Kappa 3 First row: James McClure, John Bloom, Third row: Stanley Willer, Warren Brown, Michael Capobianco, John Daniels, William Douglas McCampbell, Neil Cummins, Law- Shaw, George Cornish, Paul Montalto. renc e Thompson, David Thornburgh, Alvis Second row: William Haynes, Ray Brown, Hambrick, Robert Mayer, James Forgerson, Malcolm MaclIvor, Paul Hatfield, John Elliott, Jerome Rini, Wesley Pignolet, Gerald Marion Detrick, John Zintsmaster. Schreiber. During 1946, Alpha Kappa Kappa has strived to provide lectures, social entertainment, competition with social and other professional fra- ternities, alumni functions, and scholastic aids for its members. Several of the local alumni have presented informal monthly discus- sions on practical medical economics; and through them, we have learned some important factors concerning the proper management of a practice. There have been bi-monthly get-togethers at the house, plus the annual formal and the alumni banquet. Through one of the alumni’s generosity, the fraternity medical library has increased by 200 volumes. This addition has been especially helpful to the upper classmen, since most of the books pertain to clinical medicine. Alpha Kappa Kappa won the Inter-Fraternity Sing this year for the second consecutive time. AKK also won the league trophy for intramural basketball in 1946. Twenty-seven Nu Sigma Nu Third row: Jack Bontley, DeWitt Erk, Don Cameron, Wilson Rees, Darwin Phelps, Roland Long, Ray- mond Mellinger, James Alexander, Dale Hudson, Glenn Dowell, William Bryant, Robert Gregg, Paul Mori, Robert Whittenbérger, William Binkley, Ned Gould, William Hall, Dan Cook, John Burger, John First row: Thomas Faehnle, Frank Plymire, Robert Curry, Robert Slaughter, Robert Sheahan, Richard Reiman, Tom Graham, Dean Thomas, Charles Coxe John Worthman, Frank Harold. Second row: Robert Lanfersieck, Warren Koontz, Jack Riddle, Doug Price, Carroll Robie, Reid Bur- Verosky. son, James Simmons, Henry Hook, Robert Young, Jack Lindsey, William Gallen. President Simmons took office on January 31, 1946. The rushing program was under the direction of Vice President Hook. Of the Septem- ber 1945 Freshman class, nineteen were initiated into the fraternity on January 6, 1946. Several parties were held for the October 1946 class, terminating with a party at which Dr. Robert Keating addressed the fraternity. Twenty-one men were pledged. On February 9, at the Beechwold, the winter formal was held with Ned Mates’ Orchestra. Numerous parties were held throughout the year. With the fall quarter, open house was held following each home game. The Senior banquet was held at the house on March 1, 1946. Dr. Wayne Brehm was toastmaster, and presented Robert McClave the Presi- dent’s key, and Francis Kubbs the Athletic award. A banquet was h eld at the house for the Alumni who returned for the Collegiate Assembly on March 27. The library of the house was greatly enlarged through the help of the Alumni and Dr. Starin. Trophies were won in bowling and football this past year. Twenty-eight Seniors: George E. Bell Charles M. Bovard Donald E. Coolahan Frederic C. Henry Warren N. Koontz Jack C. Lindsey William F. Lord William C. Retterbush Jackson W. Riddle James E. Simmons Frank W. Taylor Robert A. Thomas Warren G. Wagers Richard A. Welsh William W. Wiltberger David W. Wright Robert S. Young Juniors: Jack Ashcraft Charles H. Beach Members (Cont.) William G. Binkley John Bontley John H. Burger Earl R. Burson Daniel Cook Harry R. Custer Donald Dye DeWitt Erk William J. Gallen Ned T. Gould Robert H. Gregg William L. Hall Henry L. Hook Paul E. Lacy Robert Lanfersieck Elliot Leonhardt Roland Long Raymond Mellinger Paul A. Mori James B. Overmier Darwin Phelps Wilson Rees George Rogers Sophomores: James Alexander Loren R. Baumgartner John G. Bolen William W. Bryant Donald Cameron Rodney Caudill William H. Donovan Glenn C. Dowell Dale Hudson Paul Leithart Herbert W. Lohmuller William Love John F. McGary James Monroe David W. Parke Douglas B. Price Carroll H. Robie Alvin B. Salisbury John M. Verosky James R. West Robert Whittenburger Freshmen: John Babb Charles Cox Dave Crosby Robert Curry Thomas Faehnle William Goff George Freetage Tom Graham Frank Harold ee Nu Sigma Nu Richard Reiman Robert Sheahan Officers: Robert Slaughter President: Dean Thomas James E. Simmons Jewell Van De Water Vice President: James Walters Henry L. Hook Jack Williams Secretary: John Worthman Carroll H. Robie “Ughhhh... ” “She'll be comin’ ‘round the mountain when she comes.” “T’ll pick you up at nine o clock.” Treasurer: Earl R. Burson Historian: William J. Gallen Custodian: Donald E. Coolahan “Look fellows, a Knouffacyte!” “And she was such a nice girl.” “I think the prof’s all wet.” Phi @rai Officers: Presiding Senior: Lloyd Barnes Presiding Junior: Robert Taylor Treasurer: Jack Barch “T'll bump.” “Shut up, I’m eatin’!” This Junior year is tough as hell! Secretary: Wayne Agey Judge Advocate: Don Hosier Historian: Tom Stevenson House Manager: Paul Metzger “Come on, Mary, tell us where you put that extra piece of pie.” “According to Cunningham, this ought to be a leg.” Come on, you guys, get busy. Seniors: Lloyd Barnes Glick Busby Harry Cope Joe Craig R. W. Gifford Jim Harmon Bud Hosier Dick Huston Dave Mack Charles Meckstroth Bill Merryman Dick Miller Loren Senn Bill Smith, Jr. John Tytus Ted Wilson Juniors: Jack Barch Bob Barth Bud Bolon Loring Brock Bob Distelhorst George Duffey Bob Dustin Gordon Gifford Chet Hanson Charles Morgan John Nickel Bob Rawers Biil Schwartz Jack Sharp Fred Slager Lowell Smith Bob Stevenson Tom Stevenson Bob Taylor Jack Woodruff Sophomores: Wayne Agey J. T. Boswell Ed Broaddus Robert Brown Robert Campbell Robert Cooper Pat Crawford Jim Duffee Matthew Elson Richard Fogle Bill Hamelberg Floyd Herold Dick Jackson Anthony Jesik Roland Kennedy Juny Klages Paul Metzger Clarence Nyce Syd Philbrook Kirk Pritchard Bob Prouty Art Simpson Dick Spangler Herbert Speers Jack Stoffel Robert Zellmer 4 a ft ee = i Be @ : 4 E mate d@lay First row: John Polsley, James Matson, Charles McMullen, Bill Lehecka, Bill Loughry, Al Runner, Bob Campbell. Second row: James Duffee, Loren Senn, Ted Wilson, Dick Huston, Wayne Agey, Lloyd Barnes, Bob Taylor, Charles Bolon, R. W. Gifford, Jr., Bill Smith, Jr. Third row: Tony Jesik, Bob Barth, Bob Rawers, Charles Morgan, Bob Brown, Clarence Nyce, Members (Cont.) Freshmen: John Nickel, Kirkwood Pritchard, Pat Craw- ford, Chet Hanson, Lowell Smith, Dick Jackson, Charles Meckstroth. Fourth row: Ed Broaddus, Dick Fogle, Dave Spangler, Bill Hamelberg, Syd Philbrook, Herb Speers, Gordon Miles, Floyd Herold, Jack Stoffel, Paul Metzger, Bill Schwartz, Bob Cooper. Bill Blesch Roscoe Brand William Brown Remy Fulsher Dean Johnson George Landis Bill Loughry John Lovett James Matson Gordon Miles Charles McMullen John Polsley Jim Romaker Alfred Runner William Taylor Miller Toombs Edwin Weiss Ed Winzeler William Zartman The year 1946 was in all a successful one at Phi Chi. Social activities for the past year included in addition to the traditional Senior Banquet and Spring Formal several house dances, hay rides, and buffet suppers. House parties were held after every home game during the fall quarter and on homecoming the fraternity entertained the old grads and members of other chapters at a buffet supper and dance held at the chapter house. Twenty members of the present freshman class were pledged to the fraternity at the beginning of the fall quarter. In athletics the Phi Chi basketball, baseball, and football teams had successful, though not championship seasons. During the past year the regular business meetings of the fraternity have been followed by informal talks by members of the medical faculty, including Dr. Ruggy, Dr. Doan, Dr. Barnes and Dr. Keating. Thirty-one Phi Delta Epsilon First row: Marvin Mitchell, Marvin Kohn, Rob- ert Levine, Marvin Sakol, William Berson. Second row: Morton Sass, Abby Franklin, Al- vin Essig, Harrison Shapiro, Jerold Rosen- blum, Herbert Duber. Third row: Sidney Tyroler, M. David Protetch, Oscar Klein, G. Warren Kleinmaier, Law- rence Tourkow, Bert Peppercorn, Howard Tucker, Elliott Foxman. Fourth row: Arnold Windt, Jerome Kimmel- man, Irving Wikler, Howard Novell, H. Neil Karp. Chi Chapter of Phi Delta Epsilon began the school year with ten new pledges—a more studious and conscientious group of Freshman has not been seen at Phi Delta Epsilon for many years. The Sophomores seem to have survived the “Battle of the Freshmen Year” successfully and have permitted their weary minds and bodies to participate in athletics and social events of Phi Delta Epsilon. The Juniors when not studying delight in an uproarious house shattering bridge game for relaxation—or perhaps an evening of Wagner or Mozart in the music room. Most of the seniors are married but visit the house often, especially for the C.P.C.’s on Friday evenings with a member of the faculty as guest. Highlighting the year’s social calendar was the annual winter formal which was held on Washing- ton’s Birthday on February 22 at the Neil House. Thirty-two Phi Delta Epsilon Officers: President: Treasurer: Harrison Shapiro Alvin Essig Vice President: Steward: Abby Franklin Sidney Tyroler Secretary: Historian: Jerold Rosenblum ., M. David Protetch “You flunk this course and A little home for two or three I'll beat your ears in.” or four or more... “Down for three.” Calling Dr. Kildare. “Is this loose-dense or dense- “She's a pretty hot number, loose?” huh?” Seniors: Daniel Bloch Zelique Katz Joseph Klausner Oscar Klein G. Warren Kleinmaier Irwin Krakoff Bert Peppercorn Harold Segall Harrison Shapiro Edward Siegler Lawrence Tourkow Howard Tucker Juniors: Herbert Duber Alvin Essig Elliott Foxman Abby Franklin Marvin Sobel Sidney Tyroler Sophomores: H. Neil Karp Jerome Kimmelman Howard Novell M. David Protetch Jerold Rosenblum Morton Sass Leonard Tucker Irving Wikler Arnold Windt Freshmen: William Berson Bernard Glass Marvin Kohn Robert Levine Lloyd Mark Marvin Mitchell Sol Myers Marvin Sakol Alpha Epsilon lota First row: JoAnn Dawson, Constance Connors, Third row: Carolyn Hilles, Ernagene F. Ingram, Martha Southard, Althea Dora Buccalo, Edythe C. Kaffenberger, Gwendolyn D. Clotilde Dent Bowen. Second row: Virginia Hermanson Brown, Mary- Jo Roth, Bessie Marks, Mildred Louise Gei- ger, Barbara Anne Reed. OFFICE RS: President: Martha Southard Vice President: Constance Connors Secretary: JoAnn Dawson Treasurer: Althea Buccalo Adviser: Dr. Helen Graves Thirty-four Campbell, Hope Hyams. Fourth row: Lucille Richardson, Doris Newell Carson, Ruth M. Baxter, Mary Adele Davis, Carol Dewey Varner. The activities of Sigma chapter consist of a short business meeting each month and social meetings throughout the school year with a member or an associate member as hostess. Winter quarter ten new members were pledged at the home of Mrs. Rollo C. Baker, and spring quarter Mrs. Clair Underwood entertained the group at a picnic supper. Fall quarter opened with a picnic meeting at University Golf Course in honor of the freshman girls. The group were guests of Mrs. Margaret Colburn, Mrs. Etta Mae Sherman, and Mrs. Mary Frame. In November total active membership was brought to fifteen by the initiation of the largest group (10) in the history of the local chapter. The annual celebration of Founder’s Day was held in December at the home of Miss Mary Jo Roth with more than fifty guests and members present. Following a buffet dinner, the speaker of the evening, Dr. Robert M. Zollinger, described some of his interesting war-time experiences. Most outstanding among the limited projects of the group is the maintenance of a fully equipped obstetrical bag presented by the alumnae and used by the girls om practical obstetrical service. “Where is the heart that doth not keep Within its inmost core, Some fond remembrance hidden deep, Of days that are no more?” ELLEN CLEMENTINE HOWARTH ‘OC God! Put Back Thy Universe and Give Me Yesterday’”’ “We started our sophomore year in October, 1944, fewer in number, but with more self assur- ance, for now there were 84 freshmen whom we could intimidate with gruesome stories about midterms, practicals, sausage slides and Dean’s letters. “The work that year was more interesting and our goal seemed nearer. In Dr. Wiseman’s medi- cine course we first discussed patients. And in materia medica quiz sections under Drs. Ruggy. Smith and Rosenfeld we signed “M.D.” after our names on practice prescriptions. Later in the year, in physical diagnosis we put on our white coats and went to the T. B. Sanatorium, the State Hospital and St. Francis Hospital to practice taking histories and doing physicals. Most of us were first called ‘Doctor’ by some unsuspecting patient that year. “But there was still a lot of midnight oil burned; we had all-day laboratories in Physiology, Phar- macology and Clinical Pathology; we had practi- cals in pathology and unknowns in bacteriology, we had midterms in everything. “That Fall we watched the undefeated Buck- eyes, led by Les Horvath, romp to a Big 9 football championship. With Warren Koontz and Chuck Bates leading the Republicans, and Dick Welsh and Stan Brody heading the Democrats we had many heated discussions after class about the Roosevelt-Dewey campaign. “In December Dr. Doan, formerly chairman of the Department of Medicine, was made Dean, and soon thereafter Dr. Ruggy became Junior Dean and Dr. Baker Secretary. Almost immediately Dr. Doan met with the student body, inaugurating a new faculty-student relationship. As a result, our class elected a coordinating committee com- posed of Dan Bloch, R. W. Gifford, Jack Lindsey. Faith Cooper, Jim Simmons and Vic Emery. We adopted Bob Young's plan to sign up for Junior clinic groups ahead of time. And all four classes were organized to urge legislation on an appro- priation for a new Medical Center at Ohio State. Paul Hatfield was elected president of our class. Jack Lindsey, vice-president and Hash Shapiro secretary. “That was the year of Dr. Davidson's nugget- filled lectures in pathology ... and I remember how ‘Pappy’ Starin used to catch Zintsmaster and Tucker sleeping in class and berated Ed Bonar for not taking notes ... the posting of Dr. Smith’s All-American team after every midterm... and the day in clinical path lab Fred Henry spiked a specimen of Warren Hoffman’s blood with some Kahn positive serum and we watched him operate at the thalamic level as he read the test... Bill ‘Muscles’ Wiltberger fought in the Golden Gloves Tournament ... Rusty Wagers got drunk on morphine in Pharmacology lab . . . there were ‘pink teas’ in pathology ... and on Saturdays we began going to CPC. “One April afternoon as we were studying specimens in the pathology museum, President Roosevelt died in Georgia; a month later as Jim Harmon and I worked on local anesthetics in pharmacology lab the unconditional surrender of Germany was announced. Our sophomore year ended shortly thereafter—in June 1945.” Thirty-five Sophomores “Seeing much, suffering much, and studying much, are the three pillars of learning.” DISRAELI First row: Gwendolyn Campbell, Mildred Gei- ger, Edythe Kaffenberger, Dale Hudson, Rodney Caudill, John Bolen, Reynold Klages, James Hardie, Jerome Kimmelman, Howard Karp, Loren Baumgartner, Edward Broaddus. Second row: Hope Hyams, Dora Buccalo, Jo- Ann Dawson, Richard Jackson, Donald Cam- eron, Robert Cooper, John Crawford, Joe Kirkpatrick, Matthew Elson, Don Gantt, Anthony Jesik. First row: Kirkwood Pritchard, David Spang- ler, Robert Prouty, Arnold Windt, Lawrence Thompson, Donald Walters, William Love, Leonard Tucker, Andrew Zito, Barbara Reed, Constance Straw. Second row: Jack Stoffel, Paul Metzger, How- ard Novell, Arthur Simpson, David Thorn- burgh, Jerold Rosenblum, Herbert Speers, Malcolm McCampbell, John Stephens. Third row: Ray Carroll, Richard Fogle, Wayne Agey, Glenn Dowell, Robert Brown, James Forgerson, Eugene Hilliker, William Hamel- berg, “J.” Boswell. Fourth row: James Duffee, William Donovan, Roland Kennedy, William Bryant, Robert Campbell, William Anshutz, James Alexan- der, Warren Brown. Fifth row: Neil Cummins, Floyd Herold. Third row: Raymond Krause, Myer Protetch, Creed Ward, Wesley Pignolet, John McGarry, Alvin Salisbury, Robert Zellmer, Lester Zipser. Fourth row: Morton Sass, Tracy Parks, James Monroe, John Verosky, Robert Mayer, Clar- ence Nyce. Fifth row: James West, Irving Wikler, Arthur Stecker, David Parke, Gerald Schreiber, Doug- las Price, Carroll Robie, Sydney Philbrook. Thirty-seven l “They might ask this.’ 2. The dark and smoky corner. 3. The interest is appalling. 4. On and on and on. 5. “Where in hell Usui. pad) Ouner trump?” 6. “What! No car- otid pulse!” ia D Teast cor prostate?” 8 A pure “cul- ture”’. 9. Must be a practical tomorrow. 10. Obviously posed—no one works in Physiol- ogy Lab. ll. But there's no normal tissue!” le lecoultanwt help it —the can- nula just slipped out.” 2. “One has found that in skaleetal ae muzzle ... 3. Now these reticulo - endo- thelioses .. .” 4. The All-Amer- ican team. 5. “Undoubtedly diphtheria.” 6. Apathy. THE SAGA OF THE PATHOLOGY PRACTICAL: 7. Before. 8. Passing out the slides. 9. Five minutes to make the diag- nosis. 10. The bell rings. 1l. Pass it on. 12. Post mortem. Class ot 1949 Wayne L. Agey James F. Alexander William M. Anshutz Loren R. Baumgartner John G. Bolen “J.” Thornton Boswell Edward J. Broaddus Robert T. Brown Warren J. Brown William W. Bryant Dora A. Buccalo Donald Cameron Gwendolyn D. Campbell Robert L. Campbell Ray Carroll Rodney C. Caudill Robert F. Cooper John P. Crawford Neil W. Cummins JoAnn Dawson William H. Donovan, Jr. Glenn C. Dowell James H. Duffee Matthew William Elson Richard J. Fogle James G. Forgerson Don L. Gantt Mildred L. Geiger William Hamelberg, Jr. James A. Hardie Forty Floyd E. Herold Carolyn Hilles Dale A. Hudson Hope Hyams Ernagene Ingram Richard L. Jackson Anthony J. Jesik Edythe Kaffenberger Howard N. Karp Roland L. Kennedy Jerome Kimmelman Joe S. Kirkpatrick Reynold L. Klages Raymond J. Krause Paul W. Leithart Herbert W. Lohmuller William C. Love Robert E. Mayer Malcolm D. McCampbell John F. McGarry Paul S. Metzger James R. Monroe Howard A. Novell Clarence B. Nyce David W. Parke Tracy G. Parks Seth S. Philbrook Wesley J. Pignolet Douglas B. Price Kirkwood A. Pritchard Myer David Protetch Robert L. Prouty Barbara A. Reed Carroll H. Robie, Jr. Jerold M. Rosenblum Alvin B. Salisbury Morton Sass Gerald G. Schreiber Arthur M. Simpson . David J. Spangler Herbert K. Speers Arthur I. Stecker Jack O. Stoffel John Stephens Constance M. Straw Julius M. Tesi Jonathan S. Thatcher Lawrence C. Thompson David B. Thornburgh Leonard Tucker John M. Verosky Donald W. Walters Creed Ward James R. West Robert Whittenberger Irving Wikler Arnold Windt Robert W. Zellmer Lester L. Zipser Andrew J. Zito Department of Pathology “Und now I will train my microscopic eyes und give you a diagnosis.” EMMERICH VON HAAM First row: Russell Milliser, Ph.D., M.D., Assist- ant Professor; George Y. Shinowara, M.A., Ph.D., Assistant Professor; Roswell S. Fidler, M.D., Assistant Professor; Harry L. Reinhart, M.D., Professor and Pathologist of Starling Loving Hospital; Emmerich von Haam, M.D., Professor; Horace B. Davidson, M.D., Assist- ant Professor; Ralph M. Hartwell, R.N., M.B., M.D., Assistant Professor. Second row: Sylvia Bubis, M.D., Resident As- sistant; James Erwin, M.D., Resident White Cross Hospital; George J. Heid, Jr., M.D., Instructor; John Fung, M.A., M.D., Assistant Resident; Mitchell A. Spyker, M.S., M.D., Instructor. Third row: James McCord, M.D., Fellow in Ob. Gyn.; George Hamwi, M.D., Resident Grant Hospital; William M. Bogart, M.D., Assistant Resident; John B. Wilkes, M.D., Assistant Resident in Surgery; John M. Strait, M.D., Assistant Resident in Surgery. EMMERICH VON HAAM., M.D., Chairman Born in Austria, 1903; Coll. Empress Maria Theresa, Vienna; M.D. 1926, Vienna; Res. Fellow Path., Vienna, 1924-26; Inst. Clin. Path. and Int. Med., 1926-28; Fellow, Physiol. Instit., Morristown, N. J., 1928-29; Inst. Int. Med., Vienna, 1929-30; Assoc. Prof., Arkansas, 1930-31; Asst. Prof.,Path. and Bact., School of Med., Louisiana, 1932-37. Prof. and Chairman of Dept. of Pathology, O.S.U. since 1937 with leave of absence while serving in World War II. Gold medal, Amer. Soc. Clin. Path., 1936; Soc. Exper. Biol.; Soc. Endocrine.; Assn. of Path. and Bact.; Assn. of Cancer research. Forty-one Department ot Physiology oot ies) ee a eee ate on Lee Ore Emit BOZLeER First row: Katherine Brownell, Ph.D., Instruc- Second row: Jonathan Thatcher, Ph.D., In- tor; William Whitehorn, M.D., Assistant Pro- structor; Robert C. Grubbs, M.S., M.D., As- fessor; Fred A. Hitchcock, -VGS.;. Ph-D., Professor: Kran eee seca eee es sistant Professor; Clifford A. Angerer, Ph.D., Professor; Emil Bozler, Ph.D., Professor. Assistant Professor. FRANK A. HARTMAN, M.A., Ph.D., Chairman B.A. 1905 and M.A. 1909, U. of Kansas; Ph.D., 1914, U. of Washington; Teaching Fellow, Harvard Med. School, 1914-15; Lecturer and Asst. Prof., U. of Toronto, 1915-19; Prof., U. of Buffalo, 1919-34; Prof. and Chairman of Dept. of Physiology, O.S.U., since 1934. Has published many papers in field of Endocrin., especially on the adrenal gland. Member: Amer. Physiol. Soc.; Assn. for the study of Int. Secretions; Amer. Chem. Soc.; A.M.A.; Sigma Xi; Ohio Acad. of Science. Forty-two Che Clinical Years “To study the phenomena of disease without books is to sail an uncharted sea, while to study books without patients is not to go to sea at all.” Sirk WILLIAM OSLER “Still o'er these scenes my mem’ry wakes, And fondly broods with miser care; Time but the impression stronger makes, As streams their channels deeper wear.” ROBERT BuRNS ‘ Backward, turn backward, O Time, in your fight - - -”’ “Most of us wore white coats or intern jackets that first morning of our Junior year as we came to class weighted down with _ stethescopes, spygmomanometers and hemocytometers. It was in the summer of 1945 when we took up our duties on the clinical services. “Those who started on either University medicine or surgery had their illusions about that ‘easy Junior year’ quickly shattered. I still re- member Bert Peppercorn and Irwin Krakoff that first afternoon in cross sectional anatomy class— they each had six or seven cases requiring work- ups. Sooner or later, however, we all had the same experience. “Our class now met in its entirety only a couple of hours each day for lectures. I can remember some of them yet: Dr. Barnes in obstetrics—it was his first year at Ohio State; Drs. Nelson and Mahanna on cardiology; Drs. Wiseman and Hat- field on internal medicine; Dr. Curtis on chest surgery and the thyroid gland and Dr. Dodd on general surgery. “In our clinical work we were divided into six groups. I still remember long hours of de- tailed history taking and physicial examinations . ward rounds and clinics .. . the 2B lab with its myriad blood counts, repeat blood counts, urinalyses, divided urines and fantastic tests dreamed up by the intern or resident ... the usual morning scurry to draw our ‘bucket of blood’ and get it to the lab by 10:00 ...a host of cross-matches, intravenouses, transfusions and re- dressings—‘scut work’ we used to call it... the call that inevitably came in the middle of the night when we were first up .. . holding retractors in surgery ... or an anxious attempt at a lumbar puncture ... the St. Francis emergency room where we got our first experience in suturing ana Forty-four Al Day even got his picture in the paper sewing up an accident victim ... prenatal at University Hospital and pediatrics at Children’s Hospital. “Some of the fellows took externships... . Bill Cope; Dick Welsh and Bob Young in pathology... George Bell in X-ray ... Harry Cope and George Clauer out at St. Anthony’s ... the two Warrens, Hoffman and Kleinmaier were at St. Francis... Will Taylor and Mike Henry at White Cross... Vic Emery, Bob Murnane and Paul Hatfield at Grant. “Dr. von Haam returned from the Army and gave us some excellent discussions as he worked bare-handed at the autopsy table . . . ‘Hose-nose’ Elliott hung an unflattering epithet on Jack Wilt- berger who promptly hung a hay-maker on ‘Hose- nose’s’ nose .. . I got excited one day while pre- senting a patient to Dr. Nelson in medicine clinic and ‘smelt a mass’... Dave Mack is still looking for the week-end he lost celebrating VJ day... during the Fall quarter the first class on the de- accelerated program started ... Bob Weimer, one of Dr. Palmer’s converts began work on his book entitled, ‘The Psychosomatic Background of the Ingrown Toenail’... Bill Smith and his wife gave a party for our group at the Deshler . . . Howard Sirak began missing classes to read periodicals so he could keep up with Dr. DeLor in quoting from the literature ... our class submitted a bill of complaints and suggestions to the Dean .. . Ray Brown, R. W. Gifford and Jack Lindsey climaxed a three year battle for class scholastic honors by being initiated to AOA ... the first edition of the Caducean was presented by the class of 1946... and in March, 1946 on our last day as Juniors, Dr. Ruggy revealed to us a sketch of the proposed new Medical Center.” “The value of experience is not in seeing much, but in seeing wisely.” Srr WILLIAM OSLER Juniors Coordinating Committee Seated: Jack Bontley, Alvin Essig, Chairman, Malcomb Maclvor. Jack R. Ashcraft John W. Barch Robert L. Barth Charles H. Beach William F. Binkley Charles G. Bolon John R. Bontley Lucian L. Brock George T. Brooks Virginia Brown John H. Burger Earl R. Burson Daniel Cook Harry R. Custer Robert Distelhorst Herbert C. Duber George W. Duffey Robert W. Dustin Forty-six Donald Dye DeWitt Erk Alvin Essig Charles B. Foelsch Elliott Foxman Abby Franklin Aris W. Franklin William J. Gallen Robert E. Gardner Gordon Gifford Ned T. Gould Robert H. Gregg William L. Hall Jay M. Hallauer Alvis R. Hambrick Chester Hanson James Haynes Henry L. Hook Standing: Allen Hovda, Rob- ert Rawers. Allen A. Hovda Lewis K. Ingram Stanley Jacob Paul E. Lacy Robert Lanfersieck Elliott Leonhardt Roland Long Malcolm Maclvor Bessie Marks Mary M. Martin Norman L. Marxen Raymond Mellinger M. Charles Morgan Paul A. Mori John H. Nickel James Overmier Ernest J. Penka Darwin Phelps Robert Rawers Wilson D. Rees Jerome Rini George Rogers William B. Schwartz John H. Sharp Fred H. Slager Lowell D. Smith Marvin Sobel Robert Stevenson Thomas Stevenson Robert L. Swezey Robert J. Taylor Sidney A. Tyroler Violet Wagner Stanley Willer Thomas Wilson Jack Woodruff Class of 1948 eANOOUUULALTATG USAIN 1 sdnissialiadeaaaldidlulsodalsieldabsaddhde le First row: Virginia Brown, Bessie Marks, John Bontley, DeWitt Erk, Lucian Brock, Aris Franklin, Charles Bolon, Robert Lanfersieck, John Barch, George Brooks, Malcolm Mac- Ivor. Second row: Henry Hook, Alvis Hambrick, William Binkley, Earl Burson, Robert Gard- ner, William Hall, Allen Hovda, Abby Frank- lin, Stanley Jacob, Harry Custer, George Duffey. First Row: William Schwartz, Jack Woodruff, Robert Taylor, Robert Rawers, Marvin Sobel, Charles Morgan, Darwin Phelps, Thomas Wilson Stanley Willer. Second row: John Nickel, Fred Slager, Sidney Tyroler, Raymond Mellinger, James Over- Third row: John Burger, Robert Barth, Chester Hanson, Herbert Duber, James Haynes, Wil- liam Gallen, Elliott Leonhardt, Robert Gregg. Fourth row: Gordon Gifford, Charles Foelsch, Lewis Ingram, Jay Hallauer, Ned Gould, Norman Marxen, Daniel Cook. Fifth row: Donald Dye, Robert Dustin, Paul Lacy. mier, Lowell Smith, Robert Stevenson, Jerome Rini, Wilson Rees. Third row: Paul Mori, Ernest Penka, Robert Swezey, John Sharp, Thomas Stevenson, Elliott Foxman. Forty-seven Lo 1 atill dont see that fracture,” 2. So you give her ze penizillin— here she is!” 3. State Drug 715. 4,.Hand me a proctoscope quick! __5. “So I sez to Dr. Barnes, ‘Allan,’ I an sez... 6. The Big “Z” listens ! ! ! Des eho ATIC) LC COL up at 7:30 to listen to that stuff!” 8. Pearls from the plumbing de- pariment. Jens0 lL. 5. and I did a resection.” 10. What! No hyperchromic, mac- rocytic anemia?? ll. Orders from headquarters. l. “This man was perfectly well until 2 days after admis- sion...” 3. You _ fellows will have to quit copying the resi- dents’ histories and physicals.” 4. Count one cell and multiply by 8,550. 5. “Heads I win.” 6. “The study of Pediatrics requires a simple mind.” Lito e re Ou have pulled the head off, then grab ua an arm... 8. “You residents are all crazy.” 9. “I’ll double.” 10. It’s three o'clock in the morn- ing. 11. Looking for the scissors they lost yesterday. 12 Ba bl ol am glad you are not a surgeon, Dr. Bo- gart.” 13. “No exostoses, no lacerations, no ae scars... 14. “Der pleura iz smooth und glisten- - an IG st. 8 15. “Now you'll notice this area of as decalcification ... 16. Each one a dear. Ly, ]Y oras.ceden quote me as saying the Dodgers will win.” 18 Go ahead, babies can’t feel anyway. 19. Please turn the magazine right side up, Jack. be ens | Administrative Statt University Hospital Seated: Louis B. Blair, B.A., Superin- tendent; Verne A. Dodd, M.D., Chief of Staff; Charles A. Doan, M.D., Med- ical Director. Standing: Robert M. Zollinger, M.D., VERNE A. DODD, M.D. Born Waterville, Ohio 1881. Premedical work Ohio Wesleyan University. M.D., Ohio Medical University 1903. Intern and resident in surgery, Protestant Hospital, 1903-05. Department of Sur- gery Ohio State University since 1905. Professor and Chairman of Department since 1921. Resigned latter position in January 1947. Chief of Staff University Hospital since 1922. Served in both Army and Navy in World War II. F.A.C.S.; Columbus Academy of Medicine, President 1934; Phi Rho Sigma; Alpha Omega Alpha. Fifty Chief of Surgical Service; George M. Curtis, Ph.D., M.D., Assistant Chief of Staff; H. Campbell Haynie, M.D., Assistant Medical Director; Bruce K. Wiseman, M.D., Chief of Medical Service. LOUIS B. BLAIR, B.A. B.A., Maryville College, Tenn .; Graduate work at U. of Cincinnati; Bus. Manager one year and Super- intendent one year of Lawrence County General Hospital, Ironton, Ohio; Credit manager, Cincinnati General Hospital, five years. Came to University Hospital Feb. 1, 1942. Discovery: “You can do more work in sixteen than in eight hours.” Member: Ohio Hosp. Assoc.; Amer. Hosp. Assoc.; Columbus Hosp. Fed.; Board of Directors of Blue Cross—Central Hosp. Service. Administrative Staff Aitiliated Hospitals STATE CHILDREN’S TUBERCULOSIS ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL HOSPITAL SANATORIUM HOSPITAL Dr. Bateman Dr. Baxter Dr. Potts Dr. Wiseman Superintendent Chief of Staff Superintendent and Chief of Staff Medical Director J. FREMONT BATEMAN, M.A., M.D. B.A. 1922, Ohio U. where he served as Instructor in Biol.; M.A. 1924, Cornell U. where he served as Instructor in Neur.; M.D. 1927, U. of Cin- cinnati where he served as Instructor in Anat. and Clin. Psych. Director, Butler Co. Mental Hygiene Clinic, 1930-37; Clin. Director, Longview Hosp., 1930-37; Commissioner, Mental Diseases, 1938-40; Supt. Cols. State Hosp. and Clin. Prof. of Med. (now Neur. and Psych.) since 1937. Member: Cols. Acad. of Med.; O.S.M.A.; A.M.A.; Amer. Psych. Assn.; Delta Tau Delta; Mason; Sigma Xi; Alpha Omega Alpha. 2nd Lt., Inf., World War I. WILLIAM LAW POTTS, M.D. Pre-med. at Geneva College, 1928; M.D. 1933, Western Reserve; Intern, Grasslands Hosp., Valhalla, N. Y.; Residencies in surgery and psychiatry, 1935-36. Studied thoracic surgery, Boehne Hosp. in 1939 and tuberculosis at Guilford Co. (N. C.) San., 1939-40; Med. Director, Hillsborough Co. (Fla.) Tbe. Hosp., 1942-45. Asst. Prof. of Med., Supt. of Franklin Co. Tbe. Hosp. and Controller of Tbe. of Franklin Co. since 1945. Has written papers on thoracic surgery. Member: A.M.A., Cols. Acad. of Medicine, F.A.C:S. BRUCE K. WISEMAN, M.D. B.S. 1926 and M.D. 1928 from Indiana U. House officer, Indianapolis City Hospital 1928-29. Asst. in Bact. and Path., Rockefeller Institute for Med. Res., N.Y.C. 1929-30. Dept. of Medicine, O.S.U. since 1930. Prof. of Medicine since 1939; Chairman of Dept. of Medicine since 1944; Chief of Staff, St. Francis Hosp. since 1946. Widely recognized for research and literary contributions on blood dyscrasias. Diplomate Amer. Board of In- Earl H. Baxter, M.D. ternal Med.; Life member, Amer. College of Physicians. Member: Central (See page 64) Soc. of Clin. Res.; Amer. Soc. Exper. Path.; Soc. for Exper. Biology and Medicine; A.M.A.; Alpha Omega Alpha. Hobby: golf. Fifty-one Departmen t ot Medicine General Staff B. K. WISEMAN, M.D., Chairman First row: C. Joseph De Lor, M.S., M.D.; George H. Ruggy, Ph.D.,, M.D.; John A. Prior, M.D.; Donald Mahanna, M.D.; Shelby G. Gamble, M.D.; Thomas E. Clark, M. D.; Norman O. Rothermich, M.D. Second row: Elijah J. Gordon, M.D.; George I. Nel- son, M.D.; Charles A. Doan, M.D.; Bruce K. Wise- man, M.D.; Solomon A. Hatfield, M.D.; Lear H. Van- Buskirk, M.D.; Harvey M. Clodfelter, M.D. University Attending Staff eee a pe Wg aie ec ba Seated: Philip T. Knies, M.D., Associate Clinical Pro- fessor; George I. Nelson, M.D., Clinical Professor; Bruce K. Wiseman, M.D., Professor; Solomon A. Hat- field, M.D., Clinical Professor; Donald Mahanna, M.D., Assistant Clinical Professor; George H. Ruggy, Ph.D., M.D., Associate Professor. Fifty-two Third row: Ben Arnoff, M.A., M.D.; Kenneth McLane Smith, M.D.; H. Campbell Haynie, M.D.; Florence R. Lenahan, M.D.; Walter M. Stout, M.A., M.D.; William V. Whitehorn, M.D. Fourth row: Oscar W. Jepson, M.D.; Wiley L. For- man, M. S., M.D.; Philip T. Knies, M.D.; Robert C. Kirk, M.D.; Clifford C. Sherburne, M.D.; Grant O. Graves, M.A., M.D.; Robert H. Schoene, M.D.; Morris B. Guthrie, M.A., M.D.; Dale E. Putnam, M.D. Standing: Kenneth McLane Smith, M.D., Instructor; Wiley L. Forman, M.S., M.D., Instructor; H. Camp- bell Haynie, M.D., Assistant Professor; John A. Prior, M.D., Assistant Professor; C. Joseph De Lor, M.S., M.D., Assistant Professor. Arthritis Physical Medicine William M. Mitchell, M.D., Clinical Instruc- Shelby G. Gamble, M.D., Assistant Professor; tor; John H. Mitchell, M.D., Assistant Clini- Richard H. Jacques, M.D., Baruch Fellow in cal Professor. Physical Medicine; Stuart Cromer, M.D. Ph.D., Clinical Instructor. Cardiology Dermatology and Syphilology Thomas E. Clark, M.D., Assistant; R. W. Seated: Burton F. Barney, M.S., M.D., Asso- Kissane, M.D., Associate Clinical Professor; ciate Clinical Professor; Louis L. Praver, Donald Mahanna, M.D., Assistant Clinical M.D., Assistant. Professor. Standing: Eldred B. Heisel, M.D., Clinical Instructor; Joseph H. Shepard, M.D., Clinical Instructor. Fifty-three Hematology ca Seated: Herman A. Hoster, M.D., Associate Standing: Samuel Saslaw, Ph.D., M.D., Intern; Professor; Bruce K. Wiseman, M.D., Profes- James D. Thomas, M.D., Assistant Resident; : Claude S. Wright, M.D, Instructor and Fel- Ee Charles A. tee. M.D., ete and low iti Medical ‘Reseibcrmenmiece amen ete Director of Medical Research; Benjamin C. M.D., Graduate Student (Egypt) in Hematol- Houghton, M.D., Associate Professor. ogy and Pathology. St. Francis Attending Staff Seated: Robert C. Kirk, M.D., Clinical Assistant Buskirk, M.D., Clinical Professor; George H. Professor; William V. Whitehorn, M.D., As- Ruggy, Ph.D., M.D., Associate Professor. sistant Professor; Clifford C. Sherburne, M.D., Assistant Clinical Professor; Bruce K. Standing: Philip T. Knies, M.D., Associate Wiseman, M.D., Professor; Solomon A. Hat- Clinical Professor; H. Campbell Haynie, field, M.D., Clinical Professor; Lear H. Van M.D., Assistant Professor. Fifty-four Tuberculosis Sanatorium Seated: Joseph E. Moody, M.D., Assistant Med- ical Director; William L. Potts, M.D., Super- intendent and Medical Director; Bert E. Moore, M.D., Resident Physician. Standing: Norris E. Lenahan, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery; Karl P. Klassen, M.D., Assistant Professor of Research Surgery; George M. Curtis, Ph.D., M.D., Professor of Nutrition Research Surgery; Frederick J. Epstein, M.D., Resident Physician; Joseph H. Geyer, M.D., Instructor of Surgical Research; Mau- rine P. Redden, M.D., Resident Physician; Vincent Marchese, M.D., Fellow in Research Surgery; William M. Wells, M.D., Assistant Resident; Richard Reed, M.D., Fellow of United States Public Health. Betty Derflinger, B.S., Assistant Administrative Dietician; Marjorie Brock, B.S., Assistant Die- tician; Mary Irene Hageman, M.S., Administra- tive Dietician; Helen Shaw, B.S., Clinic Dieti- cian; Rita Cordray, B.S., Assistant Dietician; Claire Goble, B.S., Assistant Administrative Dietician; Martha Nelson Lewis, M.S., Director of Dietetics. Fifty-five Department of Surgery “Now this is weird and unsavory! What'll we take out? A kidney? What am I saying?” ROBERT ZOLLINGER General Surgery—University Hospital Seated: George M. Curtis, M.A., Ph.D., M.D., Professor; Donald W. Traphagen, M.D., In- Professor; Verne A. Dodd, M.D., Professor; structor; Richard Patton, M.D., Instructor; Robert M. Zollinger, M.D., Professor; John Paul H. Charlton, M.Sce., M.D., Associate W. Means, D.D.S., M.D., Clinical Professor. Professor; Robert S. McCleery, M.A., M.D., Standing: Charles R. Baber, M.D., Assistant Instructor. ROBERT M. ZOLLINGER, M.D., Chairman B.S. 1925, M.D. 1927 both from Ohio State Univer- sity. Internship Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston under Dr. Harvey Cushing. Ass’t. Resident Surgeon, Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland; Resident Surgeon, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Ass’t. Professor of Surgery, Harvard. Surgeon, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital:. Professor of Surgery O. S. U. since January 1946 and Chairman of De- partment since January 1947. Colonel, U. S. Medical Corps; Commanding Officer, 5th General Hospital; Consultant General Surgery, E.T.O. Legion of Merit. Now Director General Surgery, Veterans Adminis- tration, Washington, D.C. Fifty-six Well Done, Good and Faithful Servant! “The real difference between men is energy. A strong will, a settled purpose, an invincible deter- mination, can accomplish almost anything; and in this lies the distinction between great men and little men.” THOMAS FULLER It was with deep regret that we learned of the resignation of Dr. Verne Dodd as Chairman of the Department of Surgery in which capacity he had served capably and faithfully for 25 years. Since his appointment to the faculty as assistant professor of surgery when the present Ohio State University College of Medicine was founded in 1914 he has given unstintingly of his interest, time and talents to the growth and development of this institution. Dr. Dodd has worked hard and long in the shaping of plans for the new medical center. Then on the threshold of a new era, representing a life’s work and a heart’s dream, he modestly asked that he be relieved of his duties so that younger and newer Dr. Dodd ideas might be instilled into the organization which | his wisdom, fortitude and experience had built. Our remorse at seeing Dr. Dodd relinquish his post as Chairman of the Department of Surgery was somewhat mitigated by the announcement that he would retain an active Professorship in that De- partment, for he has always taken great pride in and derived much pleasure from his teaching duties. Having the true spirit of the educator, Dr. Dodd is constantly aware of his responsibility to the student and is always willing to take time to share his wide experience and vast knowledge with the student. It is this constant association with younger men which so ably defends Dr. Dodd’s tremendous vital- ity and enthusiasm against the onslaught of the years. The succession of students and house officers who have learned to love and respect Dr. Dodd and who are now better benefactors of mankind because of their training under him are a living tribute to his teaching genius. But Dr. Dodd is more than a skilled surgeon and a patient teacher. He has the foresight and calm judgment of the administrator; the eager and inquir- ing mind of the scholar; the charity and magna- nimity of the altruist; the discerning logic of the scientist; but above all he has what Osler calls “that which can alone give permanence to powers—the Grace of Humility.” Fifty-seven St. Francis Surgery Seated: Morris Goldberg, M.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Otolaryngology; William B. Harris, M.D., Instructor; Isaac B. Harris, M.D., Emer- itus Clinical Professor; Luke V. Zartman, M.D., Clinical Professor; Tom F. Lewis, M.D., Anesthesia Clinical Assistant Professor. Standing: H. P. Worstell, M.D., Instructor; Warren G. Harding, II, M.A., M.D., Instruc- tor; Clyde Dawson, M.D., Assistant Professor; Donald W. Traphagen, M.D., Instructor. Seated: Wilbur L. Reimers, M.D., Assistant Resident; Norris E. Lenahan, M.D., Associate Professor; Merrill E. Speelman, M.D., Assist- ant Resident. Standing: Charles V. Meckstroth, Extern; Fifty-eight Doris E. Clinger, R.N.; Doris Cunningham, Secretary to Dr. Lenahan; Jean Gamble, R.N.; Janet Kohl, R. N.; Jeanette Spangler, R.N.; Charles Cassaday, M.D., Post Graduate Student in Anesthesia; Loren E. Senn, Extern. Orthopedics i Chester C. Shinbach, M.D.; Instructor; Henry Instructor; E. Harlan Wilson, M.D., Professor; B. Lacey, M.D., Instructor; H. P. Worstell, M.D., Judson D. Wilson, M.D., Assistant Professor. Urology Proctology Seated: William N. Taylor, M.D., Professor. Walter H. Hamilton, M.D., Standing: Kenneth Day, B.M., M.D., Assistant Assistant Professor; Richard Resident; Ray Slabaugh, M.D., Assistant Vance, M.D., Instructor. Resident; John Beachler, Jr., M.D., Resident; Robert Keating, M.D., Assistant Professor; P. J. Harbrecht, M.D., Intern. Fifty-nine Department of Neurology and Psychiatry “The neuropsychiatrist deals with psychosomatic, and not with psycho-somatic, relationships.” DwicHut M. PALMER First row: Shirley L. Glasser, M.A., Clinical Psychologist; Leon H. Caviness, M.D., Clini- cal Assistant Instructor; Frank F. Tallman, M.D., Clinical Associate Professor; Attilio LaGuardia, M.D., Clinical Instructor. Neurosurgery Harry E. LeFever, M.D., Clin- ical Professor; Roy J. Secrest, M.D., Clinical Assistant Pro- fessor. Siaty Second row: Milton M. Parker, M.A., Ph.D., M.D., Assistant Professor; Harrison Evans, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor; Dwight M. Palmer, M.S., M.D., Professor; George T. Harding, M.D., Clinical Professor. DWIGHT M. PALMER, M.S., M.D., Chairman Born Scio, Ohio 1906. B.S. 1929, M.D. 1932, M.S. 1933, all from Ohio State University. Served as Ass’t., Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor, Dept. of Anatomy O.S. U. 1927-45; Professor since 1946. Has served in Dept. of Medicine as Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor 1937-45. Professor and Chairman of Dept. of Neurology and Psychiatry since 1946. Diplomate American Board Psychiatry and Neurology. Member: Theta Nu Epsilon, Nu Sigma Nu, Sigma Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha. Interest: family, home photography and Free Masonry. Department of Obstetrics Gynecology “The fruit of the pregnant uterus is like that of a tree—when it is ripe it drops.” Seated: Edwin J. Stedem, M.D., Clinical As- sistant Professor; Philip J. Reel, D.V.M., M.D. Clinical Professor; Allan C. Barnes, M.Sc., M.D., Associate Professor; Charles W. Pavey, M.D., Clinical Associate Professor. Resident Staff ALLAN C. BARNES Oe — a Y 4 eo? ‘el m eo Standing: Dana W. Cox, M.D., Clinical Asso- ciate Professor; Z. J. R. Hollenbeck, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor; Robert F. Daly, M. D., Clinical Instructor; F. C. Hugenberger, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor; F. W. Davis, M.D., Clinical Assistant Professor. PHILIP J. REEL, M.D., Chairman M.D. 1915 Ohio State University. Since that time he has served in the Depts. of Pathology, Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics with the exception of the period of World War I and a year at the Uni- versity of Vienna, 1926. Professor and Chairman Dept. Gynecology and Obstetrics since 1945. Has published numerous articles in relation to Pathol- ogy, General Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics. Author of a text book on Gynecology for Nurses. F.A.C.S. Member: Cols. Academy of Medicine, Ohio State Medical Society, A.M.A., Central Assn. of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Medical Review Club, AKK. Hobby: trout fishing. Seated: John A. Spencer, M.D., University of California, former Chief Resident; Joseph B. Wylie, M.D., Loyola Univer- sity, Chief Resident. Standing: Fred B. Hapke, M.D., North- western; John H. Holzaepfel, M.D., Michigan; James M. McCord, M.D., Michigan. Siaty-one Department of Ophthalmology “Never use yellow oxide of mercury for anything except greasing wheel-barrows.” CLAUDE PERRY 4S @ ae Seated: Wilbur Renner, M.D., Instructor; Harry Standing: Ivor G. Clark, M.D., Instructor; Er- M. Sage, M.D., Assistant Professor; Claude win W. Troutman, M.D., Instructor; Carl D. S. Perry, M.D., Associate Professor, Acting fence Chairman; Herbert F. Kessinger, M.D., Resi- Postle, M.D., Instructor; William A. Stouten- dent. borough, M.D., Assistant Professor. CLAUDE S. PERRY, M.D. ACTING CHAIRMAN B.A. 1922 Ohio Wesleyan; M.D. 1926 Western Reserve University. Resi- dent E.E.N.T. Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit. Post graduate work at the University of Vienna and other Euro- pean Clinics. Has served on O.S.U. faculty since 1931; Associate Pro- fessor and Acting Chairman of Dept. of Ophthalmology since 1945. F.A.C.S. Certified Board of Ophthalmology. Served 5 years in World War II, promoted to rank of Colonel. Mem- ber: A.M.A., O.S.M.A., Cols. Acad- Robert E. Quinn, M.D., Assistant; Vernon D. emy of Medicine, Amer. Academy of Stephens, M.D., Instructor; Ruth Hartup, R.N., Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology, Head Nurse, Department of Surgery; John A. Cols. Ophthalmological Soc., Sigma Dole, M.D., Chief Resident. Xi, Alpha Sigma Phi, AKK. Sixty-two Department of Otolaryngology “Hold still, godammit!” RuSsSEL G. MEANS Seated: William J. Miller, M.D., Instructor; Standing: Morris Goldberg, M.D., Assistant pete eg SLD s.ssistant PTOtessor, Professor; Herbert D. Emswiler, M.D., Assist- Hugh G. Beatty, Ph.C., M.D., Professor, os Chairman; Daniel G. Sanor, M.D., Assistant ant Professor; T. Rees Williams, M.D., Asso- Professor. ciate Professor. HUGH G. BEATTY, M.D., Chairman M.D. Starling-Ohio Medical College 1910. Assist- ant, Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor of Otolaryngology Ohio State University since 1914. Professor and Chairman of Department since 1929. Chief of staff of Otolaryngology and Bronchoscopy at University, St. Francis and Children’s Hospitals. Member: American Rhinological, Otological and Laryngological Society; American Broncho-Esopha- gological Society; Academy of Ophthalmology and Laryngology; certified by the American Board of Otolaryngology; American Board of Plastic Surgery; A.M.A.; F.A.C.S.; Fellow, International College of Surgeons; American College of Allergists. Sixty-three Department of Pediatrics “Don't over-stimulate children. Keep them dumb as long as possible.” First row: Thomas E. Shaffer, M.D., Associate Professor; Samuel D. Edelman, M.D., Asso- ciate Professor; Warren E. Wheeler, M.D., Associate Professor; Elizabeth Barnes, M.D., Instructor; Earl H. Baxter, M.D., Professor; Mary Ann Graber, M.D., Clinical Instructor; Oliver W. Hosterman, M.D., Assistant Pro- fessor. Second row: Homer A. Anderson, M.D., Instruc- tor; Shelby G. Gamble, M.D., Assistant Pro- fessor of Physical Medicine; John Rimel- Sixty-four EARL H. BAXTER spach, M.D., Intern; George F. Walliker, M.D., Clinical Assistant; Mary Louise Scholl, M.D., Fellow; Mitchell A. Spyker, M.S., M.D., Instructor in Pathology; James C. Beesley, | M.D., Instructor. Third row: Ethon L. Stone, M.D., Clinical As- sistant; Robert F. Sylvester, M.D., Clinical Assistant; Carl F. Tarlowski, M.D., Clinical Assistant; Lawrence E. Metcalf, M.D., Clini- cal Assistant; Mason A. Jones, M.D., Resident. EARL H. BAXTER, M.D., Chairman Born Mt. Vernon, Ohio, 1892. B.A. 1915 and M.D. 1918, both from Ohio State University. Pediatric training in Children’s Hospital, Philadelphia, Rush Medical College and Vienna Clinics. Has served on O.S.U. faculty as instructor in clinical microscopy, assistant in anatomy, instructor, assistant and asso- ciate professor of medicine (pediatrics). Professor and Chairman of Department of Pediatrics since 1941. Chief of staff at Children’s Hospital. Diplo- mate, American Board of Pediatrics; member American Academy of Pediatrics. Hobby: farming, travel and Pediatrics. Department of Radiology “Could be, could be — Now I’LL tell you!” JosePpH L. Morton Reis. First row: Faye Irvin, B.A., Instructor; Hugh Second row: T. E. Fox, M.D., Fellow; G. A. J. Means, M.D., Professor and Chairman; Erhart, M.D., Assistant Resident; W. H. Car- Joseph L. Morton, M.D., Assistant Professor. ter, M.D., Assistant resident; R. A. Taylor, M.D., resident. HUGH J. MEANS, M.D., Chairman B.A. Ohio State University 1905; M.D. University of Pennsylvania 1908. Faculty Starling-Ohio Medi- cal University and College of Medicine, Ohio State University since 1908. Roentgenologist to Protestant, St. Francis and Children’s Hospitals in past years. Roentgenologist University Hospital 1926-1942. Pro- fessor and Director of Radiology University Hospi- tal since 1942. Fellow American College of Radi- ology; Diplomate American Board of Radiology. Member: American Roentgen Ray Society, Radi- ological Society of North America, A.M.A., Cols. Academy of Medicine, Sigma Xi, Kappa Sigma, AKK. Clubs: Rotary, Crichton, Faculty. Hobby: gardening and tinkering. Sixty-five Department of Surgical Research “Now there’s a lazy hand—that spectator attitude! Do you see what I mean?” GerorcE M. Curtis ‘Seated: George Van Buren, M.D., Instructor; Louis C. Roettig, M.D., Assistant Professor; Jay McLean, M.D., Associate Professor; George M. Curtis, Ph.D., M.D., Professor, Chairman; Karl P. Klassen, M.D., Assistant Professor; Kenneth F. Lowry, M.D., Fellow Sixty-six in Surgical Research. Standing: Frederick A. Waltz, M.D., Resident; Edwin J. Clinger, M.D., Intern; Robert L. Anderson, M.D., Resident; Roy E. Swenson, M.D., Research Associate; David W. Wright, Extern. GEORGE M. CURTIS, M.A., Ph.D., M.D., Chairman A.B. 1910, M.A. 1910, Ph.D. 1914 all from Univer- sity of Michigan; M.D. Rush Medical College 1920. Professor of anatomy, Vanderbilt University 1915. Internship and Residencies, Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago. Studied, John McCormick Institute, Uni- versity of Chicago and University of Berne, Switzer- land. Professor of Surgery, University of Chicago 1932. Professor of Surgery Ohio State University since 1932; Chairman Dept. of Surgical Research since 1936. F.A.C.S. 1928. Member: Amer. Surgical Assn.; Amer. Soc. for Clinical Investigation; Amer. Assn. for History of Medicine; Amer. Assn. of Anatomists; Amer. Physiological Soc. and Amer. Soc. for Experimental Pathology; President, Central Surgical Assn.; President, Cols. Surgical Soc. First row: Jane Adkins, Donna Bitzel, Harry L. Reinhart, M.D., Lois Karl, Betty Ma- Medical Technologists—-University Hospital '46-'4'7 Melba Arbaugh, Ruth Mathis, Alan Firestone. “What! You don’t like my tie?” Harry L. REINHART son, Anne Kimes. Second row: Sara Lewis, Mary Lou Hoopman, Ann Novicky, Joan Blackmore, Third row: Susan Ragsdale, Dorothy McCague, Kay De- laney, Phyllis Spitz, Jean Reeves, Carmen Bond. HARRY L. REINHART, M.D., Director B.A. 1922 and M.D. 1924, both from Ohio State University. Early work and training in pathological anatomy and medico-legal pathology with increasing interest in clinical pathology. Has been on O.S.U. faculty since 1927. Pathologist, University Hospital since 1932; professor of clinical pathology since 1942; Director of blood bank, University Hospital; Director of vocational training for medical technolo- gists which he initiated at University Hospital in 1932. Established weekly C.P.C. in 1927. Member: Sigma Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha, O.S.M.A., A.M.A., American Society Path. and Bacter. and American Society Clinical Path. Hobby: music and gardening. “As clinical observers, we study the experiments which nature makes upon our fellow-creatures.” House. Statt Seated: John T. Read, M.D., O.S. U; Lloyd Evans, M.D., Harvard, Chief Resident; Edward C. Heyde, M.D., Johns Hopkins University; Robert M. Wolford, M.D., Jefferson Col- lege of Medicine. Surgical Residents ae ‘ ’ a . Had Seated: Curtis P. Artz, M.D., O.S.U.; Harold T. Gross, B.M., M.D., North- western, M.S. (In Medicine) O.S.U.; Nicholas H. Holmes, M.D., Harvard, Chief Resident; John A. Scholl, M.D., University of Maryland, Chief Resident; Johnston F. Os- borne, M.D., Temple University. Sixty-eight a mie a Sir WILLIAM OSLER Medical Residents Standing: Gerhard T. Shearer, M.D., O.S.U.; Wilbert P. Skirball, M.D., O.S.U.; Floyd G. Niswander, M.D., O.S.U.; Jess F. Gamble, M.D., Uni- versity of Nebraska. Standing: David R. Lehrer, M.D., O.S.U.; Ralph W. Lewis, M.D., Uni- versity of Iowa; John M. Strait, M.D., O.S.U.; John B. Wilkes, M. D., Vanderbilt University; Julien M. Goodman, M.D., O.S.U.; Theo- dore V. Gerlinger, M.D., O.S.U. “Medicine is the one place where all the show is stripped off the human H St tt drama. You, as doctors, will be in a OUSE a position to see the human race stark naked — not only _physically, but mentally and morally as well.” MarTIN FISCHER Interns a Seated: Joel Pratt, M.D., Ohio Standing: Robert Kessler, M. State; James H. Williams, D., Ohio State; Raymond M.D., Ohio State; Robert Jennings, M.D., Ohio State; Ireland, M.D., Ohio State. James Parker, M.D., Uni- versity of Oklahoma. Interns Seated: John P. Miller, M.D., Western Standing: Luther M. Keith, M.D., Reserve University; William L. University of Tennessee; Frank H. Grover, M. D., O.S.U.; Alvin L. Austin, M.D., University of Okla- Schultz, M.D., University of Minne- homa; Phil J. Harbrecht, M.D., sota; Samuel Saslaw, M.D., O.S.U.; O.S.U.; John J. Rimelspach, M.D., Richard C. Schaffer, M.D., Univer- O.S.U.; Edwin J. Clinger, M.D., sity of Kansas. 0.S.U. Sixty-nine nopi Form 908 Name-———- Smeal time of Seaver snooting.SEepeend °° oceasionallys He has had several dates e call Louise from whom h with a nurse © —— th a nurs against mer seme pt —_—_—— a well aevelo ef ed age aisori peter nere | 4 story of the ——— pat ears there were goute exac WIsTORY—C ontt nued ee ae me patient of%© 4ndulges in his favor nted, snowing y i 00k. ON eo Tee ana ee EXAMINATIONS $ physical examination re contrac’ aoh 18 rare aiseas® bras Savane oes a contractet a aisease® of the same acer ca eae Die ont LABORATORY EXAMINATIONS ae ctinesithaatee a MICROSCOPIC i EXAMINATIONS Pubic | Urethral Smear IMPRESSION: __ Co eee : Normal senior medical student. DISPOSITION: Graduati Ono HISTORY “It was the beginning of our senior year when we all met as civilians for the first time. The Navy boys had been taken out of uniform in December of ’45, but it wasn’t until March of ’°46 just a week before we began our senior year that the Army men were discharged. “More and more of the fellows accepted extern- ships. Jim Harmon, John Tytus, Dick Miller, Ray Beitzel, Dave Mack, Harry Cope, Will Taylor, Bill Merryman and Warren Koontz went to White Cross; Tony Enriquez-Navarro, Jim Sim- mons, Bob Ralston, Bob Thomas, Bill Retterbush, Bill Lord and George Clauer were at St. Francis; Marion Detrick, Jack Lindsey, Chuck Bovard, Oscar Klein, Harold Segall and Glick Busby were at Mt. Carmel; Danny Bloch, Joe Klausner, Donn Tippett and Tim Caris were out at the T. B. San.; Zeke Katz was at Grant Hospital and Vernon Cotterman delivered babies at St. Ann’s while Bob Murnane worked both places. Faith Cooper was kept busy riding her bicycle back and forth from the State Hospital. Bill Wiltberger and Don Coolahan and later Frank Nemcik and Al Day took the newly established externship at the city jail; Bob Young was at the state pen. At Univer- sity Hospital were Loren Senn and Chuck Meck- stroth on anesthesia, George Bell on X-ray and Dave Wright on Research Surgery. Bill Cope was on Ob. and Gyn. as well as extern at the Feeble Minded Institute. Joe Craig, Ted Wilson and I were down at Children’s Hospital. “Outside of one or two lectures a day we spent our time in the out-patient departments at Uni- versity and Children’s Hospitals. “Early in the year, between lectures on tropical medicine our class elected officers for the last time. Jim Simmons was president; ‘Hash’ Shapiro, vice president and Dave Wright, secretary-treas- urer. R. W. Gifford was elected editor and Paul Hatfield business manager of the CADUCEAN. About that same time we were applying for our internships. Don Coolahan took off for New Seventy-two “Recollection is the only paradise from which we cannot be turned out.” RICHTER ‘ S0 Sad, So Strange the Days That Are No More’’ Haven to participate in the meet that brought the national AAU swimming title to Ohio State. And Ed Siegler had trouble explaining to Dr. Davis how he got on the wrong road and ended up at the Kentucky Derby. “We had our first summer vacation that year for the accelerated program was discontinued. Some of the fellows worked off their 8 weeks of practical obstetrics during that time. It was in August, I believe, when Senn, Segall and Detrick arrived at a home in time to deliver the last of triplets. And Charlie McReynolds paced up and down the corridor in 4A the hot summer night his twins were born. “In the Fall eight more of our class were initi- ated into AOA: Paul Ohliger, Loren Senn, Larry Tourkow, Bob Thomas, Bob Ralston, Glick Busby, Faith Cooper and Connie Connors. “Lloyd Barnes conducted the election that made Dr. Palmer ‘Man of the Year’... Joe Klausner began signing his own name to his term papers ... Dr. Barnes graciously let some of us take pre- natal clinic again .. . Dr. Stedem removed a ‘we just got it in time’ appendix from Joe Craig the night before he was to go on practical Ob... . Donn Tippett got the mumps and spent a week on Isolation ... I smashed in the side o f my new Ford ... Dr. Wiseman was made Chief of Staff at St. Francis ... Charlie Meckstroth was never seen without his camera and then never in Medi- cal Clinic . . . May Zaugg who had joined our ranks late in our Junior year graduated a quarter early ... Dr. Dodd whom we had grown to love and revere resigned as Chairman of the Depart- ment of Surgery and was replaced by the capable and energetic surgeon from Boston, Dr. Zollinger. “That last quarter ended in March of 1947 in such a flurry of excitement over graduation and our senior banquet that it was hard to realize we were at last M.D.’s. And so ended our days in Medical School—‘Days so sad, so strange—days ep k that are no more’. Seniors “.. So it will be your highest mission, students of medicine, to carry on the never-ending warfare against disease and death, better equipped, abler men than your predecessors, but animated with their spirit and sustained by their hopes, for the hope of every creature is the banner that we bear.” Sir WILLIAM OSLER Seniors David W. Wright Secretary-Treasurer Lloyd W. Barnes Charles A. Bates Raymond E. Beitzel George E. Bell Daniel M. Bloch Edward T. Bonar Charles M. Bovard Clotilde Dent Bowen Stanley L. Brody Ray K. Brown Jonathan G. Busby Timothy N. Caris George L. Clauer Constance Connors Donald E. Coolahan Faith M. Cooper Harry C. Cope William H. Cope Vernon L. Cotterman Joseph D. Craig Seventy-four James E. Simmons President C. Alton Day Marion F. Detrick John W. Elliott John V. Emery Antonio Enriquez- Navarro R. W. Gifford, Jr. James Harmon Paul M. Hatfield Frederic C. Henry War ren R. Hoffman Don M. Hosier J. Richard Huston Zelique Katz Joseph M. Klausner Oscar Klein Warren Kleinmaier Warren N. Koontz Irwin H. Krakoff Jack C. Lindsey Harrison Shapiro Vice President William F. Lord David S. Mack Charles R. McReynolds Charles V. Meckstroth William B. Merryman Richard K. Miller Robert T. Murnane Francis J. Nemcik Paul H. Ohliger Bert L. Peppercorn Robert E. Ralston William C. Retterbush Jackson W. Riddle Harold Segall Loren E. Senn Harrison Shapiro Edward E. Siegler James E. Simmons Howard D. Sirak William P. Smith, Jr. Martha Southard Frank W. Taylor Robert A. Thomas Donn L. Tippett Lawrence P. Tourkow Howard J. Tucker John S. Tytus Warren G. Wagers Robert Weimer Richard A. Welsh Edward H. Wilson, Jr. John F. Wiltberger William W. Wiltberger David W. Wright Robert S. Young May Breniser Zaugg John L. Zintsmaster Lloyd W. Barnes Youngstown; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi, Presiding Senior; ATO; PIFC; Caducean staff; finance committee; Indian- apolis City Hospital. Raymond E. Beitzel East Sparta; B.A. OSU; AKK; Caducean Staff; Youngstown (O) Hospital. Daniel M. Bloch Los Angeles, California; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Ep- silon; Zeta Beta Tau; Cadu- cean Staff; Los Angeles County Gen. Hospital. Charles M. Bovard Mt. Vernon; B.A. Ohio Wesleyan; Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Theta; finance committee; St. Lukes Hos- pital, Cleveland; Internal Medicine or Radiology. Stanley L. Brody Geneva; B.A. OSU; fi- nance committee; Caducean staff; U.S. Navy Hospital; G.P. Jonathan G. Busby Canal Winchester; Har- vard; Phi Chi; AOA; Cadu- cean staff; banquet commit- tee; St. Lukes Hospital, Chicago, Il. G.P. Charles A. Bates Columbus; OSU; ATO; University Hospital, Colum- bus; Ob-Gyn. George E. Bell Carrollton; Wooster and Yale; Nu Sigma Nu; Alpha Gamma Epsilon; Kappa Mu Epsilon; finance committee; Delaware Hospital, Wilm- ington, Delaware. Edward T. Bonar Columbus; B.A. OSU; graduation committee; Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus. Clotilde Dent Bowen Columbus; B.A. OSU; AEI; Delta Sigma Theta; Scholaris; Elizabeth Black- well Society; graduation committee; Harlem Hospi- tal, New York City; G.P. Ray K. Brown Columbus; B.A. OSU; AKK; Phi Eta Sigma; AED; Phi Beta Kappa; AOA, Sec- retary; banquet committee; Boston City Hospital; Re- search. Timothy Nick Caris Akron; B.A. OSU; AKK; Akron Peoples Hospital; Internal Medicine. Class of 194'7 Seventy-five Class of ]194'7 George Lewis Clauer Springfield; B.A. OSU; AKK; ATO; City Hospital, Springfield, Ohio; Surgery. Donald E. Coolahan Limasesb i -OSU- ano Sigma Nu; Varsity O Club, Vice President and Corre- sponding Secretary; Swim- ming Team; banquet com- mittee; Santa Monica, Calif.; Surgery. Harry C. Cope Lisbon; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi; Stadium Club; Corwin Hospital, Pueblo, Colo. Vernon L. Cotterman Somerset; B.A. OSU; AKK;; Beta Theta Pi; Meth- odist Hospital, Gary, Ind.; Ob-Gyn. C. Alton Day Columbus; B.S. Ohio Uni- versity; Phi Kappa Tau; Caducean staff; finance committee; banquet com- mittee, chrm; Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus; Ob- Gyn. John W. Elliott Cincinnati; OSU; AKK; banquet committee; City Hospital, Springfield, Ohio. Seventy-six Constance J. Connors Columbus; B.A. OSU; AEI; AOA; Caducean staff; Mercy Hospital, Altoona, Pa. Faith M. Cooper Struthers; B.A. OSU; AED; Alpha Omega Alpha; Montgomery Hospital: Norristown, Pa. William H. Cope Wellsville; B.A. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Kappa Psi; Phi Eta Sigma; AED; U. S. Navy-Aiea Ht’s., Honolulu, T.H.; Ob-Gyn. Joseph Deafner Craig Washington C. H.; A.B. Denison; Phi Chi, Presiding Junior; Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, Va. Marion F. Detrick DeGraff; B.A. OSU; AKK; AED; Caducean staff; Uni- versity Hospital, Columbus; Ob-Gyn. J. Victor Emery Washington C. H.; B.A. OSU; AKK; Tower Club; AED; Caducean, Ass’t. Edi- tor; Cincinnati Deaconess. Antonio F. Enriquez- Navarro Panama City; University of Missouri; AKK; Santo Tomas Hos pital, Panama City. James M. Harmon Columbus; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi; Phi Kappa Psi; ban- quet committee; Caducean staff; University Hospital, Columbus; Surgery. Frederic C. Henry Monroeville; B.S. Heidel- berg; Nu Sigma Nu; Cadu- cean, Asst. Bus. Megr.; fi- nance committee; Maumee Valley Hospital, Toledo. Don Miller Hosier Maumee; B.S. Capital; Phi Chi; Caducean staff; graduation committee; New Jersey Medical Center, Jer- sey City, N. J. Zelique Katz Dayton; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; Hillel Foun- dation; AED; graduation and banquet committees; Mercy Hospital, Canton; Ob-Gyn. Oscar W. Klein Mansfield; B.A. OSU; Treasurer 1945-1946, Phi Delta Epsilon; AED; ban- quet committee; Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus; Pedi- atrics. R. W. Gifford, Jr. Westerville; B.S. Otter- bein; Phi Chi, Secretary 1945; Pi Kappa Phi; (local) Sigma Zeta; AOA, Presi- dent; Caducean, Editor; Colorado Gen. Hospital, Denver, Colo.; Internal Medicine. Paul M. Hatfield Columibus;.) B.A, yOs ws: AKK; Phi Gamma Delta; Sphinx, President, 1944; AED; Romophos; Student Court; Student Senate; Track; Varsity O; President, Junior Class; Caducean, Business Mgr.; Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Mich; In- ternal Medicine. Warren R. Hoffman Ashville; B.A. OSU; Ca- ducean staff; White Cross Hospital, Columbus; Ob- Gyn. John R. Huston Columbus; OSU; Phi Chi; President, Freshman Class; U. S. Navy Hospital; Sur- gery. Joseph M. Klausner Dayton; B.A. OSU; Presi- dent 1945, Phi Delta Epsi- lon; Sigma Alpha Mu; PIFC; AED; _ graduation committee; St. Elizabeth Hospital, Dayton; Ob-Gyn. G. Warren Kleinmaier Daytona As sOsUee ent Delta Epsilon; Tower Club; Hillel; AED; Caducean staff; banquet committee; Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati. iaiaas of 194'7 Seventy-seven Class of 194'7 Warren N. Koontz St. Louisville; A.B. Miami; Vice President 1945, Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Eta Sigma; Caducean staff; banquet committee; University Hos- pitals, Iowa City, Iowa; Ob-Gyn. Jack C. Lindsey Mt. Victory; A.B. Ohio Northern; Nu Sigma Nu; AOA, Vice President; Ca- ducean staff; Vice President, Junior Class; Cleveland City Hospital; Gen. Surgery. David Slocum Mack Columbus; B.A. [Illinois College; Phi Chi; Phi Delta Upsilon; Detroit Receiving Hospital. Charles V. Meckstroth Columbus; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi; Kappa Sigma; AED; Caducean, Photographer and Photographic Editor; Kings County, Brooklyn, New York; Surgery. Richard K, Miller Marion: B.A. :OSUs Phi Chi; Phi Gamma Delta; St. Josephs Hospital, Ft. Worth, Texas. Francis J. Nemcik Cleveland; B.A. OSU; Theta Kappa Phi; Kappa Kappa Psi; graduation and banquet committees; White Cross Hospital, Columbus. Seventy-eight Irwin H. Krakoff Columbus; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; Alpha Epsi- lon Pi; Mt. Sinai, Cleveland. William F. Lord Elyria; “B:A® OSU Nu Sigma Nu; AED; Caducean staff; Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital, Detroit, Mich. Charles R. McReynolds Steubenville; B.A. OSU; AKK; Sigma Chi; Oak Ridge Hospital, Oak Ridge, Tenn.; Psychiatry. William B. Merryman Columbus; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi; Delta Chi; AED; Kappa Kappa Psi; Cadu- cean staff; Kings County, Brooklyn, New York. Robert Thomas Murnane Columbus; B.S. Univer- sity of Notre Dame; AKK; Mt Carmel Hospital, Columbus. Paul H. Ohliger Alliance; B.S. in Phar- macy, University of Pitts- burg; AOA; Sigma Xi; Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, New York; Ob- Gyn. or Internal Medicine. Bert L. Peppercorn Cleveland; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; AED; Cleve- land City Hospital; Internal Medicine. William C. Retterbush Piqua; BA. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Newman Club; Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital, Detroit, Mich. Harold Segall Youngstown; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; AED; Phi Eta Sigma; Caducean staff; graduation and ban- quet committee; Indianap- olis City; Pediatrics. Harrison Shapiro Cleveland Heights; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon, V. Pres. 1945-46, Pres. 1946-47; ZBT; AED; Romophos; Phi Eta Sigma; Student Senate; Secy.-Treas., Junior Class; V. Pres., Senior Class; Ca- ducean staff; graduation committee, chrm.; Mt. Sinai, Cleveland. James E. Simmons Toledo; B.S. Toledo Uni- versity; Nu Sigma Nu, Pres- ident 1946-47; Phi Kappa Chi (local); President, Sen- ior Class; St. Vincent’s Hos- pital, Toledo; G.P. William P. Smith, Jr. Columbus; B. A. Denison; Phi Chi; Lambda Chi Al- pha; Caducean staff; ban- quet committee; University Hospital, Columbus; Sur- gery. Robert E. Ralston Portsmouth; B.A. OSU; Theta Kappa Psi; AOA; Henry Ford Hospital, De- troit, Mich. Jackson W. Riddle Ashland; A.B. Ashland College; M.Sc., Ph.D. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Sigma Xi; Sigma Alpha Gamma; Markle Foundation Re- search Fellow; graduation committee; Dept. of Bacteri- ology, OSU; Medical Bacte- riology. Loren E. Senn Columbus; B.A. OSU; Phi Chi; Acacia; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Phi Mu Alpha; AED; AOA; Presbyterian Hospital, Chi- cago, Ill.; Surgery. Edward E. Siegler Shaker Heights; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; Tau Epsilon Phi; AED; graduation committee; Cin- cinnati Jewish Hospital. Howard D. Sirak Cleveland; A.B. Univer- sity of Pa.; University Hos- pital, Columbus; Surgery. Martha Ellen Southard Marysville; B.S. OSU; AEI, ‘Treasurer, 1944-45, Secretary, 1945-46, Presi- dent, 1946-47; Alpha Xi Delta; Elizabeth Blackwell Society; Secretary - Treas- urer, Sophomore Class; Caducean staff; graduation committee; University Hos- pital, Columbus; G.P. ee of 194'7 Seventy-nine Class of 194'7 Frank W. Taylor, Jr. Clarksburg; B.A. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Maumee Valley, Toledo; G.P. Donn L. Tippett Columbus; OSU; AKK; Chi Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; banquet committee; Ohio Valley Gen. Hospital, Wheeling, W. Va.; G.P. Howard J. Tucker University Heights, Cleve- land; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; AED; Phi Beta Kappa; banquet and finance committees; Caducean staff: Mt. Sinai, Cleveland. Warren G. Wagers Cadiz; B.A. OSU; Nu Sig- ma Nu; AED; San Diego County Hospital, Calif; G.P. and Surgery. Richard A. Welsh Springfield; B.S. Univer- sity of Dayton; Nu Sigma Nu; finance committee; Eloise Gen. Hospital, De- troit, Mich. John F. Wiltberger Columbus; B.A. OSU; Sigma Chi; banquet com- mittee; U. S. Navy; General Surgery. Eighty Robert A. Thomas Radnor; B.S. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Delta Kappa: Phi Lambda Upsilon; Phi Eta Sigma; AOA; San Diego County Hospital, Calif.; Ob- Gyn. Lawrence P. Tourkow Dayton; B.A. OSU; Phi Delta Epsilon; AOA; Cadu- cean staff; finance commit- tee; Detroit Receiving Hos- pital; Internal Medicine. John S. Tytus Columbus; B.A. Prince- ton; Phi Chi; banquet com- mittee; University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Neuro- surgery. Robert E. Weimer Akron; B.A. Akron Uni- versity; Akron City Hospi- tal; Psychiatry. Edward H. Wilson, Jr. Columbus; A.B. Dart- mouth; Phi Chi; Sigma Chi; Mass. Gen. Hospital; Sur- gery. William W. Wiltberger Columbus; OSU; Nu Sig- ma Nu; Kappa Sigma; Var- sity O Club; wrestling team; St. Joseph’s Hospital, Denver, Colo.; General Sur- gery. Class of 194'7 David Williams Wright Uhrichsville; B.A. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; Phi Kappa Tau; Secretary - Treasurer, Senior Class; Caducean staff; finance committee, chrm.; St. Luke’s Hospital, Denver, Colo. Robert S. Young Loudonville; B.A. OSU; Nu Sigma Nu; AED; Cadu- cean, Ass’t. Editor; Indian- apolis City Hospital; G.P. John L. Zintsmaster May Breniser Zaugg Bellefontaine; OSU; AEI; Women Children’s Hos- pital, Chicago, Ill. Massillon; B.S. Western Reserve; AKK; Phi Delta Theta; finance committee; Akron City Hospital; Sur- gery. Senior Committees Graduation First row: Charles Bates, Zelique Second row: William Retterbush, Katz, Harold Segall, Harrison Sha- Edward Siegler. piro, Chairman. Eighty-one senior Committees — Continued Budget and Finance First row: Paul Hatfield, Charles Bovard, Wil- Second row: John Zintsmaster, George Bell, liam Wright, Chairman, Howard Tucker, C. Larry Tourkow, Dick Welsh. Alton Day. Banquet and Play First row: Frank Nemcik, Zelique Katz, Ed- Third row: Harold Segall, Jim Harmon, Wil- ward Siegler, Harrison Shapiro, Larry Tour- liam Merryman, Loren Senn, Donn Tippett. kow. Second row: Glick Busby, Howard Tucker, Fourth row: Marion Detrick, Don Coolahan, William Wright, William Smith, Tim Caris. Gene Beitzel, C. Alton Day, Chairman. Eighty-two Alpha Omega Seated: Jack Lindsey, George Curtis, Ph.D., M.D., Charles A. Doan, M.D., Sir Lionel Whitby, Guest Lecturer, R. W. Gifford, Jr., Ray K. Brown. Officers: President: R. W. Gifford, Jr. Vice-President Jack C. Lindsey Secretary: Ray K. Brown Treasurer: George M. Curtis, PhDs NED: Faculty Adviser: Chas. A. Doan, M.D. Alpha “To be worthy to serve the suffering.” Pt ee Standing: Robert Thomas, J. Glick Busby, Lawrence Tourkow, Robert Ralston, Loren Senn, Paul Ohliger, Faith Cooper, Constance Connors. Alpha Omega Alpha is a national honorary medical society composed of students in the upper one-sixth of the Senior class and of various out- standing alumni and faculty members. The Gamma chapter was estab- lished at Ohio State in 1933. This year the pre-war custom of bringing a distinguished lecturer to the Ohio State campus was renewed by the local chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha. On November 14, 1946 Sir Lionel Whitby, Regius Professor of Physic at Cambridge and Pathologist at Middlesex Hospital spoke in Campbell Hall on “Atomic Energy and Medicine.” Prior to the lecture an initiation banquet was held at the Faculty Club. Dean Doan, AOA faculty adviser, was toastmaster and Sir Lionel Whitby was guest of honor. Dr. Curtis officially initiated the following new members: Paul Ohliger, Robert Thomas, Loren Senn, Lawrence Tour- kow, Robert Ralston, Constance Connors, Faith Cooper and Jonathan Busby. At another banquet on the evening of February 26, 1947 three mem- bers of the Junior class were initiated. They were: William Haynes, Thomas Stevenson and Ray Mellinger. Dr. Allan C. Barnes of the Depart- ment of Obstetrics and Gynecology was the speaker. Eighty-three Caducean Staff R. W. Gifford, Jr. Editor: R. W. Gifford, Jr. Assistant Editors: Robert S. Young J. Victor Emery Business Manager: Paul M. Hatfield Assistant Business Manager: Frederic C. Henry Photographer and Photo- graphic Editor: Charles V. Junior Editor: John R. Bontley Junior Business Manager: William Hall Meckstroth The Man Behind the Camera Charles V. Meckstroth Eighty-four “Now Ill count to two and snap it on three, so don’t blink! Ready! One - two -” CHARLES V. MECKSTROTH In spite of broken appointments, re- takes and film shortages; in spite of cold meals following unavoidable detain- ments and sleep lost while working late at night in his dark room; in spite of all such tribulations that beset the life of a yearbook photographer, Charlie Meckstroth’s blood pressure never rose above its all time high of 105, his con- genial smile and dry wit never waned and a barium meal at CADUCEAN ex- pense showed no evidence of an ulcer niche. But Charlie asked no recompense for his photographic versatility—and only because he gave so generously of his time and talent were we able to pro- duce a book filled with scores of pic- tures which in years to come will carry us happily back to our medical school days. Paul M. Hatfield First row: Harold Segall, Paul Hatfield, R. W. Gifford, Jr., Harrison Shapiro, Marion Detrick. Second row: Robert Young, James Harmon, William Smith, Lawrence Tourkow. Business Staff: Lloyd Barnes Gene Beitzel Dan Bloch Glick Busby Constance Connors C. Alton Day James Harmon Warren Hoffman Don M. Hosier Warren Koontz Jack Lindsey Third row: William Wiltberger, Jack Lindsey, William Lord, Howard Tucker. Fourth row: Fred Henry, C. Alton Day, Vic Emery, William Merryman, Charles Meck- stroth. Man of Year Feature: Lloyd Barnes Things To Come Feature: Marion Detrick William Merryman Class Prophecy: Lawrence Tourkow Charles V. Meckstroth William Merryman Editorial Staff: Harold Segall William P. Smith, Jr. Constance Connors C. Alton Day G. Warren Kleinmaier William F. Lord Harrison Shapiro Howard J. Tucker Lois Wagenhals Martha Southard David Wright Bob Young J. T. Boswell John Daniels William Hall Lois Wagenhals Typists: Doris Cunningham Mary E. Morris Faculty Advisers: Dr. George H. Ruggy Wayne V. Harsha Eighty-five VARSITY O MEMBERS IN MEDICAL SCHOOL Seated: Vernon Cotterman, wrestling; William Wiltberger, wrestling; Don Coolahan, swim- ming; Paul Hatfield, track. Standing: Aris Franklin, tennis; Robert Mayer, manager; Reid Burson, manager; Rodney Caudill, basketball; Gordon Gifford, tennis. THE OATH OF HIPPOCRATES I swear by Apollo, the physician, and Aescul- apius, and Health and All-heal, and by all else which I hold to be sacred and inviolate, that, according to my ability and judgment, I will keep this oath and stipulation: to reckon him who taught me this art equally dear to me as my par-— ents, to share my substance with him and relieve his necessities if required; to regard his offspring as on the same footing with my own brothers, and to teach them this art if they should wish to learn it, without fee or stipulation, and that by precept, lecture and every other mode of instruction, I will impart a knowledge of the art to my own sons and to those of my teachers, and to disciples bound by a stipulation and oath, according to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will follow that method of treatment which, according to my ability and judgment, I consider for the benefit of my patients and abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous. I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel, furthermore, I will not Eighty-six give to a woman an instrument to produce abor- tion. With Purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my art. I will not cut a person who is suffering with a stone, but will leave this to be done by practitioners of this work. Into whatever houses I enter I will go into them for the benefit of the sick and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption; and further from the seduction of females, or males, bond or free. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice, or not in connection with it, I may see or hear in the lives of men which ought not be spoken abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such should be kept secret. While I continue to keep this oath unviolated, may it be granted me to enjoy life and the prac- tice of the art, respected by all men at all times; but should I trespass and violate this oath, may the reverse be my lot. The Out-Patient Department “No man is more worthy of esteem than a physician who... exercises his art with caution; and who gives equal attention to the rich and poor.” VOLTAIRE ELIJAH J. GORDON, M.D., Director Premedical work Capital University; M.D. Star- ling-Ohio Medical College 1909. Intern Protestant Hospital 1909-10. Has served on Medical faculty since 1910. Professor of Medicine since 1925. Chairman of Department of Medicine 1926-36. Director of Out-Patient Dispensaries since 1920. Post graduate work Harvard. Member: Cols. Acad- emy of Medicine, O.S.M.A., A.M.A., Phi Rho Sigma, Foreign Policy Assn., Amer. Academy Political Science. President, Schonthal Community Center 1930-46. Hobby: gardening. Dr. Gordon Eighty-seven Foe pe eee l. Punchy must be right. 2. Smells like leg ulcer clinic. 3. “There’s a hole in that law big enough to drive a truck through.” 4. I can’t waste my time waiting for these staff men.” 5. “You'll feel a little stick now.” 6. “Dammit, Vic, knock it off!” 7. “According to t he Afghanistan Medical Journal of March, 1928 .. .” 8. “I've already had two new pa- tients.” 9. “Mama always told me that a stork an 10. “Get my cam- era, I want a shot Of this . ll. At last the seniors see a case of mumps. 1. When his wife sees this! 2The great lovers! 3. Turn it on, Bob! 4. No change since the last exam- ination.” 5. Late comers! 6. A lull in the rush. 7. Now in my series of 25,692 a” cases .... Pucker wp, Stevie. 9. November 20, 1923. 10. Presenting parts are often edematous. ll. Better late than never. “O, Dr. Lewis!” 2. Peek-a-boo. 3. “Here, let me graph that!” 4. Let the nurse do it. 5. So it’s bro- ken?” 6.0 Dives - Su ae right - uh - uh - lung =e. 7. Give ‘em hell, Ralph. 8. “Now if I were paranoid...” 9. “Hold real still. honey.” 10. “Soft, presys- tolic, apical — who the hell says so?” ll. “Open up, you little. 27.5 l. “Always con- sider the sex angle “a eo ee 2. All this for a little blood. 3. “Now what?” 4, “Let's give her a little thyroid too.” 5. “What's the in- cubation period?” 6. UMW meeting. 7. Bring on the folic acid. 9. That receding hair line. LOA aa Dir’, Coolahan, you’re going to have to get here on time.” ll. “This won‘t hurt — much!” 12. “Did you no- tice this pulse was irregularly irregu- lar?” 1. These gowns are a waste of time —I've had it.” 2. Emery: Got to get these nuggets in my little book.” 97.4 W.it Wh ey oars blood pressure, ma’am, I’d have headaches too!” 4. Always have a nurse in the room when doing GYN work. 5. No sugar — no albumin. 6. From you. dear, it’s a pleas- ure.” 7. This patient wants to know if 21 children aren't enough?” 8. “Use this mop. DOG 9. ... with chief complaints of ner- vousness, indiges- tion and pain.” 10:1 told y,0 0 diphtheria wasn't caused by a virus.” ll. “Nurse, this patient needs a clean diaper.” 12. Better step up that phenobarb. to tid.” 13. “ No blood io- dines for a week?” 14, Let's go over io the State Drug for coffee.” 15. “Yous ¢ On agree with my diag- nosis, huh?” 16. With these square needles you've got to push like this.” 17: ewok s abl right from here.” 18. “Lady, you've got to reduce.” 19. Chryso- (or is it psycho-) therapy. “e . in public the trained nurse has become one of the great blessings of humanity, taking a place beside the physician and the priest, and not inferior to either in her mission.” Sir WILLIAM OSLER Nurses University Statt 4 E. ITALIA SEARS, R.N., M.S. Supervisors Director of Nursing ay oN ae Seated: E. Italia Sears, B.S., M.S., R.N., Di- cate of Public Health Nursing, Supervisor rector of Nursing. of Dispensary; Angie Shain, B.S., R.N., Standing: Ola McCleskey, B.S., R.N., General Medical Supervisor; Thelma Lang, R.N., Supervisor; Grace Fuzy, B.S., R.N., Certifi- Surgical Supervisor; Delores Walser, R.N., Operating Room Supervisor. Head Nurses, Supervisors, and Assistants t First row: Margaret Broedel, B.S., R.N.; Leona Hall, R.N.; Evelyn Bell, R.N.; Jane Stokes, Ruess, R.N.; E. Italia Sears, B.S., M.S., R.N.; R.N. Mary Cormany, R.N.; Ola McCleskey, B.S., Third row: Mary Gamber, R.N.; Mary Mautz, R.N.; Veda Nye, R.N. R.N.; Marilyn Hunstead, B.S., R.N.; Tnelma Second row: Lucy Schneiter, R.N.; Jane Ander- Lang, R.N.; Betty Schumate, R.N.; Virginia son, R.N.; Phyllis Cotterman, B.S., R.N.; Lela Ely, R.N. Ninety-four University Staff Staff Nurses | First row: Ruth Harris, B.S., R.N.; Nancy Hipkins, B.S., R.N.; Elaine Husch, B.S., R.N.; Jeanette Bailey, R.N.; Doris Smith, R.N. School of Nursing Faculty Seated: Frances McKenna, R.N., B.S., M.A., Director of Nursing Education and Associate Professor. Standing: Florence Priest, R.N., B.S., Instructor; Veronica Conley, R.N., B.A. M.N., Instructor; Jeanette Robinson, R.N., B.S., Instructor; B. Made- Uurses Second row: June Evans, R.N.; Martha Stevens, R.N.; Lillian Rollins, R.N.; Emma Blaskovich, R.N. Third row: Virginia Kavanaugh, R.N.; Evelyn Seldon, R. N.; Ellen Leist, R.N. FRANCES McKENNA,. R.N., M.A. Director of Nursing Education a ‘i 2 a line Schaub, R. N., B.S., Instructor; Ellen J. Bruner, R.N., B.S., Assistant Professor; Frieda Imogene Stewart, R.N., B.S., Instructor; Beatrice McGuire, R.N., B.S., M.A., Instructor. : Ninety-five School of Nursing Class of 1950 First row: Elizabeth Iddings, Jo Ann Keith, U. Janis Van Houten, Mary Evans, Alberta Gall, Josephine Colapietro, Mary Earnshaw, Betty Morris, Frances Schleppi. Second row: Patricia Mowery, Martha Hoff- meister, Rhoda Jewell, Josephine Ripple, Nancy Wilson, Barbara Forchheimer, Lou Ann Downing, Belva Hos- tettler, May Catell. Third row: Sophie Ifantiedes, Rachel Class of 1949 Hupp, Barbara Redding, Eugena Corder, Virginia Lau- ten, Patsy Keller, Mary Lou Geiser, Marilyn Fambough. Fourth row: Geneva Kokoruda, Margaret Kirkland, Vera Thomson, Lois Allen, Maxine Stevenson, Claribel Wilcox, Mary Downey. Fifth row: Christine Conner, Phyllis Wolford, Mary Browder, Patricia Clark, Mar- jorie Zeigler, Barbara Dalton. First row: Jean Perkins, Virginia Kachmar, Louise Brightbill Clapp, Esther Leonard, Jessie Pergrin, Martha Nelms, Cecelia Simon. Second row: Ethel Prince, Bonnie Simpkins, Persis Townsend, Jean Walters, Ruth Bum- garner, Floridene Snyder, Shirley Moran, Virginia Klop- fer, Helen Davis, Mary Smerdel, Mary Ann Moore. Third row: Jane Grattidge, Mary Brinkley, Normalee Wor- thington, Emily Freidhof, Gloria Cassetta, Mary Lewis, Ninety-six . — Mary Benson, Jean Tannehill, Joan Brown, Harriett Sto- vall. Fourth row: Phyllis Schlatter, Ruth Moon, Marie Diener, Marianna Fuller, Grace Wallace, Jane Corbet, Camilla Davis, Phyllis Zeiher. Fifth row: Carrie Cole, Dorothy Trimble, Reva Snavely, Louise Schillinger, Carolyn Young, Sally Kuntz, Barbara Scott. Sixth row: Kathleen Cannon, Mary Franks, Barbara Haigh, Jean Hoelscher, Virginia Roberds, Lillian Clark. school of Nursing Class of 1948 First row: Nettie Basinger, Elnora Basinger, Elaine Guiher, DeLores Jones. Third row: Patricia Lauer, Caroline Lucas, Barbara Hedge, Margaret Sieg Booth, Geraldine Elliott, Jane Rosemary Scott, Marianna Jones, Antoinette Berinato, Ritchie Harper. Second row: Martha ; Shaffer, June Wasinack, Helen Walmsley, Ro- Norma Stough, Jane Metz, Betty Mellinger, berta Connell, Barbara Dean, Sara Hoy, Lois Mary Ann Strike, Kreitler, Marjorie Glickman, Joyce Clinger, Now I lay me down to sleep .. .” Typical St. Francis with no Med. Stu- dents around. “Come up and see me sometime.” Just playin’ around. “Baby girl Jones?” Seniors Class Officers Lois Wagenhals bes ee ane ee Columbus; Kappa Alpha Theta; Torch Club; Presi- Anne Tock Marjorie Mae Stoner Lois Wagenhals Susan Short dent, Senior Class; Cadu- Treasurer Vice President President Secretary cean staff; B.S. in Nursing. Barbara Banker Atchison Gretchen Gonser Janet McDaniel Sue Short Eleanor Banks Jean Griffith Barbara McMillan Jane Sollars June Barker Dorothy Haynes Doris Marlowe Joanne Stanley Anna Nelms Beetham Ruth Irick Jean Marshall Bonnie Steve nson Betty Bickel Mary Johnson Florence Kaltenbach Marjorie May Stoner Loraine Bigler Florence Juh Murray Anne Tock Dorothy Black Barbara Kenyon Vada Nye Dorothy Ulmer Marthel Caldwell Lois Kievit : Joan Overmyer Virginia Vause Betty Calland Dorothy Lauten Molly Pugh Lois Wagenhals Margaret Coy Carol Lemley Betty Ranney Lois Whitacre. Alonna Croninger Jean Levinson Ann Ratliff Betty Jean Wiles Dorothy Debacher Thelma Long Sara Jane Rector Sally Williams Betty Deckard Patricia McCall Virginia Robey Margaret Wilson Betty Francis Martha McClellan Alice Shelton Mary Wood Mary Friel Ann Ratliff Hamilton; Torch Club; R.N. June Barker Columbus; R.N. Ninety-eight Barbara Banker Atchison Alliance; V.I.C.; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Betty Bickel Columbus; Student Gov- ernment; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Dorothy Black Columbus; Alpha Chi Omega; President, Sopho- more Class; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Betty Calland Steubenville; Alpha Chi Omega; Student Govern- ment; B.S. in Nursing. Alonna Croninger Wauseon; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Betty Francis Newark; Mixed Chorus; Vice President, Executive Council; President, Execu- tive Council; W.S.G.A.; Torch Club; Sigma Theta Tau; B.S. in Nursing. NOT PICTURED: Anna Nelms Beetham Jean Levinson Eleanor Banks Steubenville; Student Government; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Loraine Bigler Powhatan Point; Kappa Phi; B.S. in Nursing. Marthel Caldwell Warren; President, Uni- versity house; Pleiades; Torch Club; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Margaret Coy Hicksville; Pleiades; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Betty Deckard Columbus; Torch Club; Sigma Theta Tau; B.S. in Nursing. Mary Friel Columbus; Torch Club; R.N. Class ot 194'7 Ninety-nine Cadiz; Torch Club; B.S. Steubenville; Torch Club; in Nursing. B.S. in Nursing. Class of 194'7 Gretchen Gonser Columbus; Delta Zeta; B.S. in Nursing. Ruth Irick Ridgeway; Pleiades; B.S. in Nursing. Florence Juh Warrensville Heights; Student Government; Torch Club; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Lois Kievit Columbus; Student Gov- ernment; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Carol Lemley Galion; Kappa Phi; Sec- retary, Torch’ Club; B.S) in Nursing. Patricia McCall Worthington; BS. in Nursing. One Hundred Jean Griffith Columbus; Strollers; Al- pha Xi Delta; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Mary Johnson Bergholz; President, Jun- ior Class; ‘Torch’ .ClGgb;.B.o: in Nursing. Barbara Kenyon Van Wert; Student Gov- ernment; B.S. in Nursing. Dorothy Lauten Columbus Station; Pleia- des; B.S. in Nursing. Thelma Long Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Torch Club; Sigma Theta Tau; B.S. in Nursing. Martha McClellan Xenia; Symphonic Band; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Torch Club; B.S. in Nurs- ing. S Janet McDaniel Forest; Torch Club; R.N. Doris Marlowe Columbus; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Florence Kaltenbach Murray Columbus; Student Gov- ernment; Torch Club; Ple- iades; B.S. in Nursing. Joan Overmyer Mansfield; Student Gov- ernment; Pleiades; B.S. in Nursing. Betty Ranney Winter Park, Florida; Student Government; Torch Club; R.N. Virginia Robey Uhrichsville; Student Government; B.S. in Nurs- ing. NOT PICTURED: Sue Short Westerville; Secretary, Senior Class; R.N. Barbara McMillan Columbus; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Jean Marshall Newcomerstown; Alpha Delta Pi; Torch Club; Sig- ma. Chetay Tau: B.S.) ?in Nursing. Vada Nye Columbus; B. S. in Nurs- ing. Molly Pugh Columbus; Treasurer, Torch Club; Sigma Theta Tau; R.N. Sara Jane Rector Circleville; Delta Zeta; Torch Club; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Alice Shelton Columbus; B.S. in Nurs- ing. Marjorie May Stoner Class ot 1947 Marion; Vice President, Senior Class; R.N. One Hundred One Class ot 194'7 Jane Sollars Washington Court House; Student Government; Torch Club; Pleiades; Sig- ma’ ‘Theta Tau; B.S. in Nursing. Anne Tock Toronto; Torch Club; Ple- iades; Treasurer, Senior Class; B.S. in Nursing. Virginia Vause Lockbourne; Torch Club; Pleiades; B.S. in Nursing. Betty Jean Wiles Wellington; Concert Band; Mid-Mirrors; V.I.C-.; Pleiades; B.S. in Nursing. Mary Wood Lima; Torch Club; R.N. Dorothy Haynes Toledo; B.S. in Nursing. Joanne Stanley Columbus; Univers ity Chorus; Y.W.C.A.; Foil and Mask; Mid-Mirrors; Ple- iades; B.S. in Nursing. Dorothy Ulmer Bucyrus; University Chorus; Y.W.C.A.; Mid- Mirrors; Mirrors; Mortar Board; Student Govern- ment; President, Torch Club; Sigma Theta Tau; B.S. in Nursing. Lois Whitacre Alliance; Pleiades; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Margaret Wilson East Liverpool; W.S.G.A.; R.N. Dorothy Debacher Lima; Torch Club; B.S. in Nursing. Bonnie Stevenson Loudonville; Pleiades; B.S. in Nursing. Not Pictured: Sally Williams Cincinnati; Alpha Xi Del- ta; Mid-Mirrors; Mirrors; Strollers; Makio; Y.W.C.A.; B.S. in Nursing. One Hundred Two 1. Please hide the bottles, girls. 2. Chain gang. 3. What would Miss McKenna say! 4. 5 A beauties. 5. “We'll show the Big Z.” 6. “What's this I hear about you girls having dates?” 7. How are ya’, ole buddy? He, he, BON opie 8. Tenders to the snake pits. 9. Recess time. 10. Telling nurses jokes again. 1l. Chow time on AA. ieee ay © know that nursing is one of the oldest Tha air bosetls O27 5) 6G.0 home.” 14. “A patient for you, doctor.” 15. “Shut up, you rascal!” 16. Bottoms up! 17. Are there any medical stu- dents in the clinic?” 18. “No, I haven't seen any all day.” 19. Ipana, for the smile of beauty. 1 WO KWEKE i - ; i! 4 4% a hah Ls wis. it. bi vee i L.-T) So.ete my hepatoscope and we'll take a look.” 2. That straight and narrow road. 3. “The pain of a hangover can be re- lieved by...” 4. Date bureau. 5. “Let’s go ahead —it doesn’t look like an aneurysm to me!” 6. “Just like I thought —hyperne- phroma comes from kidney.” 7. Who _ turned those lights on?” 7a. “All right, I'll tell him this after- noon.” 8. “You bet!” 9. That’s where my money goes. lO ets cee ee ll. “Did you hear that snap?” 12. “But Doctor, she already has one kidney out!” 13. “We could use two pints right now.” 14. Birds of a feather ....” 15. “You bring it —we wreck it.” 15a. Bread line. 16. “On call” at the Mount. 17. Call RA 2 873 any evening after 5:00. 18. Casanova. 19. “I’m going to put you on an 800 calorie diet.” ings (o Come Why build these cities glorious If man unbuilded goes? In vain we build the world, unless The builder also grows. EDWIN MARKHAM Things to Come --- continued my besa | me | tal tay mii) Hit a] MAIN ENTRANCE LOBBY - UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL- OUIO STATE UNIVERSITY - COLUMBUS, OUIO. skiomorne, Ownes Megrue-Ancuts. The main entrance of the new medical center, depicted in the above sketch, will be composed of glass doors and will face South, opposite Kinsman Hall. The nebulous dreams of a year ago are fast approaching reality. Whereas last year at this time, we had only a vague outline of the fin- ished product, on Jan. 1, 1947 the final detailed drawings of our new Ohio State University Medical Center were delivered, as scheduled, into the hands of the Steering Committee for approval. This represents the culmination of over two years of intensive effort on the part of the faculty and student body to bring to the people of central Ohio the research, training, and hos- pital facilities which they have so long needed. It began with the appointment of Dr. Rollo C. Baker as acting Dean of the College of Medi- cine. He appointed a Building Committee and an Alumni Public Relations Committee, and meeting together, they determined a minimal need of a six hundred bed teaching hospital with appropriate allied facilities. This was re- ported in July, 1944. Then Dr. Charles A. Doan was appointed Dean of the College in Decem- ber, 1944 and pressing forward worked with far-sighted members of the Ohio Legislature to present this plan to the Finance Committee of the House of Representatives. Medical stu- dents contacted legislators in their home One Hundred Six counties who were quick to recognize the value of this proposal. Consequently, an appropria- tion of $5,000,000 was passed by the 96th assem- bly to construct not only a 600 bed hospital including out-patient facilities, but also a new $800,000 Dental Clinic. An additional $475,000 was also appropriated for a new 200 bed Neuro- psychiatric Receiving Unit for the Columbus State Hospital under the State Dept. of Public Welfare to be an integral part of the Medical Center. Thus, with money available and the plans completed, waiting only final approval before contractors’ bids are accepted, optimists predict that ground will be broken by July 1. The main edifice will be the University Hos- pital located just northwest of the present hos- pital; extending north of this will be a four story wing housing the new Out-Patient De- partment; extending east from the Out-Patient Department will be the new College of Dentis- try and Clinic. (See illustrations on frontis- piece, page 105 and page 109) The hospital is to be a thirteen story building combining the beauty and simplicity of modern architecture with efficiency and convenience in the care of patients. The south wall has been scientifically designed with broad eaves be- Things to Come - - - continued tween each floor shading the huge windows which comprise the entire wall of the patients’ rooms and which give an overall massive solar- ium effect. This construction admits the direct rays of the sun during the winter day, yet ex- cludes them during the mid-day heat of the summer months. On the ground floor will be the emergency rooms, a medical students’ lounge and locker room and the service departments including the kitchen. One enters the main floor through the entrance depicted on page 106 into the main lobby. On this floor are also Admitting and Administration. Classrooms, radiology, physi- cal medicine and the central clinical laborato- ries will be located on the second and third floors. The fourth and fifth floors, conspicuous by their lack of windows, will house twelve operat- ing rooms, completely air-conditioned, and artificially lighted. Along the north side of these at the fifth story level runs an observation Building Committee — “- % Wiseman, M.D., Charles A. Doan, M.D., George H. Ruggy, Ph.D., M.D., Louis B. Blair, B.A. Seated: Allan C. Barnes, M.Sc., M.D., Bruce K. Standing: Rollo C. Baker, M.A., Ph.D., Philip J. balcony. The patients’ rooms are on the next seven floors with approximately 80 beds per floor divided into three nursing units with each floor containing a student lab. On the sixth floor are the delivery rooms (also air-con- ditioned), the obstetrical beds and the nursery. The seventh will house the gynecological serv- ice plus some female surgical beds while the eighth and ninth floors are assigned to surgery. The department of Medicine will use the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth levels. On the top floor will be a beautifully appointed cafeteria and dining room. The spacious Out-Patient Department wil] eliminate over-crowding and give quiet and privacy in examining patients by providing in- dividual offices for each student working there. The five story Dental Building will approxi- mately double the facilities for the College of Dentistry. Here too, individual booths equipped for all but the most difficult procedures will be a Reel, D.V.M., M.D., Verne A. Dodd, M.D., Emmerich von Haam, M.D., Clayton S. Smith, Ph.D., M.D., Harry L. Reinhart, M.D. One Hundred Seven Things to Come --- continued provided for each junior and senior student. It is contemplated that the A wing of the present University Hospital will be used by a greatly expanded University Health service in- cluding a 90 bed infirmary in addition to Out- Patient facilities. The remainder of the hospi- tal will be employed by the Pathological and Pharmacological Chemistry Departments as well as providing living quarters for the house staff of the new hospital. The Medical Center will offer special medical care to any citizens of Ohio needing such serv- ice regardless of race, creed, color or economic status. As has the present University Hospital and Medical School, it will provide medical care for indigent patients and training for un- dergraduates and _ post-graduate physicians. Every bed will be a teaching bed! In addition, the Medical Center will provide a consultation service whereby physicians from any part of the state may send selected patients for diag- nosis and treatment or recommendations for treatment. Thus, it will serve as a repository for expensive and relatively infrequently used diagnostic and therapeutic equipment. Each department will be directed by a full time staff physician; and as before, prominent doctors from Columbus and vicinity will teach on a part time basis. This is the center for which plans are drawn and money appropriated. But it is only the basic unit of an extensive plan which allows for expansion into a Medical Center second to none. in possibilities in the country. As has been mentioned, funds have already been appropri- ated for the simultaneous erection of a 200 bed Neuropsychiatric Receiving Hospital in addi- tion to the basic plan. This is the first in a series of wings to be built in connection with the University Hospital proper. It is to be expected that eventually interested groups or government departments will see fit to erect other units including: a children’s hospital, a private general hospital, and a state tubercu- losis hospital; it is hoped that the latter may become a reality relatively soon as a bill has just been recently introduced into the present assembly for the construction of a 300 bed tuberculosis unit. To a considerable extent these wings would avoid the duplication of ex- pensive facilities by using those of the central hospital. One Hundred Eight The sketch of the new medical center which appears on the frontis- piece was made exclusively for the CADUCEAN by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Architects from an air- plane view taken by Charlie Meck- stroth, CADUCEAN photographer. Beate The eventual dream is to centralize all of the biological sciences (pharmacy, botany and zool- ogy, bacteriology, and veterinary medicine) in the 120 acres of land potentially available in this medical center area. With the physical ex- pansion of the University necessitated by a continued swollen student enrollment this dream must be realized in the immediate fu- ture if Ohio is to maintain the basis for superb physical and mental vigor for its sons and daughters so vital to the future welfare of mankind. Things to Come -- - continued INTE Sinevnoesy pee ee | SHE SOME WSO AIS RAING aItosews sees we 52°.s Oo = AAD WIS Nk PAL FBR a ne an oe ¥ One Hundred Nine And Now —- “It’s been 25 years since that day in March 1947 when we were graduated and left our youthful, carefree days behind us. Yes, a quar- ter of a century has passed and ages have doubled. The years have brought fame to some, fortune to others, and social security to a few: “Dr. Al Day, now retired, is still active as medical adviser to the Townsend organization. Rumor has it that he is to be succeeded by Dr. Weimer or Dr. Huston. Faith Cooper has de- clined the position as she plans to continue as team physician for the Chicago Bears. “Heartening news comes from Don Coola- han’s missionary hospital in Tanganyika. He is contributing the entire proceeds of his best seller, ‘Salve for the Zulus, a Record of My Exploits,’ to the International Milk Fund. “Dub Gifford and accomplices have startled the medical world with the new cut rates of their ‘You Should Live So Long’ Clinic: three dollars for a complete work-up and a thyroid- ectomy; fifty cents refunded when the skin clips are returned. “Genial Jack Wiltberger is now in his twelfth year as ‘Your Friendly Physician of the Air,’ the proletariat’s Dr. Crane. “Will Taylor has just started his twenty-sixth Dr. Killkare movie entitled ‘Dr. Killkare’s Coronary’. Studio gossip has it that this opus will terminate the series. “A text of really practical nuggets for medi- One Hundred Ten “The present is an indivisible point which cuts in two the length of an infinite line.” DIDEROT cal students has been compiled by Bob Young. Its title is ‘Steady, Fella’. “One of our unfortunate confreres, Dr. Segall, has been dogged by insomnia for the past few years. As a last resort, he has decided to re- turn to his alma mater to audit some lectures. “George Bell, Dean of the College of Medi- cine of Wooster University, told the student body in a commencement address that they had ‘constantly to keep pooshing’. “Dr. Nemcik has been credited with the in- vention of a sign of interest to doctors. It not only proclaims the practitioner’s name in five colors, but also gives an automatic estimate of the height, weight, general appearance, gait, and loose change of prospective patients by means of a concealed electric eye with x-ray attachment. “The latest book by Lenny Zintsmaster, nu- trition expert, is ‘All Obesity Is Alimentary ’. Dr. Zintsmaster evidently prefers to remain a powerful but anonymous figure in the fat field as he consistently refuses to make any public appearances. “Howard Sirak, known to his staff as ‘The Big S’, has returned to his spastic clinic after a leave of absence. “Drs. Martha Southard and Connie Connors have made a radical change in their urology practice. Popular demand has prevailed upon them finally to accept male patients. And Now - “The leading authority in the country on narcolepsy is Dr. Bloch. He claims it takes years of effort to develop this disease. “George Clauer ran into trouble during a recent pneumonectomy when a fuse blew in his office. “Dick Welsh is nursing an unilateral periocu- lar hematoma. Evidently one of his patients did not like the name ‘Jack’. “Howard Tucker is recovering from body bruises sustained when he was accidentally stepped on the other day. “Dr. Tourkow has been chosen the nation’s number one menace to pedestrians. Just before his selection Dr. Tourkow claimed his one hun- dred and thirty-second victim in a corridor of one of our local hospitals. He maintains that the accident was unavoidable as the child stood directly in his path. “Ophthalmologist H. Shapiro has perfected a new eye for women. Of course, it is still in the experimental stage and must be tested on a vast amount of clinical material. “¢ A Horn Player’s Syndrome’ is described in the current issue of ‘Etude’ by Dr. Senn. The presenting symptoms are chipmunk cheeks, red lips, and disgruntled neighbors. As yet, no satisfactory treatment has been found, and the usual termination is eviction. “Oscar Klein, temporarily deserting medi- cine, is playing the title role in the Broadway revival of ‘Harvey’. “Dr. Tim Caris is the author of that hi t song, ‘The Last Time I Saw Caris’. “Warren Hoffman fractured his mandible the other day while making a diagnosis of amau- rotic familial idiocy. “A. Enriquez-Navarro, M.D. has published a paper on ‘The Use of the Thumb-Screw in the Practice of Pediatrics’. “The new specialty of endocardoscopy is be- ing developed, though not too rapidly, by Jim Harmon. “During the past 25 years, Dr. Jackson Riddle has become the world’s outstanding authority on the sex life of Klebsiella pneumoniae. He has recently culminated his research with the establishment of the oestrus cycle for this species. “Drs. Beitzel, Siegler, and Bovard are out- standing trichologists. Ray and Ed have devel- oped an ideal trichogen. As proof, they have three shaggy billiard balls on display. Charley admitted at the last state medical convention that there was no way to arrest trichopoliosis. “In a related field Paul Hatfield has estab- lished himself as a first-rank cranial dermatol- ogist. “Dr. S. Brody, now Angus McBrody, has emi- grated to Scotland where the environment is more to his liking. “Speaking of the Scotch brings Ed Bonar to mind. He is the author of that monumental monograph, ‘Spiritus Frumenti’. “Donn Tippett and Chuck McReynolds are also strong advocates of ethanol therapy. “Rusty Wagers is hopping mad since the ‘Archives of Surgery’ refused his extensive re- port on bovine mastitis. ‘They’re m’own cattle, too,’ said Rusty. “Dr. Pancho Wiltberger performed his forty- third bilateral nephrectomy last week. Bill is one of the more radical surgeons operating south of the border. “During a recent operation by Dr. Wright, the famous thoracic surgeon, his first assistant sneezed and got his right thumb sewed into the incision. To quote Dr. Wright: ‘Speed is of the essence’. “Dr. W. Cope has been an active playwright ever since the startling success of the senior class play which he co-authored in 1947. That’s a joke, son. “Dr. Tytus, the neuro-surgeon, chews only Corona-Coronas now that he has become a diplomat of the board. One Hundred Eleven And Now - “Dr. Koontz has just finished leafing through all those books he acquired while going to medical school. “Cecil B. Meckstroth has produced another technicolor extravaganza, ‘Borborygmus Blues’. Music and lyrics are by Bob Murnane including such hits as ‘Fancy Flatus’. “Dr. Katz, better known as Zelique of the Waldorf, has achieved a gustatorial triumph. All New York is talking about his testicular seminoma and with pymphoid stroma and marshmallow syrup. “Dr. Cloe Bowen will resume her obstetrical practice after recovering from her recent ton- sillectomy. “Ray Brown breaks the monotomy of. his large Los Angeles medical practice by acting as stand-in for the aging Harpo Marx. “Warren Kleinmaier has been appointed medical examiner for the Atlantic City beauty contests. Overcoming his reluctance, the offi- cials drafted him for the position. “Dr. Harrison Quincey Cope is in his fifth year as Dean of Harvard Medical School. “Lieutenant Elliott, M.C. observed his silver jubilee in ‘This Man’s Army’. He loves that life. “The nation’s leading authority on male re- juvenation is Dr. Bates, publisher of Liberty Magazine. “Dr. Ohliger has been missing for the past several weeks. The noted pharmacologist was last known to be working on a universal sol- vent. “Commander James Simmons has led an ex- pedition to Antarctica in search of medicinal oils. Dr. Simmons is so famous for his fearless work in this field that he is often called the ‘Oily Byrd’. “Senator Edward Wilson, Jr., M.D. has intro- One Hundred Twelve duced a bill for more strict socialization of medicine in the Senate. “Dr. Irwin Krakoff has been elected president of Physician’s Local 5, C.I.O. in Columbus. May Zaugg is chairman of the all-important picket committee. “Surgeon J. C. Lindsey's friends have nick- named him ‘Jack the Snipper’. “Dr. Peppercorn sold his tan Pontiac (re- member?) last week. He figured that any mile- age over 25,000 would reduce its trade-in value. “Lloyd Barnes is head of the Committee to Investigate Un-Medical Activities. Dr. Barnes thinks he has found some reds loose in the hematology department. “Honest John Emery has added a shell game to his office equipment. “Drs. Busby and Ralston were suspended at the last A.M.A. convention when they refused to smoke Camels. “Bob Thomas was picked up by a truant officer again yesterday when he left his birth certificate at home. “Dr. Craig is writing a paper on the variance in feeling among nurses in different localities. “Drs. Detrick, Retterbush, and Smith, gyne- cologists par excellence, have developed a plas- tic digit for short or shy M.D.’s. It has been tried on several patients and they have been tickled with it. Its greatest value is in the bi- manual diagnosis of bronchiectasis. “Joe Klausner is enjoying unusual success at Mayo’s where everybody is crazy for his action. “Dick Miller is now known as the Milton Cross of Medicine. He is in great demand as a speaker. “Fred Henry has been doing some personal research on the physiological properties of Sea- gram’s Seven Crown. Aided by Dr. Cotterman he has worked out the miscibility ratio of this substance with Prestone. “Bill Merryman has greatly improved the lot of interns and medical students by discovering a method for removing juniper berry stains And Now - from bathtubs. “Drs. Mack and Lord have invented a right- angled needle for thick-skinned patients. When it bends it straightens out. “That is the roll call. It’s nice to see how the old cut-ups are doing. Maybe we'll have a re- union soon and see them lay the cornerstone of the proposed medical center.” Congratulations, Seniors Dr. Marion L. Ainsworth Dr. Rollo C. Baker Dr. Allan C. Barnes Dr. Earl H. Baxter Dr. Hugh G. Beatty Mr. Louis B. Blair Dr. Wade D. Bower Dr. Donald F. Bowers Dr. Wayne Brehm Dr. John E. Brown, Sr. Dr. Grace Nunemaker Brown Dr. John B. Brown Dr. John E. Brown, Jr. Dr. Olan P. Burt Dr. Thomas E. Clark Dr. John L. Clifton Dr. Kenneth W. Cook Dr. Dana W. Cox Dr. George M. Curtis Dr. Robert F. Daly Dr. Clyde W. Dawson Dr. C. Joseph DeLor Dr. Charles A. Doan Dr. Verne A. Dodd Dr. R. Frank Donley Dr. Herbert D. Emswiler Dr. Roswell S. Fidler Dr. Huston F. Fulton Dr. Howard M. Gilmore Dr. Mary A. Graber Dr. John B. Gravis D rok; E Hall Dr. Walter H. Hamilton Dr. D. O. Hankinson Dr. Warren G. Harding II Dr. Edward W. Harris Dr. Harold K. Harris Dr. William B. Harris Dr. Frank A. Hartman Dr. Eldred B. Heisel Dr. Zeph J. R. Hollenbeck One Hundred Thirteen Congratulations, Seniors Dr. Charles R. Holzer Dr. Herman A. Hoster Dr. Ben C. Houghton Dr. George K. Hughes Dr. L. N. Jentgen Dr. Arnold B. Johnson Dr. Henry W. Karrer Dr. Robert Keating Dr. Edward T. Kirkendall Dr. R. W. Kissane Dr. Ruth Koons Dr. Florence Lenahan Dr. Norris E. Lenahan Dr. Ralph W. Lewis Dr. Tom F. Lewis Dr. Donald L. Mahanna Dr. H. Sherman Manuel Dr. Hugh J. Means Dr. John W. Means Dr. Howard R. Mitchell Dr. Joseph L. Morton Dr. Link M. Murphy Dr. Jay McLean Dr. George I. Nelson Dr. D. M. Palmer Dr. J. B. Patterson Dr. Charles Pavey Dr. Claude S. Perry One Hundred Fourteen Dr Dr, George E. Peters W. L. Potts ij eraven . 1, Darin Puppel . Dal e E. Putnam . Philip. Reel . Harry L. Reinhart . Norman O. Rothermich . George H. Ruggy . Carl W. Sawyer . Joseph H. Shepard . C. C. Sherburne . C. C. Shinbach . Robert Shoene . Wynne M. Silbernagel . E. J. Simms . William P. Smith . William A. Stoutenborough . Frank F. Tallman . William N. Taylor . Donald Traphagen . Murrell H. Turton . Emmerich von Haam . George B. Watson . Edward Harlan Wilson . P. B. Wiltberger . Bruce K. Wiseman . Claude-Starr Wright . Robert E. S. Young . Luke V. Zartman . Robert M. Zollinger Experience beyond the books practical wisdom from the confident, experienced physician. And as he 8° into his own practice, the younger man’s experience will s e wisdom of placing his confidence in medicaments . 5 : Ma AST, AMMA], iN ’ ticals: cap: De ee ae cin : eccye } e he Write for literature. nts, sterilized solutions X SEQs™ SQqggs One Hundred Fifteen BANKERS LIFE COMPA, Practitioners of the medical profession, through the centuries, have given sacrificially of their time and their energies to foster a happier, a longer, and a more wholesome life for every human being. “ Sincere congratulations and hearty best wishes to each of you upon your official entrance into this select humanitarian circle. Samuel S. Loyer, Special Agent Suite 3230 LeVeque Lincoln Tower Telephone: ADams 4254 Columbus 15, Ohio Bankers Life Company Des Moines STUDENT DIRECTORY CLASS OF 1950 Name Address Phone Babb, John- Littler = 32 768 Wilson Ave., Ev. 0685 Baxter, Roth: M22 ee 231 W. 10th Ave., Un. 9290 Berson, William Leonard____201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Blesch, William Robert____263 Chesterfield Rd., Do. 3795 Bloom, John Donald Bope, Charles Edward EXE S47 es 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 ae UWeel the AV ero Sek Brand, Roscoe C.___________126 W. Tulane Rd., Je. 7093 Brown, William Ellis________ Marysville, Ohio. —______ Campbell, William Hodgens, 297 W. 10th Ave., Wa. 61542 Capobianco, Michael Angelo._199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Carson, Doris Newell... ___ 54 Garden Rd., Je. 7066 Chiles, Bennie Walter_______578 Stanley Ave., Ga. 4437 Name Address Phone Cornish, George Gantz_.___State Fair Grounds_________ Cox; Charles Vincent . 22s. 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Crosby, David Joseph__River Road Dormitory________- Curry, Robert Irwins 2-22 == 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Daniels, John Raymond________ _ 126 Erie Rd., La. 5318 Davis, Mary Adele (Mrs.)_..__1364 N. 4th St., Un. 1987 Faehnle, Thomas Marion_______ 2367 Southway, Ki. 4963 Freetage, George Henry______-__ 759 S. 6th St., Ga. 9939 Fulsher, Remy Walter________354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Glass, Bernard___.__-._____-___32 15th Ave., Wa. 3516 Goff William larry sce. 2s 188 Clinton St., La. 8540 Graham, Thomas W.______-.--1499 Perry St., Wa. 5885 Gum, Oren Berkley. oo. anes 2872 Neil Ave., La. 5491 Heffelfinger, John Wm. __ _321 W. 10th Ave., Wa. 61724 (Continued on page 121) One Hundred Sixteen SCHOEDINGER Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS EAST STATE STREET AT FIFTH AD 6105 BLOCK’S The University Flower Shop 11 16TH AVE. NICKLAUS PHARMACY PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS Filling Prescriptions is the most important part of our Business A REAL DRUG STORE High Chittenden Cleveland IIth LOWELL L. NEWMAN Representing THE ROBERT K. ZIMMER AGENCY The Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company 66 E. Broad St. MAin 4294 College City Cleaners If your clothes ARE NOT becoming to you, they should be coming to US. LA. 0826 1606 N. High St. COMPLIMENTS OF Rogers Arlington Pharmacy 2136 ARLINGTON AVE. COLUMBUS, OHIO One Hundred Seventeen WENDT-BRISTOL COMPANY The Prescription Store of Columbus QUALITY — DEPENDABILITY Manufacturing Fine Pharmaceuticals e Distributors Physician and Hospital Supplies We Would Appreciate the Opportunity of Serving You 51 East State Street 721 North High Street AD 6108 MA 3153 QUALITY COURTESY CONVENIENCE COMPLETELY AIR CONDITIONED PRIVATE AMBULANCE SERVICE THE P. E. RUTHERFORD CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS UNiversity 5264 WAlnut 1716 2383 NORTH HIGH STREET COLUMBUS, OHIO One Hundred Eighteen Alacta; Amigen Powder; Ami gen Solution 10%; Amigen | _ 5% in 5% Dextrose Solution; — [ Cod Liver | _ Mead’s Cod Liver Oil With — _ Viosterol; Dextri-Maltose Nos. 1, 2 3; Dextri-Maltose Wit! “Yeast Extract and fron; Mead: Halibut Liver Oil; Mead’s Pow dered Lactic Acid Milk No. 2: Mead's Menadione in Oil Mead’s Niacin Teblets; Nutrom: igen; Olac; Mead's Oleu Percomorphum With Other | ' Fish-Liver Oils and Viosterol {liquid and capsules}; Pabena; Pablum: Mead’s Pectin-Agarin — Dextri-Maltose; Mead’s Pow- _ dered Protein Milk; Mead’s Riboflavin Tablets; Sobee; Mead’s Thiamine Hydrochloride __ Tablets; Mead’s Viosterol in Oil; Mead’s Viostero!l in Hali- but Liver Oil; Mead’s Brewers Yeast Powder; Mead’s Brewers _ Yeast Tablets. “When you see one of us on a package of medicine or food, it means first of all that the manufacturer thought enough of the product to be willing to have it and his claims carefully examined by a board of critical, unbiased experts .. . We're glad to tell you that this product was examined, that the manufacturer was willing to listen to criticisms and suggestions the Council made, that he signified his willingness to restrict his advertising claims to proved ones, and that he will keep the Council in- formed of any intended changes in product or claims ... There may be other similar products as good as this one, but when you see us on a package, you know. Why Suess, or why take someone’s self-interested word? If the product is everything the manufacturer claims, he should have no reason for hesitancy m submitting it to the Council.” NSON CO., Evansville 21, Ind. One Hundred Nineteen BYALL KINNEY PURE OIL DEALERS Bumper to Bumper Service BRAKE SERVICE MOTOR TUNE-UP LUBRICATION ACCESSORIES BATTERIES TIRES Lith High LA 0706 We invite you to visit The Surgical Store of Columbus SURGICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS PHYSIOTHERAPY EQUIPMENT MODERN TREATMENT FURNITURE The Columbus Hospital Supply Company 271 E. BROAD AD 3738 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1947 THE FURNITURE HOUSE 1500 N. High St. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Lucktenberg, Prop. PARRISH CLEANERS 1538 N. High St. WORLEY'S RESTAURANT At Ith and High Mrs. Flora Worley, Prop. B F BARBERS 1604 N. High St. McCABE EYERMAN UNIVERSITY JEWELERS 1580 and 1852 N. High St. GROFF'S PHARMACY Lane and High Paul H. Groff, Prop. One Hundred Twenty MODERN ! , DAY LAUNDRY 1568 N. High St. Moe Glassman's College Shoppe COR. IIth and HIGH STREET Men's Haberdashery — Interwoven Socks CONNOR'S SOHIO SERVICE Cor. Park and Russell Next to White Cross Hospital WOODS SOHIO SERVICE At Lane and Neil ORMEROD'S PHARMACY 1537 N. 4th St. LA. 0859 McFARLAND HARDWARE 1575 N. High St. UN. 6869 CLASS OF 1950 (Continued from page 116) Name Address Phone Name Address Phone Imboden, Lester Ernest___..466 Larcand Ave., Ra. 5594 Meyers, pattie Louise. 558 Gilbert St., Fa. 9756 Johnson, Dean Howell______ 175% W. Frambes_ Miles, Gordon Leslie.._.=_._... 246 Oak St..._.2.._2 Kelemen, William Arthur____46 W. 10th Ave., Wa. 2486 Mitchell, Marvin Lee_______..201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 RohnsMaryinelr iss Ol 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Montalto, Paul Norman____._176 W. 9th Ave., Un. 4094 Landis, George Elliott__________ 2350 Club Rd., Ki. 3929 Morkel, Gordon Franklin__7457 Riverside Dr., Fr. 2-8512 Worthington Levine, Robert “s 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Nehrer, Carl Joseph_________ 28 W. Lane Ave., Un. 6438 Loughry, Charles William ___ 1652 13th Ave., Un. 3376 Ogram, Gordon Fern__________98 E. 16th Ave., Wa. 3474 Lovett, John Daniel_________ _1994 Suffolk Rd., Ki. 5594 Plymire, Frank G.____________1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 McCl J Herbert______ ; F 3 See ioe eee Smee, eee Polsley, John Raymond____._268 Miller Ave., Fa. 2884 McMullen, Chas. H._1501 Franklin Ave., Apt. A, Ev. 8389 Prescott, Thomas M._._____ 466 King Ave., Wa. 5623 Mark, Lloyd Karon________ 2498 Sherwood Rd., Fa. 2144 Randall, Jack Maynard______54 W. Starr Ave., Wa. 3480 Matson, James Evans_________ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Reiman, Richard William _______115 18th Ave., Wa. 3593 (Continued on page 123) Always Rememter--- AKRON APPLIANCES HAVE MET EVERY SURGICAL NEED FOR OVER 40 YEARS @ 2000 AKRON EXCLUSIVE DEALERS @ LEADERS IN EVERY COMMUNITY @ PROFESSIONALLY TRAINED FITTERS @ MODERN FITTING EQUIPMENT @ STRICT ADHERENCE TO YOUR ast YES; aura fl KA BERLE Dp Ter 9 IN COLUMBUS IT'S The Akron Truss Appliances, Inc. AKRON MAYO TYPE 137 E. Gay St. MAin 4860 SACRO-ILIAC SUPPORT One Hundred Twenty-one Congratulations from CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL Congratulations from ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL Congratulations from HAWKES HOSPITAL OF MT. CARMEL One Hundred Twenty-two Congratulations and Best Wishes To the Class of ’47 GRANT HOSPITAL Best Wishes To The Sentor Class WHITE CROSS HOSPITAL Congratulations from ol. ANTHONY HOSPITAL CLASS OF 1950 (Continued from page 121) Name Address Phone Name Address Phene Richardson, Lucille__________1948 Iuka Ave., Wa. 1006 Ray lorem Wal ariel eee ee 2674 Kent Rd., Ki. 6711 Romaker, James Richard__999 Delaware Ave., Wa. 6361 Thomas, Dean Seidel_______.._90 W. 10th Ave., Un. 4524 Runner, Alfred George______ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Toombs, Miller Frederick__2376 Andover Rd., Ki. 1787 Sakol, Marvin Jay__________201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 VanDeWater, Jewell Edward__2149%2 N. High, Wa. 2518 Sand, Richard Eugene_____ 707 Sheridan Ave., Fa. 6498 VanHarlingen, George William, 175 W. 10th Ave. Schroeder, Richard A._________ 1088 17th Ave., Un. 4768 Varner, Carol Dewey (Mrs.) __2635 Summit St., Je. 4743 Shaw, William Raymond____5019 No. High St.._._-_____ Walters, James M....5 = 2.2 Pataskala, Ohio, 32-L Sheahan, Robert Charles______ 2683 Kent Rd., Ki. 1359 WiGISSee Cyl Tiel VL. = eee see ee 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Simonis, William George____41 N. Oakley Ave., Ra. 4165 Williams John Kin bei es 86 Haldy Ave., Ra. 5923 Slaughter, Robert Dodds_____ _1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Winzeler, Edwin C._______- 410 W. Third Ave..__--_— Stanly, Anna’ Marie-___.______357 Fallis Rd, La. 4373 Worthman, John______________1436 Neil Ave., Un. 8646 Stinson, Byron Briggs .____ New Holland, Ohio, 3746 Zartman, William V.____._.1819 Roxbury Rd., Ki. 4829 Congratulations H. Bae A Ve Or and Best Wishes Q DRUGS AND PHYSICIANS To The Senior eres Class Surgical Instruments—Trusses—Crutches 4 x x) Elastic Stockings — Artificial Eyes Examination Room Furniture Therapeutic Lamps ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL 80 East Long Street COLUMBUS, OHIO One Hundred Twenty-three 4] AKRON 8, O. 1013 Akron Sav. Lean Phone: Fr. 7222 COLUMBUS 16, O. 82 No. High Street Phone: Adams 5181 CUMBERLAND, MD. 72 Pershing St. Phone: 2281 DAYTON 1, O. 302 Fidelity Bldg. Phone: Adams 1551 DETROIT 31, MICH. 346 Book Tower ANN ARBOR, MICH. 308 Wolverine Bldg. Phone: 21040 BATTLE CREEK, MICH. 407 Cen. Natl. Tower Phone: 5933 BAY CITY, MICH. 203 Cunningham Building Phone: 27271 CINCINNATI 1, O. Provident Bank Bldg. Phone: Parkway 2698 ERIE, PA. Erie Trust Bldg. Phone: 23-055 Phone: 9-5717 CLEVELAND i, O. 1519 Guardian Bldg. Phone: Cherry 4773 years of service through our laboratories INDIANAPOLIS 6, IND. Hume-Mansur Bldg. Phone: Market 4503 LIMA, O. 405 Cook Tower Phone: 17-2571 LOUISVILLE, KY. 256 Francis Bldg. Phone: Jackson 0133 MARION, O. Phone: Cadillac 0210 FLINT 3, MICH. 403 National Bldg. GRAND RAPIDS 1, MICH. COLUMBUS 16, O. 2nd Floor, Watson Bldg. Phone: 94319 HUNTINGTON 18, W. VA. SAGINAW, MICH. 907 Fifth Ave. Phone: 5409 SOUTH BEND, IND. 327 Sherland Bldg. Phone: 3-8523 SPRINGFIELD, ILL. 524 E. Capitol Ave. Phone: 2-2331 SPRINGFIELD, O. 1st. Natl. Bank Tr. Bldg. Phone: 4551 TOLEDO 3, O. 311 Ohio Bldg. Phone: MAin 9821. WASHINGTON, PA. 604 Washington Union Trust Bldg. Washington 1166 WHEELING, W. VA. Uhler-Phillips Bldg. Phone: 3146 PEORIA, ILL. 440 Jefferson Bldg. Phone: 6902 PITTSBURGH 30, PA. 604 Penn Avenue Phone: Atlantic 6468 Phone: WHG 2402 General Offices Phone: Adams 5181 Phone: 77140 ZANESVILLE, O. 210 Eddy Bldg. Lind Arcade Phone: 2-2109 THE WHITE-HAINES OPTICAL COMPANY Des an en 8 ea Rio OLN Punv ES? CO “Hiole Pla Omey CLASS OF 1949 Name Address Agey, Wayne Lyle_____ See eee OO LV NOLWICN =e Alexander, James Firth_- 345 W. 10th Ave., Un. Anshutz, William M.___ _ _.+_=_-.390 Oak St., Ad. Baumgartner, Loren Ralph, 38 W. Norwich Ave.__ Bolen, John Grant______. __1926 Baldridge Rd., Ki. Boswell, J. Thornton______315 W. 10th Ave., Un. Broaddus, Edward John______. 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. Brown, Robert Thurman___._354 W. 9th Ave., Un. Brown, Warren Joseph____. _199 W. 10th Ave., Un. Bryant, William Walter__ ___1454 Neil Ave., Wa. Buccalo, Dora Alethea_____ ___1211 Neil Ave., Un. Cameron, Donald Kimmel____ 381 W. 9th Ave., Un. Campbell, Gwendolyn D.___- 378 W. 9th Ave., Un. Campbell, Robert Louis—589 S. Terrace Ave., Ra. Carroll’ Ray. __365 13th Ave., Un. Phone 6548 3523 2661 611 Central Union Bldg. YOUNGSTOWN 3, O. 210 Dollar Bank Bldg. Phone: MAin 2700 SB RV ate Gee Name Address Phone Caudilk Rod Clarke 1718 N. 4th St., Wa. 6847 Cooper, Robert Frank_______ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Crawford, John Patrick. 4.2) 2253 N. High St., Un. 1259 Cummins, Neil Winston____2577 Findlay Ave., La. 7278 Dawson, JoAnn_____. _____1946 Indianola Ave., Un. 1761 Donovan; William-Holt Jr 22364, No Bigiaieese Dowell Glenn CG. Jl = _._1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Duffee, James Harvey 1101 Urlin Ave., Ki. 5687 Elson, Matthew William__1837 Cleveland Ave., Wa. 2939 Fogle, Richard Johnston______ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Forgerson, James G._____-__- 224 W. 10th Ave., Un. 9637 Gantt, Don Lowell____1085 S. Cassingham Rd., Do. 2463 Geiger, Mildred Louise____1123 Franklin Ave., Ev. 4606 Hamelberg, William __________ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Hardie, James Alexander_94 N. Westmoor Ave., Ra. 8977 (Continued on page 126) One Hundred Twenty-four | | Think of HEER PRINTING : | When you need... OFFICE FURNITURE | OFFICE SUPPLIES Our complete stock can fulfill your every need—Make one call and order your Office Supplies and Printing at one time. ADams 4125 -- Stationery, Office Supply and Furniture Dept. 5 trunk lines are available to handle your calls. 364 - 386 South Fourth Street Columbus 15, Ohio ADAMS 4125 One Hundred Twenty-five CLASS OF 1949 (Continued from page 124) Name Address Phone Name Address Phone Herold, Ployd ‘hari. e 244 W. 9th Ave., Un. 2707 Lohmuller, Herbert Wendel___1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Hilles, Carolyn_____ ow 87 McMillen, Wa. 62004 Love, William Clinton____213 W. Wilbur Ave., Un. 3700 Hndson, Dale ‘Alvin 2... = 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 McCampbell, Malcolm D.____ 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Hyams, Hopess = eae ee 333 W. 9th Ave., Un. 9239 McGarry, John Francis______ 295 W. 10th Ave., Un. 6557 Ingram, Ernagene__ Powell, Ohio, Fr. 2-8416 Mayer, Robert Ernest_______ 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Jackson, Richard L.0_. 2. 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Metzger, Paul St. Clair. 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Jesik, Anthony John_________ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Monroe, James Richard______ 315 W. 10th Ave., Wa. 1398 Kaffenberger, Edythe Clay____378 W. 9th Ave., Un. 7908 Novell, Howard Andrew_1764 Northwest Blvd., Ki. 0954 Karp, Howard Neil_________ 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Nyce, Clarence Barndt_______ 93 W. 11th Ave., Un. 1084 Kennedy, Roland Louis____-38 W. Norwich Ave.__.___ Parke, David William________ 2366 N; High e St. es Kimmelman, Jerome_______ 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Parks, Tracy Gregory, Jr.____ 1200 Author Pl., Ev. 3084 Kirkpatrick, Joe Stewart___834 Franklin Ave., Ev. 3424 Philbrook, Seth Sydney_______ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Klages, Reynold Edward, Jr._Pickerington, O., Fr. 4-6418 Pignolet, Wesley Jules_______ 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Krause, Raymond Joseph__188 E. Frambes Ave., Un. 5542 Price; Douglas: Boyds. 5 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Leithart, Paul Walter__2578 Lockbourne Ave., Ga. 7619 Pritchard, Kirkwood Arthur__244 W. 9th Ave., Un. 2707 (Continued on page 127) WE'RE-FROCK-DOCTORS We amputate spots, stains, and just plain dirt by modern methods . . . garments come to us looking sick and maltreated . . . when finished they have a fresh healthy glow. Classmate Dry Cleaners 18 Years at LA 0816 258 W. 10th Ave. (Back of Campus Neil) For the Unusual in Flowers - - - ROBERT H. McCORMICK'S UNIVERSITY FLOWER SHOP 1664 Neil Avenue at I Ith Phone UN. 2916 One Hundred Twenty-six Compliments Carroll Weir Funeral Home, Inc. and Ambulance Service 675 E. Broad Street MA. 5551 VARSITY DRUG CO. 16th Ave. High St @ Imported Briar Pipes Tobacco and Pouches Prescriptions Filled SEN ee enc More Than $2,000,000,000 Insurance In Force THE LINCOLN NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY K. V. FARGO AGENCY 616 Beggs Bldg. COLUMBUS 15, OHIO Phone: AD 1297 We have enjoyed serving you and extend hearty congratulations and best wishes for your SUCCESS STATE DRUG SUPPLY SHOPPE 1660 NEIL AVE. CLASS OF 1949 (Continued from page 126) Name Address Protetch, Myer David__. IPTV OULY LOD ET Ulises 159 W. Dunedin Rd., La. Reed, Barbara Anne_______ 332 Cliffside Drive, La. Robie Cart Olle ia Ls 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. Rosenblum, Jerold Mark ____201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. Salisbury, Alvin Burton, Jr.__239 E. 19th Ave., Un. Sass, Morton__ Schreiber, Gerald Gregory__199 W. 10th Ave., Un. Simpson, Arthur McClelland____152 E. Tulane, Je. Spangler, David Joseph______ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. Speers, Herbert Kenneth_____93 W. 11th Ave., Un. Stecker, Arthur Irving__.- __396 King Ave... Stephens, John: Hi22232 222 273 Belvidere Ave., Ra. etoiel, Jack Otlos. 2) so .. 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. Straw, Constance Marcile_18 Neilwood Gables, Un. _._.201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. _-201 W. 11th., Wa. Phone 4741 6237 0681 Name Address Phone Desi; Aulus see ee 360 14th Ave... Wasoese Thatcher, Jonathan Skiles__ 1893 Myrtle Ave.____.____ Thompson, Lawrence Carson____270 15th Ave., Un. 6231 Thornburgh, David B._______199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Tucker, Leonard Charles____201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Verosky, John Michael________1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Walters, Donald William _____ _1487 Perry St., Un. 3055 Ward, Creed Francis________202 E. Spring St., Ma. 6779 West, James Russell________.224 W. 10th Ave., Un. 9637 Whittenberger, Robert N.__15 Indianola Court, Wa. 62651 Wilker, Irving- ___201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Wifbetchm Ise gaollcle -@ Tyo 3 el awe 224 W. 10th Ave., Un. 9637 Zellmer, Robert William_____244 W. 9th Ave., Un. 2707 Zipser, Lester Louis_____ 227 S, Remington Rd., Ev. 5732 Zito, Andrew Joseph________ 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 One Hundred Twenty-seven Beach, Charles Herman__415 S. Parkview Ave., Fa. 7337 ° : You are paid for loss-of Le time due to SICKNESS. e : You are paid for loss of = time due to ACCIDENT. e f Provides CASH for your = family in event of DEATH. e j Provides you with a Retirement = fund for OLD AGE. ONE COMPLETE PLAN PROTECTS YOU For Information of This Unusual Plan— Phone TODAY... JOHN R. SCOTT PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. 20 SO. THIRD ST. MAin 5176 RAndolph 5086 CLASS OF 1948 Address Phone Name Address Phone Ashcraft, John Randolph_____ 450 E. Town St., Ad. 7570 Cook, Daniel George___________ 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Barch, John Wallace____St. Anthony’s Hospital Fa. 3141 Custer, Harry Richard______ 621% Wager St., Ga. 6049 Barth, Robert LeRoy_________ 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Distelhorst, Robert George pa IN -1676 Westwood Ave., Ki. 1062 Duber, Herbert Charles. 1184 Lilley Ave., Ev. 4681 Binkley, William F.____._____1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Duffey, George Wallace___511 Southwood Ave., Ga. 8237 Bolon, Charles Gordon________ 2468 Elm Ave., Fa. 9039 Dustin, Robert William | Grant Hospital, Ad. 5151 Bontley, John Robert______ 505 E. N. Broadway, Je. 2254 Dye, Donald (Ray eee 134 W. 9th Ave., Wa. 5263 , FE: ‘i ._____354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 : ‘ BLOCK, UCTAS LGTIAS Io e eere en ege Erk, DeWitt _____.3066 Indianola, La. 7896 Brooks, George Tanner __..131 Lilley Ave., Fa. 5108 Essig, Alvin : 201 W. 11th Ave. Wa. 4741 Brown, Virginia Hermanson Foelsch, Charles B.._____ 134 W. 9th Ave., Wa. 5263 son eeee, rater Ave., Je. 2066 : peta tate es) Foxman, Hijottess22 eo. 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Burger, John Hutchfield____381 Linwood Ave., Fa. 9882 Franklin, Abby_________ 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Burson, Carl Reid : St. Francis Hospital, Ma. 7731 Franklin tAris “Wes ele 38 14th Ave., Wa. 1285 (Continued on page 129) One Hundred Twenty-eight CLASS OF 1948 (Continued from page 128) Name Address Phone Name Address Phone Gallen, William Joseph ____ 176 Winthrop Rd., La. 4948 Jacob, Stanley Wall ace________ 85 W. 9th Ave., Un. 1909 Gardner, Robert Earl_______ 185 W. 10th Ave., Un. 1090 Lacy, Paul Eston______ 187 W. Frambes Ave., Un. 5500 Gurord, Gordon’ Biz. 2.2 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Lanfersieck, Robert Hugh______ 1595 Perry St., Un. 4697 Gould, Ned Trump___________ 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Leonhardt, Elliott Carl________ 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Gregg, Robert Harold_______ 252 W. 10th Ave., Un. 9990 Long, Roland Ellsworth_____ 357 E. 11th Ave., Un. 9013 Hall, William Louis_________ 2266 W. Lane Ave., Ki. 1528 Macivor, Malecolmz....2...= 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Hallauer, Jay Miller________ 345 W. 10th Ave., Un. 6548 Marks, Bessie __________487 Carpenter St., Ev. 3990 Hambrick, Alvis Rupert_____ 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 Martin, Mary Margaret__.._____ 1531 Perry St., Un. 7851 Hanson, Chester Abraham____354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Marxen, Norman Leonard Haynes, James Wm eee anata eens 199 W. 10th Ave., Un. 7515 White Cross Hospital, Ad. 9171 Hook, Henry Lynn_———-—---—-__- 1595 Perry St., Un. 4697 Mellinger, Raymond Craig____1718 N. 4th St., Wa. 6847 Hovda, Alka Adelbert______ 192 W. 8th Ave., Un. 8429 Morgan, Marshal Charles Ingram, Lewis Karmiecle_____ PowellwOhio. Wer 2 yGdlGer 6) 862s ee te oe is St. Anthony’s Hospital, Fa. 3141 (Continued on page 130) FINE FOODS Best Wishes No Waiti ick Servi 0 Waiting pemeervice To the 1947 Medical Class Group Dinners OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY Campus-Neil Under New Management THE ORR BROWN PRICE CO. Soda Fountain Drugs WHOLESALE Complete Line of Cosmetics DRUGGISTS One Hundred Twenty-nine CLASS OF 1948 (Continued from page 129) Name Address Phone Mort: Paul Alpert== 1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Nickel, John Hugh __-—_—__-_-_ 148 W. 9th Ave., Wa. 2866 Overmier, James Bryce_______1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Penka, Ernest John_____- St. Francis Hospital, Ma. 7731 Phelps, Darwin K._____141 E. Woodruff Ave., Wa. 5212 Rawers, Robert Keith__St. Anthony’s Hospital, Fa. 3141 Rees, Wilson David... —..-- =. _1454 Neil Ave., Wa. 3173 Rini, Jerome M. 91 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 1284 Rogers, George Snelling White Cross Hospital, Ad. 9171 Roth, Maryjo, 60 Kenyon Brook, Worthington, Fr. 2-5267 Schwartz, William Burnside ______333 Sherbourne Dr., Fa. 6522 Sharp: Joon Hays. == 1438 Eastwood Ave., Ev. 5076 Name Address Phone Slager, Fred Harshman____1983 Berkshire Rd., Ki. 1644 Smith, Lowell Donald____ __ 148 W. 9th Ave., Wa. 2866 Sobel, Marvin Howard________ 33 Starr Ave., Wa. 75153 Stevenson, Robert Benjamin_199 Northmoor Pl., La. 2124 Stevenson, Thomas Dickson__82 Montrose Way, La. 5127 Swezey, Robert Leonard______ 218 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6685 Taylor, Robert James________- 354 W. 9th Ave., Un. 6237 Tyroler, Sidney Austin_____ 201 W. 11th Ave., Wa. 4741 Wagner, Violets2 a2 on 2. 1625 Cardiff Rd., Ki. 4289 Willer, Stanley dix 222-2 ee 91 W. 1lth Ave., Wa. 1284 Wilson, Thomas Edward______ Grant Hospital, Ad. 5151 Woodruff, Jack Stewart____1967 Berkshire Rd., Ki. 2729 LIFE — ACCIDENT HEALTH — HOSPITALIZATION GROUP— ALLWAYS INSURANCE Business Men’s Assurance Company E. W. WELTON, Mgr. 3030 A. |. U. Building Columbus, Ohio AD 4472 One Hundred Thirty KARL E. KUHN TELEPHONE: MAYNARD M. DONALDSON MAin 5513 Denton, Donaldson Kuhn FUNERAL DIRECTORS “Known for Service” 318 East Town Street Columbus, Ohio PARKER PHOTOGRAPHS “Center of Creative Styling” FINEST IN PORTRAIT AND COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY CATERING TO O.S.U. STUDENTS FUNCTIONS 2036 N. High St. UN. 2912 WOODRUFF HIGH—N. E. CORNER OF OSU CAMPUS) BOWEN'S RESTAURANT 1652 N. HIGH FOUNTAIN LUNCHES SANDWICHES MALTED MILKS ADams 5747 Courteous Service The Harris Company OPTICIANS 106 East Broad Street Columbus, Ohio Congratulations to the Class of 1947 Smitty's Drugs Corner High 16th UN. 0200 BASCOM'S Creative Jewelers For 39 Years at IIth and High Original Designers of Senior Medical Key and Nurses Graduate Pin 12 East I Ith Ave. UN. 2288 Columbus Orthopaedic Appliance Co. 337 S. High St. MA. 0990 Manufacturers and Fitters of custom built BRACES BELTS SPLINTS SUPPORTS Pharmaceuticals for Physicians Ampules Ointments Cansules Powders Liquids Tablets DISTRIBUTION EXCLUSIVELY ETHICAL The Columbus Pharmacal Co. Columbus 15, Ohio DEYO FUNERAL HOME AMBULANCE SERVICE 1578 W. Ist Ave. KI. 2515 One Hundred Thirty-one ; ; MA. 3123 MA. 3124 Est. 1861 J. E. HANGER CO. Manufacturers of LIMB BRACES and ALL TYPES OF ORTHOPOEDIC APP. WE INVITE YOUR PERSONAL VISIT TO OUR NEW FACTORY, 541 W. TOWN ST. CATALOG ON REQUEST One Hundred Thirty-two The following story comes from Dr. Keat- ing's private repertoire: The bride, anxious to please her husband by making for him his favorite salad went into the grocery store and asked for three round, ripe, red juicy to- In Appreciation “There are no quotations which adequately express the appreciation which we so deeply feel.” R. W. Girrorp, JR. We are deeply indebted to many, many people without whose kind cooperation the 1947 CADUCEAN could never have been published. Both students and faculty members have taken time out of a busy day to pose for pictures. In some instances doctors have broken up their usual routine to come half way across the city to meet the CADUCEAN photographer. The long and tedious hours that various members of the staff have spent in preparing this book are countless. For all of this we are grateful, but in particular there are a few whom we feel deserve individual citation for their interest and cooperation: Mrs. Sherman, Mrs. Colburn and Mrs. Frame for their help on the myriad of intricate details that are bound to arise. Dr. Brown for sharing his office with us. Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Architects who furnished the airplane perspective sketch of the new medical center exclusively for the CADUCEAN. Earl Schofield and his group in the Medical Shop who let us use their shipping facilities. Miss Helen Linn at Don Scott Feld who made arrangements for the CADUCEAN photographer to take the airplane view from which the sketch on the frontispiece was made. Bill Trayte, Myron Dixon, Lew Ballinger and Ray W. Gifford of the Columbus Evening Dispatch who so willingly helped us with photography, art work and lay-outs. Dr. Doan for his excellent message, “Serendipity” which appeared in this book and Mr. Blair for his cooperation on the “Things To Come” section. Fred Shepard who made the posters for the circulation campaign. Robert Koehler of Otterbein College for the make-up job he did on Bud Hosier in the theme portrait; and Arada Pickering for her help with micro-photography in preparing the case-history presented in this book. Drs. Curtis, Zollinger and Evans who let us use their respective year- books from which we derived many ideas. Miss Lois Wagenhals who took charge of the section on Senior Nurses. Miss Mary Morris and Miss Doris Cunningham, our patient and expert typists. The 1947 MAKIO staff who cooperated with us in every way. Dr. Ruggy and Mr. Wayne Harsha, our faculty advisers who spent many long hours trying to make journalists of us. The Pontiac Engraving Company, the F. J. Heer Printing’ Company, Parker’s Photographic Studio, the E. R. Kissinger Company, and the S. K. Smith Company, maker of Malloy Covers. And last but by no means least, our advertisers who, through their generosity, deserve your patronage. One Hundred Thirty-three WHEN: Dr. | Dr. | Dr. Dr. Dr. | | Dr. Dr. Dr. Brown eats doughnuts and coffee for breakfast, and. eo. - Palmer refutes psychosomatic medicine, and.. - Knouff stops lecturing when the bell rings, and. - Ruggy finds his Medical class yearbook, and... - Ralph reduces, and... . Milliser stops saying “sech” instead of “such,” and”.-: Lenahan admits surgeons have a right to live, andi: Barnes forgets the mechanism of labor, and... von Haam agrees with the clinicians, and.... Hartman finds that the adrenal cortex is not essential to life, and... Davidson wears the same suit two days in a row, and... Hollenbeck stops prescribing thyroid, and .. . Curtis finds that thoracotomy carries a higher mortality rate than myringotomy, and... THEN: Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Dr. Wheeler stops drawing graphs, and... Emswiler stops reading out of Dr. Beatty's book and has 100% attendance at his classes, and eA Wiseman never looks at another monocyte, EW ALS oes Wiley Forman finds a patient with no neu- rotic basis for his symptoms, and... . Barney never writes another prescription for ammoniated mercury, and... Perry starts using yellow oxide of mercury, Fehals Wel . Keating never tells another dirty story, and... - Doan keeps an appointment on time, and... Kissane gives Dr. Ruggy quinidine for auri- cular fibrillation, and... Praver accepts a positive serology as a diag- nosis of syphilis, and... The out-patient records at Children’s Hospital get reorganized— A graduating class at the Ohio State University College of Medicine will put out a better yearbook than the 1947 CADUCEAN. THIRTY One Hundred Thirty-four Autographs Autographs a SRG ESN a a eee r oo oe OL ‘saree os z ee caren ee Be oe


Suggestions in the Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) collection:

Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

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Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

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Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

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Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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