Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) - Class of 1952 Page 1 of 172
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From Aber- nethy To Wilms There Are Bighty-Three Who ... In The Lord’s Year Nineteen Fifty Two ... Have Striven To The End Of Bind- ing In This Single Volume A Filigree Of Tender Sentiments With Which To Brighten By The Glow Of Fond Recall That Arteri- osclerotic Twilight Up Ahead ... And With- out Inspiration . . . Imagination . . . Or Re- markable Originality . . . Have Named This Maudlin Bit... The Caducean Page One and who... having voluntarily allied themselves to that special champion of human life, having freely and selflessly dedicated them- selves to the ceaseless struggle against all things inimical to the upright beast’s biological prosperity . . . do feel gently impelled to dedicate these pages to the curious Priesthood of Medicine . . . which they now do with moderate respect and tremendous affection ... Page Three For in the beginning... there was a blest childe born, the bright light of destiny aglow on his sweete, fey face... predestined to The Calling, perched precariously but without fear on his mothers firm fundus, he undertook an mmmediate study of this nearest thing at hand. “Mmmmm, batteldore,’ he muttered, wiping the meconium from his dimpled chin... ¢ ares o) j . . . it happened one day durmg eal the four o’clock bottle... his beloved mother, still in the depths of her puerperium, was startled to hear him say, “Mama, when I grow up I wish to be— f if PAs | d é L 4, not a cowboy, a copper, a fireman or a prize- fighter —but—but ...? “Yes,? his mother whispered, afire with anticipation? the sky darkened porten- tuously ... there was a great rolling of thunder and a lightning clap (not to be confused with a popular lay expression for fulminating Neissertan urethritis) for this was a grave and meaningful point in time. “Mama,” he repeated, tho she had heard him the first time.. “l-—lsqwant tobe a DOCLOR . 7 “My son, my son,” she cried, fall- ing to her knees and clutching his tiny frame to her muttonous bosom. “My Son, my Son,? she cried, capitalizing the “Son”? on the second tune around—she was that moved. “Pwoof, he replied arly, unable to speak per oral. “Pwoof—wump, he added, waxing cyan- otic. Then he moved. Page Four . . . supplementing laboratory endeavor with consult to many massive tomes of a tech- nical nature he progressed steadily to the end of his choosing. His friends called him schizoid until the day they heard him shout ec- statically : “Vive medicine!” He studied french on the side. In subsequent years he was ever faithful to his ideal... He made quaint ex- o perimental observations on lower animals, and ou studied their practical application to the lowest TA form afoot...neer relenting, studiously plug- 2 sates. ; ‘Tsie ging, he biologized all over town. He had an aston- ishing singleness of purpose... .. . practisng everything from peripatetic pelvics to perigrinating proct- oscopics, he was heard to cry... “Hold still, honey, dammit—it’s all for — —_ science.” ee . . many hours he spent orating by the sea, his mouth full of pebbles, thinking ahead to the glories of academic medicine—of teaching ...and was finally graduated from high school, splendid in academic gown... Page then a strange interl ude... . of incredible faith i the wizardry of science and the infallibility of medicine . . . and with the great soft eyes of the worshipful acolyte he gazed eagerly beyond the drab prelude of elementary biology, and physics, and mathematics . . . almost against his wishing he was disciplined to calculate all things in terms of gram- centimeter-seconds . . . against his wishing because it was not in his nature to reduce thing to simple and concrete patterns . . . algebra, the calculus were entertaining exercises of wit but never acceptable as conclusive . . . leave that to the staid and uninspired . . . perhaps only the astronomer shared with him that higher and most divine lust for final knowledge . . . the desire which excused and justified the prosaic numerical devices required in the pursuit . ecology was not a study of animals populations but a beguiling clue to the solution of terminal problems . . . mechanics and genetics were held in the same light . . . let the sane and steady red-blooded boy build cars and breed cattle . . . leave to him the vain, pretty folly of impractical speculation and of reaching too far . . . but unrest plagues the pensive . . . it was an era of distressing ignorance . . . medicine was a word surrounded by fatuous ad- jectives . . . a remote priestly calling pondered with secret guilt in terms sprung from popular fiction and distorting folk-lore . . . he knew not what it was but knew well it was what he wanted .. . for humanity—a congress- man could do more . . . for money—business could provide it better .. . for love and respect—seek the religious ministry . . . but from medicine there was to come... Sate phat e a Sebi . aiiaaeastmaae, — vances RT Pe ee SeGnie id egy te Fae 4 cael names a intmam RUS Sa RionMnmemescemonace ss oes dee Page Seven —_—_— het trade, his one has Memo eo eee Ve ee ee ERAS aged cavorted on the oval wise men and good oe Page Te n . . like Hugh Setterfield, professor of comparative anatomy with absolute ideas . a demanding teacher and eloquent lecturer . by his words and gestures the complex was reduced to the simple . by his examinations the simple was terrifying ... who professed a pure sctentis?s scorn for medicine while the love of it shone in his eyebal’s . . nationally recognized as a leader in pre- medical education ... ruggedly outspoken hell never make colonel... nor will his insistence on the best in medical education ever change. . ... and Ralph Knouf,, known in out-of-the-way places to out-of- the-way people as “Rufe”... may the ghost of Bichat forgive their insolence... for this man teaches as he breathes... constantly and because he must do so to live... his outlines of course work are as numerous and detailed as the sands... frequently published and promptly for- gotten ...a master of the marathon lec- ture he adhered to no schedule... dog- gedly Socratic, he carried his students near to exhaustion and made them learn... he doubted himself and tried harder each day ... someone should tell him he ts suc- EERSTE. there was the glory... . . Alpha Epsilon Delta, the pre-medical hon- crary fraternity. The members, in the front row: Orlando, Holloman, Dr. Russell Hayes the adviser, Dr. Hugh E. Setterfield, president of the national organizaticn, Tom Klever, chapter president, Neri, Helman, Barga, Wolfe. Second: O’Brien, Cape, Cor- bin, Mowry, Solt, Malone, Brant. Smith, Manning, Rugucci. Third: Warner, Jaffe, Schwemley, Patterson, Moshier, Dodds, Axline, Lenhart, Ober, Ticich. Fourth: Freese, Kandal, Allen, Bealo, Cochran, McClug, Briggs, Lovell, McCorkle. Pictured in the inset are the chapter officers. In the front row, usual order: Tony Neri, historian; John Hollaman, vice-presi- dent; Jean Smith, secretary. In the back row are Robert Ober, treasurer; Dr. Hayes, adviser, and Colista Malone, Scalpel reporter. and the gall... . . « passing as the medical college admissions board they constituted im fancy a monstrous trio of ogres limited to a rigid low-salt, high pre-medical student diet, and in fact a genial body of warm and kindly friends of the feckless ...reading in the customary order they are the doctors Baker, Thompson and Ruggy... Page Eleven ob!.. we beheld the temple... ak ak ee . . millions of dollars worth of brick, steel and mortar... widely recognized as the most active medical center in the North Neil Avenue district ...it cuts the skyline like a knife...and can be seen from every lover's cove within reasonable driving distance .. . no less imposing than the sunstruck temple of the Rubawyat it beckons the idle from dalliance to duty ...a great and lofty institution it 1s bounded above by the sky ... below by « coffee shop... and in the cardinal directions by sundry noble establishments known to serve hot coffee . +. we once thought that it would never become a reality but now it is... we glory properly in having exchanged old inconveniences for new... and theyre milder, LOO wes and the wayside shrines... where ether is as good as oxygen ... where we were one great happy fam'ly . . . and friends to the end... . where there were four flights of stairs to climb .. . and there were no toilets for the needy, nor consolation and evils of flaming youth . . .septic technique . . .where we met dire emergencies . . . Page Thirteen the high priest... ... our Dean, Charles Doan, best known to us for having confounded the genealogy of the formed elements of the blood while still a stripling youth ...a fluid speaker —with free-wheeling and a detergent wetting agent...a fine teacher and great administrator... and the General... C) ae PIM Charles A. Doan, Dean . Richard Meiling, Associate Dean .. . a rascal wrote on the, bulletin board: “All troops will muster in , platoon formation in front of Hamilton Hall at 0730 for close order drill, prior to forced march to class at OSOO .. .” but fear was the worst... there have been no courts=martial ... and no salutes... no tub thumping or rolling of drums... only a gracious reserve and good adminis- tration .. . time slap-foot’s on who spake unto us... COOPERATING WITH THE INEVITABLE ... “God grant me serenity to accept what I cannot change, to change the things that can be changed, and wisdom to know the difference.”—Reinhold Niebuhr “This year I means to cooperate wid de inevitable,”—so reportedly summed up old ‘Dr. Tom,” an ancient negro factotum, in one of his characteristic campus orations to the students at Wake Forest College,—a philosophy of worldly wisdom particularly appropriate for considera- tion by the physician-students of today. On the political and economic fronts our national life reflects the international instability of four decades of world wars, alternating with financial inflation and depression, and climaxed by the scientific achievement of nuclear fission. Cooperation—“rolling with the punches to avoid a K.O.”—and opportunistic adaptation, without hopeless submission to this seemingly inevitable and unending tide of soul-testing events, has been, and is, the only hope of individual human survival, mental as well as physical. “Military necessity” or “the government’s prior conveni- ence and need” have repeatedly postponed individual plans and deferred educational timing at undergraduate, graduate and professional career levels. Happy the individual who philosophically accepts these unavoidable interferences at whatever stage and translates them into psychologi- cally useful experiences, which later may be seen in retrospect not as interruptions, but simply as different, and often better routes toward the original ideal and ultimate goal. Fortunate, also, are the institutions which embody man’s highest hopes and aspirations, and whose leaders plan well while biding their time to seize the opportune moment for achieving the goals so greatly de- sired and often so long delayed. Many of you, in this medical student generation, have already experienced delay and seem- ing frustration in the accomplishment of your medical education, only to persist, to persevere, and now finally to achieve your desires in an age of greater medical accomplishment with better and more effective medical educational facilities than could have been yours at any earlier date. Such compensations for any temporary past disappointments, if looked for, will be more often found than not. Others of you, now about to be graduated, may be viewing with some appre- hension and genuine concern, the immediate future—its military demands, the recurring labor- management disputes, the threats of further inflation, continuing international misunderstand- ing and worsening international relationships, the trends toward so-called socialized medicine, the incurable diseases to which man is heir and for which we have, as yet, no explanation, and, therefore, no control. But if the physicians of this nation should falter—either as world citizens or national patriots or as doctors to men’s bodies and minds, there really would be ground for pessimism as mankind faces the future in 1952. Your training in life’s school—with a part of it fortunately in an environment where the mental and physical vulnerabilities of human kind are looked upon with sympathy and _ ever- growing understanding, now place you in the most enviable position of all men—you are prepared to live and serve anywhere, utilizing the wisdom and the courage and the will you possess to change the things that can be changed, both medical and social, while accepting with some de- gree of tranquility, those factors of time and place and circumstance presently beyond our individ- ual influence and control. Once this state of mind has been achieved by the good physician, he is ready to help his patients, to distinguish and to differentiate for them between the reversible and the irreversible in their lives. To the former he can promptly give health and a chance for happiness once again; to the latter he will bring his own contagious philosophy of optimism and hope because of his own full confidence that those enigmas not yet completely understood to- day, men of medicine can and will solve tomorrow. May you men and women of the Class of 1952 take fullest pride in your current accomplish- ments and be assured of the complete confidence of your Alma Mater that each one will meet the great challenge of every phase of today’s urgent need for capable, understanding physicians. May we, in turn, always in the true Hippocratic tradition, be worthy of the loyalty and pride of our sons and daughters! Charles A. Doan Dean Page Fifteen the jolly deacons... George Ruggy, the Junior Dean of the Rollo Baker, the college Secretary, pos- college, the star of our family, to be sessed of silver throat and mane, made dealt with more thoroughly later. the ureter sound like “Hamlet.” Radiant beauties... The ladies of the front office staff, regarded by some as the power behind the throne, are Mrs. Margaret Colburn, Mary Ellen Hull, Mrs. Mary Frame, Mrs. Dorothy Smith, Ruth Tufta. Also remember Jody Cox, wife to Jason, who was here until gravidity set in. Page Sixteen the illustrious congress... . . . because things were going much too smoothly we organized ourselves, held an election, fought valiantly to avoid nomination, accepted the office with a shrug of surrender, and called the resultant stalwart body of legis- lators the Medical College Council. It was something like setting up a cold pop stand in the heart of a brewery—there wasn’t too much business. Having fared so well for so long under the benevolent despotism of the front office we were ever faced with the problem of making business. We decided to have our own commencement ex- ercises but the university said “no? We were going to buy our own academic robes for graduation but found that they cost too much, There was talk of a general prac- tise clerkship in the senior year, but somebody failed to answer a letter and nothings been heard of it since. We had many good times rising to points of order and debating minutiae heatedly. One time we served as mediator for a polite discussion between the faculty and private enterprise on the subject of the mimeographed lecture note system. That one was fun. All told, it was worth it. This is the Medical College Council in travail. In the pulpit is William Briggs, noted publisher and president of the second council. Seated in the front row of the room, beginning in the foreground, are councilmen Braun, Johnson, Strawsburg and Burk. In the next row, student senator Messick, councilmen Sinclair, Schoettle and Ken- nedy. In the last row, their backs to the wall, are Charles Hendricks, sage faculty advisor, councilmen Baker and Friedman, and Eric Ogden, faculty representative from the front office. On the other side of the room, council- man Jones, class advisor Jackson Riddle, and last but by no means least, Nick Martin, champion of the oppressed. Page Seventeen and where were you... ? Page Eighteen i .. . yes, brother. +... was a cold bleak stretch on the rack . . . we donned the sack cloth and dusted ashes in our hair . . . and were inclined to view ourselves as the bastard issuance of an ascetic martyr and a Spartan girl . . . the demands we made on ourselves were stringent and asinine, and if we had worked as hard as we worried we would now know even more than we think we do... we covered our walls with educational charts and inspiring slogans and our friends with venom . . . lead nuggets became the standard exchange medium among brothers . . . when the brain ached and failed we flogged it to greater service with dexedrine in heroic dosage then turned off the lights with barbiturates . . . we reviled the pharmacopoeia then consumed it . . . the paranoid reaction became an occupational disease except that we weren’t teally paranoid . . . they actually were after us . . . socially we were lepers . the playful effort was limited to a frenetic week-end quest for deep anesthesia with loud music . . . the only thing we got into was academic distress . . . wives and sweethearts named us anathema for in this year we learned the meaning of sublimation . . . gastronomical insults were heaped one upon the other . . . we ate too much of all the wrong things and got fat cn coffee cream and sugar .. . it was the beginning of medicine .. . an endless chain of pompous lectures and ponderous books . . . the fourth floor men’s room in Hamilton hall became sanctuary . . . its grubby cracked tile walls will ever echo the viciously contended post-mortem analyses of gross anatomy practicals . . . it was each man’s holy task to persuade all others that he alone had failed and woe unto him who questioned it... when the smoke of battle cleared most of us were still there . . . bones a- tremble and laden with unhealthy fat . . . a quaint and homely museum demonstration of subclinical scurvy and beri-beri . . . then it was summer and the birds chortled in the customary fashion . . . we had seen medicine .. . Don’t tell me I didn’t flunk that practical!’ “If it's a prostate, it’s lac- “u tating... “You're wrong but your opinion.” ) one lemon dash of bitters . siete tonasianenia it’s called . 8 handed technique . “Look—it was a blonde Pseudostratified ciliated co'- ws umnar epithelium—hell “If they don’t pull that shade um” Vll never finish . . . “Keep your hands on the ca- daver, big boy!” “Our Father, Who art u“ Heaven... _.. when it hit the fan. A Page Twenty Distinguished freshmen, dignified only by initial and surname, are identified from left to right, starting in the front row: L. Kachenmeister, L. Oman, H. Mack, C. Lahr, E. Collins, L. Zimmerman, D. Wagner, H. Bean, R. Cornwell. Second row: R. Chapman, P. Curtis, C. Casey, J. Fisher, H. Knoll, M. Means, A. Meyerson, J. Evans, D. Corey, N. Browning, G. Stevens. Third row: J. Loudenslager W. Fil- singer, H. Lash, D. Waugh, J. Smith, L. Ozoroff, T. Pinsky, J. Baker, W. Beahm. Fourth row: J. Venetta, E. Meyer, J. Sprinkle, B. Blake, D. Aberegg, J. Zeigler, Fifth row: R. Distad, R. Ganoom, C. Wright, M. Fader, M. Stough, W. Cron, C. Davis. Sixth row: R. Stastny, B. Pukay, R. Bolander, E. Hiestand, W. Hanna. Too busy preparing themselves for the medical ministry to attend these mugging ceremonies were: J. Allen, E. Art, G. Biagiotti, D. Bunde, P. Burson, W. Clark, W. Cook, G. Dandalides, J. Devaney, K. DeVoe F. Dick, J. Diller, J. Essig, J. Foulkes, G. Galehouse, J. Graham, S$. Grosshandler, K. Harshman, W. Heyse, J. Hoffman, R. Holzbach, A. Jones, E. Jones, D. Kinsey, W. Orlow, J. Schaefer, E. Schlicht H. Smith, G. Wilson. There were plenty of freshman. First row: V. Runco, A. Nakle, L. Monteleone, D,. Stotzer, I. Papish, W. Wagner, R. Stamm, R. Kaufman, F. Rothman. Second row: C. Rossel, J. Chosv, S. Rose, L. Ballard, N. Tresser, F. Vargo, J. Doolos. Third row: C. Spragg, W. Cohen, R. Gebhart, J. Thornbury, R. Heiny, R. Myers, M. Linn, Walt Wolery. Fourth row: G. Bruggemann, S. Arter, H. Rowe, B. Huss, J. Tarr, M. Korstanje, R. McCormick. Fifth row: B. Stewart, B. Houser, C. Henault, B. Fladden, W. Davis, A. Schwartzberg, A. Juliano. And more. First row: M. Converse, S$. Fisher, $. Stregevsky, N. Dishon, J. Barnes, R. Rabkin, J. Goldberg. Second row: R. Rohrer, R. Kirkpatrick, W. Whitacre, W. Teknipp, R. LeVere, A. Korb, A. Pultz, P. Mezger. Third row: F. Brown, L. Appel, W. Fippin, P. Ruksha, D. Talbut J. Dotter, J. Dunbar, H. Lowery, and one poor indivi- dual unknown to all. Fourth row: §. Green, C. Mendelson, J. Lindower, D. Nikolaus, T. Ogden, J. Roberts, D. Kibler. Fifth row: R. Rose, J. Belt, E. Warner, J. Tanner, F. White, L. Hirsch. Page Twenty-One “See—I told you the oviduct was an inner tube.” See what happens to people who bite their nails?” “Dress right—dress!”’ This is medical school?” Sp. Gr. 1.018... salty.’ Double-barrelled manicure.” vs This boy’s lost weight ... ! “Rufe really shovelled it out this morning, eh?” “Down by the old mill stream, “u where I first... ” “The hell you say... H ey Thats my am, ( =f SS AQ iS eat ee T dont care if Richat didnt use a microscope In this class —— ¥ 30S 01714 TIAA AAC 2 Today — we will each pour 4oo blood plates —“then we will staeak. 75 unknowns for isolation of pure cultures, AHer which, each student will look at 50 TB. slides- then there will be 120 demonstrations to be studied befor we have a Short quiz with 80 essay questions - Page Twenty-Three the resurrection men... .. . we tried to look casual when they dumped those things on the table... They told us to get greasy but the more sensitive students discussed the subject distantly while smoking in the men’s room... We played bones-in-the-bag with Dr. Baker but clearly didwt know our os from a hole in the ground... At dinner we avoided sclisbury steak, chop suey and spareribs ... We washed our hands in scented soap and smelled like hell anyway .. . Medicine stood naked, bereft of beauty Bichat’s principals. 7 this was indeed a rare ex- perience in fantasia . . . unknown then and highly questionable now . when no other answer came to mind we tried “desoxyribonucleic acid”... only God, professor and liars could tell a lympho- cyte from a monocyte . . . some of us still think the distinction is delusional . . . practical exams were grim experiments in mass sadism . . . pseu- dostratified ciliated columnar epithelium sounded like a ghastly contagion . . . it still does... 36 SO We sold our microscopes the potbotlers... devoted to crystallizing exotic sugars and percolating pee-pee . . . we did our first venipunctures and StVONg hearts went fait eee 17 fact, large butts hit the floor... the fat chemist seemed to prefer arachidonic actd to cortisone... A it proved necessary to invoke scripture to justify the derwation of the Henderson-Hasselbach equation . .. intermediate carbohydrate metabolism was... waswt it? ... we mastered myriad Useless and Non-essential remedies . . . the lovely sonority of spiritus frumenti converted us to Latin... Ah! Wilderness ... Page Twenty-Four . are these grossly cordial anat omists . . . starting left . . . Grant O. Graves, who once ; smiled . . . C. Joe Hatfield, our friend . . . Rollo C. Baker, thespian . . . Lin- den F. Edwards, hot on the subject of ; body-snatching . . . and John Gersten, a surgeon who decided to work with them afterwards. rather than before... at the time of the picture Dr. Baker was opining gleefully that 150 freshmen would mean twice as much fun . . . on the left is Francis W. McCoy ... then E. Rus- sell Hayes, who didn’t love us . . . and Hugh E. Setterfield, master lecturer F and Ralph A. Knouff, “himself,” the chair- man .. . and Janis Eglitis, whom se- niors remember as well as they remember their course work . . . they are pictured reading one day’s fan mail from various devoted alumni who flunked their course at some time in the past. . . . . . the bio- chemists and pharmacologists . . . in the front are Bernard Marks and Walter Frajola . . . in the back is J. B. Brown, the fat chemist . . . Clayton S. Smith, of blue mass fame and the chairman : . Elmer D. Engelman, practical pill piffler . . . and George Ruggy, more the pharmacologic philosopher type prof. . . seen here in a meticulously studied in- formal pose . . Page Twenty-Five “Tlegitimus non carborundum...” a” “don’t let the bastards weer you down... a . . . when the pain of it all became too overwhelming to bear we turned to our comrades in fraternity and joined our cold, moist palms in the quest for succor . . . the rah-rah had gone from fraternity sociability and only a misguided few even bought pins .. . rushing was an excuse for old-timer’s to nurse on a keg . . . the only requirement for membership was the wish to join . . . archaic restric- tions founded on race, color and creed vanished from the by-laws . . . initiation was perfunctory . .. during the first two years the house was a cloister . . . we lined our microscopes up on tables and created chaos attempting to anticipate the professor .. . we kept a complete and completely disorganized file of old examinations which we used to anticipate the pro- fessor . . . it sometimes worked . . . there was no schedule, no reveille, no taps ... the only discipline was that imposed upon each man by himself . . . that was usually enough . . . here was a sounding board for the non-medical interests . . . we washed walls and sang operatic arias miserably but with knowledge . . . some invited the muse with mathematics . . . there was an amicable and stimulating disharmony of personal relationships . . . to make a positive statement was to invite assault from all quarters . . . this place was refug e and sanctuary .. . Page Twenty-Six some kept records... 1952 eh) 952 mSien JUNE 42 1952 vena el2[sfaistels Heo ON 4272 — | pels) 19 48 12] 13] 14 ,eee cw MONTH the scholars of Alpha Krappa Krappa ... . . . noted for thew devo- tion to the study of medicine and the practise of music as students they performed quite adequately . . . as musicians they sang without peer . . they also excelled at acquiring pledges by the platoon . . . educational aides were a strong point . . . fancy slide projectors in the corridors and a jug of braims in the john . .. they were excellent laddtes and there were a lot of them... In the top picture is the rambling hovel which they proudly called home . . . below this are the of- ficers incumbent at the time of picture-taking . . . in the front are T. Stage, the tyrant . . . W. Briggs . . J. Hanley ...H. Long ., , and in the back ‘ C. Fuchs . .. A. Korb . . . J. Mullen ... Lb. Haley ... and D. Barr. . . a fine body offimen “4 « Page Twenty-Eight First row: Juliano, Pukay, Abood, Alexis, Orlow, Teknipp, Collins, Linn, Opritza. Second: Wilson, Ziegler, Evans, Ucker, Whetstone, Sprinkle, Hanley, Schmidt, Dandalides, Ackerman. Third: Barr, John- son, Fischer, Korb, Snyder, Kroeger Price, Loudenslager, Burson, Kieffer . First row: Heistand, Von Kaenel, Russell, Johnson, Foulkes, Filsinger, Chapman, Rose, Davis. Second: Ruskin, Haley, Cutlip, Koenig, Kackley, Rhodes, Bunde, Olsen, Goff, Smelker. Third: Stevens, Messick, Starkey, Wright, Miller, Saroff, Thatcher, Apel, Boswell . . . First row: Mullen, Miethke, Madsen, Fodor, Gedert. Second: Briggs, Bruggeman, Jac- ob, Holzbach, Long, Fuchs, Teteris, How- ard, Young. Third: Harshman, Tarr, Mc- Cormick, Rossell, Henault, Devany, Con- rad, Van Fossen, Topinka, Galehouse. Fourth: Heyse, Wilms, Hambrick, Stastny, Dick, Stage, Cook, Brown, Diller, Corn- well Not pictured: Bolander, Means, Smith, Amstutz, Armbruster, Baer and Baer, Bar- ker, Beatty, Boker, Bower, Boyd, Brannon, Camardese, Campbell, Claunch, Cole, Covault, Dierker, Gammage, Gilcrest, Greene, Hendershot, Hughes, Kidd, Myers, Platten, Rarick, Rhodenbaugh, Whetstone, Ziegler... Page Twenty-Nine aristocrats of Nu Smegma... Page Thirty gentlemen of leisure ... loafers... with skeletons all a-rattle in the family closet... champions of a grand diversity of things... beguiled by matters of flesh, mind and spirit . . . avow- ing a belle indifference to scholastic indus- try .. . but performing with honor .. . given also to studious intrafraternity dis- cord in all things... they argued most mightily on the questions of least signifi- cance... a sterling ag ggregation of atypicals . . In the top picture is the Nu Sigma Nu house, known also as the north Neil Avenue Gayety . . . below, the officers . in front: R. Strawsburg .. . D. Holmes . in back: J. Munger . . . T. Richards . . . E, Burnes . . . B. Andreas G. Willoughby . First row: Andrain, Cox, Creedon, Hubbell, Harold, Holmes, Burnes, Caldwell, Sinclair, Newsome. Second: Biagiotti, Smith, Converse, Jones, Arter, Linton, Mc- Fadden, McFarland. Third: Lahr, Stough, Lindower, Lowery, Houser, Spragg, Moore, Morris, Voehringer, Essig . . First row: Munger, Roberts, Hammon, Rockwell, Willoughby, Walters, Castleman, Meyer Strawsburg Scarpelli, Brown. Second: Feldheimer, Ridolfo, Richards, Brehm, Sadlon, Ridgeway, Marshall, Peters, Onkst, Wolery. Third: Browning, Menzies, McCutcheon, Brown, Schoettle, Johnston, White, Hadder, Andreas, Pond . Not Pictured: Barton, Brown, Brugger, Davis, Dormire, Foxx, Giles, Graham, Grannis, Haldeman, Howarth. Hubbard, Kemph, Kuhn, Lausa, Lutz, Marker, Michel, Mur- ray, Nickerson, Palmer, Reinhart, South, Sprague, Veg, Webb, Baker, Dot- ter, Kaufmann, Wagner... Page Thirty-One phee-see party boys. “ Page Thirty-Two . . . where some merely excited—they lived . . . oh, those gay, mad days on the Phi Chi riviera... ail was wine, woman, wine, song, and wine see MILOTE accurately it was sea-breeze... a diabolical concoction of gin and grape- fruit juice... calculated to accomplish in one night what it takes years for cheap wine to do... when last heard of they were concertedly compiling a ponderous volume of bawdy song ... strange nymphs of medicine... Above, the home of the Phi Chi’s . . . note the severe radial erosion of the yard . . . effected by repeated overflow of seabreeze . . . Below, the officers . . . in front . .. E. Monroe, Kraker the crackerjack, Flickinger . . . behind them. . . R. Askam, J. Jones, B. Oris, T. Simons . .. a pic- ture of Dorian Gray .. . N S N N NS y NS N First row: Cron, Mack, Tanner, Casey, Talbut, Korstanje, Barnes, White. Second: Stotzer, Gebhart, Dishon, Rose, Allen, Meyers, Roberts, Distad. Third: Stewart, Warner, Thornbury, DeVoe, Huss, Ballard, Runco . First row: Wright, Lindburg, Manchester, Kraker, Kansky, Pollock, Scott. Second: Freeder, Walters, Carr, Snider, Wallace, Volzer, Dudgeon. Third: Smith, Selmants, Paul, Von Thron, Lutz, Del Greco, Simons . . First row: Schutt, Whitcomb, Frye, Riden- our, Jones, Krigbaum, Flickinger, Noble. Second: McPherson, Abel, Capper, New- land, Eberly, Askam, Cotterman, Dysart. Third: Fuller, Gerrick, Nowland, Rower, Wagner, Soquel, Phiffer . . Not in pictures: Baker, Batterson, Brin- gardner, Burk, Cleary, Denkewalter, Dorn- er, Drake, Geist, Good, Gwinner, Hamil- ton, Holbrook, Kennedy, Kerth, Lloyd, Lyon, McFarren, Metzger, Monroe, Myers, Nichols, Orders, Oris, Postle, Sheehan, Slager, Ulrich, Graham, Heiny, Kibler, Kinsey, Pultz, Schaefer, Schlicht, Wagner, Abernathy . . Page ™ F 72 Ts. ed Thirty-Three Peed. . yupsilon ah; . . . the gentlemen of Phi Delta Epsilon . the first year... then vigorous new blood things were quiet here moved in and the reign of terror began. . no more scattering of newspapers about the premises... desist the earthy romance in the front parlor... turn the mind to lofty community projects... they did sponsor Dr. Hans Selye in a_ brilliant lecture... but the old guard felt un- comfortable amidst all the order and hygiene... Above is the Phi Delta Epsilon house, a mere shell of itself in its early days of glory some two hundred and fifty six years ago . and below are the officers . . . sitting: W. Kleinman . . . A. Friedman ... J. Lewis... R. Braun... W. Lippy standing: E. Schneir .. . N. Atkin . . . H. Sigal. In the front row: Stamm, Pinsky, Schwartzberg, Papish, Stregevsky. Second row: Hirsch, Cohen, Knoll, Rose, Rabkin. Th'rd row: Tresser, Greene, Fladen, Ozer- off, Fisher... First row: Friedman, Braun, Marks, Schneir. Second: Bash, Kaufman, Benja- min, Vigoda, Lewis. Third: Sigal, Atkin, Lippy, Meerkreebs, Desberg, Cohen. Fourth: Kleinman, Abramson, Krill, Segel, Foxman, Gold... Not pictured: Appel, Goldberg, Gross- handler, Allen, Baker, Benis, Friedman, Hirsch, Pollens, Weiss . . . Page Thirty-Five the distaff docs... Page Thirty-Six Those most precise and primly disposed ladies of medicine . . . in the checse-cake row read- ing from left to right . . . Kathryn Panis . . . Mary Lovise Oman . . . Virginia Reese . Ruth Maher... and in the second row... Stella Kontras . . . LeMoyne Unkefer Lois Zimmerman . . . Sarah Long . . . Eileen O’Ferrell . . . and the last row... Jean Smelker (taken to wife by Ed of the senior class)... Jane Fitz . . . Dorethy Van Ausdal Evelyn Lavery (three children and one enroute). . . Lois Kachenmeister .. . . . . atruly exceptional breed (you should pardon the expression) of medical individual . . . in daily professtonal contact with life at its rawest they maintain with ease an air of gracious gentility ... the dainty pinky employed to a cosmetic end confirms the symmetry of the ailing prostate with equal facility ... the only class of medical student known to derive no subjective satisfaction whatever from the performance o f tha Purg aa ditionally hailed as excellent scholars they ere most highly regarded as stout fellows ... some are married, some unmarried, and some dowt give a how- a ya-callit . . . they would prosper in urology but interest and taste beckons them to pediatrics, anesthesia, psychiatry and allergy .. . .. the bacchanalia : % = 8 i Se -20 8 SAP eas at ka 4 as e? all e did cut up ds = S ; 8 S 2 7 . Pace ...and dignity? Pshaw..! “un “a au“ “Low card draws blood tomorrow... “Nery nice for vasectomy... “Q-o0-0-oh, that Rex Morgan... “It’s in the bag.” “So that’s what it looks like?” “Yes, | said ‘Ten Cents’.”” Thirty-Nine give us strength... LECTURE ROOM = Page Forty ... there was one down with three to go and the fuel was running low already . . . the work poured on in greater volumes but the tension ebbed . . . with one year successfully completed we had given positive proof that we could write under water . . . or snow ... we lifted our heads and began to strut a little for there appeared to be cause for pride . . . one of the privileges of our attainment was the right to enjoy with a certain amount of smugness the esoteric humor of the work . . . as this ripe limerick gleaned from the yearbook of a small eastern college: There was an old greek named Thucydides Who devoted his life to lewditides; His prostate benumbed, he finally succumbed, To epididymiditides .... meaning nothing to the slack-jawed and uncultivated lay person but fraught with significance for us . . . and although the point has already been ade- quately illustrated, another one may be added for no good reason at all: An old warrior prince named Alexis In his youth tried mixing his sexes, But found this admixture had strictured his fixture And thrombosed his pampiniform plexus... the course work came noticeably closer to the heart of medicine . . . the anatomical nature of disease processes in small legless and slithering crea- tures was made clear to us in pathology . . . we learned the apothecaries’ system and vowed never to use it .. . here unaware that the greater segment of the American population is convinced that every meal renders manda- tory a bowel movement—we scorned the exhaustive treatment of cathartics ... in the spring of the year they exposed us to the art of physical diagnosis and that was it . . . we were in... we belonged... “Much more reliable’ than Benedict’s test . . .” Bullous session .. . ” . .. and she had six breasts, um a luffly creature... “It started with a little scratch, u“ arsphenamine .. . This is truly unposed. ‘Sar ge The pilgrimage. “I told ya that I love ya, now ua get out... Tea for Two raised to the fifth power... “They're my own—brot ‘em up from New Orleans . . .” ...to beat the rap ... In the front: D. Schutt, T. Simons, J. Scott, J. Soquel, J. Munger, E. Feldheimer . . . second: A. Ridolfo, W. Walter, D. Scarpelli, M. Sadlon, J. Voehringer, F. Zwemer .. . third: R. Starkey, G. Snider, J. VonThron, T. Ruskin, N. Teteris, R. Smith, E. Schneir... fourth: R. Whetstone, M. Smith, R, Wallace, D. Ucker, R. Schmidt, A. Segel, A. Van Fossen, PaSoudet cas In the front: A. Cohen. D. Barr, C. Eubanks, L. Covauli, D. Desberg, L. Burman, L. Del Greco, Cc Carpenter . . . second: R. Cotterman. N. Atkins, R. Batterson, F. Eberly. N. Baker, R. Carr, R. Capper, A. Ackerman... third: R. Askam, D. A lexis, R. Brannon, J. Beattie, M. Abel, D. Flickinger, R. Dysart . . . fourth: R. Barton, H. Brown, G. Brehm, D. Brown, E. Conrad, E. Abramson. . . fifth: R. Braun, R. Dormire... In the front: K. Panis, E. O’Ferrell, J. Smelker, V. Reese, H. Onkst, G. Meerkreebs, J. Pond... second: J. Magill, A. Thatcher, T. Ziegler, F. Moore, P. McFarland, J. Noble, R. Paul . . . third: J. Miethke, D. Ridgeway, J. Questel, T. Richards, A. Opritza, G. Priest, J. Phiffer . . . fourth: B. Mills, R. Price, B. Reinhart, D. Michel, C. McFarren, R. McPherson . . . fifth: G. Morris, L. Peters, C. Madsen, H. Snyder, P. Ridenour, B. Marshall, F. Pollock .. . In the front: J. Jacob, E. Kieffer, R. Fodor, P. Gilcrest, R. Fuller, D. Hubbard, F. Lyon . . . second: W. Kleinman, P. Kerr, L. Haley, W. McFadden, J. Freedman, L. Hughes, R. Johnson, L. Gold... third: J. Gedert, J. Koenig, W. Lippy, J. Hanley, E. Kragbaum, D. Foxman, C. Kroeger... fourth: C. Hamilton, J. McCutcheon, E. Kansky, J. French, J. Jones, T. Frye, H. Newland . . . fifth: A. Krill, D. Linton, C. Kidd, R. Johnston, Paul Jackson, E. Hadder ... Not in pictures: A. Armbruster, L. Brown, C. Dudgeon, M. Graham, S$. Grosshandler, C. Howarth, R. Metzger, J. Mullen, W. Parsel, P. Platten, I. Rothchild, H. Sigal, N. Sindel, J. Stevens, LeMoyne Unkefer ... Page Forty-Three “So that’s how they repro- duces. «20 “He's lovely, he’s engaged. . . au“ he uses testosterone .. . “In 1923 Dr. Joe Mush series on this . . .” “You probably can’t see au from there, but .. . “u “I—am Mel Davis... um “Lullaby, and goodnight . . . “We could do a finger punc- ture.” Sometimes | wonder if | did the right thing . . .” “Dr. Towbin . recognize you . the bug farmers. . . . the subject matter waswt bad but we couldwt figure out the exams... they always looked like mcome tax forms... tm- munology was a fascinating exercise in pipettery .. contrary to all laboratory evidence they con- tinually insisted that diphtheria was produced by a microorganism ...we learned that Neisseria claparrhalis thrives on chocolate goodies... ac- curate cultivation of the enteric organisms is vitally important in the pre-clinical era... later on paregoric and sulfonamides turned the trick... the lab assistants were real mean to us... ghouls of a sort... the pathologist is a frus- trated chef ...sago, nutmeg and sugar-coating have a special meaning to them... the pink tea was also a significant thing ...an autopsy 1s a special event in which the room smells bad, two hours are shot, vision is completely abscured by resi- dents ... the successful pathologist is a conscience- less brute who can make a-thirty minute post last two and a half hours... we went to twenty-five of them for an “A”... he is also an wory tower prophet... he never understood why the patient was permitted to die... the kymograpbers. , Page Forty-Six . the Boze taught us a new way of looking at science... what was said was considered more important than saying something . we inhaled, exhaled, puked, peed, sweat, froze and bled to prove that the text was something less than pure fiction... the new chairman taught us how to save 198 liters of ure for every two wasted ... the heart-lung preparation was a thrill- ing spectacle ... all seventeen times ... we shall never forget the innervation of the bladder (its to laugh) ... this work is the core of it all... ... assistants: Sudimack, Stevenson, Aus- tin, Englehard, Beardmore, Nadel, Kornder, Harvey .. . and the staff: Jack Baldwin, Jackson Riddle, the chief, and Rosemary Bole . . . the chief's tie was a solid color until attacked by a virulent | strain of foulardphage .. . . .. the pathol- ogists in the first row: Roswell Fidler, Harry Reinhart, Emmerich von Haam, the chief, A. Towbin, Constance Connors, Hans Schlumberger . . . second: William Smith, Robert Wybel, Fred Dick, George Shinowara, Fred Collier, Richard Saleeby third: Robert Murphy .. . Henry DeLeeuw, Thurston Batson, Christie Davis, James Morgan, Bartow Bloodworth, Wil- liam Benham .. . this is the institute of pathology . . . note that this picture rep- resents the staff—not the museum . . . The Phys- iologists: Ralph Stacy, Eric Ogden, the chief, Emil Bozler, Fred Hitchcock, Hugh Hull, Milton Lessler, William Myers, Floyd Beman, Leo Sapirstein, Clifford Angerer, Robert Grubbs . . . not in the picture: Frank A. Hartman, Katherine Brownell, Edwin Durrant, Henry Sweeney, Irving Rothchild . . . the piece de resistance was fricaseed sk’lital mussel nested in kidney popovers . . . urea clearance studies will follow the beer der von... Pige Forty Eight . as Napoleon remarked when he first beheld the poet Goethe: “Voila un homme!” .. . which in rough translation is: “There’s a man .ismt it...2? This bit constitutes a special commendation for Dr. Emmerich von Haam, the head of the department of pathology... this 1s the ebullient, vigorous, effervescent, bombastic, iron-handed, whimsical, satirical and coy Big Von ... classmate Hugh Jones, who was singularly demolished in the second pathology session, asked that the qualifying adjective phrase “and cruelly anti-Jonesitic” be added to this panegyric ... his lectures were uniformly vital and original ... he paced the floor like a caged bear while lecturing and studied the pathology of the ceiling in room 211... there was plenty of that... best remembered for his treat- ment of lymphopathia venereum, after which the annual college dance, The Blue Ball, was named... and the pathology of the pituitary gland, which sounded like Grimms Fairy Tales... and the pathology of the female breast, freely illustrated with snapshots from his own wallet ...a most engaging man and inspiring pro- BAT oor ae We Mourned the Passing... Luke V. Zartman, M.D. . was graduated from Ohio State Uni- versity in 1906 ... and from Johns Hob- kins in 1910 . . . served his interneship at Johns Hopkins and took resident’s training at the Church Home Infirmary in Balti- more... became the first man in Colum- bus to specialize in surgery exclusively .. . practised from the same Co!umbus of fice for thirty-seven years and attended the O.S.U. faculty for the same number of years... Chief of Surgery at St. Franets Hospital . . . a member of Kappa Sigma, Faculty Club and numerous medical so- cieties .. . we knew and respected him as man and teacher... Jacob Jones Coons, M.D. . born in Washington C.H., Ohio... - received the B.A. from Ohio Wesleyan in 1898 .. . was graduated from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in 1902... there became personal assistant to Sir Wil- liam Osler . . . established the first clini- cal diagnostic and pathological laboratory in central Ohio... a Diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine and Fellow of the American College of Phy- sicians .. . awarded an honorary Doctor of Science by Ohio Wesleyan .. . a pro- fessor of medicine at Ohio State Uni- versity . . . mot known to us personally, but a name in medicine... J. Fremont Bateman, M.D. .. . late Superintendent of the Columbus State Hospital... “Through his interest in every aspect of hospital life; through his work in various positions of responsibility; through his work on many national committees; and through his writing and speaking he has served our people, our state, our nation and our world, He ave his life in service to his fellowman. An honest and kindly 5 ; person, a skillful administrator widely recognized and respected in his field, an understanding and faithful friend, we honor his memory and thank God for his life”... Rev. Maurice Clark, Chaplain, C.S.H. Page Forty-Nine “Ob, doctor,” they sneered... LECTURE ROOM = Page Fifty . . there was the meta- morphosis of medicine from the passive to the explosive . . . cerebration supplanted by locomotion . . . scholarly contemplation yielding to muscle and manipulation . . . collectively we lifted our waffle-marked prat from the cane-bottom chair and undertook the cultivation of corns, callouses and bunions . . . ward rounds were a problem . . . the soul suffered untold in- dignities and the lower back a painful lordosis . . . faced with a patient whose form and figure were only vaguely familiar we became versed in the fine art of phumphing . . . we learned clinical vocabulary, attitudes and gestures and played the role with vigor . . . were crushed when our proposal that the patient “had sustained a cerebrovascular accident” was condescendingly countered with “tyes, doctor, the patient had a stroke”... wore the pure white smocks and bucks of the profession with a casual air and arranged to lounge in public places . . . each patient was a baffling problem whose solution lay floundering in an impossible mitre of diagnostic criteria, and our greatest single error was in making a scientific approach . . . it took a long time to learn time to learn to ask the patient what his diagnosis was ... the fanciful line of demarcation between the normal and the abnormal faded and another beautiful illusion was gone . . . we had faith in the pharma- copoeia .. . however incredible that may sound in retrospect . . . believing all things important to the medical history we patiently survived hours of irrelevant detail . . . every physical became a ritual of critical decisions . . . for every lung had its rale and every breast a mass . . . spent months looking for the prostate in the rectal ampulla . . . did scores of pelvics before feeling anything but embarrassed although the married men got an edge on us by dint of homework . . . wives had their revenge in practising the gay diversion of the cremasteric reflex . . . medicine had indeed become all-pervasive .. . we talked about it after hours ... there could be no greater tribute than this. Candid (?) 348 “Do you have cramps, discharge y P or clots? “Oh, you’re just saying that!” “One U.R.I. after another .. .” “Give i.v. fluids until rales de- velops .. .” “Omigod—right in the middle of the floor .. .” “This—is—a—camera . . .” “Please, doctor—my piles!” au“ “Once upon a time... “Sad Sam Sez.. .” ...and so ne nere... Page Fifty-Two In the front row: J. Rodenbaugh, A. Veg, P. Saroff, R. Russell, F. Rose, R. Straws- burg . . . second: E. Ulrich, N. Smith, E. Peck, L. Palmer, G. Wagner, L. Schoettle ... third: N. Camardese, V. Shampton, S. Weiss, C. Wright, H. Rhodes . : . fourth: F. Rarich, R. Smith, D. Van Ausdale, G. Wright, B. Young, R. Slager . . . fifth: R. Webb, R. Swindaman, G. Sheehan, J. Walters, J. Postle, P. Whetstone . . . In the front row: A. Frizdman, J. Freeder, R. Gerrick, F. Bower, S. Baker . second: D. Burk, J. Fitz, G. Drake, S$. Friedman, C. Greene, C. Bammerlin .. . third: B. Andreas, W. Dorner, D. Brown, J. Greene, J. Good, D. Chesler . . . fourth: M. Benis, R. Barker, F. Denkewalter, A. Bringardner .. . In the front row: R. Orders, E. Miller, J. Lewis, J. Hirsch, $. Hardy, C. Long, R. Nichols ... second: J. Haldeman, R. Lausa, P. Menzies, R. Gwiner, R. Lutz, §. Kontras . third: D. Jackson, J. Kemph, W. Holbrook, W. Kerth, W. Oris, R. Messick... fourth: J. Kackley, J. Manchester, J. Marks, R. Myers, P. Howard, H. Haverland... Not in picture: D. Castleman, J. Claunch, F. Cleary, C. Fuchs, D. Lindberg, E. Monroe, I. Nickerson, K. Noble, L. Pollers, D. Volzer.. . Page Fifty-Three When Te Z0 pages= I mean 20 pages! $f Ring hell- Thats my wrist watch. ¢ 30 year age — when m Pappy fust brung US youngins to the Ohio KentRy d.ag ever ding dong one of us wuz Right smart health ul, ceptin m' uncle ZeK,en he had just picked up_a dose in fil y -- TT) Lleyd — ce —__ =) Dermatitis Confusifor i2 Q 0) 0 Nice try- Mes. Boonmingbut Candid 349” You wanna picture of pore li'l cle me... ae “Just a simple test for halitosis, ma‘am.. .” “A hairy little bastard, but mine —all mine .. .” “Too wonderful for words .. . Six boys and a stathoscope. “This? . .. oh, we’re just prac- UT: ay | re “A clean, punched-out, painless u” crater... Quartet... “And if lam elected .. .” ne knew tt all... . . . there was a certain amount of disenchantment at the outset and a dangerous lot of apathy in the homestretch . . . it depressed us because we didn’t know then that it would pass . . . the out-patient departments broke the spell for here the most frequent chief complaint was ‘‘Everything” . . . and they meant it . . . the voluminous pharmacopoeia sifted dewn to antibiotics, liver extract, digitalis, insulin, cortisone and .. . hail and amen . . . elixir of phenobarbital gr. one-quarter t.i.d. ... we began to think we knew a thing or two and elected to bait our superiors with moot proclamations and unanswerable questions - + + we got wise and started every patient interview with “what’s bothering you”... the patient got a one-minute chance to start a clear history . . . failing in this he was promptly assisted through a prefabricated five-minute review of the classical symptom complex most closely related to the cardinal complaint . . . square pegs were shaved off and jammed into round holes but the therapy was the same . . . we missed the science of ward medicine but patients became people . . . the physical examination was a gracious and rarely productive performance . . . we stopped calling friends over to hear soft systolic murmurs in the mitral area . . . prostates became smal- ler, breasts more homogeneous and lungs much drier . . . obstetrics was an oasis . . . it was medicine in black and white all cut and polished . . . night and day lost meaning and we learned to sleep soundly for minutes at a stretch . . . we got serious about specialties but couldn’t make up our minds . . . many came to feel that general medicine was the best medicine - - we contracted for internship then wondered if we’d selected wisely . . . we knew we were going to be docters and wondered if we were worth it ...as the year went by we had a feeling that something was slipping away from us ... it was about to end . . . and patients continued to say “I have an awful pain here, and doctor, I’m nervous . . . I’m so nervous .. .” and sO wete we... “Damned if I know .. .” NO SMOKING i “Stand back, Burgoon — it’s contagious .. .” “ “Ooochie coochie coo... “Get that—three pelvics and not one blood pressure.” “Okay for T.U.R.” “W-e-e-egad!” u” “Roger ... over and out... “That's right—no smoking.” “lam my father’s son.. “Dear Ma: things are gettin’ awful chicken. . .” Page Fifty-Eight There was GEORGE ABERNETHY, from Co- lumbus, listing no fraternity affiliations or other en- tanglements, he will imterne at PROVIDENCE HOS- PITAL im Portland, Ore- gon, and plans to enter GENERAL PRAG Tiss and SAMUEL WN. ABOOD, from Canton, ob- tained a B.A. and an M.Sc. from OS.U., a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; he will interne at AULTMAN HOSPITAL im Canton and plans to train in INTERN- Al. MEDICINE. ...; .and HERMAN L. AL- LEN, from Youngstown, recewed a B.A. from O.S.U., a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta and Alpha Omega Alpha honoraries, a member of the Soctety for Clinical research, of Phi Delta Epsilon professional fraternity; secretary of the senior class; will interne at BETH ISRAEL HOSPIT- AL im Boston and then to SURIGER Yo, 3 ena GiLA RENCE RAYMOND APEL, from Portsmouth; has a_ B.A. from OWS.U.; a member of Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Epsilon Delta honorartes, of Alpha Kappa Kappa profes- sional fraternity; to interne at WHITE CROSS HOS- PITAL im Columbus and then to GENERAL PRAC- GL Sacer and RICHARD F. BAER, from Tuscarawas; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to interne at MI- AMI VALLEY HOSPIT- AL with no definite plans beyond that . .and ROBERT DAVID BAER, from Tuscarawas; has a B.A. from O.8.U.; @ member of Alpha Kappa Kappa, vice-president of this fraternity Junior year; to in- terne at DENVER GEN- ERAL AND COMMUN- ITY HOSPITAL, he will enter GENERAL PRAC- TISE thereafter . .and NORMAN BASH, from Cleveland; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honor- ary, and of Phi Delta Eps:- lon; to interne at HURON ROA Det) Si 2 LA ass Cleveland, then to GENER- ALePRAG PISE. ... and STANLEY BEN- JAMIN, from Canton; has a B.A. and an M.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Delta Epsilon; he will in- terne at ST. LUKE’S HOS- PITAL im Cleveland, then plans to enter INTERNAL MEDICINE or GENER- PAE RAR LOG: os. Page Fifty-Nine Page Sixty . and HEINZ A. BOK- ER, from Kelley’s Island; has a B. Ch. E. and M. Sc. from O.S.U.; a member of Tau Beta Pi and Sigma Psi honoraries, and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to interne at MT. CARMEL HOSPIT- AL, Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRACTISE oe ohana, WILLIAM: BOSWELL, from Barnes- ville; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary, and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; he will interne at GRANT HOSPITAL, Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRAC DISER ss. s ena iO) Bel Reel ae BOYD, from Columbus; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; he will imterne at S Lal TAVHOSPI TA Geez Lima, and then to URO- LOGY or GENERAL PRAG BISEe as sae: 20d VV IIIS LAV SE: BRIGGS, from Frankfort; B.A. from O.S8.U.; a mem- ber of Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta, Kappa Kappa Psi and Phi Beta Kappa hon- orartes, was historian, treas- urer and president of Altha Kappa Kappa; treasurer of the sophomore class; presi- dent of the second Medical College Council; Business Manager of the Caducean; publisher of the Briggs Note Service; he will imterne at OHIO STATE UNIVER- SULLY HOS Fi Ga- lumbus, and then to AIR FORCE MEDICINE... ...and DONALD JAMES BRUGGER, from Alh- ance; has a BS. from Mt. Union College; a member of Phi Kappa Tau and Nu Sigma Nu; member of the Medical College Counet!; National Councilor of the Student American Medical Association; to imterne at PHILADELPHIA GEN- ERAL HOSPITAL, then fo) BS EAR iC 5 ond GYNECOLOGY 11: and EDWIN W. BURNES, from Sylvania; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Omega Alpha hon- oraries, and of Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at ST. RIAs) HOSPITALS un Lima, then to GENERAL PRAG TSE. i. and GEORGE E. CALDWELL, from War- ren; has a B.S. from Bald- win Wallace; a member of Nu Sigma Nu_ fraternity ; secretary of fraternity and of junior class; to imterne GION GaaeO UNG y. HOSPITAL im New York, and undecided beyond this Meera LW LG Hel CAMPBELL, from Co- lumbus; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to interne at SEASIDE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL in Long Beach, California and then to GENERAL PRAC- isis. Page Sixty-One . . and CHARLES ED- WARD COLE, from Portsmouth; has a B.S. from Otterbein College; a mem- ber of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to interne at DETROIT RECEIVING HOSPIT- AL, and then to GENER- AL PRACTISE se soa and NACKIH COX from Harlan, Kentucky ; has a B.A. from Ohio Wesley- an; a member of Phi Kappa Psi and Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at ST. RITA’S HOSPITAL im Lima, and then to GENERAL PRAC- els eee (one ora ERICKSR. C REEDON, from Well- ston; has a BSc. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Omega Alpha honorary, and of Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at MT. CARMEL, HOS- PITAL im Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRAC- re Loree .and ERNEST B. CUT- LIP, from Tippecanoe RFD 2; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Al- pha Kappa Kappa fraternity ; to interne at MT. CAR- MEL, Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRACTISE es Page Sixty-Two Peavta 1 kr A a DD “DIXIE”. DAVIS, from Columbus; a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Nu Sigma Nu fraternities ; to interne at MT. CAR- MEL HOSPITAL, Colum- bus, and then to GENERAL PROAG FISKH@es: . and FREDERICK W. DIERKER, from Colum- bus; has a B.A, from O.8.U.; he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa frater- nity; he will mterne at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL im Columbus, then to GENER- AIZP RAC ILISE gee and WILLIAM F. FOXX, from Zanesville; has an A.B. from Wooster and an M.A. from Colum- bia U.; a member of Alpha Omega Alpha honorary, and of Nu Sigma Nu; was col- lege representative to the Student Senate 1950-51 a nd a member of the College Council; also a member of the Caducean Staff and the Senior Class Committee; to internesar) PAILADEL- PHIA-GENERAL HOS- PITAL, then to GENER- Pig EA GELS Keren .and WAYNE I. GAM- MAGE, from Columbus; has a BSc. from Capital U.; is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; will interne with the U. S. NAVY at Philadel- phia Naval Hospital, and plans after that are inde finite Page Sixty-Three Page Sixty-Four ol and--|-A NEE SS. GEIST, from Columbu:; has a B.Sc. from Capital U.; he is a member of Phi Chi fraternity; to interne at the VAN WViEeRS lela Oe IOWA, then to UROL- OG Yes, ... and RAYMOND 3. GILES, from Cuyahoga Falls; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Ep- silon Delta honoraries, and of Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at PEOPLE’S HOSPITAL in Akron; has recently de- veloped an interest in gyne- cology, although plans are not definite... . « -and FRED-. GOFF, from Wauseon; has a B.S. from Toledo U.; a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa, he will interne at the WIL- LIAM BEAUMONT Army Hospital, then to GENERAL PRACTISE po and “WILLTANE.G, GRANNIS. from Lodi; has a B.A. from Heidelberg College at Tiffin; ts a member of Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at ST. RITA’S HOSPITAL im Lima, then to GENERAL PRACTISE Persad (als AUD ES: HAMBRICK, from Well- ston; has a BSc. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Phi Lambda U - silon and Sigma Xi honor- aries, and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to interne at MI- AMI VALLEY, Dayton, and then to GENERAL PRACTISE 2... ..and EDWIN B. HAM- ILTON, from Columbus ; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a member of Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Chi fraterni- ties; to interne at ST. VIN- CENTS HOSPITAL sz New York, then to SUR- CF ROY eae . and JERRY L. HAM- MON, from Logan; has a B.A. from Miami U.; a member of Nu Sigma Nu and vice-president of this in his sophomore year; also vice-president of class in juntor year; to imterne at MIAMI VALLEY HOS- PITAL im Dayton, then to GENERAL PRACTISE ... and FRANK C. HAR- OLD, from Alliance; has a B.A. from OS.U.; @ mem- ber of Nu Sigma Nu and treasurer of the senior class; to interne at MERCY HOSPITAL in Toledo, then to GENERAL PRAC- EELS aan Page Sixty-Five Page S ixty-Six . and EDWARD LAW- RENCE HENDERSHOT, from East Liverpool; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a mem- ber of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary, and of Kappa Delta Rho and Alpha Kappa Kappa fraternities ; to in- terne at TOLEDO HOS- PITAL, then to GENER- ATF PRACT USE es Los a Dias DULL eNas, HODSDEN, from West Mansfield; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; is a member of Al- pha Kappa Kappa frater- nity; will interne at GRANT HOSPITAL in Columbus, then to GENER- Alar RAG, LIS tiiaes .. and DON HOLMES, from Columbus; has a B.A. from OS.U.; member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, vice- president Alpha Omega Al- pha, honorartes; president of Nu Sigma Nu_ fraternity ; president of sophomore class and of first Medical College Council; editor of Cadu- cean; to interne at PHILA- DEDPHIA'GENERAL HOSPITAL, then to NEU- RGIPSYCHIA TRY a: and JOHN DSH UE- BELL, from Centerburg; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary and a mem- ber of Nu Sigma Nu; he will mterne at ST. RITA’S HOSPITAL im Lima, then on to GENERAL PRAC- AWN ce Ons “, ete 5% e a v4 os 4 ... and VINCENT PAT- RICK HUGHES, from Columbus; B.S. from Notre Dame; replied “Ha!” when asked if he belonged to an honorary ; a member of Al- pha Kappa Kappa; to in- terne at TOLEDO MER- CY Hospital, then to GEN- ROA ce Seen . and ERNEST WAL- TER JOHNSON, from Akron; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Alpha Omega Alpha honoraries, and of Al- pha Kappa Kappa; manag- ing editor of the Caducean; to interne at PHILADEL- PHIA GENERAL HOS- PITAL and ts undecided beyond that . . ...and HUGH R, JONES, from East Liverpool; he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa fraternity; has his interneshp at TOLEDO HOSPITAL and will go from there to GENERAL PRAC ELISE s.0cr- . ond BENJAMIN KAUFMAN, from Cleve- land; has a BSc. from O.S.U.; is a member of Phi Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Phi Beta Kappa honorartes, and of Pi Lamb- da Phi and Phi Delta Ep- silon; was treasurer of Phi Delta Epsilon and vice-presi- dent of juntor class; to in- terne at CITY HOSPIT- AL, Cleveland; future un- decided ... Page Sixty-Seven Page Sixty-Eight ... and WILLIAM JO- SEPH KENNEDY, from Newark; has a B.S. from O.S.U.; a member of Beta Theta Pi and Phi. Chi fra- ternities; member of Medi- cal College Council; to in- terne at WHITE CROSS HOSPITAL, Columbus, and then to INTERNAL MEDICINES. - ... and FRANK C. KING, from Spring field; a member of Phi Eta Sigma and Alpha Epsilon Delta honoraries ; he will imterne at GRANT. HOSPITAL, Columbus, and then enter GENERAL PRAG EIST sos ... and SIGMUND AN- LINO REKOSE WAC Re from. Lynchburg; has a BSc.sjfrom,OS.0s Chia. from Wilmington College; a member of Alpha Psi Omega honorary and of Sigma Zeta; to imterne at SOT ad Welle iee HOSPITALS, Tempiz, Texas, and then to GEN- ERATAPRACG EISEa and JACK LOUIS KRAKER, from Warren; has.a, B.A. from OS.U35 72 member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary, and of Beta Theta Pi and Phi Chi fra- ternities; to interne at WHERE (CROSS: HOSPI- TAL in Columbus, then to GENERAL PRACTISE “rf. ana GHAKCLES “BOOB” KUHN, from Cuyahoga Falls; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Nu Sigma Nu fraternity ; +0 interne at JACKSON ME- MORIAL ‘HOSPITAL, Florida, and then to PSY- GHIA CR Yaa and EVELYN LA- VERY, from Columbus; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; is q.member of Alpha Epsilon lota; place of imterneship and plans beyond this have not yet been decided ... a7 ae JUN Mick 5 Re: LLOYD, from Lancas- tors hase BA. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Beta Kappa honorary, and of Phi Chi fraternity ; to in- terne at OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY HOSPI- TAL, then to MEDICAL RESEARCH © .. .. and HAROLD WAT- SON LONG, from Jack- son; a member of Alpha Omega Alpha honorary, and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; treasurer of AOA and vice- president of AKK; to in- terne at PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL, then to GENERAL PRAC- ceLsy Eton k Page Sixty-Nine Page Seventy .and SARAH E. LONG, from Dayton; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a member of the Women’s Medical Soror- ity; to imterne at GRANT HOSPITAL, Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRACTISE S Ay and W. “HEELS BEALE LUTZ, from Mt. Sterling; has a B.A. from Willams College; is a mem- ber of Nu Sigma Nu frater- mity; to interne at JOHNS HOPKINS, and then to INTERNAL MEDICINE . and RUTH MAHER, from Fayetteville ; has a B.S. from Capital Univer- sity; obtained R.N. at St. Francis Hospital, Columbus ; a member of the W omen’s Medical Sorority; to interne at GRANT HOSPITAL Columbus, and is undecided beyond this . and E. RICHARD “HAP” MARKER, from Toledo; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Nu Sig- ma Nu fraternities; to in- terne at TOLEDO HOS- PITAL, then to GENER- ALO PRACTISE sr: yw ane NICHOLAS MARTIN, from Youngs- town; has a B.A. from Youngstown College; 1 member of Phi Epsilon, Omicron Lambda and Delta Upsilon honoraries; a mem- ber of the Medical College Council; holder of the Comly-Coleman Scholarship award 1951, and on the Honor Roll of the National Board of Medical Examin- ers 1950; to imterne with the YOUNGSTOWN HOSPITAL Association, then to GENERAL PRAC- ISK sane , and GERALD E-. “SNAKE” MEYER, from Celina; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, Phi Beta Kappa and Alpha Epsilon Delta honoraries, and of Nu Sigma Nu; was treasurer of the junior class and a mem- ber of the Medical College Council; described as a rec- ognized authority among mastophiles; to interne at MIAMI VALLEY HOS- PITAL, then to GENER- ALAPRAGTISE™. . 4 . and HOWARD ROSS MELCHE LL ir 0 a7 Bexley; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity ; to interne at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL m Columbus, then to GENERAL PRAC- tue one Geode Mii Ear DURE MURRAY, Js, from Lima; has a B.A. from OS.U.; a member of Nu Sigma Nu; he will in- terne at ST. RITA’S HOS- PITAL im Lima, then to RADIOLOGY... Page Seventy-One Page Seventy-Two and CHARLES 6S. MYERS, Jr. from Colum- bus; has 2 B.A: from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Chi fraternity; to interne at MT. CARMEL HOSPI- TAL im Columbus, then to GENERAL PRACTISE wd THRODORE ss: MYERS, from Columbus; has a B.S. from Baldwin- Wallace College; a member of Alpha Sigma Phi frater- nity; to interne at DEA- GONESS HOSPITAL, Evansville, Indiana, and then to GENERAL PRAC- C15 koe ..and JOSEPH V. NEW- SOME, from Youngstown; has a B.A, from OS.U.3 a4 member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary, and of Nu Sigma Nu; member of the Caducean Staff, to interne at ST. ELIZABETH’S HOS- PITAL im Youngstown, and then to GENERAL PRAC- pls eee ... and SHIGEO NISHI- MURA, from Columbus; to receive B.A. from O.8.U.; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary; vice-president of the senior class; to interne at SA- CREDBHEAR TeHOSEIe TAL, Spokane, Washing- ton, then to GENERAL PRAG TIS isa and JOHN NOW- LAND, from Spring field; has a BSc. from the Uni- versity of Chicago; is a member of Phi Chi frater- nity; to interne with the ARMY at WIL LT AM BEAUMONT HOSPI- TAL. 14 El Paso, Texas, and is undecided beyond thistetos ed od Ok) eh On from Wellington ; has a B.A. from OS.U.; is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa fraternity; to interne with the AIR FORCE, and then to GENERAL PRAC- SEY ee ... and WILLIAM PO- LANKA, from Columbus ; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; 1s a member of Alpha Omega Alpha honorary; to interne at MT. CARMEL HOS- PITAL in Columbus, then tools VAAL RY? cee 4 warans GLARENCEAA. SOLANCY” “ROBERTS, from Canton; has a BS. from O.8.U.; ts a member of Nu Sigma Nu fraternity ; to interne at 8S. BAPTIST HOSPITAL, New Orleans, and then to GENERAL PRACTISE es Page Seventy-Three Page Seventy-Four .. and’ THOMAS ROCK- WELL, from W apakoneta; has a B.A. from Miami Uni- versity; ts a member of Nu Sigma Nu fraternity; to m- terne at ST. RITA’S HOS- PITAL m Lima, and then to GENERAL PRAC- a Oe . and WILLIAM HAR- OLD ROWER, from Ka- lida; has a B.A. from O.S8.U.; is a member of Phi Chi fraternity; president of the junior class; to interne at WHITE CROSS HOS- PITAL, Columbus, and then to GENERAL PRAC- LS Eee. bd. PAU le Ce SCHWALLIE from North Canton; has a BS. from Akron University; president of Alpha Omega Alpha hon- orary, and member of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to imterne at AULTMAN HOSPITAL in Canton, then to GENER- ALAPRAG WISE so os HAL VGN | lc MANTS, from Oberlin; has a B.S. from Bowling Green University ; is a mem- ber of Phi Chi fraternity ; to interne at CITY OF DETROIT RECEIVING HOSPITAL, then to IN- TERNAL MEDICINE or GENERAL PRACTISE ow. ana “SHARLES: {; SILVA, from Garfield Heights; has a B.A. from Kent State; is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity ; he will interne at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL im Columbus, then to ANESTHESIOL- COC rane .. and ROBERT E. SIN- CLAIR, from Columbus; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Delta Tau Del- ta and Nu Sigma Nu frater- nities; was vice-president of Nu Sigma Nu and is presi- dent of the senior class; to interne at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL, Columodu:., and then to GENERAL ee al eee, and EDWIN W. SMELKER, from Colum- bus; hes @ B.As from O.S.U.; is a member of Al- pha Epsilon Delta honorary and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; to imterne at WHITE CROSS HOSP EIRA ES Columbus, then to NEU- ROPS YO Pi Ree ..and DALE R.SOUTH, JR., from Bethel; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a mem- ber of Alpha Epsilon Delta, Phi Beta Kappa, and Alpha Omega Alpha honoraries, and of Nu Sigma Nu; secre- tary of AOA; to interne at ee Cr Rio. OS LL] AL, Cincinnati, and then tu GENERAL PRACTISE Page Seventy-Five Page Seventy-Six ... and WILLIAM EU- GENE SPRAGUE, from Athens; has a B.S. from O.S.U.; a member of Beta Theta Pi and Nu Sigma Nu fraternities; to imterne at BUTTERWORTH HOS- PITAL, Grand Rapids, Michigan, and then to GEN- ERAGIPRAC TIS a . and THOMAS BEN- TON STAGE, from Mar- ietta; has a B.A. from Mar- tetta College; a member of Beta Beta Beta honorary, and of Alpha Kappa Kappa; president of AKK; to in- terne at the CITY OF DE- TCO Tea eC VN HOSPITAL, and ts unde- cided beyond this... Re a eg dO wa STRUNK, from Cleve- land; has a B.S. from Wes- tern Reserve; a member of Phi Beta Kappa honorary ; to interne at KING COUN- TY SOM LEAs y os: TEM, Seattle, Washington, and then to GENERAL PRAC HIS a ...and WALTER A. TO- PINKA, from Cleveland; has a BS. from Western Reserve University ; a mem- ber of Alpha Kappa Kappa fraternity ; to mterne at ST. LUKE'S: HOSPITAL. 1% Cleveland. and then to GENERAL PRACTISE ..and PHILIP VIGODA, from Cleveland; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Phi Delta Epsilon; head of entertainment with Senior Class Committee; to interne a. KINGS CO UNAS HOSPITAL, New York, and then to INTERNAL MEDICINE... and WILLIAM E. VON KAENEL, from Lo- ran; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; is a member of Al- pha Kappa Kappa fraterni- ty; to interne at KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAE, Brooklyn, and then to GEN- BRAL PR ACIS hen Gta -DAVAAD YE: WHITCOMB, from Hi- ram; has a B.S. from Deni- son University ; a member of Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Chi fraternities; to interne fee Oe DEP ROG, RECEIVING HOSPIT- AL, and then to UROLO- CG Yiee ...and THOMAS BLASE OM Gee W HET Reet tro Zanesville; has a B.A. from O.S.U.; a member of Delta Sigma Pi honorary, and of Nu Sigma Nu; to interne at JACKSON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, Miami, Flor- ida, and then to GENERAL PRA Cah Le ers Page Seventy-Seven Page Seventy-Eight and L. E. WHIT- MIRE, from Delta; has « B.S. from Toledo Univer- sity; a member of Alpha Ep- silon Delta honorary; to in- terne in DETROIT with Ali SPA hast ed AOE TE OS HEALTH SERVICE, and then to GENERAL PRAC- LS Eee: . . and GLENN WIL- LOUGHBY, from Mar- ion; a member of Nu Sigma Nu fraternity; to interne at MARINE HOSPITAL Detrot. (USS: PUBLIG HEALTH SERVICE=) and then to GENERAL PRAGH IS ec .and JOHN H. WILMS, from Columbus; has a B.S. from Otterbein College; a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta honorary, and of Kap- pa Sigma and Alpha Kappa Kappa fraternities; was ban- quet chairman and alumni relations chairman of AKK; to mterne at CHRIST HOS- PITAL im Cincinnati, and then to GENERAL PRAC- LISE-or PSYCHIATRY, Dilatas qn TUE Go Of No-No-Mrs. Jones, Dont heor down so hard Caan A 7 0 pSo A) Ar OT TY wath Where do you wont it tied ¢ “Sometimes | think of the sim- ple life . . .”’ “Mm—mm! Eighter from Deca- tur!’ “Well, this'is one of those matous things .. .” “It's too late—he’s gone.” NO SMOKING Bo Fane Pint tite Peet “Drop dead.” “How long has this sardine been dead, Hans?” “Why ask me?” “Ha ha ha—he’s only Mori- bund.” “Here is a typical parous introi- JUS cee “Look, Ma—I’m a surgeon!” Surgery orals. ” “Note the estrogen effect... “You can take that thing and shove it... .” “Never seen this before, huh?” “At your cervix, “Son, it all depends on your int of view .. .” “I'm seri really do go for me!” you spell ‘Johnson’?” Vacuum cleaner. “Now, just drop your apart, honey... .” ete 4 Pas Se at the master’s knee... . . . our clinical mentors . . . categorically the most incredible educational menage ever assembled . . . a clinical prof is a man adept at steering discussions to the subject matter of an article painfully memorized an hour previously . . . his favorite game is literature, literature, who’s got the literature . . . if the right article doesn’t come to mind at the right time he peremptorily dismisses all work on the matter as presumptuous and inaccurate and relies on his own series . . . the key phrase is: “In my practise I’ve found that...” ... a series is at least two cases observed within a thirty-five year period . . . twenty-two years ago he published an article on the late sequelae of vitiligo . . . the relationship between this condition and every other clinical condition observed thereafter is invariably discussed in some detail . . . he talks faster than a shellgame pitchman on the rural circuit . . . his guileless faith in the traditional abra- cadabra of his own specialty is a thing to inspire awe . . . in the lecture room he is a master at extending five minutes worth of information into fifty minutes of diaphanous fluff... the filler ranges from innocuous homilies to extravagantly irrelevant discourses on municipal waterworks, syntax and aboriginal sin . . . he is prone to wax ecstatic on matters of most minute worth . . . when momentarily halted by inadmissible ignorance he prates blithely of the “Art of Medicine...” ... but all of this contributes happily to his utter charm and detracts nothing from his competence . . . on the positive side it must be allowed that . . . mentally he has the agility of a pubescent Rhesus making love in mid-air . . . faster on his feet than kid McCoy moving away from a quick left . . . as devoted to his work as any other minister . . . he is sincerely wistful of the success of his students . . . but if asked whether they ever tire or try him he might be expected to answer in his own inimitable fashion . . . ‘Not Infrequently . . .” Page Eighty-Two . . «. Donald Mahanna, the bulldog of cardiology ...he took a special interest in the class of ?52.... he had more than a formal interest as class advisor... this fond relationship was probably based on a satisfying mutual belligerence... on ward rounds he was a stimulating an- tagonist...he said you could percuss out the heart of the obese patient... we loved him for his innocent faith... he was truly a favorite... . . . Arthur James is the sweetest surgeon of our ken... except in surgery ... beyond the confines of the O.R. he enjoyed the tranquility of a saint within them—ach! ... when a patient with a carcinoma went to a large New York clinic for treatment they said to him... “Why do you come here? Arthur James is in Columbus... he lopped benign tumors from us by the dozens ...we owe him much. . . . . Dwight Palmer, neu- rologist... few were as eager to teach as he... none more competent... his mind is perpetuum mobile... his lectures crystalline and consecutive... two quaint failings...(1) the prime intent of the student is to break brain slides... (2) students are up to their ears in crib notes ... these meant nothing in the total pic- ture... not an easy man to know but in truth a very genial one... our thanks... Page Eighty-Three Ethical flatus... . bleeding, breathing and pain are the only real medical emergencies . . . the shame of an operative exodus is usually his claim ... there are very few of them... He is the man at the head of the table who never says a word until the blood pressure falls to zero (at which he mur- murs) . .. or a surgical assistant leans on the patient’s chest...at which he screams... he 1s the master of the venipuncture... and the blood flowed like wine...he is a gentle creature and despises pain .. . “just a little more Trendelenberg, please ee The Skin Game... . . . chancre mechanic nonpareil and the last of the herb doctors...a quaintly lovable philosopher of the cracker-barrel variety, he is resigned to the hard facts of reality ...1f you cat cure °em, dowt make ?em worse... from them we learned that if it looks like nothing you ever saw before, responds to nothing, and exists with a negative serology ... call it eczema... if the patient bites his nails call it neurodermatitis . when all others fail call it dermatitis idiopathicus .. which will work for all but doctors and pro- fessors of romance languages... Gore blimey. al as a specialty, hematology approached extinction when the monophyletists met the polyphyletists in mortal combat years ago... much blood was shed and both factions were over- joyed...there were many lectures covering a wide variety of subjects... erythropoiesis, the clot- ting mechanism, erythropoiesis, clotting, clotting .. once a foreigner came to town and discussed leukemias... many hematologists still feel that the distinction between the lymphocyte and the monocyte is a real one... perhaps we were too obtuse... Page Eighty-Four . .. the anes- thetists . . . in the first row: Walter Chess, Gwen Trudeau, Jay Jacoby (the chief,) Carolyn Ziegler, Gregorio Ga- lang . . . and in the second row: Earl Wrenn, Ben Gillespie, Earl Knisley, John Garvin, Norris Lenahan, Robert Taylor, Porter Reed, Roscoe Brand, William Ham- elberg . . . all M.D.’s and gentle peo- ple... He eee POt ath Lae eee es sis We . the der- matologists . . . in the front row: Stuart Urbach, Eldred Heisel, William Loveberry . . and standing: Lloyd Stump, Joseph Shepard, James McCreary, Louis Praver ... all M.D.’s . . . Praver just remarked that 5 percent zinc oxide ointment is too strong . . . McCreary is horrified . . . Heisel didn’t hear the remark . . . and the others just don’t care . . . the he- matologists . . . first row: Bruce Wise- man, Charles Doan, Claude-Starr Wright . . . and in the second row: Bertha Bouroncle, Thomas Stevenson, Bundham Sundharagiati, John DeVore, Robert Wall, Nannie De Leeuw, Noreen Brandt. . standing outside the window is a spy from the monophyletic school, extracting lead nuggets re myelopoiesis from a monophyletic counter-espionage agent... Page Eighty-Five Cock O° the nalk... . . the internal medi- cine staff . . . direct descendants of Hippocrates and Laennec ... the latter used a rolled paper to carry heart sounds through the forbidding mass associated with Coopers ligaments . . . these men use two pieces of rubber with a bell attached... some of us prefer X-ray ... this is the blueblood of the profession (or “cyanotic,” as they call it) .. . they are the prophets of the wory tower... they are, in fact, Mr. Medicine... Whipping boys... . . the medicine residents . . . there is not much more to say . whipping boys of the internist they are rarely given to smiling ... paralyzed by the immensity of their subject they are inclined to concentrate their energy . some become experts at administering digitalis and priscoline ... others are adept at gastroscopy and sigmoidoscopy ... to be followed invariably by upper and lower GI series. . . medical rounds are a sacred pilgrimage The soothsayers . Ee ... the psychia- trists and neuropsychiatrists . . . immune to the minor vexations which torment man they have fashioned a strange world of their own . . . quan- titative determinations are not yet well developed but highly imaginative rumination has virtue... an act is not an act, but a significance . . . when two psychiatrists were greeted with a cheery good morning?’ by a passerby one turned to the other after a few steps and queried penstvely: “W hat do you suppose he meant by that... 4 Page Eighty-Six . the doctors of in- ternal medicine. Front row: Dwight Pal- mer, G. I. Nelson, B. K. Wiseman, H. Clodfelter, and one-half a martyred staff man cruelly bisected by our photog- rapher. Second: Sam Saslaw, G. Hamwi, J. Prior, C. Haynie at morning medita- tions, Wm. Burkhart. Third: N. Rothermich, R. L. Fulton, R. H. Browning, R. E. Worden, R. H. Jacques. Fourth, J. Ryan, G. Hum- mel, W. F. Bradley, D. L. Mahanna, E. R. Hatcher, J. H. McCreary. Fifth: R. W. Kissane, J. Cross... . the residents of internal medicine . . . in the front row: Phil Orpet, Charles McKitrick, Jack Rim- elspach . . . in the back: Beryl Oser, Ed Hard, H. Ben Merkle and Ralph Hurst .. . it is evident that all of these stalwarts are intent on something . . . to be intent and leaning forward is consistent with their notion of the fitness of things . ... the depart- ment of psychiatry . . . starting at the left and working around: Parker, Mich- ael, Patterson, Jacobson, Harding, Cave- ness, Hoffman, the late J. Fremont Bate- man, Shepler, Lotsof, Harvey, Gove, Evans . . . Jacobson, Shepler, Lotsof, and Harvey are all workers in psychiatric ancillary fields . . . the remainder are M:Di'si oe Page Eighty-Seven The handy men... . the obstetricians and the gynecologists ... they were a little flunk- happy but they taught expertly ... the work was a pleasure to do... every lecture was a mellow blend of homely philosophy, practical psychology and scientific fact... the proper program in per- forming the digital exam is from the ankles cephalad, with gentle caress, sotto voice and sym- pathetic smirk... the perineum is the cradle of life and not to be stretched . . . biopsy everything that won't biopsy back... Vision of delight... . . . « the ophthalmologists hold in their domain the third most useful organ of the body (the other two being cerebrum and orchids) ... but the specialty has a face that only an ophthalmologist can love . . . refractions are a vital service as well as bread and caviar paste... this man works from eight to five and dies of natural causes at an advanced age... blood loss and respiratory arrest concern him rarely but his is a true specialty ... he is an indispensable man . Carpenter’s Local... . the history of orth- opedic surgery began with the development of the iron-maiden and the rack... the highest achieve- ment in human affairs 1s the healing of the fracture with preservation of function .. . children who have been adequately treated for congenital dis- lncation of the hip become adults who walk well, speak with a croaking voice and tend to propagate tadpoles... back pain is a protruded disc until the patient develops coppery jaundice ... here is the only doctor who carries a plumb bob and miter box in his Rit... Page Eighty-Eight ... themselves .. . in the front row: the doctors Norris, Green- tree, Hollenbeck, Barnes, the chief, Hugen- berger, Daly and Hendricks . . . in the back row: the doctors Cedars, Epperson, McClure, Zartman, Keyes, Ezell, Hapke, Rothschild (Ph.D.), Morley, Gillem and Williams . . . someone just remarked that fibroids are the commonest cause of post- menopausal bleeding . . . no one smiled .. . . the ophthalmologists pictured here in the usual order .. . front row: doctors Quinn, Perry, Culler— the chief, Clark, Stoutenborough, Sage, Stephens . . . second: the doctors Stine, Battles, Sage, Clark, Thompson, Moses, Magnuson, Makley, Farmer, Long, Bont- ley . . . on the wall behind them are illustrations of pathological fundi any relationship between these and what you ever see through an ophthalmoscope is purely coincidental . . . ... the ortho- pods ... in front the doctors Lacey, Harlan Wilson (the chief,) Worstell in the back, the doctors Kubiac, Miller, Kackley . .. the photo was snapped in the winter . . . the boys were considering the icy streets with glee .. . Page Eighty-Nine The dying swan... ... these are, you shou.d pardon the expression, the otorhinolaryngolo gists . . some say the air is filled with the swan song of a noble specialty . . . others feel that chronic sinusi tis and otitis media will flourish forever .. . and penicillin or not, tonsils will probably con- tinue to meet in the midline ... there also re- mains the eternal question of adenoids as a causa- tive factor in enuresis . . . these are the artists of minute and difficult manual procedures . . . but quo vadis .. .£ Jwenile delinquents... ... the pediatricians... at least one of them has said that it takes one to treat one... psychiatry is the only other spe- cialty that can make this clam. . . eighty-five percent of all infants can do well on pizza and sauerkraut ... the remainder must be fed by the calculus . . . as a specialty it ranks with minor surgery in terms of therapeutic satisfaction weigh ’em, and flood ?em with vitamins .. . the only place where URI and gastroenteritis stand as diagnoses c Soak-and-sizzlers... ... physical medicine... hake it, baste it and bend it nine ways... when the diagnosis is made and the pharamacopoeia of- fers naught, their gentle care and untiring patience is all that stands between therapeutic surrender and a return to health ... heat and massage are still better medicine than cor tisone im some con- ditions . . . and when arguing with osteopaths we point with sincere pride to this field, thereby re- ducing the one argument to dust... unsung and unpublicized, he of fers hope to the hopeless . . . . . the gentlemen of ears, nose and throat . . . front row: the doctors Emsweiler, Harris, Sanor, Means, Miller, Arrington . . . second row: the doctors Hendricks, Smith, Arthur, Roth, Deishley, Wehr, Krech and Martin . they have just finished discussing the future of the tonsil and feel that there is much hope left . ... in the front row are the doctors Baldock, Wheeler, Host- erman, Baxter (the head man), and Syl- vester . . . in the middie: doctors Rie- penhoff, McClave, Ainsworth, Anderson . . and in the rear: doctors Brown, Dawson, Ainsworth and Howard . : they are all smiling because the phot- ographer waved a teddy bear at them and cooed childishly . . - . readying themselves for a refreshing dip in the Hubbard tank are Dorothy Adey, pretty miss Nancy Bell, Dr. Ralph Worden, the chief, Lois Perkins, Elner Courtney, who always had the situation wired, and Nancy Lee Fix . . . another therapist, Richard Magato, fell into the tank just prior to the ex- posure and is not visible here .. . One General electric... ... neurology... the diag- nostician’s paradise and the therapist’s inferno . . thiamine hydrochloride given in most any amount, t.i.d. or otherwise, is considered “helpful” im many instances... regarding NEULrO-SUr LETY y the post- operative presence of respirations and a pulse 1s considered an excellent prognostic sign .. . con- sciousness, with cerebration above the elasmobranch level is a luxury... euphoria and sunny optimism is an occupational disorder of the physician... P. opular roentgenogr aphy er ... the radiologist, pa'e and wan, thrives in a jungle of dark rooms, film, lead pants, view boxes, complex machines and dictaphones . . . these men see deeply imto thei patients . . . diodrast contrast studies are euphonious but forbidding . . . it 1s a battle of inaccessible vessels, hyperactive gag reflexes and taut, straming ani... roentgenographic findings are customarily consistent with the clinical im- pression ... which is consistent with X-ray find- ings... only the pathologist dissents... De Lands... ... the surgery staff... dowt be a handmaiden to medicine— use your own stethoscope .. . cutting 1s the work of a butcher—know when to operate and what to operate . .. the anesthetist keeps them alive dur- ing surgery .. . the surgeon’s trick is to keep them alive before and after... when in doubt give sodium, potassium and inundate with fluids . . . never speak to a scrub nurse when it’s posst- ble to scream at her .... never accept the first instrument offered ... ask for something dif- Not aca ee Page Ninety-Two . .. the neurologists are the doctors Dwight Palmer... J. J. Alpers . . . and Harrison Evans .. . pictured here studying yesterday’s rac- ing form and results . . . their horse, which ran last, is in the process of being diagnosed as a case of multiple sclerosis complicated by myasthenia gravis .. . . .. the radiologists ... in front: the doctors E. Kirkendall, B. Kirkendall, Means, the chief, Carter, Wid- rich . . . rear: Schlecht, Mastropaolo, Vin- son, Gersh, Ash, Putnam, Franklin... a doctor named Morton is absent . . . at the time of the picture he was busy bring- ing a clinical path conference up to date on medicine, surgery, pathology, geria- trics, endocrinology, etc .. . ... Surgery staff... in the front: the doctors Furste, Ellison, Robert Zollinger—the chief!! . . . Richard Zoll- inger, Zox . . . back row: the doctors Hardymon, Traphagen, Lewis, Arnold, Meyers, James . . . just as the picture was snapped an irate internist—who believes that peptic ulcer should be treated with banthine—stepped into the light and cast a gloomy shadow across the group... Page Ninety-Three And cherubim... . = «= SUuPptcal FesIente megs oe forlorn victims of the pecking order .. . some are more assiduous peckers than others but all are industrious . . . they tend to walk with a military waddle, lagging several feet behind their corp- ulent midriffs . . . also show a marked propensity for quizzing medical students without warning, each interrogation being followed by a staccato: “Nun? Nu? Whaddaya say, boy? Nasies nee ae in all creating a remarkable if miniature similitude of the chief . . . good boys, all Euphoria, amphoria... . . . front line m the ageless crusade against the tubercle bacillus . . . no avenue of investigation has been ignored in this battle . . . and indeed, few things have been left untried . . . the problems of diagnosis and treatment have created this specialty . . . what seems to be a smokers lung on the medicine floor more closely resembles active imvasion in the acid- fast annex . . . therapeutically, bed rest 1s still regarded as best . . . prognostically, the end of this killer may be near . Gay spigoteers... Page . . . the urologists . . . mtrepid in slickers and hip boots they throw wide the flood gates . . . the only contraindication to T.U.R. of the prostate is femininity ... the only specialist to manipulate a catheter like a hydraulic jack handle . . .the only essential difference between a quack and a physician is the “touche? .. . or rectal, if you please . . . this man collects specimens in three bottles . . . he is a remote control whittler of big, bouncing glands : orchids to these champions of orchiectomy .. . Ninety-Four ... the boys ... in the front: are the doctors Rini, Morgan, Williams, Lovingood (the chief) . . . lounging on the sofa arms are doctors Cedars and Burns . . . behind the sofa: doctors Prados, Sloan, Flory, Plechas . . . and in the back: doctors Boiman, West- hart, Carroll, Britt, Waite, and Boles... they pose with blood on their hands, footprints on their necks and _ hearts filled with humanity . . . the milk of human kindness circulates in their veins . . it looks like ice water... ... the tuberculosis bat- talion . . . in the front: the doctors Browning (the chief) . . . Atwell, Ash, Widrich . . . in the back: Miss Brown, Miss Loose, the doctors Lodge, Hull, Smith, and Kuzack . . . they work in another world, where quiet efficiency and good cheer reign... . .. the north Neil Avenue Plumbing and Fixture Society . . . sitting in front, crouched for the kill, is the chief of the service, Dr. Taylor—urological sur- geon and orator . . . standing behind him in trembling apprehension are the doctors Saylor, Williams, Collins and Taylor ... ol’ Wil’ Bill’ Collins, the top resident, is grinning because the chief has promised to let him do a T.U.R. next year... Page Ninety-Five Curtis’ cut-ups... «i 3 SUTQtCOl TESCAresr me enen. 150 called because they specialize in thyroid and thoracic surgery...(2)...some say the ad- vances made have been primarily im anesthesia... but without these men we might never have seen a positive Chvostek’s sign... or Trousseaws... surgery is the treatment of choice for the toxic goiter . . . is it true that radioactive iodine 1s irritating to the T-zone? ...the key-word 1s “facilitate — facilitate the surgeon” ... Bowel Movement Rate determinations are’ no longer valued as thyroid function tests .. . Page Ninety-Six ... confined as usual to their own tight little group they are, starting around the table from the left . .. the doctors Rapport (top resident), Curtis (chief of the service), Klassen (him- self), Reiser, Kazuk, and Smith . . . in the back are the doctors Thurlow, Meck- stroth, Dow and Ashare . . . protein- bound fritters and barbecued apices con- stituted the piece de resistance . . . specific dynamic action will set in shortly ... CLINIC - QUIZ. Here are depicted various clinical clichés, procedures or diagnoses. lest youR nonsense level by identifying the quiz cartoons below. Score: 12- poor ,9- air G-go0d, 3- excellent, O- normal. Correct Gnswers on page Il ow N PATH oe LP 64 SH Pa ! AUREO mye jy 2 doz- Cope Loom Our Man of the Year... St. George ... ... George Harris Ruggy ...a physician and the Junior Dean of the College of Medicine... named Man of the Year for the second time —an honor without precedent ... we did it and we're glad... he is one of those rare persons to whom a promise is more than a hollow convenience... for the student, he does unfailingly what he promises to do... for the student, he more often serves beyond the contract of formal promise and beyond the demands of moral obligation ... for the student—always ... when needed most, when thunder- heads darken the scholastic sky, when professional catastrophe threatens—for the student . . . who clearly recognizes that Medicine and Medical Education are not necessarily synonymous . . . who educates as he instructs . . . who earns fast and enduring friends as he educates... whose life and work are an inseparable unit— for the student—always for the student... in ... 20 beer at all...2” “In malaria, the treatment of choice... ” “So I said to the dean... “There will be no fires in this lab... ” ...and friend “|. friends, Romans... Page Ninety-Nine LANDSLIDE REELECTS RUGGY Quiz Educator In Bloody Riot (This Caducean exclusive was written by one of our corres- pondents who found himself, by sheer coincidence, on the scene of one of the bloodiest riots in this city’s history.—Ed.) “T am a senior medical stu- dent.” At first it seemed no different than any other day. The time came for our four o’clock class and by some mad chance I hap- pened to attend. As I hadn’t read the bulletin board for five months it came as a surprise to me that our usual course in preventive med- icine (derived from the Latvian epithet ‘Previs Entiva Medicus’, meaning ‘If it doesn’t have a damn thing to do with medicine call it this’.) had been dis- placed by a class meeting. Upon arriving I found my classmates sunk in traditional somnolence. Our president arose and stated the question concern- ing the type-face to be used on graduation invitations. Failing in his attempt to ex- cite a discussion he arbitrarily ruled that the decision be left to an impartial committee. No dissenting voice was heard and the meeting verged on adjourn- ment. At this point the Junior Dean entered under a pall of impending doom. “JT have no personal interest in this matter,” he remarked crisply, “but the question has arisen and should be settled by class vote.” After twenty minutes. of casually inflammatory discourse Dr. Ruggy persuaded one of the students to make public a posi- tive declaration of opinion on the question. And that quickly a large par- cel of Guaiac positive Nitrogen- Cellulose complex hit the venti- lating system. When the ambulance left with the last maimed body the Junior Dean was questioned about his role in the holocaust. “Phlegm is as dangerous in student affairs as it is in the bronchial tree,’”’ he commented drily. Page One-Hundred SCIENCE TRIUMPHANT OVER DRAMA’S CALL During the high school pe- riod, in Newcastle, Pennsyl- vania, this young scholar found himself trembling on the brink of scholastic catastrophe. There bewitched by the smell of grease paint and the lurid glare of footlights he aban- doned himself to the theater. The turning point came in his career during a scene from MacBeth, when a myopic Mac- Duff inadvertently severed his portal vein with a misdirected thrust of steel. Impressed by the surgeon’s technique, he resolved to an- swer the less sanguine call of medicine. The last two paragraphs are fiction—the first two truth. His interest in theater persists. No dignitary escapes the indignity of the defamatory sobriquet. During our tenure this honored professor has been popularly referred to by ir- reverent students in dark lurking places by two such names. One of these—alluding to his positive somatic charm as comparable to that of a noted artist of the resined canvas—is ‘‘Gorgeous George.”’ The other associates him nominally—in the manner of a bad pun—with the con- volutions of the _ gastric mucosa. This comes out “Rugae,” and is pronounced ‘“Roog-eye” by the _ blas- phemous. Unprecedented Honor Conferred George H. Ruggy Born February 13, 1911, the son of Eva Harris and Rex Walker Ruggy, at Salem, Ohio. Despite the fact that no new, strange star was observed in the east on this occasion, the par- ents were extremely and justi- fiably proud. The neighbors of the Ruggy’s were considerably less enchant- ed. It was their practise to arise each morning by the lights shining from the Ruggy house- hold. On this occasion the lights went on at two o’clock in the morning. As a result of this traumatic experience the neighbors plunged some capital into an alarm clock and never were able to establish good rapport with young George thereafter. Juntor Dean Stellar Witness Columbus — Three members of the Phi Chi medical fra- ternity were saved from a back- breaking stretch in the county labor farm by the surprise testi- mony of Dr. George H. Ruggy, Junior Dean of the College of Medicine. Hailed into court on the charge of First Degree Patho- logical Intoxication, the defend- ants submitted a plea of “not guilty” from the _ horizontal position. Confronted with the evidence recovered from their backyard —seven empty ponies and eighty-three emptied and rinsed seabreeze flagons—the students became acutely hysterical and confessed. At this point, Dr. Ruggy arose and invalidated the con- fession on the grounds that it had been extracted from gross- ly incompetent minors under profound sedation. The turning tide in this legal drama was climaxed by the junior dean’s declaration that he had drunk the contents of the ninety exhibits unaided. Called to offer Expert Testi- mony, the seven defendants readily agreed that this was well within the realm of pos- sibility, The Judge threw the case out of court and the students were immediately dispatched to St. Francis Hospital Emerg- ency Room, where they were treated with intravenous insulin, five-percent dextrose in water and coramine. Columbus — For reasons as obvious as they are multiple, George Harris Ruggy, Junior Dean of the College of Medi- cine, O.S.U., was recently elec- ted Man-of-the-Year for the second time! In the final ballot the vote of the Senior Class was unani- mous. This is the first time that this honor has been conferred twice on one man. HARD FACTS NOTED The offices of our tabloid find themselves in receipt of a forbidding list of deadly sta- tistics, attesting in sum to the impressive scholastic achieve- ment of a young medical edu- cator of our acquaintance. As a matter of record and because of their nature, these facts are included here rather than on the comic page. George Harris Ruggy, edu- cated in part in the public school system at Salem, Ohio. Awarded a B.A. at the Col- lege of Wooster in 1932, and an M.A. at Ohio State Univer- sity in 1934; a Ph.D. at O.S.U. in 1936, and an M.D. at the University of Chicago (Division of Biological Sciences), 1940. He served as a House Officer at Blodgett Memorial Hospital in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1940-41, as a Graduate Assist- ant in Physiological Chemistry at Ohio State University, 1932- 36, and as an instructor in this department from 1936-39 and 1941-42. From 1942-47 he was an As- sistant Professor of Physiologi- cal Chemistry and Pharmacol- ogy at this university. He was appointed as assistant Professor of Medicine in 1943, and elevated to Associate Pro- fessor of Medicine in 1946. He has been Junior Dean of the College of Medicine since 1945, and an Associate Pro- fessor of Physiological Chemis- try and Pharmacology since 1947. He became a Diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1948. A member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Theta. Xi Delta, Kappa Kappa Gamma and others, he belonged to no secret societies. ... ne nere honored... row at the left these smirking cherubim are South, Allen, Polanka, Foxx, Long, Schwallie . . . and in the back are Meyer, Johnson, Burns, Holmes, Creedon, and Dr. Robert Zollinger, faculty advisor... ... but few were iwm- pressed... following this there remains the challenging task of filling approximately fifteen square inches of copy with eulogistic banaltties about the distinguished members of Alpha Omega Alpha, the national medical honorary society for superior scholastic achievement . . . this is important to the end of achieving an artistic balance of the page . . . the secret of their success becomes evident in a review of certain personal characteristics and virtues... Schwallie walks with a scissors gait and sleeps in opisthotonos . . . Holmes vomited in prelude and encore to every examination . . . South went into circulatory collapse with each case presentation . . Long renounced matrimony ... Burnes became an hostile aggressive . . Johnson had it cased . . . Creedon sublimated his priestly propensity in cloistered study ... Meyer switched religions . . . Allen bowed beneath the burden of extra surgery ... Polanka retired from public life... Foxx worked with his right hand pressed fearfully over his precordium .. . this is the patterm.. . strict conformance aSSUreES SUCCESS .. starting in the front Page One-Hundred-One With stars in their NA Pige On -Hundred-Two ... is the beginning and the end ... as the great minds of medicine confer on elaborate diagnostic programs and refined systems of therapy. . . . the nurse cares for the patient . .. in silent swiftness she glides from task to task with no motion lost .. . to the physician she is hands, feet and eyes . . . the medical student first coming on the ward encounters in her a warning glance, a crisply intolerant voice, a forbidding declamation of floor regulations, and an all-inclusive air of disapproval . . . a moment later she is a lovely vignette of smiles and sympathetic patience . . . for the doctor who is also a gentlemen she will perform any duty uncomplainingly . . . to that occasional, imperious blabber- mouthed bounder she is an inflamed insurrectionist . . . she is a good woman to have on your side . . . professionally she is not to be regarded as the physician’s aide . . . in this respect she stands solidly by herself, doing work which the doctor is ill-trained to do properly . . . her status represents the fruition of years of arduous, demanding work and study . . . her highest virtues are industry, efficiency, forbearance . . . she is a perfect lady but can handle the vernacular competently when the occasion requires it .. . she is a thoroughly lovable creature . . . bless her heart .. . “ “Pure corn... “We go to Toledo next week.” “If you shoot I'll scream!” “Night In.” “Let's all go out for a straw- berry soda... .” “Oh you kid.” “IIL serve it but | don’t have to drink it...” “Candid 350” “Oh, pshaw .. .!” ...and hands full of bedpans... Page One-Hundred-F our . .. The freshman student nurses . . . currently in a state of aca- demic flux and strangers to each other . . . picture identification proved to be impossible . . . members of the class, passing by their lovely surnames: Bender, Brady, Bunshaft, Crocker, Dillon, Ehrlich, Gladman, Gordo n, Gott, Jackson, Hanes, Laver, Lilley, Paul, Settimio, Stockum, Walden, Whittaker . . . Aiken, Allison, Arnold, Arthur, Bassett, Bodey, Bornshine, Bower, Bradley, Cicanese, Clark, Cowans, Daumler, Dillon, Dumm, Eakins, Edwards, Freeland, Gallagher, Geiger, Halberg, Henderson, Hill, Hildebrand, Hirth, His- rich, Hoge, Humberger, Janes, Johnson, Jones (Gwen), Jones (Mary), Kawasaki, Kell, Knight, Kornder, Kress, Lanman, Lau, Lee, Lewis, Lim, Matway, Meyer, Miarer, Miesse, Mock, Mosher, Mushock, Musser, McCartney, McKenna, McMaken, McPhee- ters, O'Hara, Parsons, Perkins, Pryor, Pulse, Richie, Ridenour, Ringley, Rolfes, Sabetay, Shaw (Ethelrine), Shaw (Patri- cia), Shutt, Speir, Stinson, Strehler, Stringfield, Thatcher, Thomas, Todd, Tra- ver, Velez, Virden, Walton, Ward, Warner, Welch, Welker, Weller, Wise, Yee . . . indeed, a goodly number of them... . . The sophomore nursing stu- dents . . . first row: Farnsworth, Hoover, Edmonson, Frary, Brandenburg, McNary, Mielke . . . second: Jones, Cochran, Cruikshanks, Steiner, Heussner, Campbell . . . third: Knight, Childs, Rohr, Freeman, Smedley, Seig .. . . .. The sophomore nursing stu- dents .. . first row: Flemming, Bosse, Graft, Lankor, Rohr, Risser, Halsell . . . second: Rubio, Yee, Crombie, Johnson, Bukey, Campen, Kirkpatrick . . . last: Stalter, Morris, Castle, Bechschmidt, Kroeger, Athey, Harris... . . - Sophomore nursing students not in picture: Bunshaft, Dolezal, Doty, Fuller, Goetz, Lorimer, Prince, Stevens, Tannenbaum, Wood- burn, Bevington, Collins, Edwards, Esbenshade, Geise, High, Lukianoff, McLoughlin, Tobin, Zediker... . .. The junior nursing students front row: Hunter, Lewis, George, Nicholson, Snapp, Swank . . . second: Pancaw, Magruder, Smith, Inks, Kramer, Moss, Morrison . . . the cool, sure dignity of the profession of nursing is admirably epit- omized in this formal group portrait .. . ... in the bottom pic starting in front: Brautigan, Woodburn, Coffey, DeWitt, Dinsmore, Bishop, Andrick, Cummins . . . Adieu... There was MARY AGLE of Springfield, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Mary was ac- tive in Grange and 4H Club and plans to work in Springfield ... and MARTHASUE ARGANBRIGHT of Co- lumbus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Sue was active in Torch Club and will prob- ably work in Obstetrics .. . and VIOLET BALES of Lido, California, B. 8. in Nursing. Vi was a mem- ber of the Rifle Club and the University House As- sembly. She plans to work in Michigan for a short time, then return to Calt- fornia and SHIRLEY BO- GART of Columbus Grove, Ohio, B. 8. in Nurs- ing. Shirley was a member of Links, Pleiades, Rifle Club, WSGA, Torch Club secretary, Junior Nursing Class President, and Presi- dent of the Nursing Stu- dent Faculty Association She also played basketball and plans to go into Pub- lic Health . Page One-Hundred-Six ...and ELSIE BURKEY of Berlin Center, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Elsie was active in Pleiades and plans to go into Public Health 6 nde ATT Reva ELIZABETH CAMPEN of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Kitty was Freshmen Nursing Class Vice President and a mem- ber of ei) orch Gin, ae . and JO ANN DUN- NETT CANRIGHT of Delaware, Ohio B. 8S. in Nursing. Jo was Vice Presi- dent of the Senior Nurs- ing Class, a member of Alpha Gamma Delta, and participated in intramur- als .and ANNE CASELEY of Jackson, Ohio, who will receive her B. 8. in Nurs- ing wn @8@ DAR BARA CLARKIN of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Barb was a member of Pi Beta Phi, Chimes, Fresh- man Activities, Links, Mid Mirrors, Newman Club, Pomerene Activities and Board of Control, Torch Club, WSGA_ Board and Standards Committee, YWCA Board, and partici- pated in intramural basket- ball. Barb is very much in- terested in Pediatrics... f and NANCY JEAN CLAYPOOL of Akron, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Nancy was a member of Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, and Newman Club ... and MOLLYANNE REAM DAVIS, Colum- bus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nurs- ing. Molly was secretary of the Sophomore Nursing Class. She may do private duty or industrial nurs- GO Gees fee ae tO Ct AY NADINE DAWSON of Akron, Ohio, B. 8. in Nurs- ing. “Sparkie” was a mem- ber of Rifle Club, Sigma Theta Tau, Torch Club, Estrellita of Pleiades Presi- dent, Roger Williams Club Secretary, and Junior Nurs- ing Class President. Sparkie will probably work in Tu- berculosis Hospital . . and EVELYN MA- RIE DERINGER of Ada, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Evie was a member of the Golf Club, Christian En- deavor, and played intra- mural basketball. Evie plans to go into VA Nursing... . and LOIS DE VORE of Ottawa, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. “Beanie” was a member of Pleiades, YW- CA, Representative of Stu- dent Faculty Association, and played intramural bas- ketball. She is planning to do Staff duty for awhile. . eee dds Orb CANIN DODSON of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Ruthie was Torch Club Vice President. She is think- ingn of VA Nursing... . and SUE DRESBACH of Ashville, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Sue was active in Boot and Saddle Club. She plans to work in Obstetrics Page One-Hundred-Seven .. and MARY ELLEN EBRIGHT of Powell, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. “Ducky” played intramural basketball and was im- pressed with Psychiatric Nursing and WANDA EIT- NER of Akron, Ohio, B.S. in Nursing. Wanda was a member of Torch Club and plans to work in Ak- ron ... and RITA GENE- VIEVE ELER IN Gof Cleveland, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Rita was a mem- ber of the Tennis Club, Boot and Saddle, President of the March Senior Class, and played intramural basketball. Rita plans to work in the Operating Room . and NAOMI EVANS of Newark, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Naomi was Senior Class treasurer, a member of Pleiades, and active in the Lutheran Students As- sociation Page One-Hundred-Eight ... and VIRGINIA FOS- TER of Creston, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Ginny was Senior Class Secretary, a member of Pleiades, and ac- tive in the Lutheran Stu- dents Association. .« « and ‘BETTY. MAE HATTON of Clyde, Ohio, B.S.in Nursing. Betty was a member of Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, YWCA, and VIC. She plans to work in Dayton... .. . and - NANCY EF LEDGE HEGENBER- GER of Columbus, Ohio, B. §. in Nursing. “Judy” plans to do Public Health Nursing... ...and DORIS ESTHER HIRTH of Kilbourne, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Esther was active in Uni- versity Chorus, and a mem- ber of Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, and YWCA, She is interested in the po- sition of “Night Nurse” at the Health Center... eA Ute A i GLA KING of Columbus, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Pat was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, University, Sym- phony, and played intramur- al basketball. She plans to work in the Operating Rooms. eer ange ky) Obey RUTH KUHLWEIN of Hilliards, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Dottie was a member of Torch Club, Links alpen Yate GA: Pleiades, Strollers, Gamma Delta, was Nursing Editor of the Caducean, and played on the intramural basket- ball team. Dottie plans to work in the Operating IRWOG oo € ...and IRENE MADA- LENE LABRIOLA of 4k- ron, Ohio B.S. in Nursing. “Sunshine” was a member of Pomerene Activities, Newman Club, YWCA, and served on the Student Faculty Government Coun- cil, and was SNAC Repre- sentative ... ...and MARY ANNE LIMBACH ASKAM of New Philadelphia, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. “Andy” was a member of Pi Beta Phi, Torch Club, and the Ten- nis Club. She also served as Student Faculty Associa- tion Treasurer of the March Senior Class. She plans to go into Psychiatric Nursing... weaned, JOY “SHOE- MAKER McMILLAN of Portsmouth, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Joy plans to work with the IDNA in Colum- AIS be oy ...and DELORES JANE MERRIMAN of London- derry, Ohio, B. 8. in Nurs- ing. Janie plans to work in Coshocton... ...and JACKIE OVEN- SHIRE of Troy, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Jackie was active in Torch Club, Pleiades, and Strollers. She plans to do Staff Nursing 17 MOLE Ones re ...and BARBARA RED- DING of Columbus, Ohio, B.S. in Nursing. “Mother” was active in Kappa Phi and Pleiades and served as Student Faculty Secretary and President. She was also Freshman Nursing Class Treasurer. She plans to work in the Health Cen- pce NA Page One-Hundred-Nine and MARJORIE ANN SCHIEFER of Bucyrus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Marge was a member of Pleiades, YW- CA, Treasurer of Torch Club, and Vice President of the Student Faculty As- sociation. She plans to do Public Health Nursing in Bucyrus and. Wil La Mi A SCHMELZER of Colum- bus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nurs- ing. “Willy” is interested in Public Health and Edu- cation and HARRIET WORT RIN.G LON STEECE of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Harriet was active in Torch Club and Sigma Theta Tau and was So- cial Chairman of Student Faculty Government As- sociation. She plans to work with the IDNA , ond COLLED EE MARIE STEVENS of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. Collette was a member of Pi Beta Phi and Torch Club. She is inter- ested in Tuberculosis Nurs- E Y poe, Boke Page One-Hundred-T en .. and LEE TAYLOR of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Lee was active in Strollers, Midmirrors, YWCA, and on the Sundial staff. She plans to work at the Health Center .. ...and MAXINE TREES of Milford Center, Ohio, B.S. in Nursing. Max was active in Pleiades, Wesley Foundation, and YWCad. She plans to travel and work after graduation. . .. and LUCILE MARIE TROUT, of Lakewood, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Lucy was active in Kappa Phi, Wesley Foundation, and YWCA. Lucy plans to work in the Health Cen- ter . and RUTH IMKE TUCKER of Clyde, Ohio, B.S. in Nursing. “Ruthie” was a member of YWCA and the Badminton Club and played intramural basketball. She plans to work the IDNA in Co- lumbus 2. ys, and- BETTY VAN ATTA of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8S. in Nursing. “Betsy Bob” was President of Torch Club during her Sen- ior year. She plans to stay at the Health Center for CET Tee Meee tik I ya Reh VAUGHN of Washington DD. G; Bo S.-in Nursing. Nita was a member of Phi Mu, the International Re- lations Club, Strollers, and YWCA. Nita plans to work in Florida eventually oe wa and. GRETCHEN VON KANEL of London, Ohio, B. S. in Nursing. Gretchen was a member of Alpha Delta Pi, Strol- ler, YWCA, and served as Senior Class President. She plans to work at the Health Center .. ...and BETTY IRENE WEST of Weston, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Betty was a member of Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, and served as Secretary-Treas- urer of the March Senior Class. She is very much in- terested in circus nurs- 1G ewe rd Fit ed pan od ed ee WITHEROW of Akron, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Betty was a member of Phi Mu and she plans to stay on at the Health Center... ... and BARBARA WOL- COTT of Columbus, Ohio, B.S. in Nursing. Barb was a member of Alpha Lamb- da Delta, Torch Club, and Sigma Theta Tau. She plans to stay on at the Health Center... ...and THEDA MARY- ANNA YOST of Zanes- ville, Ohio, B. 8. in Nurs- ing. “Teddy” was a mem- ber of Pleiades. She is in- terested in Obstetrics .. ...and DOLORES ZIM- MER of Columbus, Ohio, B. 8. in Nursing. Pat was a member of Pleiades. She is planning a career in the Operating Room... Page One-Hundred-Eleven Torch Club... and bearers... . the hon- ored ladies, starting in the front row at the left: Steece, Kuhlwein, Eitner, Ovenshire, Moss, Stevens, Hatton . . . second: Barco, Evans, Argenbright, Miss Downey (ad- visor), Miss Brown (advisor), Van Atta, Dodson, Snapp, Tull, Dawson ... third: Magruder, Smith, Brauti- gam, McCarthy, Inks, Nicholson, Shade, Venson, Day, Campen, Lewis... CLINIC QUIZ ANSWERS — Page One-Hundred-Twelve Se oo NEN MAR Ot . Putting the patient on Anti-biotics. . Running a urine on the pt. Sitting on a hot belly. Watching the pt. . A patient—rapidly going down hill. Following the patient. “Pott’s” fracture. . Head Inspection. . Taking a flier . Rapid induction anesthesia. . Trendellenberg sign. . Colle’s fracture. And chickadees... Miss Mildred Newton . .. Teaching staff of the school of ... the new Director of the School nursing .. . first row: Ruth Vrbanac, Frieda Stewart, Sally Hull, of Nursing . . . poised, charming, Victoria Smith . . . second: Frances Ory, Mary Earnshaw, Alma efficient . . . in her brief stay she Wittmeyer, Helen Brown . . . third: Marion Hoff, Nancy Houck, has won countless friends and Mildred Newton, Frances Pease . . . not pictured: Dora Colver, admirers from rear rank to top Marjorie Plummer, Geraldine Price, Florence Harvey, Ethel brass... Laezenbee, Irma Nickerson, Elgie Wallinger .. . fee rere fit wmred f poteer ol Po.9 owed Pepe wo tLtoy 2. a Ttold him not to bite on them nitroglycerin tablets Page One-Hundred-Thirteen Post-partum party. “Try that one on one of the stu- dznts, big boy .. .” Off-tackle run. “Is it true what they say about socialized medicine?” “|. . Chuck, Monday; Dave, Tuesday; Carl, Wednesday .. .” “ .. but it tickles so...” Son MEE PIO ”“ ... S. S. enema q. half-hour for days times five € “| thought it wos going to be glamorous...” ‘ ‘... here’s one that isn’t mar- Pit 1: eines self (ugh!) BES ay DOAseNe HUA YC. LA Mot There it qoes again | Meeting of the Big Four. . pubertal my eyes et Tever catch the ( sonofabitch that put a mineral oil (abel on that bottle of castor oil, TIl beat him onthe head with one of these bed pans--: Sui Levine tube with constant suction Ti op Brass... and more gas... Miss Irma Nickerson .. . Director of Nursing service .. . . . . Nursing Supervisors ... in the usual order, A. Simon, J. Fox, J. Wall, L. Schneiter, L. Ruess, R. Capes, P. Stephan, E. Leist . . . not really Simon Legrees ... ... The Head and Assistant Head nurses . . . starting in the front row are the ladies Moore, Willruth, Nemuth, Trumbull, Neal . . . second: Munn, Apel, Comstock, Byington, Rippel, Cormany .. . third: Connell, Williams, Smith, Munford, Patterson, Stevenson, Grant... ... The nurse anesthetists . .. first row: Eberhart, Crawford, Harsh, Moran . . . second: Leaman, Merva, Haskins, Rollins, Matyskiela, Lott . . . ab- sant: Smith, Belt . . . . .. The night duty nurses . .. seated left to right: Bruner, Cain, Abrahams, Meyer, Demos, Haynes, Barker, Tyler, Brugger . . . Standing: Snell, Mat- thews, Ulrich, Rogers, Skinner (night Supervisor), Maddox, Sherman,- Katz, Morse, Campen .. . absent: Vorhees, Fant, Simon, Humsath.. . . . + The surgical nurses . . . Olson, Dew, Crouse, Jeffers, Hartup, Stahl, Allen, Desmo nd, Marshall, Thurn, Warner . . . absent: Piatt, Reinking, Byer, Van Ness... ... nurses of the out- patient department . . . seated: are the ladies Hambrick, Roeterer, Boiman, McGee and Burgoon . . . standing in the back are Dornbusch and Rohe .. . it was impossible to tell from the printer's proof just what they’re dissecting, but whatever-it-is appears to have miss Mc- Gee on the verge of emesis .. . Page One-Hundred-Seventeen At the seance... cA Please cee Me. Blossom- TI dont want to see YOuR incision ° age One-Hunir d-Eighteen . Day and evening nurses... first: Jacoby, Katch, Harris, Smith, Shelton, Sommers, Isaac second ... Karam, Weiland, Crawford lee, Clave: Riggs, Farrow, Mohney, Hite . . . third row .. . Milne, O’Linn, Wallace, Mercer, Carpenter, Holford, Sun- dell, Ellis, Schoeff Jackson, Wolfe . ‘O- Sth way to spell it. ‘a.funny “And | came in to have a boil lanced .. .” “No—no .. . send for some size you don’t have .. .” vs “Ooooo... nasty... .! “This is one way to shut ‘em up a “Newborn with placenta. still attached .. .” Indication for digital. “Shall we dance?” au” . . . about that much bourbon would do it better . . .”” um” “Come on-a my house-a .. . a” a” . .. say that once more... The Anallary Services... Page One-Hundred-Twenty . . . the medical ancillary services . . . they do save the physician time and spare him from work which might become monotonous . . . but again, they are distinct fields of endeavour . . . in an instant’s time the harried clinician writes for a “‘low salt, low carbohydrate, high protein reducing diet, 1200 Calories per day”... it is the painstaking dietitian who carefully calculates the details of the pro- gram and makes these known to the unenthusiastic patient . . . we loved them most because they fed us fine food with their theory in that third year section . . . the medical technologist is the blessed angel who eventually re- lieves the graduate doc of the privilege of running the routine blood and urinalyses on his patients . . . isolated in their own laboratories they are inclined to eye with limited tolerance the free, easy and utterly generous fashion in which the physician orders the lab work . . . they still await their first order for spinal fluid molybdenum level—fasting . . . some regard the beleaguered X-ray technician as the unhappiest soul. in the hospital family . set upon from all sides this spastic spirit faces many times daily the odious task of pouring gallons of turgid contrast medium into one, all or any number of bodily orifices compatible with a number-20 needle tip . . . they have become accustomed to receiving requisition slips reading: “patient complains of malaise—please X-ray” . . . their favorite secret dream, it is said, is to line up every intern, resident and staff doctor on the premises in comfortable lithotomy and administer hot plaster of paris enemas to all ... they are known for their good cheer and gently sadistic ways . . . we couldn’t do without a single one of them... Calculated famine... ... The dietetics staff .. . in the front: the ladies are Lum, Downey, Dillow, Scobie, Willson, Broadwater, Mar- tin, Myers (Ass’t Director), Lewis (Director, Dietary Dept.) . . . having placed them- selves on a high cellulose diet, they are seen here preparing to eat their own pre- scriptions . . . . . . The dietary interns . .. in the usual order are the ladies Joyce, Messina, King, Holes, Hard, Wells, Lovett, Close, Ritch, Goff, Okada, Hiort- land . . . these euphoric scholars of the balanced feed are not really cutting out paper dolls . . . they just seem to be cut- ting out paper dolls .. . Page One-Hundred-Twenty-One B.C Stal 4 . .. The Medical Technologists . . . in the left inset is Doctor Wybel, a department wheel . . . and in the inset on the right is Doctor Harry L. Reinhart, the chief, and an helminthologist well-known to all of us . .. in the back row are the “med techs,” distinguished here by surnames: Dalton, Anderson, Hudnall, Grener, Nicodemus, DeWitt, Grover, Ockuly, Freck, Humphrey, Davy . . . in the middle: Morri- son, Dovenbarger, Snyder, Anderson, Busby, Lyons, McClure, Bonner, Waite, Ulbrich... in front: Morton, Nichols, Bretzius, Mahlerwein, Neely, Hickman, Coon . . . appearances can be deceiving . . . this is not the Radio City chorus Iine .. . Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Two ... we struggled... ... The X-ray technicians . in front: the ladies Chambers (pun unintentional), Friedman, Irvin, Hurley, Sisson, Cook . . . behind them: Smith, Coleman, Bowen, Enders . . . absent: Stewart, Miller, Muellen . . . this is the first time these girls have smiled since they walked into the new hospital . . . it wasn’t easy to do it for the birdie . . . We're gonna miss you around here, Doctor! Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Three INTERNAL MEDICINE CARDIOLOGY GASTROENTEROLOGY HEMATOLOGY INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE METABOLISM AND ENDOCRINE PULMONARY (NON-TUBERCULOUS) TUBERCULOSIS OBSTETRICS - GYNECOLOGY OPHTHALMOLOGY OTOLARYNGOLOGY PATHOLOGY PSYCHIATRY RADIOLOGY SURGERY (GENERAL) ANESTHESIOLOGY ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY UROLOGY SURGICAL RESEARCH THORACIC SURGERY Page One-Hundred-Twenty-F our ... Mecca in the Morning... The Intern and Resident Training Program in the Ohio State Uni- versity Health Center presents many advantages to the intern or the resident, not the least of which is the academic and environmental relationship with the University and campus activities The University Hospitals include Ohio State University Hospital, a 600-bed general hospital; the Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital, a 300-bed hospital for care and treatment of tuberculosis and chest diseases; the Columbus Receiving Hospital, a 140-bed hospital for the care and treatment of acute psychiatric patients; the St. Francis Hospital, where 162 beds are under the professional administration of the College of Medicine and are used in. the clinical teaching of interns and residents and medical students; and the Children’s Hospital, a 200-bed hospital devoted to pediatric care, and through which our interns and residents rotate as well as our medical students. In addition to these University Hospitals, we have on the campus the facilities of Hamilton Hall, the home of the Department of Anatomy, the Department of Physiology, and the Department of Physiological Chemistry, and Pharmacology as well as the Health Center Library with over 30,000 volumes; Kinsman Hall, which is the home of Research Medicine, Research Surgery, and Biomedical Physics; the Cancer Research Unit, which is under construction and which will house not only research laboratories but also animal laboratories and other facilities. Starling-Loving Hospital, which is the home of the Department of Pathology, the Out-Patient Department, the School of Nursing, and the residence facilities for male interns and residents. Likewise, there is direct relationship through both the University Hospital and the Out-Patient Department with the College of Dentistry and the Out-Patient Dental Clinic, providing a coordinated dental and medical program for patient and graduate student alike. The Ohio State University Graduate School provides an opportunity for study and research leading to advanced degrees for all residents who have an interest in this type of academic advancement and whose time permits this additional extra-curricular study. Interns and residents are encouraged to make direct application to the various national foundations and the several governmental agencies which provide for fellowships in advanced medical education and research work. A limited number of scholarships are made available by the Graduate School of Ohio State University for special medi- cal problems which qualified residents may pursue. At the present time there are 48 intern positions approved and available in the University Hospitals of the Health Center. The current program provides for a twelve-month, rotation-type internship with the option of, in 12 intern positions, an emphasis on Medicine, and in 12 an emphasis on Surgery. If an intern elects to take one of these medical—or surgical-emphasis programs, he will spend six months in either Medicine or Surgery and their respective sub- specialties during the twelve-month internship. All interns are assigned a specified time in Obstetrics, Gynecology, Pediatrics, Emergency Room service, and the Tuberculosis and Neuro-Psychiatric services. Over and above the cultural and environmental advantages to be found on the spacious Ohio State University campus, the interns and residents have the privilege of the purchase of faculty athletic tickets, University music and theatrical programs, the use of the tennis courts, gymnasium, natatorium, and the unexcelled $3,000,000 Student Union. Interns and residents are welcomed at the monthly Academy of Medicine meetings and all the guest speakers of the Academy conduct ward rounds and a general seminar at the University Hospital prior to the Academy meeting. The several departments of the College of Medicine conduct monthly Journal Clubs, seminars, etc. In addition, there are a considerable number of regional and national medical specialty societies and associations who hold annual meet- ings or conferences on the campus or in Columbus itself. Male interns and residents are provided bachelor quarters in Starling- Loving Hospital at a nominal fee, and married interns and residents are aided in securing adequate quarters near the campus. All residents recei ve faculty appointments through their respective departments in the College of lege of Medicine and serve as instructors for both the medical and allied medical specialty training programs of the Health Center. Truly, Ohio State University Health Center with metropolitan Columbus presents a well-rounded academic, professional, social, and environmental life for our interns and residents while they are receiving their post-graduate medical training. Richard L. Meiling, M.D. Associate Dean Associate Medical Director Uniwersity Hospital .. . ANESTHESIOLOGY ... The residency in anes- thesia is two years in length and qualifies the individual to be come certified by the American Board of Anesthesi- ology. The requirements for the residency include gradu- ation from a Grade A medical school and completion of a satisfactory internship. The training program has three principal components: practical work in the operating room; lecture work on basic sciences; and research. Each resident in the department is expected to conduct a re- search project. A series of lectures have been established which include basic considerations. In addition to this there is a session devoted to interesting cases and a Journal Club which meets every week. The practical work includes training in the use of every anesthetic agent and method and the use of all types of gas machines and resuscitation equipment. Diagnostic and therapeutic blocks are also performed on_ patients throughout the hospital. Residents attend meetings of the state and national anesthesia societies. Every effort is made to provide a well-rounded program so that the resident staff becomes familiar with all aspects of anesthesiology. MEDICINE .. . the program for internes and resi- dents in the Department of Medicine is designed to present a well-balanced training in internal medicine. Under the guidance of the attending staff, the internes and residents are given progressively more responsibility for the study, diagnosis and treatment of medical patients, both in the hospital and outpatient depart- ments. After completion of the interneship, four years of training in medicine are offered. Residencies in a number of sub-specialties are available after completion of two years of resident training in medicine. All services have been approved by the respective specialty board. The interne and resident staff have an opportunity to study a wide variety of diseases on both private and clinical services. In addition to the usual routine pro- cedures on the ward, the house staff is instructed in all of the special medical techniques, including electrocardi- ography, bone marrow aspiration, radiographic diag- nosis, angiocardiography, cardiac catheterization, col- lapse therapy, shock therapy, endoscopic examinations, and the use of radioactive isotopes. House officers may register in the Graduate School for the degree of Master of Medical Science if the requirements of that school are fulfilled ... INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE... Ohio State Uni- versity College of Medicine and North American Avia- tion, Inc. are jointly sponsoring a resident training program in Industrial Medicine. Graduation from a class “A” medical school with one year’s internship in an approved hospital are pre-requisites to the resident training program. In the first year half of the time spent by the resident is devoted to special study in the medical specialties related to the practice of Industrial Medicine. This training includes Ophthalmology, Orthopedics, Neuro- psychiatry, Dermatology and Industrial Hygiene. The other half of the candidate’s time is spent in the actual practice of Industrial Medicine under supervision at North American Aviation, Inc. It is hoped that we may project the resident program for a second year, and that the projected second year will include not only the actual practice of industrial medicine but also the development of a research project. At present there is no specialty beard in Industrial Medicine, however, a joint committee from the Industrial Medical Association and the American Medical Associ- ation is working on specialty requirements in this field. These developments are being watched carefully and we anticipate that when such a board is set up our program will meet their requirements for specialized training in Industrial Medicine. This resident program is the first to be set up in a teaching hospital with the same basis for training as one enjoys in the other specialties. Other Universities have special training opportunities but these are in the Grad- uate Schools, and deal primarily with Industrial Hygiene. Mr. J. Milo Anderson Administrator Ohio State University is leading the way in a new ap- proach to the training of the Industrial Physician. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY .. . Largest department in the Hospital, with one of the smallest resident staffs. Monthly turn-over of patients (excluding new-borns) is greater than that of Medicine and Surgery combined, and the total resident staff is only eight men. Actually, since two of these men at any given time are assigned to pathology and General Surgery (one each), the Obstretic and Gyn patients both in-patients and clinic patients—serve as teaching material for six of these men. The Residency Program is in general non-competitive, two men being appointed each year in November to start their service the first of the next July, and two men finishing the first of each July. There are a total of four years in the program, with the pre-requisite of at least a one year’s interneship. Title Principal Service (6 months Pathology Junior Assistant Resident (6 months General Surgery (6 months Blue Gynecology Assistant Resident (6 months Red Gynecology (6 months Prenatal Clinic Senior Assistant Resident (6 months Obstetric Floor (6 months Gynecology Clinic (6 Resident months Operating Room OPHTHALMOLOGY .. . The Department of Ophthalmology offers a three year residency designed to train ophthalmologists qualified to practice this specialty. Our residents are qualified to take the American Board of Ophthalmology. The resident rotates through four services with in- creasing responsibility and include service at Mt. Carmel, Children’s Hospital, eye clinic and in-patient service, reading clinic and orthoptic clinic as well as service in the eye clinic, refraction clinic and on in-patient service in the University Hospital. Training in basic science is provided in evening seminars. Special instruction in bacteriology, gross anatomy, histology and pathology of the eye is given in diadactic courses. The eye clinic is open all day every day and serves about 6000 patients each year. Surgery of the eye is taught by the use of animal eyes and the resident performs about one hundred and fifty or two hundred major operations on patients under the supervision of a member of the Staff during his service. Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Five University Hospital .. . PATHOLOGY ... The Department of Pathology comprises the laboratories of the new Medical Center of Ohio State University and the departmental quarters housed at the main wing of Starling-Loving Annex. Affiliated with it are the laboratories of the Psychiatric Hospital, Tuberculosis Hospital, Children’s Hospital and St. Francis Hospital. The department offers a recognized four-year res- idency training program qualifying for the Boards of Pathology and Clinical Pathology. First year: Junior Assistant Residents spend six months in the division of pathologic anatomy, and six months in the division of surgical pathology where they famil- iarize themselves with the routine of the work. They assist in autopsies, learn how to study histological sec- tions, learn to describe surgical specimens, and familiarize themselves with the frozen section techniques. Second year: Assistant Resident repeats the same training schedule as an advanced student. In this capacity he will perform autopsies himself and will carry the responsibility of describing and diagnosing surgical specimens. Third year: Senior Assistant Resident is assigned to the clinical laboratories where he spends a whole year rotating with the various divisions of the laboratory and becoming familiar with the scope, the importance and the interpretation of all laboratory tests performed. In his fourth year, the Chief Resident assumes some administrative duties in the department and participates in supervisory capacities in the routine work of all divisions, During this year he will also have opportunity to finish any research work he started previously and to prepare himself for the Board Examination. Throughout the four years the residents assist, to a certain degree, in the teaching of medical students and have the opportunity to attend all the seminars and teaching conferences of the department. They may also enroll as graduate students at the University and obtain a degree in medical sciences or work towards a degree as doctor of philosophy in pathology. At the present time, the Department of Pathology has openings for two Junior Assistant Residents, two Assistant Residents, two Senior Assistant Residents, and one Chief Resident. The stipends are similar to those paid to all residents at the Ohio State University Medical Center. PEDIATRICS ... The Children’s Hospital is a teaching unit for the College of Medicine of Ohio State University, and offers to medical school graduates, post graduate training in Pediatrics, Orthopedic surgery, Pediatric surgery. GENERAL SURGERY .. . the department of surgery offers a training program so organized as to provide increasing responsibility and operative ex- perience in general surgery over a period which may be extended up to seven years. This arrangement provides the training requirements to qualify for the American College of Surgeons and the American Board of Surgery. Special instructions for the house staff are given daily. These include ward rounds, conferences, grand rounds with the surgical staff, clinical and surgical path- ological conferences. Clinical and experimental problems currently under study by members of the resident staff are presented at a monthly seminar. Opportunity is pro- vided for investigative problems to be carried out in the Laboratory of Surgical Research. Many of the assistant residents register in the Graduate School for the ad- vanced degree of Master of Medical Science in Surgery. A complete description of the general organization and duties of the various members of the surgical house staff is attached. Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Six OTOLARYNGOLOGY ... We here at the Ohio State Health Center, with 1100 new hospital beds and through afhliation with Children’s Hospital and our other associated units have been and can now better offer all the clinical and surgical Resident Training advantages, including the basic science courses if necessary. We give our O. R. L. Residents training in all of the envisioned radical surgical procedures encountered in this field. Cooperative training programs have been set up with the following departments through which our residents will rotate: maxillo-facial, onocology, plastic, chest surgery and dental-mandibular with other fractures re- quiring combined attention, etc. Also rotation on allergy, audiology and other of the overlapping anatomical areas fundamental for a complete O. R. L. training. We can assure the basic science courses, if required to do so, plus a wealth of clinical and operative material to those seeking a broad residency foundation in the ear, nose and throat field. We are setting up the basic anatomy, physiology and pathology courses in cooperation with the other ancillary fields: e.g., in endoscopy, dissection covering gross and applied anatomy, with cadaver and dog practice, physi- ology, etc., for our O. R. L. Residents in conjunction with the other Residents in Chest Surgery and the Medical Chest Services. ORTHOPEDIC SURGERY which opens a thirty-two bed service in Univers ity Hospital this Spring, will be concerned with the problems of reconstruction surgery and will share in the supervision of fracture teaching and treatment. It has a twofold function. The Department will have its share of surgical teaching centered on problems of fracture and reconstruction on an undergraduate level. Secondly, it will have the func- tion of giving a three year program in resident training, including two years of adult surgery and fractures and one year of children’s orthopedics, during which time oo resident will reside at Children’s Hospital in Colum- us. A year of internship and a year of surgical residency are the prerequisites to admission to this training which is designed to turn out a well rounded orthopedic surgeon capable of meeting the problems of practice. As a young Department, just beginning its function in the University, we have great hopes for the future. University Hospital .. . HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION The Uni- versity Health Center conducts a program of graduate education in the field of hospital administration. In this program, students working towards a Master’s degree after their academic requirements have been filled are assigned to this institution for 12 months of administra- tive residency under the administrator of the Health Center. During this year these students are assigned operating problems in administration and are encouraged to attend medical seminars and conferences. When they are as- signed to a problem, the opportunity is given for them to present their solutions in writing so that their ability to isolate the problem and to formulate a solution can be evaluated. In presenting their solutions in writing, there is also the opportunity to evaluate their ability to write and to summarize their conclusions effectively. During the course of their year’s experience it is ex- pected that they will be exposed to problems concerning all of the major hospital activities in order that they receive a complete picture of hospital operations. At the present time two students are accepted annually, and they come to Ohio State University from one of the approximately ten universities which offer academic programs in hospital administration. UROLOGY ... . the department of urology offers an approved three year residency. Resident training consists of outpatient, ward and operating room work covering all phases of urology and urological surgery. Two approved residencies, of three years each, are offered each year. Clinical beds are available at Uni- versity Hospital, St. Francis and Children’s Hospitals. DIETETICS . . . The Department of Dietetics of the Medical Health Center, in cooperation with the Medical School and the Graduate School of the University, maintains an American Dietetic Association-approved graduate program for dietetic interns. Only one other of the 65 hospitals offering such internships combines the Master’s Degree program with the practical hospital experience. Major sequences are available in Adminis- trative Dietetics, Therapeutic Dietetics, Community Nutrition and Nutrition Research. Each year, twelve to fourteen graduates from approved colleges or universities are accepted. Those who complete the program receive a Certificate of Internship from the Hospital and a Mas- ter’s Degree from the University. MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY .. . The training pro- gram in Medical Technology at Ohio State University requires thirteen quarters and leads to a B. S. degree with a major in Medical Technology. Three years are spent in a basic science curriculum comparable to that of a premedical student. The hospital training com- prises the student’s major studies and extends through the calendar year in the clinical laboratories of the University Hospital. The hospital training program is based on the con- cept that the Medical Technologist needs a good funda- mental education as well as an understanding of the sciences of anatomy, bacteriology and chemistry with the ability to attain technical facility in these fields. Such training not only represents a practical application of these sciences to the clinical investigation of disease, but also demands the mastery of a wide range of technical procedures in various basic sciences, some knowledge of disease, a respectable medical vocabulary, and the ability to discuss intelligently with physicians the uses and limitations of standard laboratory technics, or to seek and institute new technics. Mo | | In addition, the technologist should exhibit traits of integrity, honesty, loyalty and a desire to serve mankind through the physician in accordance with the highest ethical standards of the medical profession. PHYSICAL THERAPY ... The Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation has doubled its personnel since August 1951, and it is anticipated that it will have to be doubled again to meet the needs of the Health Center. A new four year school for physical therapists is being planned which will help eliminate the bottleneck of shortage of personnel. With the help of the Industrial Commission, facilities are being de- veloped that will offer a complete rehabilitation service for patients all over the state. Research is not being neglected; facilities are already present; research equip- ment is on the budget, and it is hoped that a full time research biophysicist will be attached to the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation in the near future. X-RAY TECHNOLOGY ... the University Hos- pital conducts an approved training school for X-ray technicians. The course is for a full year and a certificate is granted on completion. The students receive intensive instruction in all phases of diagnostic X-ray procedures. In addition to practical work, lectures and personal in- struction are given by the department staff. Students are accepted for training at intervals during the year. ' y — Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Sev Peace of mind... COLUMBUS RECEIVING HOSPITAL .. . the psychiatric resi- dency program of the Columbus Receiving Hospital has been set up for the purpose of providing the interested physician with a thorough knowledge and experience of such character as to familiarize him with the various diagnostic and therapeutic procedures used in the best and most modern psychiatric practise. Breadth of experience integrated with a firm theoretical foundation is emphasized to establish a proper and meaningful perspective of psychiatry as the total study of human be- havior viewed from its medical, psychological, sociological and forensic aspects. The program includes the following clinical facilities. First, a 140 bed unit for the intensive treatment of selected patients having Ralph M. Patterson, M.D. acute mental disorders. The Mental Hygiene Clinic constitutes a second Director division within the department. This section provides diagnostic and therapeutic facilities for the outpatient, particularly the neurotic type of individual. The Children’s Mental Health Center, located adjacent to the Children’s Hospital, provides a third source for adequate train- ing in a typical community child guidance clinic. Also included are the Columbus State School, Columbus State Hospital, the Bureau of Juvenile Research and the Juvenile Correctional Institutions. LE maT a Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Eight the clinical facilities mentioned thus provide for an extensive train- ing in diagnoses and therapy as applied to individuals suffering from acute and chronic personality maladjustments of all types. The University Hospital, with its six hundred beds, provides innumerable opportunities for the investigation and study of psychosomatic problems which emphasize the interaction and interrelation of psychological and physiological medicine. As the University Health Center is not only a part of the College of Medicine but also of the Ohio State University, all the academic functions of the university are immediately available to the staff of the Columbus Receiving Hospital. This permits graduate study not only in medicine but in other cognate fields and assures guidance and assistance in research problems. Although residents are not required to take work toward a Masters Degree, they are encouraged to participate in the program and avail themselves of the opportunity of attending the various seminars in this and in related departments. These are devoted to current psychiatric literature, history of psychiatry, psychotherapy and somatotherapy, the ancillary therapies, forensic psychiatry and psychodiagnostics. Participation in a research project is considered an important part of training and the atmosphere of the university fosters the development of this phase of training. The number of residents that can be accepted and optimally trained is twenty, distributed over a four year period in the following: 6:5:5:4 from the first to the fourth year. The duration of the training program has been set at four years with the fourth year trainee acting as resident instructor with more responsibility in the field than accorded to those of the first three years. The private sanitoria in the neighborhood are the McMillen Sanitarium and the Harding Sanitarium. Weekly teaching conferences and staff rounds are held in the latter and attendance is encouraged. To afford a well-rounded experience in the Psychiatric Residency Training Program, a preceptorship with a private practitioner of psychiatry in the com- munity is now under consideration Page One-Hundred-Twenty-Nine ...and open atr... Page One-Hundred-Thrity TUBERCULOSIS HOSPITAL ... The Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital, a mod- ern, 300-bed unit, is one of three new hospitals of the Ohio State Health Center. This is located on the Ohio State University campus overlooking the Olentangy River, and has a total of 1100 beds, including 600 general and 200 neuropsychiatric beds: Although the Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital is administered by the Ohio De- partment of Health, it will be the teaching hospital for selected patients with chest diseases for the College of Medicine and the Medical Center. The Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital was conceived and constructed to provide modern methods of diagnosis, medical treatment, and surgical treatment for the citizens of the State of Ohio suffering from diseases of the chest. The hospital includes in this respect excellent medical and surgical facilities as well as complete bacteriological, pathological, and physiology laboratories which are available for diagnostic and research activities. Approval of residencies is anticipated before July 1, 1952, because of the utilization of accepted standards of operation, and the close affiliation with the University Hospital and the College of Medicine. The teaching program for medi- cal students and residents provides opportunity for study in medicine, surgery, and physiological research, and will be closely correlated with the teaching program of the Health Center. Interns and the junior resident staff will rotate through the Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital from the University Hospital. Assistant residents and residents in medi- cine, surgery, and research will be appointed for periods of twelve months by the Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital. These appointments will be in the field of diseases of the chest. Uniforms are furnished and laundered. Rooms for single residents are avail- able at a charge of $15.00 per month. Meals may be purchased at reasonable cost at the hospital cafeteria. The outpatient department.. H. Campbell Haynie, M.D. Director R. H. Browning, M.D. Director Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital THE OUT-PATIENT DEPARTMENT .. . of the Ohio State University Health Center, has been in operation in its present location since September 1938. The total number of visits for the fiscal year, ending June 15, 1951, was 65,677. Much of the teaching of the fourth year medical students is done in this Department. Students are assigned regularly to each of the clinics. The Department also provides training for some of the resi- dents who are taking postgraduate training in the Health Center, and thereby enables them to follow the patients who have been discharged from the Clinical Services of the hospital. The Out-Patient Department provides opportunities for both the students and the residents to see cases on an Out-Patient level as is done in the usual private practice of medicine. Furthermore, the Department provides patients for the Clin- ical Services of the hospital, in that patients who are seriously ill when seen in the Out-Patient Department can be referred to the hospital for admission. This source of cases should be an exceed- ingly important one in that many of them come from surrounding counties throughout central Ohio. At the present time the Out-Patient Department is housed in the southeast wing of Starling-Loving Hall which was com- pleted in 1938. Since this Out-Patient Department was opened it has grown beyond its facilities, both from the standpoint of the number of patients seen, and from the standpoint of space for student examinations. Therefore, in order to provide larger quarters, the present Out-Patient Department is to be expanded to include the A wing of the old Starling-Loving Hospital. It is hoped that these quar- ters will be completed by the beginning of the 1952 Fall Quarter. Page One-Hundred-Thirty-One Eulogy in a country barnyard... by “Snake” Meyer .. . As you can notice, the motif of the lobby is Twelfth Century Teuton. I have been told that those rustic old straight-backed pews were rescued from the first Christian church destroyed by Genghis Khan near the present site of Warsaw in the year 1193 A.D. We’ve got class here, brother! While we’re waiting for the elevator, I may as well read you six or seven chapters of Plutarch’s ‘Lives’ to while away the time. I’ve read seven modern novels and three old classics this way in the past two weeks. . ... This is our isolation service. As in the old hospital, it is located on the top floor. One of the outstanding features here is the glass partitions and doors which give a clear and unobstructed view into every patient room. You will notice that the toilet in there where that gentleman is sitting has no door at all. Well really, lady, it’s nothing to get so indignant about! ... . .. These doors are electric eye doors to enable the nurses to open them when their hands ar full. The chairs? .. . Well, you see, when the electric eye doors are closed you can’t hear the babies cry, so we have to keep them propped open with chairs. Ingenious device, really ... ... the typical patient floor is divided into three nursing units of approximately thirty-five beds each, and the nursing station is located at the ex- treme end of each division. This was purposely planned this way to provide more exercise for the nursing staff, since it had been observed that there was a high percentage of bulging waistlines among the group. Unfortunately, we have now learned that the bulging waistlines were not due to overzealous eating but to overzealous hus- bands... ... As you walk down the hall, you will notice that the doors to the patient rooms are supposed to open back and also serve as doors to the johns. We were afraid we couldn’t get by with glass doors down here so we resorted to trickery. Please observe the three inch crack at the hinged side of the door which permits a clear view into the toilet . That cement ledge projecting some three and a half feet out above the windows was scientifically calculated to cut out the direct rays of the summer sun while permitting the milder warming rays of the winter sun to slant into the room. Evidently the designer either didn’t know that our morning sun gets goshalmighty danged hot around these here parts before eleven o’clock or else he was counting a little too heavily on our renowned Co- lumbus smog. I think we’ll go on down to five now and take a quick walk through O.B. .. . . . . If you squeeze yourself around in here care- fully, you can get a good look at that which we prize most. This is unquestionably the only pelvic room in the country where the patient lies on the table with one leg out the window and the other in the waste can while the resident physician reposes gracefully on the edge of the sitz bath with speculum in hand... Page One-Hundred-Thirty-Two .. . Surgery. The entire fourth floor is devoted to surgery and its adjunct services. The surgical suite is completely air conditioned and artificially lighted. There is no outside light or ventilation. The air con- ditioning unit here has two temperature ranges in contrast to O.B.—from 12° to 42° F. and from 93° to 107° F. Of course, that’s only when it’s working. When it’s on the blink it actually gets downright comfortable up here. . . . . . If you will peek through the door here you can see the camera and television ports in the ceil- ing. The gentleman in white standing over there in the corner with the large Milton Berle powder puff in his hand is the Senior Resident in Surgi- cal Telecasting ... ... This room right down the hall here is our com- bination amphitheater, classroom, and auditorium. It is quite large, as you can see—258 feet by nine feet, to be exact, with four by four foot pillars rising hap- hazardly from the floor to the ceiling. This is really a much better arrangement than it appears to be at first glance. The three per cent who are really inter- ested can get choice front seats where the speaker can be heard... ... It’s unfortunate that we don’t at least have time to visit radiology, as I know you would be in- terested in the ‘ice brigade’ to keep the develop- ing tanks cool (the cooling system has never worked) ... ... This is the kitchen, so modern it would grace even the best of hotels. It is completely mechanized and requires the full time services of a graduate me- chanical engineer to operate the complicated ma- chinery ... ... These are the automatic pastry kettles. All you have to do is just stuff the necessary ingredi- ents inside and push the button. You will notice that the kettle is set on two pivot arms. When the mixing is done, you just push this lever and the kettle tilts right over ready to pour. Unfortunate- ly, someone forgot to install the kettle high enough to get a pan underneath the ladle, and the only things it will pour onto is the floor .. . AM Lieyd .. 50 farenell, old friends... . . . now there tw but a whispermg, waning echo of the call . . . first falling On OUr ears too long ago . . . as to the siren’s call we answered with an effort close to lust, as much used by was using wt... . . . and here remain in combat to the end, till felled ourselves by the physician’s private Foe, and mans Eternal Victor over man .. . adieu . Page One-Hundred-Thirty-Three Don Holmes, Editor-in-Chief Posterity doth profit... this is my big chance to thank all of those people pictured above for making my part in this publication ridiculously simple . it could have been a mess, but their talented and con- scientious cooperation brought the project to a clearly glorious consummation... . some special words of affection must be said for certain of these . at the height of our journalistic furor, Ernie Johnson, bearing the responsibility of a thousand drab details, maintained an attitude of manic enthusiasm which was utterly inspiring; he was in charge of most of the indi- vidual page layouts, of picture-panel construction, crop- ping, liaison to printer and engraver, and at one time or another had an active hand in every phase of the book’s development... ee SUL brigcs: masterful handling of business matters spared our ethereal spirits the pain of piddling pecuniary consider- Page One-Hundred-Thirty-F our Bill Briggs, Business Manager Ernie Johnson, Managing Editor . « « noblemen of the Fifth Estate . . . in front, starting at the left, Caldwell, Munger, Kuhlwein, Creedon ... in the back, Newsome, Brug- ger, Meyer, Lloyd . . . Dixie Davis and Ray Giles, and candid photographers Burk, Kackley, Reinhart, Sinclair, Gold, Thatcher, McFarland, Brehm, Linton are not pictured here but deserve much thanks . . . have we forgotten anyone? ations; early in the game he told us to spend as much as necessary to make the book we wanted, and at no time have we doubted his ability to make good his pro- mise—and he has made it good ... see bile hoxxand Joe Newsome served way above and beyond the call of duty; Bill arranged the senior portrait program and gathered material on the O.S.U.H. article only be- cause he knew that someone had to do it; Joe Newsome, working with Ernie Johnson, drew the prize mammoth shaft among shafty fatigue details in arranging the schedules and person identification for all still photo- graphs; both Bill and Joe got exactly what they asked for doing their jobs—nothing . . . and Jim Lloyd, who worked diligently and without hope of material compensation in preparing those technically excellent, poignant and witty cartoons scattered throughout the book... . . I was respon- sible for the book layout, some of the page layouts, for the cartoons on the genesis of the med student and the symbolistic drawings associated with the educational de- partments; I was also free with suggestions in all of the departments, and with the exception of Snake Meyer’s diatribe against the new hospital, and the hospital sec- tion itself, wrote all of the copy, cutlines and continuity lines... Best Wishes .. . Kenneth H. Abbott Marion L. Ainszvorsth T. Allenbach - J. J. Alpers James M. Andrew Ben Arnof f Charles R. Baber Allen C. Barnes E. W. Baxter Wade D. Bower G. W. Brehm J. E. Brown, Jr. O. P. Burt John L. Clifton, Jr. Harve M. Clodfelter James J. Conn Horace Davidson Francis W. Davis Clyde W. Dawson Cr) Jelor C’. A. Doan L. F. Edwards H. D. Emswiler Elmer D. Engelman Wesley L. Furste John P. Garvin James R. Gay L. B. Greentree E. M. von Haam Walter H. Hamilton D. D. Hankinson Warren G. Harding Philip B. Hardymon E. W. Harris J. B. Harris W. B. Harris Charles J. Hatfield H. C. Haynie Eldred K. Hyedinger Zeph J. R. Hollenbeck O. W. Hosterman B. E. Jacoby Arthur G. James D. D. Kackley Max P. Kanter Robert Keating Robert A. Kidd Gilman Kirk R. W. Kissane Ruth Koons G. O. Kress Tom Lewis Donald L. Mahanna Bruce Martin Clayton McPeek Hugh J. Means John W. Means Russell G. Means R. L. Meiling Howard R. Mitchell J. Moses G. I. Nelson Charles W. Pavey Donald Pelliciari Claude 8. Perry Robert E. Pickett Alexander Pollack L. C. Praver I, Darin Puppel D, E. Putnam L. C. Roettig Norman O. Rothermich George H. Rugegy Anthony Ruppersberg, Jr. Harry M. Sage Robert H. Schoene Miner W. Seymour Jack Silberstein J.C. Trabue Donald W. Traphagen Robert 8. Young Richard W. Zollinger Page One-Hundred-Thirty-Five The Bethesda Hospital congratulates the graduating class of Ohio State University College of Medicine and wishes each man the best of good fortune in his chosen profession. Page One-Hundred-Thirty-Six Bethesda Hospital is a general Hospital of 280 beds fully approved by the American Medical Association for internships and residencies. A well-rounded internship is designed for men who are aiming at general practice or who want general training before going on to specialize. A fully approved three year residency is offered in Obstetrics and Gynecology. A fully approved two year residency is offered in Pathology. An approved residency in Internal Medicine is now being established. An active program of post-graduate medical education is maintained. BETHESDA HOSPITAL Oak Street and Reading Road CINCINNATI 6, OHIO Page Missing Page Missing GRANT HOSPITAL 125 SOUTH GRANT AVENUE COLUMBUS 15, OHIQ Information On Internships and Residencies For Year Beginning July 1, 1953 Grant Hospital is a 300.bed general, non-profit community hospital, located near the downtown section of Columbus, Ohio. It has a staff of over 275 physicians. Admissions for the year 1951 were 13,135, divided as follows: Surgical, 4,759; Medical, 2,685; Obstetrical, 2,481; New Born, 2,215; E.E.N. T., 995. Approximately 10% of the patients were clinical cases. 6,200 operations were performed and 6,027 patients treated in the Emergency Room. There is no formally operated out-patient department. There were 315 deaths and 79 autopsies. The X-Ray Department and Pathological Laboratory are headed by full-time men. The teaching program is devised to provide eleven rotating internships, a path- ology residency, and a chief residency. The program is designed to provide a suit- able background and experience for the practice of general medicine, or for further specialized training. The training program includes not only the opportunity to participate in the di- agnosis and treatment of both private and clinical patients, but also ward rounds, pathological conferences, X-Ray conferences, clinical pathological conferences, a lec- ture series covering wide variety of medical topics, and participations in section meetings. A four week affiliation is provided at Childrens Hospital, Columbus, for pe- diatric experience. We are essentially a private hospital and our approach to patients must be that used in private practice. Yet you will be associated with physicians who are accus- tomed to teaching and you will see a wide variety of the rarer clinical conditions. The size of our house staff provides a sufficient number of patients for study with- out overload and yet the absence of specialty residents means that our house officers have closer contact with patients and attending staff. There is a library of 150 volumes including many new additions. The library has subscriptions to 15 current medical journals and is maintained by a competent librar- ian. A journal club meets periodically, with an attending member of the staff as mod- erator. Liberal stipends, including complete maintenance and uniforms, are provided. Women are accepted. For further information or application blanks, write to: Mr. E. C. Pohlman, Superintendent Grant Hospital Columbus 15, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Thirty-Nine APPROVED BY American Medical Association American College of Surgeons American Board of Specialties for Resident Training in General Surgery Internal Medicine Orthopedics Pathology Pennsylvania Board of Medical Education and Licensure ADMISSIONS During 1951 — 12,373 patients were admitted to Hamot Hos- pital as compared to 11,636 in 1950. X-RAY EXAMINATIONS There were 12,112 examinations and treatments in 1951 as com- pared to 11,861 in 1950. LABORATORY EXAMINATIONS There was an average of 362 ex- aminations each day during 1951 or a total of 131,985 examina- tions for the year. Autopsies—176. AVERAGE DAILY CENSUS During 1951 the average daily patient census was 259 compared to 252 for the year 1950. View of Greater Hamot Hospital Erie, Pennsylvania BIRTHS There were 1,737 births in 1951 as compared to 1,547 in 1950. This does not include still-births. OPERATIONS PERFORMED There were 2,626 major opera- tions and 3,331 minor operations during 1951 making a total of 5,957 operations for the year. BLOOD AND PLASMA TRANSFUSIONS There was an average of over 5 transfusions per day or a total of 2,056 during 1951. CLINIC PATIENTS ss 2,000 CLINIC TREATMENTS _—_—- 6,238 INTERNSHIPS AND RESIDENCIES Rotating Internships—8 Residencies in: Internal Medicine—1 Surgery—3 Orthopedics—2 Pathology—4 Application Blanks and Information may be ob- tained by writing to the Director. IN-PATIENTS DAYS CARE There was a total of 94,474 days care in 1951 of which 14,400 were “free” or indigent days, as compared to a total of 92,078 days in 1950. ANESTHESIAS In 1951—5,661 anesthesias were administered and 5,444 were giv- en in 1950. AMBULANCE CALLS Our ambulance made 2,077 calls during 1951 of which there were 544 “free” calls. PHYSICAL THERAPY TREATMENTS ____s ss 2, 406 Page One-Hundred-Forty Announcing Approved INTERNSHIPS RESIDENCIES July Ist, 1953 Lutheran Hospital—Front Section Cleveland, Ohio Lutheran Hospital is a 237 bed general hospital with excellent diagnostic and treatment facilities. Lutheran Hospital is approved for Rotating Internship (1 year), General Sur- gery (4 years), Medicine (4 years), Obstetrics (1 year), Radiology (3 years), and Pathology (1 year—pending). The education program is well supervised and offers well organized monthly general Staff meetings, weekly Clinico-Pathological Conferences, Surgical, Medical, Obstetrical Conferences, Weekly Tumor Clinics, weekly Radiologic and Pathologic Seminars, Panel Seminars, and bi-weekly Sur gical Journal Club. An excellent Medi- cal Library is available. All types of projection equipment for slides and moving pic- tures are provided. The Active Medical Staff has 40 members, representing all branches of medi- cine, of which 22 are on the teaching staff of the University and 30 are diplomates of the various specialty Boards. Lutheran Hospital provides annually: 10,000 Admissions 600 Metabolism tests 70,000 Laboratory examinations 2,000 Electrocardiograms 120 Autopsies (50% of all deaths ) 1,500 Blood transfusions 14,000 X-ray examinations 50 Tumor Clinic Meetings 7,000 Survey miniature chest x-rays 3,900 Operations 4,000 Deep therapy treatments 1,600 Deliveries Lutheran Hospital pays a generous stipend in addition to maintenance. Write for the current schedule. For detailed information, write to: LUTHERAN HOSPITAL 2609 Franklin Boulevard Cleveland 13, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Forty-Three Maumee Valley Hospital, fully approved by the American Med- ical Association and the American College of Surgeons, 1s an acute care, general hospital with a ca- pacity of 292 beds and 33 bassi- nets. About 95 per cent of all admissions are service cases. It is an institution that cares for the indigent sick of Toledo, Lucas County, and surrounding townships. The Hospital maintains an approved school of nursing, is accredited for training medical technologists, and operates the only electroencephalograph laboratory in northwestern Ohio. Services include medicine, surgery, anesthesia, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, con- tagious diseases and their subdivisions. A schedule of rotating service for internes includes internal medicine and obstetrics-gynecology, three months each; general surgery, surgical specialties, pediatrics and out-patient diagnositic clinics, one and one-half months each. Composed of leading specialists in the community, the medical staff is limited to 150 active members. All senior attending men are diplomates of their respective boards, or fellows of the American College of Surgeons or of the American College of Phy- sicians. The hospital is approved for the training of internes by the committee on medical education and hospitals of the American Medical Association. An approved three- year residency program is offered in both surgery and internal medicine and a one- year program in Obstetrics and Anesthesia. When filling residencies, preference is always given our internes. Residents may arrange for adjunct courses at the Univer- sity of Michigan or Wayne University. Internes receive $200 a month, first-year residents $210 a month, second-year resi- dents $225, and third-year $250. Full maintenance and ample quarters are provided. Detailed information will be sent on request. Address inquiries to: Mr. Robert R. Stewart, Superintendent Maumee Valley Hospital Toledo 9, Ohio am Page One-Hundred-Forty-Four Providence Hospital of Detroit, Michigan announces its INTERNSHIPS AND RESIDENCIES GENERAL INFORMATION Providence Hospital is a general institution of 372 beds and 100 bassinets. In addition there are 40 well baby beds and 90 beds for young children at the Sarah Fisher Home in Farmington. The Staff includes a number of men who are certified by their respective American Boards, and seventeen hold teaching positions on the staff of Wayne University College of Medicine. The library is maintained jointly by the hospital and staff, and reg- ularly subscribes to 51 of the leading medical journals. An excellent reprint library is also maintained. INTERNSHIPS There are 16 rotating internships available. These are for periods of one or two years. The one year rotating service includes, internal medicine, surgery and its specialties, obstetrics and gynecology, pediatrics, pathology, radiology, anesthesiology, and affiliated services in contagious disease and in neuropsychiatry. The two year period of training may be elected and is designed more fully to equip physicians for general practice. Additional training is offered in this plan which cannot be given in the rotating internship. RESIDENCIES Residencies approved by the Council on Medical Education of the American Medical Association are available in internal medicine, surgery, Seetelatie obstetrics and gynecology, pathology, radiology, and anesthe- siology. The services include not only work in the hospital but also certain per- tinent courses in the Graduate School of Wayne University College of Medicine. Residents in pathology and radiology are eligible for advanced degrees in those specialties. APPOINTMENT Applications for appointment should be made to the Secretary of the Education Committee, Providence Hospital, Detroit 8, Michigan. More de- tailed information will be supplied on request. Page One-Hundred-Forty-Five ST. ELIZABETH HOSPITAL LAFAYETTE, INDIANA A 305 bed fully approved general hospital serving a large area of northwestern Indiana. The major services of Medicine, Surgery, and Ob- stetrics and Gynecology admit approximately 9000 patients annually. The Radiology and the Pathology departments are directed by full time American Board Diplomates, and a full time medical photographer is in charge of a well-equipped Medical Photography department. The Medical Library is exceptionally well maintained. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM Scheduled conferences in Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Medicine, Pathology, Radiology, General Practice, and Fractures are conducted by the Attend- ing Staff. Affiliation is maintained with Indiana Uni- versity School of Medicine in postgraduate instruction. Each member of the House Staff is given $75.00 an- nually to attend medical meetings. INTERNSHIP A 12 month service rotating in all departments in- cluding anesthesia. Two weeks of general practice office experience are available. Twelve appointments are available, and provide $150.00 a month plus board, room, and laundry. Two weeks vacation with pay are allowed. INTERNAL MEDICINE RESIDENCY Approved three year program includes pediatrics and contagion, and is well organized with excellent teaching in all respects. The staff is composed of three residents who assume the responsibility of an active Out-Patient Clinic. SURGERY RESIDENCY Approved three year program in general surgery includes rotation in the specialties of Urology, Ortho- pedics, Pathology, and Gynecology. The emergency out-patient service is the responsibility of this staff which is composed of six residents. OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY RESIDENCY Approved two year program in which three resi- dents rotate every three months between services. Approximately 1700 deliveries and 700 gynecological operations annually are available in a detailed train- ing program. PATHOLOGY RESIDENCY Approved three year program in which approxi- mately 2500 surgical specimens per year and 10,000 clinical examinations a month are available as teach- ing material. Autopsy average is 35%. RADIOLOGY RESIDENCY Approved two year program with a third year addition being considered. Approximately 9000 diag- nostic examinations, 2000 x-ray treatments and 75 radium treatments per year furnish teaching material. GENERAL PRACTICE RESIDENCY Will be offered July 1, 1952 by the recently or- ganized Department of General Practice. Lafayette, a city of 50,000, is the home of Purdue University and offers exceptional recreational facilities. nnn nn enn nn SSS SSS SSS Page One-Hundred-Forty-Six ST. VINCENT’S HOSPITAL Toledo, Ohio St. Vincent’s Hospital, the longest established and largest hospital in the Toledo area serves a population of more than half a million people. Established by the Sisters of Charity in 1855, its present bed capacity is 500. It is located one mile from the downtown business district with easy access to department stores and theaters. St. Vincent’s Hospital with its new $5,000,000 building addition is completely and modernly equipped to care for more than 15,000 admissions yearly. All types of active medical and surgical patients are treated in all specialties except psychoses. Internship Program | The internship program is approved by the Council on Medical Education and Hospitals of the American Medical Association. Appointments are for one year. Room, board and laundry are furnished. Residency Program Approved residencies are available in Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Urology, Orthopedics, Neurosurgery, Radiology, Pathology, and General Practice. Appointments are made from the intern staff of St. Vincent’s and other approved hospitals. Page One-Hundred-Forty-Seven THE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL Washington, Pennsylvania ROTATING INTERNSHIPS Under the direct supervision of an exceptionally able Staff composed of 17 certified Specialty Board physicians on the Active Staff of 21 members, and an Associate Staff of 14 members. There is also a Cour- tesy Staff of 29 physicians and 9 dentists. The training program is not limited to ward, or service, patients. Intern Schedule Recommended by State Board of Medical Education and Licensure Medicine (including Pediatrics) 18 weeks Surgery (including Orthopedics and Urology; Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat) 16 weeks Obstetrics and Gynecology 8 weeks Pathology 4 weeks Roentgenology 2 weeks Anesthesia 2 weeks Additional hospital assignments 2 weeks Allowance—$200.00 per month plus complete maintenance Alternate nights and alternate week-ends off duty 204 beds and 48 bassinets—6,227 admissions and 1,531 births in 1951 Approved by American College of Surgeons American Hospital Association Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Address the Superintendent for further information and application forms Page One-Hundred-Forty-Eight As you officially assume the title, Doctor of Medicine, please accept my heartiest congratulations upon your achievement. SAMUEL S. LOYER 50 West Broad Street Columbus 15, Ohio Phone: ADams 4254 BANKERS COMPANY DES MOINES, IOWA Retention Catheter RISCH PHARMACY THE TRI VILLAGES’ Most Complete Prescription Pharmacy 2136 Arlington Avenue KI 3510 Compliments CARROLL WEIR FUNERAL HOMES Broad Street Chapel: North Chapel: 637 E. Broad Street 4221 N. High St. Ambulance Service COLE’S PRESCRIPTION PHARMACY 4589 N. HIGH STREET, COLUMBUS, OHIO Phone: LA. 1833 Who Knocks ? FRIEND of ENEMA i Page One-Hundred-F orty-Nin- “ Delaying Tactics” Congratulations— SAM KOONS Representing - - - CIBA Compliments of MRS. D. A. WHITTAKER SONS FUNERAL SERVICE 720 E. Long at Hamilton Ave. EV. 9549 Serving Ohio Pharmacists For Over 75 Years . THE KAUFFMAN-LATTIMER CO. Columbus 16, Ohio ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION RARITAN NEW JERSEY CONTRACEPTIVES DIAGNOSTICS THERAPEUTICS for the MEDICAL PROFESSION Beechwold Pharmacy Phone: LA. 0221 SAM C. HAHN, Ph.G. 4622 North High Street Columbus, Ohio Courtesy of D. HARVEY DAVIS FUNERAL HOME Summit St. at 16th Ave. Compliments of... . BROOKS FUNERAL HOME 1108 East Long FE 1411 Professional Pharmacists ROBERTS PHARMACY Phone LA. 0085 High and Dunedin Columbus, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Fifty PARKER CONGRATULATIONS ina PHOTOGRAPHS BEST WISHES CREATIVE STYLISTS to the CLASS OF 1952 2036 North High Street UN. 2912 STEPHENS PHARMACY AL STEPHENS, Pharmacist 3089 W. Broad St. JO. 5435 OS. UaNURSES CLASS OF 52 Photographed By The House of Portraits 1970 N. High St. WA. 5295 CONGRATULATIONS ROGER ZION REPRESENTING .... the opportunity MEAD JOHNSON CO. of serving We would welcome INTERNE SHIRTS, TROUSERS AND COATS IN STOCK—AT REASONABLE PRICES See Us Before You Buy a LEO MEYERS CO. WARREN -TEED High and Chestnut Streets each of you Burr-Patterson Auld Co. THE WARREN-TEED PRODUCTS CO. ° COLUMBUS 8, OHIO MANUFACTURING FRATERNITY Dallas e New York e Los Angeles bd Portland JEWELRY Official Jewelers Creators and manufacturers To: Phi Chi Nu Sigma Nu Alpha Omega Branch Office: 1808 N. High St., Columbus 1, O. UNiversity 6413 of Fine Pharmaceuticals since 1920 Page One-Hundred-Fifty-One EVANS and SCHWARTZ Chidester Pharmacy 497 N. High 2461 E. Main PRESCRIPTION SPEGIALISISG ORTHOPEDIC SHOE COUNSELORS 2234 Summit Street Columbus 1, Ohio SINCE 1888 Phone: LA. 7811 BEST WISHES - - - WAGGENER DRUG CO. Prescriptions—Fountain Service 247 KING AVENUE WA. 2020 At Your Service... RCCERTIFIEO BM} Columbus Orthopaedic Appliance Co. —S oap Suds Enema 337 South High Street MAin 5275 WENDT-BRISTOL COMPANY The Prescription Stores of Columbus QUALITY—DEPENDABILITY Manufacturing Fine Pharmaceuticals a Distributors Physician and Hospital Supplies WE WOULD WELCOME YOUR INSPECTION OF OUR NEW STORE — 1660 NEIL AVE. We Would Appreciate the Opportunity of Serving You 91 East State Street 1660 Neil Ave. 721 North High Street AD. 6108 WA. 7047 MA. 3153 WA. 7048 age One-Hundred-Fifty-Two HAIG M. BOYAJOHN AND ASSOCIATES, INC. General Contractors 990 WEST THIRD AVENUE Phone: COLUMBUS 8, OHIO UNiversity 4145 OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE to the OPTICAL PROFESSION = S| The White-Haines Optical Co. Principal Offices: Branches in Columbus, Ohio Principal Cities Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Three : s i F AW AW ] JAAN OL UMEN iB UN ING ms ier Again” ‘ A 1 y = SS A familiar and reassuring slogan FAMILIAR... because it has appeared in thousands of the country’s finest year- books for the past half century. REASSURING... because those years of specialized experience bring complete service, outstanding quality and de- pendable delivery to the yearbook staffs, with whom we work. + JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 817 W. Washington Blvd. Chicago 7, Illinois SS, LL Zz. = LLL: ZZ BAA Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Four A Congratulations eer OTE at ns CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL she has : Vv top of the class NAME: ST MILAC Liquid CLASS: Infant Feeding Subject Grade Remarks CLINICAL A completely modified for infant feeding—so similar to mother’s milk that there is no APPLICATION closer equivalent curd tension of zero, fostering ease of digestion fats chosen for maximum retention 50 mg. ascorbic acid per quart of formula full, balanced array of essential amino acids carbohydrate in the form of lactose (as in breast milk) high ratio of essential fatty acids minerals and vitamins in optimum proportions A unexcelled convenience... NUTRITION both in prescribing and in preparing ... normal 20 cal. oz. formula needs only 1 part stmiLac Liquid and 1 part water MANUFACTURE SIMILAC Liquid is produced under laboratory controls in the: same modern plant and with the same experience that has made Similac a byword with physicians for a quarter-century NUTRITION stom M R LABORATORIES Columbus 16, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Five LONG'S BOOK STORE HISTORY OF THE OHIO STATE COLLEGE OF MEDICINE Being a Collection of Source Material Covering a Century of Medical Progress—1834-1934. 572 Pages Published at $10.00 Our Price, New, $1.00 Request our 26 Page Catalog of Medical Books— New and Used. Fifty Catalogs on Other Subjects Issued. | MOE GLASSMAN’S COLLEGE SHOPPE Corner 11th and High Street ARROW SHIRTS—INTERWOVEN SOCKS MEN’S WEAR The Stadium sop Men’s Furnishings—Hats and Shoes 1630 North High Street UN. 8789 Congratulations - - - Jor STALIN Blood Sputum Allergy Effusions Urinalysis V Feces-Vaccines Blood Chemistry X-Ray Diagnosis Throat Cultures Stomach Contents Surgical Pathology Agglutination Tests Pregnancy Tests Basal Metabolism Pneumococcic Typing Autogenous Vaccines Premarital Serology Dark Field-Spirocheta Electrocardiagraphy Wasserman Kahn Tests Clinica l and Pathological LABORATORY Established 1904 370 E. Town Street Columbus, Ohio H. M. BRUNDAGE, M.D., Director M. D. GODFREY, M.D. Prompt Service Telephone: MAin 2490 Compliments of— Ralph L. Jordan Henry J. Jordan Professional Service Representatives THE NATIONAL DRUG COMPANY PHILADELPHIA 44 2825 Sherwood Road Columbus 9, Ohio Tel.: DOuglas 8061 Herbert J. Loechler Specializing in Life Insurance Programs for the Profession NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO. Columbus 15, Ohio ADams 8204 Huntington Bldg. Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Six ANSON L. BROWN INC. LABORATORY SERVICE FOR PHYSICIANS 41 South Grant Avenue Box 506 Columbus 15, Ohio MA. 3123 MA. 3124 Original Firm Established 1861 J. E. HANGER COMPANY Manufacturers of Prosthetic Appliances Licensed Specialists in Suction Limbs Fitters and Firm certified by American Board for Certification Offices and Fitting Room Air Conditioned by Carrier 541 W. Town Street Columbus, Ohio SCHOEDINGER COMPANY FUNERAL DIRECTORS East State at Fifth ADams 6105 PROGNOSIS: EXCELLENT! WHEN MALCOLM MOONEY MAKES YOUR PORTRAIT Malcolm Mooney Studios 1958 N. High St. UNiversity 6000 MA. 6302 EARL V. CARLIN Life Insurance Broker 35 East Gay Street Columbus 15, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Seven WOCHER’S 201 EAST BROAD STREET Specializing in Microscopes Haemacytometers Welch-Allyn Otoscopes and Ophthalmascopes Tycos Baumanometers Syphygmonometers MAin 1435 A Pioneer in 1839 As Modern As 1952 —and all Physician’s and Hospital Supplies ADams 6675 GROUP INSURANCE and ESTATE PLANNING FLOY E+ Le DORNER@ CALE U; ARTHUOR: EVSHEPARDFGs] LU. Insurance Brokers 79 East State Street FLetcher 1711 Columbus 15, Ohio “Dial Feil for Better Service” Feil Funeral Home AMBULANCE SERVICE 225 King Avenue Columbus, Ohio UN. 4221 - 3419 CHARBERT’S SANDWICH SHOP Fastest in Service—Finest in Food 1912 N. High St. 12 E. 15th Ave. Never 7 A.M.-12:30 A.M. Closes Fri. Sat. ’til 2:30 A.M. BOYER’S PHARMACY PRESCRIPTIONS High and Chittenden Phone: UN. 9991 Columbus, Ohio Congratulations PHYSICIANS SURGEONS PHARMACY 350 East State Street FE. 3626 Compliments of the O. R. WOODYARD CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Columbus, Ohio Compliments of VARSITY FLOWER SHOP 1664 Neil Ave. UN. 2424 Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Eight We invite you to visit The Surgical Store of Columbus MICROSCOPES SURGICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS PHYSIOTHERAPY EQUIPMENT MODERN EXAMINING TREATMENT ROOM FURNITURE The Columbus Hospital Supply Company 271 E. Broad MA. 6888 P. E. RUTHERFORD WW. P. RUTHERFORD e AMPLE PARKING IN REAR PRIVATE AMBULANCE SERVICE The P. E. Rutherford Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS UNiversity 1153 2383 North High Street WaAlnut 1716 Columbus, Ohio one - will you doctor! Qllmy friends thie Iman ate blond Compliments of... . The Columbus Pharmacal Company 330 Oak Street Columbus, Ohio Research Pharmaceuticals Since 1886 Page One-Hundred-Fifty-Nine H. Braun Sons Company Congratulations DRUGS AND PHYSICIANS SUPPLIES and Best Wishes To the Senior Class Examination Room Furniture Surgical Instruments—T russes—Crutches A Elastic Stockings—Artificial Eyes Therapeutic Lamps ST. FRANCIS 80 East Long Street Columbus, Ohio | HOSPITAL ADams 7166 Courteous Service ADams 9131 Best Wishes The Harris Com pany to the Senior Class OPTICIANS WHITE CROSS | 106 East Broad Street HOSPITAL Columbus, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Sixty A MILLION PARTNERS @ A partnership with the Sun Li fe of Canada is a@ DEED OF SECURITY for you and yours. JEAN WORREL 19 North Fourth St.—AD 5256 CAMPUS—-NEIL Congratulations to the Graduating Seniors We are happy to have served you during your medical school days and we are looking forward to seeing you again. CAMPUS NEIL CENTER Neil Avenue at Tenth TICE ASSOCIATES HERMAN O. Tice, General Agent The Midland Mutual Life Insurance Company LIFE - RETIREMENT - DISABILITY 122 E. Broad Street ADams 1291 Your Prescription Pharmacy MILLER DRUG COMPANY Fifth Ave. High St. UN. 5036 ZELL PRESCRIPTION CENTER 289 East State Street Columbus 15, Ohio Phone: ADams 7176 Page One-Hundred-Sixty-One CONGRATULATIONS, CLASS OF 1952 BRIGGS’ NOTE SERVICE has enjoyed your Patronage and extends best wishes throughout your medical career —— For A Complete Series In Medical Lecture Courses AtO.S.U.— BRIGGS’ NOTE SERVICE 199 W. 10th Avenue Columbus 1, Ohio Page One-Hundred-Sixty-Two For Announcements of 1953 Internships and Residencies THE MAJOR HOSPITAL ATLAS Available without cost to medical students @ In the Medical College Library @ At professional medical undergraduate fraternity houses. In July, 1952, the first edition of the Major Hospital Atlas will be available to all medical students in the United States. Its purpose is to present pictorial and verbal information about | the hospitals which you will consider for post-graduate training. It will also acquaint you with hospitals, locations and facilities which you might otherwise not know about. The hospitals represented in the Major Hospital Atlas have agreed by subscription to this combined presentation as a ser- vice to you. Consult the Atlas. It will be helpful to you this year, and in the years to come. Major Hospital Atlas 805 Neil Avenue | Columbus, Ohio | Page One-Hundred-Sixty-Three Compliments of Friends CONGRATULATIONS WILLIAMS McNABB, Ine. MORTUARY FUNERAL SERVICES 818 East Long Street EV 9521 Cz AW) 3s {AS Zl iA “7 — | ANA WW INDEX TO OUR ADVERTISERS Beechwold Pharmacy Haigt My Boyaiohn, Inco a= ee ee Re eS ee 153 Boyer’s Pharmacy H. Braun Sons Charbert’s Sandwich Shop Chidester Pharmacy Children’s Hospital Clinical Path Lab Cole’s Pharmacy Columbus Hospital Supply Columbus Orthopedic Appliance Co. 152 Columbus -Pharmacal Cox once ogee oe 159 Davis Funeral Home Evan’s Swartz Feil Funeral Home Moe Glassman’s College Shop J. E. Hanger Co. Bill Kay Oldsmobile Sam Koons M R Laboratories Leo Meyers MillerDrug Cow 822.4. ee ee 161 Malcolm Mooney Studios National Drug Co. 22)2 Ae ee eee 156 R. A. Nickerson Ortho® Pharmaceutical Gor pss see 150 Physicians’ Surgeons’ Pharmacy Parker Photographs Risch Pharmacy Roberts’ Pharmacy P.-E. Rutherford ‘Co. 222. oe eee 159 Schoedinger Co. St. Francis Hospital The Stadium Shop Joe Stalin Stephen’s Pharmacy Sun Life Insurance Herman O. Tice Turner: : Shepard (Irs: iB kers:)) jee 158 Varsity Flower Shop Waggener Drug Store Warren-Teed: Products: Cogs 151 Wendt-Bristol White Cross Hospital White Haines Optical Co Whittaker Funeral Home Williams: i McNebbs Inc ese see ee 164 Wocher’s Surgical Supply Woodyard Funeral Directors Zell’s Pharmacy Roger H. Zion es ee) P a ae = . F 3 s ar ee oe ._—
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