Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) - Class of 1954 Page 1 of 156
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er er wy eee f : eet ee 4 Gu ante Ba EE aa bites oe. 4. a 4 Ba wee Solar Se ee sie Sra cea Sak at s : Crimean a RE ns TE Re ONES og ee ENED A See PENS Se naples eS SEES OSES SPEDE NEED DESEO Dee HELO een ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY AEN 3 1833 06780 0000 GC 977.102 C720UM, 1954 ia pe meg pe : :  = ; PRPC wey han : we ie ee âTHIS book is dedicated to a group of men who have been, for the past four years, combination euinea-pigs, acrobats, construction workers, mob- sters and, incidentally, medical students. The bland assurances that they were welcomed with open arms upon entering this institute of medical knowl- edge were at times replaced by the querulous plaint, âWell, if we hadnât increased the class YOU wouldnât be here nowâ in answer to mild remon- strations about temporary lack of facilities. In addition they have surmounted the obstacle of distinguishing between air hammers and_ airy theories... . the foul Columbus weather, and changes of curriculum in mid-stream. The exigencies of the labor market have at times made contracts for com- pletion of clinics mere scraps of paper, but the strong shoulders of the 136 pushed ever onward, carrying the walls out with them, although at times their work-tables and work-ups were snatched from their fingers and they needed a program to tell from one day to the next where the clinics would be held. They have become immune to the look of horror on the clinicianâs face and the statement âI donât know where we'll find enough patients for ALL OF YOU!â With their graduation the meta- morphosis is complete. Those to follow will find the path blazed; for these the role of pioneer has been played to the hilt. In all due humility, then, this book is dedicated to... .. the SENIOR MEDICAL STUDENT. Convocation IT all began about four years ago. The new class of 150 freshmen, having been assembled for official welcomes and austere greetings from the heads of the various departments, began the process of vetting acquainted. They were officially convened in the auditorium of the Home Economies build- ing, for the building program which was to be so much with us, near and far, had not progressed to the fine auditorium in the museum now available for such functions. Comments at this time were of the character of âHow did THAT guy ever get in!â This was the last time that some of the members of the class were to see part of their brethren: for the A-B split of the alphabet in the freshmen and sophomore years was later supplanted by the split of personalities into the âattending classâ and the âregisteredâ or âcourtesy class.â However, follow- ing Dr. Doanâs inspiring welcome, Don Holmesâ ereeting from the Medical College Council, and Dr. Ogdenâs fascinating theory on when degrees should be conferred, we really felt that we were IN! How sweet 1t was... The annual Convocation of the Ohio State University College of Medicine was held on Monday, September 28, 1953, at the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Museum Auditorium. Guest speaker was Dr. McCormick, President of the American Medical Association. He was introduced by Dr. Charles A. Doan, Dean of the College of Medicine. This convo- cation represented the first time in the history of the Ohio State University College of Medicine that the entire increased enrollment of 150 stu- dents in each class was officially brought together. Processional Stewart Fisher is welcomed as president of the Medical College Council. Dean Emeritus Upham, Dean Doan, AMA President McCormick, Associate Dean Meiling Freshmen âTHE sweetness lasted about 15 hours. Tuesday morning we were greeted by a gentlemen who had prepared for us, we were to discover, a personally conducted tour through the alimentary canal. Transportation was by personal Krebs cycles. After a brief âGood morning, gentlemen,â transfusions for pens were the order of the day. For some P. Chem was a new experience; for all Dr. Brown was. The thrill of the early morningâs rising soon began to dissipate... WE ENTERED the mausoleum with mixed thoughts. We felt a strange forebodingâour new white lab coats were matched in pallor by our physiognomies as we attached our- selves beside the crypts. We were to be awed and chagrined by their contents many times in the future. We strode to class through myriads of electrical equipment, plaster and paintâ a symbol which was to follow us for years to come. Our schedules were stringent; fiancees became distant acquaint- ances. We knew the sword was posed to strike. Each of us knew they were out to get him and him alone. Friends became enemies, and minutia was the agenda for the night. Midnight oil was the perpetually burning fuel. Strangely, as the year passed our vocabulary grew, and facts found their way into the cerebrum. Such things as desoxyribose nucleic acid, arachadonic acid, and Krebâs cycles were digested and reguritated with pride. A few thought they knew a lymphocyte from a monocyteâalas, they shall be missed There were those among us who heeded the advice of the prophet, spending Saturday night in amusing relaxation, and Sunday morning in ingesting the contents of the pharmaco- poeia so that the edematous brain could attempt to function later that day. Strange persons were encountered along the wayâgar- goyles and fiends at the time, but later proven allies. There was he of the fats; and the âgorgeous oneâ; and of course the acme of the paranoids, to whom slides were more cher- ished than wife and family. There was the little man from Heidelburg who made physiology both fascinating and mani- festâand untold others. We had survived the first onslaught âwe were battered but not beatenâbut of the future? Freshman Classâ 1953 Abels, Gene Harland Abrams, Jerome Sanford Aiken, Donald James Alldredge, Beverly Ann Allen, William Antine, Bartley Evert Ashbaugh, David George Ashby, Milton Eberhardt Atanasoff, Gerald Joseph Aus tin, Robert Charlton Baab, Robert Orr Beallo, Allen Beargie, Robert Anthony Bellios, Nicholas Bernlohr, Paul Keck Blackwood, John, Jr. Bock, Joseph John Bond, William Edward Bradrick, Ralph Duane Brant, Ruth Helena Brown, John Robert Burkhart, Charles Andrew Cape, Richard Frederick Casey, Charles Griffith Chaney, Samuel Allen Coleman, John Frederick Collier, Richard Lee Collins, Irene Louise Cooper, Lyon Cox, Frederick Manson Crowe, Franklin Willis Davis, Norman Dierksheide, Eugene Dozer, William Ellis Elderbrock, William Burley Ellick, Lawrence Robert Emrick, Robert J. Epps, Robert Lee Eymann, Russell John Fasola, Alfred Francis Fishman, Harvey Lyons Fitz, David Alphonse Fouty, William Joseph Fox, Thomas Andrew Frederic, Myron Wayne Freedy, Robert Joseph Freese, Marcus James Funkhouser, James William Ganz, Matthew Barnett Garrison, Robert Essie Goldfarb, Theodore George Goorey, Loyis Joseph R. Graham, William Ralph Gray, Don James Harris, Beryl Aaron Harshman, Morton Leonard Harper, Charles Richard Hawley, Sherman R., III Hay, Charles Terrill Hensley, George Thomas Herald, Osbie Jewel Hess, Robert McDonald Hufford, Theodore Allen Hurt, John Richard Katz, Leonard Gerson Kennedy, John Halisey Klecker, Richard Lawrence Klein, Donald Raymond Krause, Manfred Ernst Kroetz, Frank William Kuehn, John Lampert Kurlander, Donald ay Lamprecht, Richard William Lange, Thelma Edler Lenhart, Milton John Kachenmeister, Lois Leonard, Gordon Shields Leonard, Joseph Whittaker Licklider, Samuel Drake Lilly, Edwin Jacob Lynsky, James Edward MacMillan, Robert Duncan Malone, Robert Eugene Mandel, Morris Jack Manning, Roy Eugene Marshall, Thomas Richard McClung, George Maxwell Mendel, Isadore Mendell, George Elbert Mentges, William Frederick Mitchell, Arnold Michael Mohr, Duane Vincent Mowry, Frank Maire Myers, Dale Harry Nichols, William Franklin Nicoloff, Demetre Matthew Novak, Richard James Ogden, Michael OâRoark, Henry Clyde Panos, Maesimund Banning Patterson, James Richard Pensiero, Donald Allen Picklow, Francis Edward Pittman, Hugh Donald Pixley, John Milton Potor, George, Jr. Powers, Rex Lee Press, Peter Prince, John Thomas Ragucci, Benny Daniel Rasor, Ralph Eugene Rechsteiner, John William Reed, Howard Francis Resnick, Jack Simon Reynolds, Daniel Fryett, Jr. Rigsby, William Carl Roda, James Joseph Rogers, Warren Franklin Sandoz, Ivan Luis Saneholtz, William Eugene Schiller, Victor Schwemley, Robert Glenn Secrest, Robert Warren Shankland, Wesley Earl Shaw, James Milton Shensa, Stanley Henkin Shuey, G. Nevin Silbiger, Gilbert Norton Skimming, Louis H. Smith, Darell Jene Solt, Robert Lee Spence, David Starr Stadel, Adolph Robert Starr, Albert Michael Stockfish, Hyman Meyer Stone, Nelson Howard Thomas, Bill Boyd Ticich, Stephan Timmons, Donald Ellsworth Treece, Florin Don Trump, Richard Cahill Venable, John Ellinwood, Jr. Visintine, Robert Edward Vuksta, Michael Joseph Watkins, Thomas Mead Welborn, Joseph Keith Williams, Robert Arthur Wynsen, Eugene Raymond Yobst, George James Young, Charles Gladden CLASS OFFICERS: Gene Abels, Secy., Richard Cape, Pres., R. Eglitis, Harvey Fish- man, Treas., Peter Press, V. Pres. NE of the more memorable experiences of that first long year was the anatomy âpracticalââthis consisting of a collection of the oldest, smallest, most wizened, distorted and poorly dissected of the ana- tomical specimens, liberally sprinkled with x-rays snatched from the file marked âundiagnosableâ in the department. This brought to the fore for many the power of the hypothalamus, as they followed their GIâs up and down the âvagus trailâ of personal ex- perience. As we can see, although the faces change, the malady lingers on... Whitey lowers the boom TOP: I can spell it but I canât say it. Itâs in the book, man! MIDDLE: A little Water Music, please. What do you mean â pathologic tissue! BOTTOM: How many drops in one c.c. This guy must know the instructor. 12 Dr. L. H. Van Buskirk (1886-1954) was born on May 11, 1886. He graduated with a B.S. in Chemical Engineering from Ohio State in 1910 and took his M.D. in 1922. He was on the faculty of the Ohio State University as an Instructor in Pub- lic Health from 1915 to 1919, Instructor in Pathology from 1919 to 1927, and on the Medicine Staff from 1927 until 1954, as professor from 1942 to 1954. He was the senior staff man of St. Francis Hos- pital. For many years he directed the teaching program in Physical Diagnosis in the College of Medicine. One of his greatest joys was in taking a eroup of sophomore medical students to see patients at St. Francis, in order that they might grow in their diagnostic acumen. He sincerely enjoyed teaching, and the students who were privileged to be in his classes soon grew to recognize this. With his passing the medical stud- ents have lost a true and understanding friend; the medical college has lost a de- voted instructor and Columbus has lost one of its erand men of medicine. Sophomores SURPRISINGLY enough, when the fall quarter of 1951 arrived we were still here. It didnât take long until we were yearning for the care-free days of the past year. The tempo had for some reason been increased. Some who were clever at symbolic logic made the first lecture in each class; the re- mainder of the class flushed the schedule sheets and followed the guy in front of them. At about this time, narcolepsy forged into the number two spot, just behind the pre-quiz dumping syndrome, as the scourge... OUR SMUGNESS was shortlivedâthey could still get us this year! Instead of a few courses we took twelve. We were treated to Thespian sagas by the Londoner and his protege; we administered strange admixtures to cannulated canines, who had a horrible habit of dying as the experiment reached its climax. We learned the Apothecary system and pre-Hip- pocratic remedies from a jolly little man, only to find later that the clinicians couldnât understand it, and the pharma- cists had long since dispensed their last Blaudâs pill. Lectures were half drowned out by the steady drone of the carpenterâs saw and the masonâs mixer. It was here that we met the gen- tleman from Vienna, whose expression, âI hod dotâ followed the description of every infectious disease save only the spi- rochete; and his aide-de-camp whose avian adenomas need no further comment. We smeared and cultured, walked through the halls with tubes hanging from our noses, and only later did we realize that the seventy-percent stuff in the lab was actually the real thing. As the year drew to a climax we palpated and percussed and were exposed to patients. Medicine began to unfold its mysteries to usâand the tempestuous National Boards were upon us. MACHIDA STEPHAN GREENE JOHNSON KORBIN MANHART SHANCK SHRIBER BLYTHE FRIEOMAN HECKAMAN KANDEL KOUSAIE KRANER KRITZER TIMMONS SENRING KUSTER TIRMONIA ZELLER SCHUCHT KAWASAK: CLASS OFFICERS: Don War- ren, Secy., Clyde Schoenfeld, Treas., George Loesch, Pres., Hal Manhart, V. Pres. SOME of the classroom material began to take life and move aroundâparticularly when the âRing- master of the Cystecircusâ produced his prize proto- zoans in the clinical lab. We learned why a good lab technician costs so much; we learned 24 ways to kill a dog; we often learned the cause of death in the latest murder mystery in Columbus; we even learned some medicine. Page 19, LEFT: So thatâs what squirrel muscle looks like! Hurry up, theyâre check- ing us now! Best bubble gum I ever chewed. What lovely eye grounds you have. RIGHT Hell, I donât knowâI read the wrong book. A little lighter on the chocolate. Apple polisher. Fecolith of the fovea. The library became a place holding more than undergraduate women. Somebody subscribed to the ââNew England Journalâ and the periodical rush was on... âUncle Shinnyâ viewed our chem- istry with tolerance, turned a deaf ear to our yelps and gave us the latest revisions of the material we had all studied in Ham the night before... the studious students studied... and though Snuffy threatened, it never really fell... You think you got problems ... Now look here, Chazz:. 28 I am his right hand. We shall now pray. Ve vonât skrew you too hard! Cat scratch fever, of course! Now, this snake walks All right, boy, say it. into your office... 2| Juniors âTHE clinical years shifted into focus somewhat more suddenly than in the past. The block system, much discussed (and cussed) was here. Three- fourths of the junior class found that they were three days behind when they began the quarter â due to the National Boards. All previous painfully gained knowledge was shuffled frantically with the advent of the first real live patient. The only things lacking were three quarters of training in bed-pan carrying, a few hours of âCourtesy Due to Senior Staff Nursesâ and an ever-liquid tongue for labels... 22 BY THE GRACE of Heaven, a lot of luck and a multitude of âel torroâ, we had gotten through National Boards! The block system was upon us, and no longer would we be to- gether as a class. The system had its growing pains: con- joint lectures were a paragon of disorganization, the nurses looked at us as if we were ants at a picnic and residents were the scourage of the earthâbut we didnât care! We were now full-fledged clinicians: stethoscopes were carried with casual obtrusiveness, and pocket notebooks replaced writing tablets. We applied the precepts of Physical Diagnosis with zest; his- tories were our prime requisite, and they were undertaken with patience and eagerness. We wrote volumes on each pa- tient, only to have the residents cover them with scarlet for omitting the fact that the patient did not have âjakelegâ as a child. We did circulation times, ââPee-S-Peeâsâ, and lumbar punctures; and arose with the birds to go over to the Hospital and attempt to aspirate blood from the hematoma created the day before. We tied knots on the bed post and door knobs, much to the chagrin of our wives, and we were impressed with the fact that the âZââ was much more than the end of the alphabet! Late in the Spring histories grew shorter, diagnoses be- came more accurate, and the golf course more crowded. Textbooks gathered dust as current literature took on added significance. We had chosen our mistress and she enveloped us. 24 CONVERSE HOLZBACH NAKHLE NIKOLAUS Bae ss oo a OZEROFF 3 ROSSEL SCHAEFER SMITH, H. STOTZER TEKNIPP THORNBURY TRESSER WAGNER, V. ' ei _ WHITACRE WOLERY ZIEGLER ZIMMERMAN ROTHCHILD AS THE year progressed, the status of the student improved. We later realized that duties usually come with ability to perform them. However, the third of the Four Horsemen appeared in the studentâs symptomatology: clinical paranoia. This was most evident on the surgical service. .. . We began to realize the significance of 2500 posts a year: this figure came alive for us after the third consecutive autopsy was begun at 3 A.M.... There was an opportunity to gain valuable experi- ence in the vena-punctureâfor some a lost art since freshman days. For those who in undergraduate school had majored in English with a minor in fiction composition, the medical workups did not really re- quire four hours. On this station EVERYONE worked. ae | Serum selenium and radioactive rhubarb. Geezâall these red marks! Get your acromegalic hands back. Blood is usually red... Then we induce them with bourbon. Sanctuary! 27 Here are some slightly unusual impres- sions of the various specialties. You might use these pages for the kids to tear out, but if you wish, try to guess who is represented in these photograms. An- swers below: TNO :9ulotpeyy : ATOSAING 28 Seniors BEFORE anyone realized it was the beginning of the end. This was a year that really moved. There were many memories â the first delivery on OB â the hectic all-night stands on 5-West â the leg ulcer clinic, where most of the patients had been coming since before we were born â ENT and the search for the biggest pair of âtonsilsâ â the drama in the OR on thoracic surgery â the first visit to the Re- ceiving Hospital âthe quest for a sick patient in general medicine clinic. Then with a rush there was the Blue Ball, the Senior Banquet at [lonkaâs and Commencement. This would be the last time that the majority of us would ever see many of our classmates again. Where had the time gone... 30 a: WE HAD ARRIVED! From Hamilton Hall, to the Hos- pital, and finally the O.P.D.! We were accompanied, of course, by our alter egos, the constructionists, who had de- cided to revamp the moment we arrived in the Clinic. Ob-Gyn. was the quarter we had looked foreward toâpvx. and multip were the first thoughts for all. Many a long night was spent with watch in hand and touche g 14 h! Precip was a swear word and the happenings in Gyn. surgery remain one of the mysteries of life. The clinics were an enjoyable diversion. We were casual and confident, the antithesis of ourselves a few short moons ago The O.P.D. was a haven of rogues and derelicts; a few sick ones sneaked by the admitting office but were soon dis- covered and promptly eliminated. We dispensed Elixir of âPhenobarb by the quart, and if that didnât cure them, they were referred to Mental Hygiene Clinic. We sweated out our internships, we were wined and dined by drug houses. The end was in sight, or was it the begin- ning? Spring quarter was spent in a stupor, we were spinning our wheelsâwe began to wonder about the futureâto specialize? G.P.? Army? As it drew to a close, nostalgia supplanted bit- terness, and the feeling of confusion crept back into con- sciousness. We had withstood the onslaught, but of the future? 32 MARLING L. ABEL Canton, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1949 Phi Chi, Treasurer V. Pres., Senior Class WifeâMarion DON MERRILL ALEXIS Akron City Hospital, Akron, Akron, Ohio Ohio O.S.U., :B.A., 1951 General Practice Alpha Kappa Kappa Phi Beta Kappa WifeâJune Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice or E.N.T. ELI C. ABRAMSON Toledo, Ohio University of Toledo, B.S. 1949 Phi Delta Epsilon, Pres., 1953-54; Social Chair.,1952- ATPHONSE V. 53 ARMBRUSTER WifeâSharron Akron Philadelphia General Hos- Emory University, B.A., pital, Phila., Penn. 1950 Internal Medicine Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâRuby; Kathryn Ann, Carol Ann St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima General Practice G. ADOLPH ACKERMAN Columbus, Ohio O.8.U., B.S. 1948, M.S. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa Sigma Xi Borden Undergraduate Re- search Award, Co-Recipient Salt Lake County Hospital Research teaching RALPH F. ASKAM Findlay, Ohio O.S.U., B.S. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâMary Anne Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice JOHN HOY ADRAIN Lorain, Ohio Baldwin-Wallace, B.S. 1949 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâMaureen Los Angeles County Hospi- NORMAN ATKIN ital, Los Angeles, Calif. University Heights, Ohio Ophthalmology Western Reserve, Ohio State, Ohio University, A.B., 1950 Phi Delta Epsilon â Social Chairman, 1952; Caducean Advertising Manager 1954 Kings County, Brooklyn Surgery 33 NORMAN HENRY BAKER Youngstown, Ohio Allegheny College, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâNancy Jo Hurley Hospital, Flint, Mich. Surgery. ROBERT WILLIAM BRANNON Crooksville, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Phi Beta Kappa Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio General Practice HOWARD R. BARTON Adelphi, Ohio Muskingum College, B.S. 1949 Nu Sigma Nu Alpha Omega Alpha WifeâJuliet Philadelphia General Hos- pital, Phila., Penn. Internal Medicine a GILL WAYNE BREHM Columbus, Ohio Miami U., O.S.U., B.S. 1948 Nu Sigma Nu Pres.; Fresh- man Class WifeâHelen; Wayne and Stacy O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Surgery 34 ROBERT EDWARD BATTERSON Columbus, Ohio Capital University, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâAudrey Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio Pediatrics xN DAVID E. BROWN, Jr. West Lafayette, Ohio Denison University, B.S. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâJoan Mae Miami Valley Hospital, Day- ton, Ohio General Practice JAMES F. BEATTIE New Straitsville, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa Wi feâElla Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio General Practice HAROLD TWAY BROWN Crestline, Ohio OS USBAMIISE Alpha Omega Alpha WifeâMary Alice; Kathleen Ann Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, California Undecided Kenton, Ohio University of Michigan, B.S. 1948; O.S.U., B.A. 1949 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâElaine; daughter Ohio ie Uhrichsville, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1951 WifeâEmma Ruth; Debra Sue Mercy Hospital, Springfield, Ohio General Practice LAUREN MITCHELL BROWN DONALD H. BURK Westerville, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1949 Phi Chi Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Omega Alpha, V. Pres. Medical College Council SAMA, Pres. WifeâEunice Dorothea O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Undecided CLARENCE CARPENTER, JR. RICHARD DEAN CARR - Columbus, Ohio Sie DAG oo | Phi Chi Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Omega Alpha, Pres. 1953-54 WifeâPatricia Mildred Blodgett Memorial Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan Internal Medicine or Dermatology LEONARD JULIUS BURMAN ROBERT S. CAPPER Columbus, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâMary Ann; Constance White Cross Hospital, Columbus, Okio Undecided ALBERT COHEN 35 Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1947 Phi Delta Epsilon WifeâShirley; Jeri Beth O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio General Surgery Columbus, Ohio Miami Univesrity, B.A. 1950 Phi Chi Managing EditorâCaducean Carnes-Bartes Scholarship, 1953-54 Professional I-F Council WifeâBarbara J.; Steven Mark Baylor University Hospital, Dallas, Texas Internal Medicine EDWARD CONRAD Grafton, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Phi Beta Kappa St. Vincentâs Hospital, Toledo, Ohio General Practice RICHARD GALE COTTERMAN Akron, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâRoberta Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice LLOYD R. COVAULT Troy, Ohio Miami University, B. A. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâJanet E. O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Physical Medicine KENNETH ANTHONY DEL GRECO Akron, Ohio O.S.U., B.S. 1949 Phi Chi WifeâMary Jane Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice DANIEL DESBERG Cleveland Heights, Ohio John Carroll University, B.S. 1950 Phi Delta Epsilon WifeâEdith Cleveland, Ohio General Practice ROBERT DORMIRE Columbus Heidelberg College, B.S.., 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâEloise Ann Los Angeles County General Hospital General Practice CHARLES ALBERT DUDGEON Rockford, Ohio Bowling Green State U., B.A., 1949 Phi Chi WifeâNancy Jo; Melinda Jo St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio General Practice RICHARD R. DYSART Columbus, Ohio Capital University, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi Manchester Memorial Hos- pital, Manchester, Conn. General Practice FRANCIS WILLIAM EBERLY Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâDarleen; 4 sons Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Pediatrics CHARLES HAYDEN EUBANKS Jackson Wilmington College, B.S. Harbor General Hospital, Los Angeles, California DALE BERTRAM FLICKINGER, JR. Toledo, Ohio Toledo University, B.S., 1950 Phi Chi Class President 1952 Medical College Council Representative, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954. WifeâZoanne; 1 son. Boston City Hospital, Boston, Mass. Surgery DAVID FOXMAN Cleveland, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1949 Phi Delta Epsilon Cleveland City Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio General Practice or Internal Medicine JOSEPH H. FRENCH Columbus, Ohio 0.5.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Beta Kappa John Hay Whitney Fellow Student Council, 1953-54 WifeâMarilyn Doss; 1 son Philadelphia General Hos- pital, Phila., Penna. Pediatrics or Pediatric Psychiatry EUGENE ARTHUR FELDHEIMER Canton, Ohio Mount Union College, B.S. 1948 Nu Sigma Nu Peopleâs Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice RICHARD LOUIS FODOR Cleveland, Ohio O.SAnI pay Alpha Kappa Kappa Cleveland Lutheran Hospital General Practice or Surgery JOEL R. FREEDMAN Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1948 WifeâMaria Livia Neuropsychiatry THOMAS ROBERT FRYE Columbus, Ohio O5.U., BAe 195t Phi Chi Phi Beta Kappa Freshman Class Treasurer WifeâBetty Lou Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio Internal Medicine RAYMOND EVERETT FULLER Columbus, Ohio Capital University, B.S. 1949 Phi Chi WifeâLillian; Steven Grand Rapids, Michigan General Practice J. MALCOLM GRAHAM Berea, Ohio Baldwin-Wallace, B.S. Nu Sigma Nu Riverside County Hospital, California General Practice JOHN JOSEPH GEDERT Clyde, Ohio Notre Dame University, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâRuth; son daughter Unknown Undecided E. THOMAS HADDER Rockford, Ohio OS. BAS 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâElizabeth; Tommy Lynda Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio General Practice Irondale Ohio State, B.A. AKK LOUIS MICHAEL HALEY Dayton, Ohio Notre Dame, B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa PresidentâJunior Class Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio Ob.-Gyn. Cleveland Heights, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1949 Phi Delta Epsilon Caducean Photographer WifeâDonna Los Angeles County General Hospital, Los Angeles, Calif. Neurosurgery or Neurology- Psychiatry CHARLES HAROLD HAMILTON Columbus, Ohio Northwestern University, B.S. 1949 Phi Chi WifeâMarianne; 1 son White Cross Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Proctology di: JOHN FRANKLIN HANLEY CHARLES HOWARD HOWARTH Carrollton, Ohio Hiram College, B.A. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâLily Anne O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Undecided Grosse Point, Michigan PAUL MAURICE JACKSON JOHN JACOB Akron, Ohio University of Akron, B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Vice- Pres. 1953-54 Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Surgery Mansfield Ohio State, B.A. Cleveland City Hospital DALE DENEEN HUBBARD LOWELL RENNER HUGHES Delaware, Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University. B.A. 1950 Chairman, Medical College Council Curriculum Com- mittee, 1952-53 Junior Class Representative to Medical College Council WifeâElizabeth; Philip Grant and Ralph Gregory United States Public Health Franklin, Ohio Miami University, B.A. 1950 Phi Beta Kappa Phi Sigma Alpha Kappa Delta WifeâLois Ann; 1 child Grant Hospital, Columbus, Ohio General Practice Service Hospital, Staten Island, N. Y. Undecided ROBERT EUGENE JOHNSON ROBERT EDGAR JOHNSTON Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.S. 1949 Nu Sigma Nu, Vice-Pres. Junior Year Medical College Council PresidentâSenior Class WifeâDolores M. Youngstown Hospital Associ- Perrysburg University of Toledo, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa Mercy Hospital, Toledo ation, Youngstown, Ohio Undecided 39 JOHN ROBERT JONES Columbus, Ohio 0.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi Medical College Council WifeâCarol; Janice Mercy Hospital, Toledo, Ohio General Practice EUGENE WILLIAM KANSKY Cleveland Western Reserve, B.S.; Bowling Green, M.A. Phi Chi San Francisco City and County Hospital PAUL BENTLEY KERR Hicksville, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1940 Nu Sigma Nu Treasurerâ1954 Caducean WifeâFloria S.: son daughter St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio General Practice CHARLES RUSSELL KIDD, le Columbus, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâElizabeth; Danny Kathleen, Charley St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio Ob.-Gyn. EDWARD Wm. KIEFFER Toledo, Ohio University of Toledo. B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa KappaâRec. Secây. Mercy Hospital, Toledo, Ohio General Practice WILLIAM KLEINMAN Glouster, Ohio 0.5.U., B.A. 1949 Phi Delta Epsilon WifeâIris St. Lukeâs Hospital, Cleve- land, Ohio General Practice JAMES WILLIAM KOENIG New Knoxville, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1949, M.A. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa City of Detroit Receiving Hospital, Michigan General Practice EDMUND M. KRIGBAUM 40 Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi, President 1954, Sophomore Class Secretary, 1951-52 WifeâAnne P. University of California Hos- pital; San Francisco, Calif. Surgery ALEX EUGENE KRILL S. Euclid, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. Phi Delta Epsilon Phi Beta Kappa Philadelphia General pital, Phila., Penn. Undecided Hos- CARL BERNHARDT KROEGER Akron, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. ,1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Surgery DONALD S. LINTON, JR. Cleveland, Ohio Amherst College, B.A. Nu Sigma Nu Associate Editor Caducean WifeâMary Ann Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. Undecided WILLIAM H. LIPPY Niles, Ohio Oberlin College, B.A. 1950 Phi Delta Epsilon Caducean, Sales Mer. Wi feâJoan Kings County Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. Internal Medicine 4l FRANKLIN L. LYON Findlay, Ohio Bowling Green State Uni- versity, B.A., 1950 Phi Chi WifeâPatricia L.; Jennifer Lee City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Pediatrics JAMES FRANK McCUTCHEON Warren Ohio State, B.Sc., 1950 Nu Sigma Nu Kappa Psi Phi Rho Alpha Alpha Epsilon Delta Kings County, Brooklyn Undecided WAYNE LELAND McFADDEN Newcomerstown, Ohio Muskingum College, B.S. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâFileen St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio General Practice PHILIP HOWARD McFARLAND Warren, Ohio Allegheny College, B.S. 1949; 0O.S.U., MS. 1953 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâMargaret Ann; Ran- dall Philip University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan Orthopedic Surgery CLARE PURDY McFARREN Dalton, Ohio Wooster College, B.A. 1951 Phi Chi WifeâLouise E., two daugh- ters Peoples Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice ROBERT B. MARSHALL Bluffton, Ohio Oberlin College, B.A. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan General Practice RICHARD CLARK McPHERSON North Georgetown, Ohio Mount Union, B.S. 1950; 0:8.U;, MSy953 Phi Chi WifeâDottie Akron City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Surgery CARL GEORGE MADSEN, JR. JOHN C. MAGILL Geneva-on-the-Lake Princeton, B.A. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa, Treasurer Shadyside Hospital, Pitts- burgh, Pa. Psychiatry GERALD E. MEERKREEBS RUSSELL CHANEY Toledo University of Toledo, B.S., 1950 University of Toledo Honor Society Phi Delta Epsilon Detroit Receiving Hospital Undecided 42 METZGER Canal Winchester, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 WifeâSuwami; David Paul Ohio State University Hos- pital, Columbus, Ohio Pathology Columbus Ohio State University, B.A., 1950 WifeâJoan; two children White Cross Hospital, Co- lumbus General Practice DON KEVILLE MICHEL Waldo, Ohio OS.Ue Baloo Nu Sigma Nu WifeâNorma Peoples Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice JOHN CHARLES MIETHKE EDNA SUE MILLER BRUCE ERNEST MILLS FRANCIS E. MOORE Cleveland Springfield, Ohio Youngstown, Ohio Armstrong Mills, Ohio Oberlin, A.B. Wittenberg College, B. A. Youngstown College, B.A. Ohio University, B.A. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa 1949 1949; Kent State Univ., Nu Sigma Nu Jackson Memorial Hospital, Alpha Epsilon Lota, Treas- M.A. 1954 City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Miami, Florida urer 1950-51 Wifeâ-Barbara General Practice Mercy Hospital, Springfield, Navy Ohio Undecided Pediatrics mn imal a GERALD WAYNE MORRIS JOSEPH MULLEN JAMES EVERETT MUNGER HARRY O. NEWLAND Columbus, Ohio Cleveland Columbus, Ohio Dover, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Ohio State, B.A., 1950 Oberlin College, B.A. 1949 Bowling Green State Uni- WifeâBetty Lou Alpha Kappa Kappa Nu Sigma Nu versity, B.A. 1949 Indianapolis General Hos- St. Lukes, Cleveland WifeâMargaret Phi Chi pital, Indianapolis, Ind. Undecided Mt. Carmel Hospital, WifeâMary Lou; Sally Lou General Practice Columbus, Ohio and Trevor General Practice Mercy Hospital, Toledo, Ohio General Practice 43 ROBERT IRWIN CURRY Mansfield, Ohio Wooster College, B.A. 1946 Nu Sigma Nu Mercy Hospital, Toledo, Ohio General Practice EILEEN MARIE OâFERRELL Cincinnati, Ohio Alpha Epsilon Iota, Vice- Pres. Christ Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio General Practice HAROLD R. ONKST Greenville, Ohio Ball State, B.A. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâJoanna Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Florida Anesthesiology or Internal Medicine. ANDREW OPRITZA Youngstown, Ohio Ohio University, B.A. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâJanice; 2 children Peoples Hospital, Akron, Ohio Surgery KATHRYN PANIS Massillon, Ohio Kent State University, B.S. 1950 Alpha Epsilon Iota, Presi- dent and Treasurer Junior Class Secretary General Practice or Pediatrics WALT G. PARSEL Bucyrus Ohio State, B.S. WifeâMaryât w o children Los Angeles County General Hospital = ROBERT JOSEPH PAUL Youngstown, Ohio Western Reserve University, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi Youngstown Hospital Asso- ciation, Youngstown, Ohio General Practice seLAWRENCE JOHN PETERS Columbus Ohio State, B.A. Nu Sigma Nu Orange County General Hos- pital, Orange, California JOHN LEONARD PHIFFER Columbus, Ohio Capital University, B.S. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâM. Eileen Manchester, Conn. General Practice P. MATT PLATTEN Lakewood, Ohio 0.S.U., B.A. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa Detroit Memorial Hospital, Detroit, Michigan Neuropsychiatry FRANK EDWARD POLLOCK Woodsfield, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1949 Phi Chi Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus, Ohio General Practice JOHN KENT POND Akron, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâPatricia; 1 child St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio General Practice ROBERT W. PRICE Columbus, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1947; University of Texas, B.A. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâNoreen; daughter Spokane, Washington General Practice GEORGE WARREN PRIEST Dayton, Ohio Washington Lee Univer- sity, B.A. 1943 WifeâMary Ann; Jamie, Steve and Lissa Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio General Practice or Ob.- Gyn. JAMES THEODORE QUESTEL Tallmadge, Ohio Kent State University, B.S. 1950 WifeâHelen Unknown General Practice ROBERT L. REINHART Columbus, Ohio Ohio State Nu Sigma Nu, Secretary 1952-53, President 1953-54 Kappa Kappa Psi CaduceanâEditor WifeâMartha; Harry Robert Los Angeles County General, Los Angeles, California General Practice THEODORE EDWIN RICHARDS Pavonia, Ohio Ohio University, B.S. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu Medical Student Council 1951, 1954. Business Manager, Cadu- cean, 1954 WifeâBette; Ted and Brooke St. Ritaâs Hospital, Lima, Ohio General Practice MILTON JOHN SADLON Cleveland Western Reserve, B.S. Nu Sigma Nu Cleveland City Hospital DON NEAL RIDGWA Uniontown, Ohio Baldwin-Wallace College, B.S. 1950 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâFern; 1 child Buttersworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Mich. General Practice PAUL JOHN SAUDER Mansfield, Ohio Ohio University, B.A. 1950 WifeâMarion K.; Pamela and Jacqueline Butterworth Hospital, Grand Rapids, Michigan General Practice ANTHONY SYLVESTER RIDOLFO Columbus, Ohio Rutgers, B.S. 1940, O.S.U., M.S. 1943, Ph.D. 1947 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâVirginia Carol; An- thony Seaton and Thomas Victor White Cross Hospital, Co- lumbus, Ohio General Practice DANTE GIOVANNI SCARPELLI Cleveland Baldwin-Wallace College, B.S., 1950 Ohio State University, M.Sc., 1953 Borden Undergraduate Re- search Award Co-Recipient WifeâHarriet; Michael Ohio State Medical Center Pathology THOMAS MORRIS RUSKIN Sandusky, Ohio Bowling Green State Uni- versity, B.A. 1954 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâVirginia Ruth; 3 children Mercy Hospital, Springfield, Ohio General Practice ROBERT W. SCHMIDT Toledo University of Toledo, B.S., 1950 AKK University of Michigan Pathology EDWARD SOL SCHNEIR Akron, Ohio University of Akron, B.S., OS.05°MS: Phi Delta Epsilon, Steward- House Manager, Vice- President WifeâEileen City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Undecided HOWARD MARVIN SIGAL Youngstown, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Delta Epsilon, Treas- urer 1951-52 WifeâRosamond Ruth Youngstown Hospital Asso- ciation, Youngstown, Ohio General Practice DONALD ALLEN SCHUTT JOHN KIMBALL SCOTT Euclid, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi Alpha Omega Alpha Vice-President Junior Class Art Editor, 1954. Caducean O.S.U. Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Surgery Toledo, Ohio Os UD sn LOU Phi Chi, Asst. Treasurer Phi Beta Kappa Phi Eta Sigma Los Angeles County General Hospital, Los Angeles, California Thoracic Surgery Columbus, Ohio U.S.U., B.A. 1949 Phi Chi WifeâLouise; Susan White Cross Hospital, Columbus, Ohio E.N:T; THOMAS EVANS SIMONS NORMAN EDWIN SINDEL Gahanna, Ohio Capital University, B.S. 1950 Mt. Carmel Hosp., Colum- bus, Ohio General Practice ALVIN SANFORD SEGEL Cleveland Heights, Ohio O.S8.U., B.S. 1950 Phi Delta Epsilon Phi Eta Sigma, Rho Chi Philadelphia General Hos- pital, Phila, Pa. Undecided JEAN H. SMELKER Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.S. 1949, M.S. 1950 Alpha Epsilon [ota Secretary, Freshman Class, 1950-51 Treasurer, Junior Class, 1952-53 Treasurer, 1953-54. HusbandâEdwin W. Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Class, Senior General Practice âg ian ee ita inciting depen MYRON RAY SMITH Lansing, Ohio Asbury College, B.A. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa Jefferson Hospital, Phila- delphia, Pa. General Practice JOHN ALBERT SOQUEL, JR. Barberton, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi WifeâPatricia Ann City Hospital, Akron, Ohio General Practice ROBERT G. SMITH Proctorville, Ohio O:S.U., B.S. 1950 WifeâMary Ellen; five children St. Maryâs Hospital, Huntington, W. Va. General Practice ROY WILLIAM STARKEY Springfield, Ohio O35. 5 eR-neeleou Alpha Epsilon Delta WifeâFrances; 1 child Detroit Receiving Hospital, Detroit, Michigan General Practice GORDON B. SNIDER Columbus, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi â WifeâMary Louise; 1 child Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus, Ohio Internal Medicine or JOHN P. STEVENS General Practice Carrollton, Ohio OS.US 0B le50 Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâElizabeth Anne Detroit Receiving Hospital, Detroit, Michigan Internal Medicine HARVEY J. SNYDER, JR. Akron, Ohio Kent State University, B.S. 1949 Alpha Kappa Kappa City Hospital, Akron, Ohio Undecided NICK JOHN TETERIS Yorkville, Ohio Washington Jefferson Col- lege, B.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Jefferson Hospital, Phila., Pa. General Practice eee pie yo ARTHUR K. THATCHER Middletown, Ohio Miami University, B.A. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Jackson Memorial Hospital JACK DONALD Miami, Florida VOEHRINGER Undecided Columbus, Ohio University of Dayton, B.S. 1949 Nu Sigma Nu WifeâBetty Lou; 1 child Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio General Practice DAVID A. UCKER Columbus, Ohio 0.S.U., B.A. 1949, M.S. 1950 Alpha Kappa Kappa Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan Surgery JOSEPH C. VON THRON Catawba Island, Port Clinton U. S. Merchant Marine Acad- emy, B.S., in Marine Transportation, 1948. Ohio State University, B.S., 1950 Phi Chi WifeâJane Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Florida Ob-Gyn or General Practice LeMOYNE IONE UNKEFER Canton Kent State, B.A. Alpha Epsilon Jota Aultman Hospital, Canton, Ohio ROBERT JAMES WALLACE Lakewood, Ohio O.S.U., B.A. 1950 Phi Chi Cleveland City Hospital, v] Cleveland, Ohio 9g General Practice ALBERT WAYNE VANFOSSEN Columbus Ohio State, B.Sc. Alpha Kappa Kappa WifeâBonnie Mt. Carmel Hospital, Columbus WILLIAM LEE WALTER Miamisburg, Ohio DePauw, B.A. 1950 Phi Chi Phi Beta Kappa Mt. Carmel, Columbus, Ohio General Practice 49 ROBERT EUGENE WHETSTONE Cleveland Lima, Ohio Princeton, A.B., 1949 Ohio Northern University, Alpha Kappa Kappa B.A. 1950 WifeâJean K.; Thomas Alpha Kappa Kappa Mount Carmel Hospital, Cleveland Columbus, Ohio General Practice Class Officers: Marling Abel, V. Pres., Ken DelGreco, Secy., Jean Smelker, Treas., Bob Johnston, Pres. 4 beae out-patient clinics were truly a hodge-podge of the-old and the new. Every day was moving day. We were really amazed at the facilities that opened up to us as we shifted from the old booths to the new âoffices.â Through it all, coffee and the pre and post-clinic seances remained the same... . THOMAS ZIEGLER Huron Road Hospital, FRANK LANUS ZWEMER Lakewood, Ohio Hope College, B.A. 1950 WifeâAnn Cleveland City Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio Medical Missionary Left: Senior Clinks: Page 51: So about up to here I felt... A dash of bitters. God, another Croque. Right: So I slipped her the speculum. Coffee time! Mother told me about med students. Beans for lunch. Only a broken leg? Page 53, LEFT: Now, back in â03â There I was at 40,000 feet... Whoâs this guy Starling-Loving? Should we wait five more minutes? RIGHT: Ahâanother thoracotomy prospect! See no evil, hear no evil, say no evil. Must be a masculinizing tumor. No coffee this morning. By this time conjoint lectures had become well estab- lished. As they are now passing from the scene, let us pause to consider and reflect on them for one moment. The considerate ones never took advantage of their friends by asking that last question at 8:49â they waited till later. The interest in the subject under discussion was usually reflected in how many of the âhard Core of the senior classâ were presentâ except when the surgery department didnât play fair and began to give attendance quizes. 27 showed up to whistle âIn a Persian Marketâ for an old friend towards the end of spring quarter. Of course there were days when the speaker mis- calculated, but they were rare. The cards were al- ways available for such opportunities, though. BZ Obstetrics and Gynecology were words to set one apart from the common underclassman. This was the stamp of the seniorâand the reward was often an un-interrupted nap from 8 till 8:50. The enthusiasm and sincerity of purpose of this department was never doubted for an instantâif you were there you learned, and you learned to be there! Some of the more am- bitious ones felt that they got to the point of ascer- taining as much from a rectal as the nurses, but only the foolhardy voiced this belief. Even the cynics couldnât hold back a smile each time they heard the first squeak of a New One in the delivery room.... No comment. So I gave the old man some DIZ7ae LEFT: Page 55: Heâs a: hairy. hittle 2-3 but heâs mine! Did you hear about the farmerâs daughter? RIGHT: At your cervix, madame! Like this, Dr. Hollenbeck? STANDING: Richards, Hendricks, Cape, Nicklaus, Mullen, French, Pen bury, Johnston. SITTING: Tarr, White, Cochrane, Klever, Fisher, Eglitis, Solacoff, Roda, Ashbaugh. | Medical College Council This debating society, only slightly less exclusively than the U. S. Senate, has delved this year into the width and breath of the curriculum and the studentâs life. Among other projects they have taken over financial responsibility of the CADUCEAN, thus relieving the senior class of the burden of possible financial catastrophe. The student lounge, one of the long-term projects, is nearing completion. Investigations into curricula and the possibility of removing the Ohio Union tax from the medical fee card were interesting but fruitless. This group continues to become more efficient and useful each year. Student AMA The SAMA, in its fourth year at OSU, has been quite active. Officers for the year were: Joe Mullen, President, Jack Devaney, Vice President, Dick McCormick, Treasurer, and Kathryn Panis, Secretary. Several interesting speaker meetings were held and a delegate attended the national SAMA convention in Chicago. The SAMA is now prepared, as one of its projects, to offer reduced premium term insurance to medical students. More power to them and their projects! siero, Visintine, Thorn- Fraternities IN the first two years enough of the adolescent remained in many for them to feel obligated to associate with the various clubs located about the periphery of the brain factory ...'There was a group for every taste... ELM AT OM Yicy mel OFFICERS: Walt Orlow, President, John Jacob, V. President, Wm. Schamadan, Corres. Secy., James Foulkes, Rec. Secy., E. C. Heistand, Treasurer. Alpha Kappa Kappa Their aptitude for medicine and song cannot be drawings. Possessing a chorus second to none and a challenged. The AKâs live in an area of 17 city cook and housemother to match. They are truly the blocks in which they guarantee a skeleton in every singingest, eatingest, most studious of all. closet, a complete set of slides and a series of Ciba TOP ROW: Jack Hoffman, Virgil Tir- monia, Bill Schamadan, Herb Mahler, Dudley Page, Jim Rush, Roy Machida. MIDDLE ROW: Lee Like, John De- vaney, Konstantine Solacoff, John Rechsteiner, Carl Kroeger. BOTTOM ROW: Richard Fodor, James Sprinkle, Vince Harshman, Jess Tarr, Richard McCormick, Rob- ert Johnson, John Miethke. TOP ROW: Tom Oakely, Glen Patter- son, Al Korb, Dick Stasney, Ed Lilly, Gordon Lenard. MIDDLE ROW: James Hayes, Nevin Schuey, William Eggleston, George Mendel, Hugh Pittman, Floyd Dick. BOTTOM ROW: John Jacob, John Evans, Bill Schutte, Max Kockheiser, James Roda, Crede Hicston. TOP ROW: Charles Burkhardt, Bob Burges, John Boch, Austin Kuster, Lou Haley, Andy Opritza, Harvey Snyder, Art Thatcher. MIDDLE ROW: Robert Secrest, Joe Mullen, Bill Nichols, Dave Ucker, Rex Powers, Ed Keefer, Dave Barr, Rob- ert Schmidt, John Welsh. BOTTOM ROW: George Burggeman, Bill Menches, Jim Koenig, Don Bunde, Walter Beam, Jim Belt, Carl Madsen. NOT PRESENT: Ackerman, Aiken, Alexis, Armbruster, Austin, Bollander, Burson, Cape, Chapman, Collins, Conrad, Cook, Co- vault, Davis, Elder, Foulkes, Galehouse, Gilcrest, Hanley, Heckerman, Henderson, Kawasaki, Kidd, Lind, Lovell, McMillan, Meyer, Omler, Orlow, Platten, Pretorious, Pukay, Russel, Smith, G., Stevens, Ziegler, T., Zigler, C., Beattie, Brannon, Gedert, Price, Ruskin, Smith, M., Teteris, Van Fos- sen, Whetstone, Dandalides, Evans, Fill- singer, Henoult, Heyse, Juliano, Louden- schlager, Teknipp, Wilson. Nu Sigma Nu Truly a varied lot. They are banded together by their differencesâcasual is their nature. Their âderma- tology clinicâ was looked forward to by student and faculty alikeâmeetings took on the aspect of a heated brawlâbut everyone came back for more, and usually changed sides in the interim. They had a few mishaps with the campus powers but blood and perseverance won out. OFFICERS: Bob Reinhart, President, Jim Baker, V. President, Jack Voehringer, Secy., Jim Munger, Treasurer. ROW 4: James Munger, Wayne Mc- Fadden, Jack Voehringer, Howard Lowery, Robert Curry, Francis Moore, Sidney Stone, Don Dean, Leonard Burman, Harold Onkst, Har- old Dowell, Tom Hadder. ROW 3: Robert Essig, Jack Dotter, Linn Jones, Robert Wynson, Phil Matlock, Gail Burrier, Dante Scar- pelli, Tony Ridolfo, Ted Richards. ROW 2: James McCutcheon, Philip McFarland, Lawrence Peters, Robert Reinhart, Don Michel, John Pond, Milton Sadlon, Robert Johnston, Don- ald Linton. ROW 1: Ed Stanley, Andrew Pultz, Ed Cramer, Walt Wolery, James Baker, Warren Axline, David Corey. ROW 3: Jim Funkhauser, Robert Freedy, William Shriber, William Sawyer, John Stephen, Whitney White, Clyde Schoenfeld, Robert Shank, John Royer, Dick Lamprect, Don Gray. ROW 2: Al Starr, Sam Chaney, Nick Belios, Tom Watkins, Don Timmons, Frank Crowe, Russ Eymann, John Coleman. ROW 1: Gene Abels, Dale Myers, Bill Dozer, Sherman Hawley, Robert Vis- intine, Mike Vuksta, Robert Malone. Not present: Adrian, Arter, Barton, Biag- iotti, Bratcher, Brehm, Brown, D. E., Brown, L., Converse, Csonka, Dormire, Feldheimer, Furst, Galose, Gilbert, Graham, Johnson, Jones, W., Kandel, Kassel, Kerr, Kraner, Lahr, Lamprecht, Loesch, Marshall, Miller, Morris, Mounts, OâBrien, Richards, Ridg- way, Smith, Wohlgamuth. Phi Chi OFFICERS: John Thornbury, Presiding Junior, Ed Krigbaum, Presiding Senior, Harold Manhart, Secretary, Harry Mack, Treasurer. Known far and wide as the party club, the Phi Chiâs have done their utmost not to break tradition, having a well located house, and an exceedingly adequate bar. Saturday night âblastsâ are a must, complete ATI iti i with booze, broads and bawdy ballads. A few even studied. Their mascot âFredâ is a living example of an experiment in endocrine therapy. Welcome is the byword of the group. LAST ROW: Patterson, J., Hurt, R., Schwemley, R., Solt, R., Klecker, R., Keuhn, J., Ticich, S., Fouty, B. SECOND ROW: Bernlohr, P., Ash- baugh, D., Epps, R., Hay, T., Treese, F., Manning, R. FIRST ROW: Freese, M., Dierk- sheide, E., Pensiero, D., Mowry, F., Hess, B., Trump, R. LAST ROW: Tufts, K., Mooney, D., Cochran, C., Dayton, J., Wolber, P., Shurmer, R., Miller, D., Myers, J., Wilson, J., Jackson, B., Russell, J., Reynolds, W. SECOND ROW: Helwig, W., Gehring, R., Neri, T., Klever, T., Ayers, M., DeMarco, E. FIRST ROW: Chrysler, C., Manhart, H., Mason, J., Martin, J., Keener, R., McCarty, D., Zellar, I. LAST ROW: Chosy, J., Graham, J., Roberts, J., Talbut, D., Thornbury, J., Warner, J., Tanner, J. SECOND ROW: Rose, S., Barnes, J., Rothman, F., Allen, J., DeVoe, K., Korstanje, M. FIRST ROW: Myers, D., Mack, H., Kibler, D. LAST ROW: Fuller, R., Dysart, R., Baker, N., Eberle, F., Jones, J., Frye, T., Batterson, R., Phiffer, J., Von Thron, J., Askam, R. SECOND ROW: McPherson, R., Wal- ter, W., Hamilton, C., Scott, J., Krig- baum, E., Kansky, E., Soquel, J. FIRST ROW: Del Greco, K., Carr, R., Wallace, R., Cotterman, R., Lyons, F., Paul, R. NOT PICTURED: Abel, M., Ballard, L., Boswell, D., Capper, R., Cron, W., Dishon, N., Distad, R., Dunbar, D., Flickinger, D., Fouty, W., Gebhart, R., Grant, J., Heiny, R., Helman, H., Kathe, J., Kennedy, J., Kinsey, D., Licklider, S., Lynsky, J., Morits, R., Mosier, W., Newland, H., OâRoark, H., Pix- ley, J., Pollack, F., Rader, S., Rigsby, W., Runco, V., Schaeffer, J., Schutt, D., Shaw, J., Simons, T., Snider, G., Stewart, W., Stotzer, D., Wagner, W., Welborn, K., War- ren, D., White, F., Williams, H., Yobst, J. â ee Th Liters â 5 Wij iii | YUPTEYY Tey any i Visi Sate 4 4 ie a Add h had . i : | X eee ae âYeo Wa. Pett r= Phi Delta Epsilon ecgganalĂ©| ite tl OFFICERS: Eli Abramson, President, Stuart Fisher, V. President, James Katz, Secretary, Irwin Herman, Treasurer. This fraternity has truly changed with the Medical Center. A new house coupled with an energetic group has won for them their place on Campus. Their par- ties were each bigger and better than the last. The members of the Senior Class were truly a cross sec- tion of Medical school lifeâand the new regime was firmly entrenched. ROW 3: D. Klein, D. Kurlander, H. Fishman, J. Goldberg, L. Tarr. ROW 2: D. Winters, B. Harris, M. Ganz, S. Shensa, J. Schiller. ROW 1: B. Antine, A. Beallo, P. Press, M. Harshman, B. Boxerbaum. . ROW 3: L. Gold, R. Rose, R. Fladen, E. Schneir, W. Kleinman. ROW 2: A. Cohen, L. Appel, A. Schwartzberg, H. Sigal, N. Tresser. ROW 1: W. Lippy, I. Herman, E. Abramson, M. Klein, R. Rabkin. ROW 3: A. Mitchell, S. Fisher, S. Green, L. Goorey, L. Kritzer, R. Pinsky, J. Hirsch, L. Katz. ROW 2: R. Stern, E. Friedman, J. Strom, W. Korbin, D. Sobel, A. Hey- erson, J. Jakob. ROW 1: N. Stone, J. Goldrich, G. Meerkreebs, A. Krill, A. Segel, D. Foxman, R. Stamm, H. Knoll. I told George that exam stunk! Dig that crazy bone. 4 Ce aad atiay i, EON ap ya i ee 4 @ Md â a â â. aĂ© % . 9 . gt 4 at gt â : Loe a at : se ee8 8? Alpha Epsilon Iota The members of the opposite gender. They withstood the onslaught of practical jokes, and Freudian slips with graciousness and ease. They handled the male patients with an assurance and agility which is inbred in their sex. Friendly to all, and their calmness and compassion gives them a rightful place as colleagues in Medicine. Letâs go up to Larryâs for a beer. Today we will discuss the prostate. BACK ROW: Dr. Graber, Dr. St. Johns, Dr. Koons. SECOND ROW: Lois Zim- merman, JoAnne Hein, Sue Miller. FRONT ROW: LeMoyne Un- kefer, Mary White, Louise Warner, Mary Young, Kath- ryn Panis, Eilleen OâFerrel. BACK ROW: Sue Miller, Le- Moyne Unkefer, Eilleen OâFer- rel, Thelma Lange, JoAnne Hein, Carmen Bloedow, Mary Young, Kathryn Panis. FRONT ROW: Jean Smelker, Maisie Panos, Mary White. Faculty The gentlemen pictured in the following sections are distinguished, among other things, by their patience and devotion to a cause hard to crystallize into concrete terms. The academic life is not for everyone, but we feel that we have been exceeding well-blessed in the men who have chosen to teach us the art as well as the science of medicine. = a a3 | Vâ uO, a Ze 2 = â= a j | lS iM 68 Today, when so many great domestic and in- ternational issues hang in the balance, those men and women about to become physicians need to remember the immense forces for good that lie within themselves. It is within their power to help people suffering from the mental disillu- sionments and physical crippling of war, poverty and disease, to a new life of hope and self-help. In so ministering to the restoration of emotional and physical health in specific individuals, the physician makes his greatest contributions to the preservation and regeneration of society it- self. Important events justify a pause for reflec- tion and re-evaluation. The coming June Com- mencement is not only an event of major signifi- cance to every one of the 136 graduating seniors in this College of Medicine, but also in a very special sense this year to the University and the citizens of the State of Ohio as well. The medical class of 54 is the first tangible and dynamic, human, dividend-return to the people on the increased educational investment of money, time, buildings and medical faculty on this Campus, which has followed World War II, in response to the national need for more and better medical care. Many more patients have received better treat- ment in and because of our new University hos- pitals for the past three years, but the deepen- ing and broadening of the medical educational opportunities, which were initiated four years âHappy is he, who can search out the cause of things, for, thereby, he masters all fear, and is throned above Fate.ââVirgil ago with the advent of 150 new freshman medi- cal students, are fully apparent this June for the first time. It is, therefore, with pardonable pride and genuine satisfaction that we hail this first enlarged classâalmost 100% greater in num- ber than any previous graduating class in the history of this Universityâs College of Medicine. All educationâbut medical education in par- ticularâis a venture in faith. Basically, it pre- supposes a firm faith in oneâs own student-self, plus an unshakeable faith in manâs collective ability to ever more completely understand and control his environment, including his emotional and physical ills. Inherent in the very nature of every good physician must be that insatiable curiosity which seeks ceaselessly to know the secrets of sustained health and the causes of diseased states. It is the worthwhileness and satisfaction of the search itself, which animates and sustains, even through the inevitable days of temporary disappoint- ment and seeming frustration which defeat men of lesser faith and mental stamina. To the true disciple of Izaac Walton, the fas- cination of the art of fishing and its greatest sat- isfactions are inherent in the joys of preparatory anticipation from one season and trip to the next, from one skillful case to another. The size and variety of todayâs âcatchâ are dwarfed by the certainty of tomorrowâs better fishing weather and more promising fishing territory. (Continued on page 89) Assistant Dean Dr. John A. Prior is the newcomer to the Deanâs office, having taken over only January 1 of this year. In the short time he has held this office he has demon- strated a great amount of understanding of the stu- dentâs problems and has always been ready with advice or a hand for those who needed it. The re- organization of the college office has given Dr. Prior the job formerly delegated to the junior dean. He has given up much of his free time to be available for this position. We wish him all the luck in the world and know that he will continue to do the fine job he has begun. Associate Dean Dr. Richard L. Meiling has for the past years held down the most thankless task in the Deanâs Office: he has acted as the buffer and un-official crying towel for all those who had complaints, suggestions and ideas about how the College of Medicine should be run. Despite the many sad tales he hears every day he still manages to have a smile and cheery word for all he meets. Our hats are off to the indomitable âgeneral.â Assistant Dean Dr. Rollo C. Baker, in performing a double duty as Secretary of the College of Medicine as well as Assist- ant Dean, has oiled the machinery of the college with one of the unsung jobs which so often go unrecog- nized. In addition to his administrative duties he still manages to enthrall the freshmen anatomists with lucid dissertations on the âKnee as a Jointâ and the âRectum as a Wholeââwith emphasis on âBakerâs Alley.â His lectures and personality will remain in our memories. Office Staff A merrier crew there never wasâhas anyone ever come into the office and received anything but a smile? After a full day of correcting the misappre- hensions in 150 studentsâ psyches, this can be a task! They have always tried to make our day easier, though few of us have returned the favor. At least they are assured of their reward in heaven! BACK ROW: Dee Hales, Mary Ellen Hull, Dorothy Smith. FRONT ROW: Margaret Col- burn, Mary Frame. | een, Grant O. Graves, Irma Eglitis, Rollo C. Baker, John Gersten. James Belt, John Eglitis, E. Russell Hayes, Morton Alpert. Milton Lessler, Robert Grubbs, Clif- ford Angerer, Leo Sapirstein, Emil Bozler, Norman Coulter, Ralph Stacy, Fred Hitchcock, William Myers, Eric Ogden, Frank Hartman, Kathryn Brownell, Nancy Buckley. DEM BONESâThat first day shall never be forgot- tenâno one really got sick, but we sure were livid. We spent the first night studying with text and dic- tionary till the wee hours. Twenty dollar dissecting kits gathered dust as fingers proved more applicable. Our substantial aroma preceded us for blocks, and we were avoided like the plague. We took a sojourn through the labyrinthine crypts of the peritoneal cavity, and everyone knew the dimensions of the thoracic duct and the lymph drainage of the orchids. We had truly arrived, and the boys became men. SLUMBER PARTYâWe never saw daylight from eight in the morning till noon. Bichatâs principals rivalled Zoroasterism and Buddhism as a way of life. Rufeâs lectures were a rare combination of nebulous fact, fantasy and homespun philosophy. Nine lym- phocytes in a row followed by trachea encircling corpus cavernosa sent us home from a practical exam in a state of catatonic stupor. Instructors were given such adorable noms de plumes as âMoon River,â âMumblesâ and âGatling Gun,â but nobody lost much sleep in this course. CANULATE AND LIGATEâThe Physiologists, in- vestigators into the simp ler things in lifeâone of them spent his life studying the effect of defecation on renal plasma flow. We were to know more about squirrel muscle than we did about our own. We learned quaint old English customs and donated gal- lons of blood to the cause. We sweated and peed; we put ourselves into hypoxia, hyperpnea, acidosis, alka- losis and hypnosis. We groaned and ached, and chased half anesthetized dogs all over the building so we could measure their pancreatic outflow. Life was based on a combination of cardiac output and glomerular filtration. We were beginning to under- stand. 73 Wadacuo iF ROW 2: George Ruggy, Walter Frajola, Fred Kruger, Arthur Devor. ROW 1: Bernard Marks, Elmer Engleman, Clayton Smith, John B. Brown. ROW 2: Melvin Rheins. ROW 1: Matthew Dodd, Samuel Saslaw, Jack Baldwin. Bernard Marks, Elmer Engleman, Clayton Smith, and George Ruggy. MIX VOMICA Q.S. adâHinkle pills, Brownâs Mix- ture and Hydrargyrium Ammoniatum U.S.P. were the backbone of therapeutics. We wrote prescriptions which would have instituted the demise of a large elephant and learned that Sunday morning urine was worth thirty cents a shot. Digitalis had only one use, and it later proved to be just as good as they said it was. Ruggyâs exams were lessons in relativity, but the aphrodisiac power of Spiritus Frumenti are familiar to all. MINUTIA AGARâInto each life some Shigella must comeâand our diarrhea came from two hour ab- stracts in the subject covering a vast store of knowl- edge and facts. We learned to pick the best of three right answers, and anyone who got higher than 50 on an exam was considered qualified for a Ph.D. Sipping pathogenic bugs through a glass straw was the order of the day. We had to know seventy-three types of pneumococci only to learn later that penicillin hit them all. Unknowns were a tax on the most virulentâ but we got through somehow. PEE CHEMâtThe mysteries of amino acids and the untold wonders to be derived from bodily excretions were manifest indeed. We toted our jugs around with us enraptured in divine awe. The âfat chemistâ lec- tured endlessly on tthe horrors of obesity and the many ways that drain oil surpassed butter as a table spread. The Krebs cycle proved more intricate than the inside of a pin-ball machine, and a study of his- tory revealed that Henderson and Hesselbach dis- covered the pH of sea breeze. 75 ROW 3: Clarence Gantt, Primitivo Cruz, Edward Ryder, Thomas Wil- liams, Alexander Cardoso, Guenther Ceelen, Jacinto Vazquez. ROW 2: James B. McMillen, Abra- ham Towbin, George Y. Shinowara, Hans G. Schlumberger, Ralph John- ansmann, J. M. B. Bloodworth, Jr., Clarence Cole. ROW 1: Sylvia Bubis, Irma Gebauer, Constance Connors, Emmerich von Haam, Harry L. Reinhart, Vance Sanger. ROW 4: Fred Zuspan, Harry Ezell, Franklin Hugenberger, Douglas Gil- lim, Edward Zartman, Edwin Stedem, Dana Cox, Robert Daly, Charles Hen- dricks. ROW 3: James Norris, Richard Boi- man, Anthony Ruppersberg, John Holzaepfel, Ben Jacoby, Leonard Greentree, William Copeland, Francis Gallagher. ROW 2: Francis Davis, Wendell Scott, James Patterson, Zeph Hollenbeck, Robert English, Charles Pavey, Rich- ard Meiling. ROW 1: John Buckingham, John Rousseau, Edward Quilligan, James McClure, Jerold Rosenblum, Lloyd Barnes, William Merryman. TOP ROW: Oliver Hosterman, Charles McClave, Martin P. Sayers, Joseph Ryan, Barnes, Louise Ains- worth. SECOND ROW: Dorothy Falken- stein, Robert Sylvester, Riepenhoff, Miner Seymour, Cecil Hales. FRONT ROW: John E. Brown, Jr., Thomas Shaffer, Warren Wheeler, Earl Baxter. SEMPER FATALISâThe King of the Zombiesâ autopsy anything that wonât autopsy back. Round cell infiltration took on lasting meaning for us, and islet cell adenomas in the pancreas of a dengue fly were thoroughly covered in lectures. Such vague syndromes as âmyassissâ, and âskeerhosesââ were explored at great lengths. We became experts of the venapuncture and levine tube. The words âTake it like a manâ shall always cause many to wake from a sound slumber in a cold sweat! THE LOCHIE BIRDSâThe Gentlemen of Ob-Gyn. We felt almost like the real thing on their service. The speculum is the stethoscope of the trade and the pelvic the X-ray. If thyroid and estrogen couldnât cure it, it was an indication for a D C. Most of the stuff was normal and complications were discussed for weeks on end. They kept us up all night and be- came embittered if we dozed in class, but they more than compensated us by delivering our babies gratis, and teaching us their art with enthusiasm. PATTY CAKEâThe Pediatrician. His practice is de- voted in the main to soothing frantic mothers and trying to be nice to their tiny, eight armed darlings. Their hospital was a pleasant diversion where every- one was niceââexcept those who weren't, and we were summoned from all corners of the hospital to watch a venipuncture. We tried to apply the chiefâs âartâ in wild baby clinic, but failed miserably and left tattered and torn. âBig Redâ was a terror in the O.R.âbut the wheelâs rounds made up for it all. 77 ROW 2: John Mitchell, William Mit- chell, Robert Mayers, John Martin. ROW 1: Virginia Marchese, Dorence Harbinson, Iola Sivon. ROW 2: Loyd Stump, Joe Shepard, Jim McCreary, Louis Praver. ROW 1: Stewart Urbach, Eldred Heisel, William Loveberry. ROW 2: Morris Battles, Roy Teed, Harry Koenig, Jacob Moss, Robert Magnuson, Harry Sage, Jr., Harvey Wright. ROW 1: Alfred Joseph, David Rum- mel, Vern Stephens, Torrence Makely, Michael Cancilla, Stanley Barton. âSENSITIVE SOOTHERSâ â The Allergists â past masters of the art of listening. Their patients are divided into two categories, neurotics and croques. Their workup consists of inflicting several hundred puncture wounds about the bodyâand if any of them becomes inflamed the patient is referred to another doctor for Rx! We were made aware of the fact that hives were the clinical manifestation of an unhappy childhood ,and hayfever is a disease of unfaithful husbands. CHANCRE MECHANICS â The Dermatologist â âsnow jobâ par excellence. Their prescriptions were volumes in themselves. They used polysyllabic Latin terminology to describe chafed digits. Anything on an erythematous base is Herpes till proven other- wise. Their basic therapy we understood, but be- yond that we just sat. A mixture of five percent crude oil in axle grease will cure anything except lues, lupus and pregnancy. MUD IN YOUR EYEâThe Ophthalmologists. Spe- cialists in tthe truest sense. They snipped out cata- racts by the score, and treated everything else with cortisone and compresses. Refractions managed to pay the office rent. They painted lucid word pictures of pathological changes in the fundusâbut to us the macula was an unseen area pictured only in the book, and we promised ourselves we would refer anything ophthalmologic that came into the office. 79 ROW 4: Virgil Cross, Maurice Zox, James Sampsel, William Meyer, Jud- son Wilson, Tom Lewis, William Taylor, Jack Taylor. ROW 3: Luther Keith, Robert Zol- linger, Louis Roettig, Karl Klassen, Kenneth Lowery, Pliny Price. ROW 2: Arthur James, Jay Jacoby, Carolyn Zeigler, Robert Rauch, James Kauffman, Philip Hardymon, Nathan Hale. ROW 1: Walter Hamilton, Edwin Ellison, Richard Patton, Gilman Kirk, Drew Arnold, Wesley Furste. ROW 3: Joseph Bonta, John Wolff, Robert Waugh, Thomas Leach, Rich- ard Ireton, James Lloyd. ROW 2: Frank Berridge, Ray Ashare, William Kaylor, James Harmon, ROW 1: John Terry, Robert Watman, Robert Westhart, Roger Williams. Mustafa Kazuk, Patrick Crawford. ROW 4: Maurice Borkon, Bella Hat- falvi, Max Gerke, Augusto Samonte, Betty Beauge, Peter Fomenko, John Hubbell, Earl Heine, John Jones, Fred Flory. ROW 3: Frank Wappler, Roselea Heeter, Willadeane Slider, Irene Moseley, David Hunter, Nelly White- house, Dorothy Shaw, Jean Alarcon, Filomena Cavallo, Molly Martinez, Lewis Gumper. ROW 2: Betty Duvall, Joan Potzner, Mahin Farzoneh, Eleanor Drum- monds, Joan Amstutz, Leonette Burk- hart. ROW 1: George Collins, Early Knise- ley, Gwendolyn Trudea, Jay Jacoby, John Garvin, Aaron Canowitz, Wil- liam Hamelberg. EN GARDEâThe Surgeonsâmasters of the parry, hack and thrust. The only way to make an accurate diagnosis is to open them up and look. They did colec- tomies, cholecystectomies, colotsomies and_ radical amputations of our favorite gland; then when there was nothing left to remove, they referred the patients to internists. Electrolytes and fluids replaced all ex- cised material, and anything cortisone couldnât cure, potassium could! The Saturday morning comedy hour was fun for all and the acme of a surgeonâs existence is to acquire a little âNyaaââEh! MOUNTAIN CLIMBERSâThe Surgical Residents. They jump through the big âZâsâ hoop with the greatest of agility and their goal in life is to some day receive a nice word from him. Their hours are long, and their acid secretion approaches phenomenal levels. They are a constant source of anguish for students, but we are only scape-goats for suppressed ageression. During their training they tend to de- velop certain figures of speech such as, âEh?â and âWhat's aâ matter, boyâ, but security is a status un- beknownst to most of them. GAS! â Guardians of the Truth, the Patient and the Principles of Physiology, these scientists assume their true stature only when a member of a doctorâs family undergoes surgery. One of the rare specialties wherein you can do your work sitting down, they tend as to group to be even more peripatetic than the surgeons. Since the anesthesiology department was established, there hhasnât been a âsurgicalâ mortality in the hospital. 81 SITTING: Jaber Muhsin, Mark Saylor. STANDING: William: Kaylor, John Terry, Jack Taylor, William Taylor. ROW 2: Joseph Ridgeway, Ben Wilt- berger, Joseph Leach. ROW 1: John Q. Brown, Henry Wor- stell, Clyde Dawson, Judson Wilson. ROW 1: Martha Southard, Ulrich Henschke, Joseph Morton, Jack Wid- rich, William Carter. ROW 2: Hugh Cregg, Paul Meyer, Teofilo Marte, Matthew Elson, Flor- ence Blackford, Dana Schmidt, Frank Riebel. ROW 3: Anthimos Christoforidis. THE PLUMBERSâtThe Urologistsâentrepreneurs of the tube, jug and gaff hook. They wear hip boots and rubber aprons into the O.R. and their patients prance around the hall with garden hoses emerging from them, gleefully pinching the nurses derrierĂ©s and wishing they were thirty years younger. The pre- requisite for joining the club is a large, sensitive index finger, a pipe, and a name ending in â-lorâ! HAMMER AND CHISELâThe Orthopod. An ingeni- ous composite of carpenter, architect, engineer and doctor exquisitely pieced together with plaster, Sted- man pins and Kirschner wires. They encased their patients in a myriad of ropes and pulleys which re- sembled an ancient torture chamber; but miraculously they got well and walked home. Inspection of their equipment made one wonder whether they came to treat a patient or to fix the toilet. BARIUM BRAWLERâThe Radiologist. He can diagnose seborrheic dematitis from a P-A and lat- eral film of the os calcis and heâs the first to admit it. He lives in a world of diodrast, barium and im- pacted feces. Somebody once put a thumb print on a G.I. series and the patient had a colectomy for polyps. His machines look like dynamos and sound like streetcars. Radiation therapy will cure everything from cheilosis to clap. 83 ROW 3: John Prior, George Morrice, Robert Schoene, Floyd Beman, Robert Browning, Perry Ayers, Robert Wall, Joseph Ryan, James Schieve, Robert Kirk. ROW 2: Claude-Starr Wright, James McCreary, C. Joseph Delor, Charles McKitrick, Ralph Worden, Joseph Tomashefski, Hugh Hull, Robert At- well, Samuel Saslaw. ROW 1: Dwight Palmer, Norman Rothermich, Bruce K. Wiseman, Philip Knies, Richard Fulton. ROW 2: Richard Schaeffer, Bertha Bouroncle, Robert Wall, Hugh Pyle, Paul Demerit. ROW 1: Charles A. Doan, Bruce K. Wiseman. Charles Meckstroth, Neil Andrews, Mustafa Kazuk, Patrick Crawford, Charles Wehr. aie. RETURN THE KINGâS PHYSICIANSâThe Men of Internal Medicine, the bloodhounds of the profession. To these champions, the E.K.G. is as informative as a textbook, and an elevated serum selenium is diag- nostic of more than just face value. A stethoscope be- came an instrument of untold capacity, not just a pocket ornament. They inspected disease from every aspectâand though patients suffered much blood loss and punching, all benefitted from their thor- oughness. We were on service with G.I., and it was the high point of our career. Their discussions often approach nebulous proportions, but they are fine teachers all. FEE FI FO FUMâtThe Hematologistsâthe fountain- head of Ohio State. Therapeutically they have a long way to go, but scientifically they know no peer. Rounds on this service were a lesson in contrast. Their thereapy is in a constant state of flux and pallia- tion replaced cure in any discussion. The Kinsman count required two pints of blood and a pound of flesh. Simple anemias were pleasant drudgery. LIGHTS! ACTION! MUSIC! â The Barrymores of OR, these cool, steel-nerved supersuave technicians have blood pressures exceeding only those of the patients on whom they operate. Thoracotomy is a more benign procedure than repair of a ruptured hangnail, and if a lesion isnât diagnosed in four hours, take it to surgery. They still have a tendency to bow to the East where lies Boston each morning .. . 85 ROW 3: Dorothy Whitford, Pat Cairns, Dick Stow, Karl Ireland, Barbara Ford, Dick Burke, Rex Mc- Morris, Barbara Hill, James Powell, Bill Daugherty, Stan Muroff, Chester Mayo, Charles Banks. ROW 2: Ralph Worden, Gladys Woods, Theresa Davis, Nona Toops, Sue Carter, Earl Gentile, Arden Pfouts. ROW 1: Barbara Randall, Ann Craw- ford, Nancy Martin, Lois Perkins, Rosemary McElroy, Nancy Petroff, Richard Baer. Hans Never, Erwin J. Lotsof, Greg Sheehan, William Morse, Dorthea Smith, Mary McDonald, Florence Harvey, Robert Stevenson, Ralph Patterson. ROW 3: Peter Tchen, Dick Weaver, Mostafa Daneshvari, Richard Booth, Hisato Anno, Aubin Charbonneau. ROW 2: Santo Galanti, Constance Connors, Martha Southard. ROW 1: Mustafa Kazuk, Robert Browning, Robert Atwell, Neil An- drews, Karl Klassen, Joseph Toma- shefski. GRUNT AND GROANERSâThe Physical Medicine staff. When all else fails they are called. They go about the business of beating, bending and drowning their patients with gusto. They teach them to use muscles they never knew they had. They practice their trade with untiring patience and fortitude. Polio and hemiplegia are their forte. Hopeless crip- ples became useful citizens under their care. Hats off to an unheralded but worthy specialty. BRAIN WASHERSâThe Psychiatristâa_ strange taciturn lot, immune from the overt manifestations of physical ills. Their interest lies in the whys and wherefores of life. Every act is a manifestation of basic derangement in personality. They listen for hours to sordid tales of sex, tantrums and Bacchana- lian orgies, then had the patients return in a week so they could hear it again. The indications for E.E.G. are two Betz cells and $25. RED SNAPPERSâThe direct descendents of Koch, Pasteur and Ehrlich, fighting the never ending battle against the bug. Streptomycin, PAS, and isoniazid have aided them greatly, but bed rest is still good therapy, and they still blow their patients up like balloons. They make them cough, gag and snort to erow out the organism, then take enough X-rays to fill a room. Surgery is a boon to localized disease, but the search continues. 87 i. wil Radiology Technicians: ROW 3: Charles Harris, Marilyn Blue, Kathleen Leh- man, Peg Heinzman, Beverly Stanhagen, Judy Stumpf, Connie Rogers, Sonja Cook, Nancy Simpson. ROW 2: Dorothy Cook, Bregetta Korn, Marilyn Kiess, Paula Haines, Connie Niebel, Marie Green, Bob Thomp- son. ROW 1: Sam Chizzoniti, Konnie Wu, Jeanette Simpson, Nancy Markel. ROW 3: Kenneth Scribner, Shirley Edwards, Geneva Carson, Rosemary Korchak, Anne Kingsmore, Suzanne Mahlmeister, J. Joan Milsark, Mary Todd, Naney Boh- man, Sally Dunham. ROW 2: Phyllis Ring o, Marilyn Betz, Sigrid Krehbiel, Marjorie Smith, Roberta Collins, Marilyn Gauggel, Lois Rubenstein, James Helwig. ROW 1: Joyce Bloor, Rose McKnight, Alice Blair, Ming Ming Wong, Elizabeth Romig. Medical Technologists: The gentleman on the left with the enigmatic grin has just done one of two things: either discovered a new way to confuse medical students with cryptic ciphers on faded films, or has remembered the name of the one technician who did not hand in a complete case history of every patient he x-rayed yesterday. From the smiles below it appears that Dr. Mortonâs bark may be worse than his bite. At any rat e, his students swear by him (I think). The piercing gaze a sinistra is being directed at a medical tech student who didnât top all the sophomore medics in the clinical path exam. âYou have to know more than they do or you'll never be able to interpret their orders for tests,â says Happy Harry Reinhart. Incidentally, the picture above was not lifted from the Gayety markeeâstop in on the third floor anytime for proof! AOA: ROW 2: Paul, Runco, Krill, Stewart, Segal, Beattie, Con- rad, Brannon, Metzger, Frye, Lowery, Zwemer, Schmidt, Johnson, Abramson. ROW 1: French, Schutt, Carr, Ellison, Zollinger, Burk, Bar- ton. NOT PICTURED: McPherson, Michel. . a a This impressive array of top talent represents the best that the OSU medical school has to offer in brains. All these men are class-toppersâeither the top 5% as juniors or the top 15% as seniors. They held their annual initiation banquet on April 28 and inducted 19 new members. These men will no doubt go far in their chosen fieldsâfor they already have a great start. DEAN DOANâ Continued from page 69. The entire professional career of the physician is made up of a continuing series of âsearches for causes,â either in individual patients or in disease mechanisms, which, according to the philosophy of Virgil, enthrones him above all fear of blind Fate. It also places him beyond the pale of those whom Epictetus scorned, sarcasti- cally, when he observed many centuries ago, that ââit is impossible for anyone to begin to learn what he thinks he already knows.â Rather is the physician under the necessity of continu- ally learning, and following the new, rapidly emerging facts, wherever their implications may lead, in this mid-twentieth century of nuclear fission and allied scientific progress. In reaffirma- tion of Charles Mortonâs discerning observation made in 1678: âWhere new appearance is before the eyes, new suppositions thereupon arise.â Never has faith in the physician been more truly justified than in the present-day, nor has there ever previously been so promising a pros- pect for the young practitioner of medicine, who is in possesion of the factual knowledge already available, and who is abundantly prepared to re- ceive and apply that which is in imminent future prospect. The fulfillment of these faiths by pro- 89 fession and public alike is based on the tenet that âsuccessâ is always that âmeans,â never the âend,â always a âjourney,â never a âdestina- tionâ! This year marks one of the more impor- tant and significant âhigh pointsâ in your lifeâs journey, from which elevated plateau a true per- spective may be obtained, as a brief pause per- mits a reassuring backward glance, but more importantly, envisions the long road ahead as it beckons us on our path. Mutual respect for each other and effective cooperative effort are the hallmarks of our Esculapian brotherhood. John Wesley, brilliant Oxford scholar and eloquent evangelist of the 18th century, saw clearly the desirability of a dynamic fellowship of the spirit, dependent upon a union of hearts, not necessarily an exact meet- ing of minds. Often said he: âIf thy heart is as my heart, give me thy hand.â And, so, with this warm âhandclaspâ goes the sincere wish that good fortune may attend you! May your continuing journey bring you fair vistas and many satisfying âway stationâ stop- overs to the final destination at the end of the road, always still seeking âcauses,â and, thus, continuing to be the Master of your Fate! Charles A. Doan, M.D. Dean Man oj the Year Dr. Jay J. Jacoby Born in New York, December 12, 1917, our Man of the Year was the second of three children born to a carpenter and his wife, both of whom were de- voted to their childrenâs education. A sister in jet propulsion engineering, a younger brother in chemi- cal engineering, and our Man of the Year document the parentsâ success. Our Manâs memories of childhood grandeur are limited to those of having been the first school boy patrolman. The years of the depression were not easy for the family and he tried to help with the family finances by working at odd jobs, and then as general handy man in a cafeteria when he started at Brooklyn College. In the closing years of the depression with improved finances he transferred to the University of Minnesota where he received his B.S. (1939), Bachelor of Medicine (1940) and M.D. (1941). In the medical school his first interest was in pathology and he worked as assistant to the coroner of New York City during the vacations. Externship at an obstetrical hospital changed his interest to obstetrics. Here he first became aware of the im- portance of anesthesia and under the influence of Dr. Ralph Knight, he finally settled on anesthesiology as his special field of interest. 90 Following graduation (AOA) and internship at Kings Countyâ Hospital, our Man of the Year and his new bride, Helene Kurshan, were provided with honeymoon facilities on Long Island at Fort Totten, compliments of the U. S. Army. The army provided a trip to the Arctic where he was a medical officer for an air base under construction, and he became the family doctor for the Eskimos. Due to the peculiari- ties of military red tape, he found himself the tempo- rary and worried âownerâ of a $20,000,000 air base. Shortly before the invasion of the continent, he was transferred to the European Theatre and served as anesthetist with the 40th General Hospital and then on a mobile surgical team in the First Army. After the war he made the decision, while research assistant at the University of Chicago, to continue in academic surroundings. He came to Ohio State in the summer of 1947 as Associate Professor of Anesthesia, and in the summer of 1951 was made full Professor. Our Man of the Year likes children, and has three daughters, aged three, five, and seven. His principle hobby is the entertainment of his own and the neigh- borsâ children. He has the local reputation of being the Pied Piper, principally because the children know that there will be an ample supply of ice cream, cookies, and candy in his vicinity. He likes to see them running around happy, carefree in their outlook on life, in contrast to what he sees so much at the hospital. He enjoys working in the operating rooms and meeting the daily challenges in the life and death battle. He enjoys teaching and the stimulus that comes with developing and presenting important practical points to students. Our Man of the Year has chosen a career of teaching and research in order to have an opportunity to work with the problems singled out by his adventurous intellect. He hopes, now that the De- partment of Anesthesiology is nearing maturity, that he will have more time to give both to the âinsoluble problemsâ which he prefers to study, and the teaching from which he derives so much personal satisfaction. Anticipation of reaching this goal keeps him in Co- lumbus. Its realization will attract more men like him. Night Out There was a real blast on the nights of April 9 and 10 at U. Hallâthe Colleges of Medicine and Nurs- ing combined for one real good night out, and the results were best appreciated for those lucky enough to have seats. Everything was featured: spontaneous and unrehearsed audience participa- tion, meller-drammer, good music, bad dancing, sex, awards and even grand rounds. The terpsichorean talents of the teachers were brought out in the open âDr. Zollinger got three offers from Jackie Gleason and one from Ottoâs Dancing Seals. Jack Taylor is being groomed to replace Robert Q. this summer, and who knows where Marge Nussdorfer will end up? All in fun and fun for all is the motto of this ONnCEe-a-year extravaganza. 22 NURSES The cap the nurse on duty wears Is costlier than the bonnets gay Worn by the wives of millionaires Regardless of the price they pay. Tis something she herself can make, A bit of linen, trimmed and turned The right to it (for mercyâs sake) Was with four years of training earned. That uniform of spotless white Was costher than a ladyâs gown, Twas bought with care by day and night For those with illness stricken down. The royal robes show royal birth But every nurseâs simple pin Is emblematic of her worth; A symbol she has toiled to win. Oh gracious spirit, love imbued, That can such tender care accord, Perhaps it is, that gratitude Must always be your best reward. Now out of gratitude appears This tribute, done in simple verse Unto the dedicated years Of all who choose to be a nurse. âKEdgar A. Guest â X( Torch Club ROW 3: P. Dillon, R. Young, M. Bean, G. Jones, W. Aiken, P. Me- Carthy, M. Nethers, C. Ringley, M. Mosher, D. Edwards, B. Lee, H. Prince, P. Knight, M. Knight, M. Rolfes. ROW 2: S. Jones, J. Lesh, S. Hites, B. Gladman, L. Mosucci, M. Ely, E. Stringfield, M. Walton, D. Stinson, C. Arnold, P. Shaw, S. Ridenour, M. Halsell, E. Shaw, B. Smedley, J. Gott, S. McNary, E. Cavanaugh, G. Strehler, M. Tohim, I. Blechschmidt, S. Andrews. ROW 1: E. Pulse, L. Welch, R. Mangan, J. Warner, C. McKenna, J. McGregor, M. A. Jones, M. Hirth, A. Hildenbrand, P. Roberts, M. Lilly, J. Risser. SITTING: B. Scott, M. Settimio, B. Johnson, B. J. Diedrich, C. Fuller, C. Ditz, C. Hoover. The honorary for student nurses, this group combines fine social outlets with high scholastic achievements. The girls pictured above have attained at least a 2.5 while in school to earn the right to be among this select group. Their other achievements are noted in the candid snaps at the left: who would have thought that the hand that held the needle could balance a beaker of brew with such ease? Nursing Faculty ROW 4: Marjorie Plummer. ROW 3: Virginia Cyples, Madeline Angelone, Geraldine Price, Helen Wallace, Sally Hull, Frances Mc- Elhoe, Nancy Lytle, Nancy Houck, Janet Arstingstall, Wilda Cham- bers, Irma Nickerson. ROW 2: Ellen Roller, Margaret Trail, Ruby Martin, Helen Brown, Jean McArdle, Ruth Urbanac. ROW 1: Frieda Stewart, Frances Pease, Elanor Lewis, Mildred New- ton, Florence Harvey, Frances Barr, Grace Porterfield. That which has been said of the medical faculty can be doubled here, for this group of women combine to teach the arts of patient care with âdoctor care,â âmed student careâ and the exigencies of existence in a large general hospital. In this day when techniques advance almost faster than knowledge of patient care, it is the nurses duty to see that the patient is remembered as a person as well as a âpost-bla syn- dromeâ or another figure on a morbidity table. The art of nursing, to be taught, requires the art of teach- ing, and the girls staffing the floors of UH speak well for their preceptors. The day will not dawn when they will get their full share of credit, but we would like to pass on this pat on the back for a job well done. ROW 4: Margaret Anne Warner, Joan Sadler, Kaye Matter, Sally Ann Dienstberger, Barbara Tanner, Mar- jorie Hunter, Marcia Lowery, Nancy Kessler. ROW 3: Marilyn Green, Ruth Ann Roediger, Joan Lloyd, Shirley Van Arsclalen, Sharlee Scott, Shirley Schwertzer, Margaret Walter, Elizabeth Himes, Joan Recher. ROW 2: Martha Everhart, Ann Curtis, Nancy Youse, Doris Barco, Carolyn Durham, Molly Gosnell, Alice Puterbaugh, Sue Ann Cablish. ROW 1: Ellen Hutchins, Beverly Ann Tucci, Kathleen Merz, Shirley Ann Roberts, Carolyn Thomas, Marva Flowers. ROW 4: Roberta Jean Mauer, Donna Marie Willard, Nan Reynolds, Virginia Moysey, Patsy Ann Patterson, Anna Jean Robinson, Marilyn Pulse, Carol Carruthers, Beverly Bauer, Janet Holt, Willathea Parlette, Jane Harman, Catherine Brascoll, Janet Richards. ROW 3: Charlotte McGill, Ruthe Schwaderer, Beverly Dewese, Doris Nelson, Alice Hansen, Margaret Thomp- son, Marilyn Milsom, Patti Emmons, Mary Ann Brow- der, Kathlene Von Haam. ROW 2: Sallie Lou Grappy, Veannette Miethke, Bevy- erly Kinney, Lois Gale, Janet Bull, Nancy Giehl, Joanne Weber, Sue Lowry, Mary Shively. ROW 1: Elizabeth Ann Ault, Marcia Jean _ Bolin, Myrna Kessler, Janet Eckelberry, Marylu Biehn, Roberta Theobald, Joan Agnone, Nancy Johnston. ROW 6: Betty Ausenbaugh, Jo David, Sharon Soutar, Carolyn Shuter, Pat Moorman. ROW 5: Margaret Allison, Winona Paul, Mary Benson, Patricia Helms, Marilyn Cramer, Gerry Morris. ROW 4: Dolly Sondles, Glenda Gunther, Carole Robinson, Frances Rings. ROW 3: Joan McRu, Jeanne Baker, Jean Haas, Nancy Reichard, Mary Drake, Ellen Ebinger. ROW 2: Alyce Polcyn, Shirley Huff, Carolyn Smith, Mary Ann Mefferd, Nancy Beagle, Ann Rut- ledge, Barbara Eagon. ROW 1: Louise New, Kathryn Dunham, Janice Foster, Lorraine Wears, Katherine Elder, Janice Somppi, Margaret Williamson, Shirley Guesman, Joyce Grauser. CLASS OF DECEMBER 1956: ROW 5: June Hanes, Kay Wallace, Rita Reed, Rhea McBurney, Mari- lyn David. ROW 4: Janet Harmhausen, Lee Ann Graham, Ann Hill, Marjorie Allyn, Gayle Whittington, Jose- phine Cramer. ROW 3: Martha Pratzman, Marie McDonald, Mary Hendricks, Helen Loftis, Mary Jo Freeman, Laura Harrison. ROW 2: Frances Schutz, Nancy | McDonough, Arden Chapline, Maureen Merrill, Maurita Merrill, Mabel Finley, Caroline Vanmeter. ROW 1: Carol Kendall, Jean Cur- tis, Betty Ruth Kuffner, Jeanne Ollila, Ruth Rickert, Elanor Mc- Lees. ; NOT PICTURED: J. Stevens. 1 ROW 5: Marjorie Harstine, Kathy Dunahugh, Ginny Stage, Anne Mil- ) lott. ) ROW 4: Nancy Spoon, Suzanne | Rummel, Marcia Huffman, Doris Hayden, Margaret Baker. ROW 3: Janet Vermillion, Laureva Fraser, Jane Erdmann, Marilyn Hall, Marian Spelsberg, Pat Can- ) navan. ) ROW 2: Jean Hain, Norma Sapko, Rachel Rankin, Barbara Carter, Margie Dearth, Nancy Ralph, Alice Goodrich. ROW 1: Carolyn F. Smith, Gayle | Niswonger, Eileen Holden, Frances | Hoza, Julie Petit, Katherine ) Charles. MARCH CLASS OF 1956: ROW 4: Kathryn Sieg, Earlene Thomas, Martha Lichtensteiger. ROW 3: Carolyn Dumm, Doris Anne Blair, Patricia Burrell. ROW 2: Sharon Bassett, Eloise Eakins, Helen Crawford, Nancy Guelyou. ROW 1: Nancy Johnson, Jean Huston, M. Schweitzer, Jean Gra- ham, Alice Brandt. NOT PICTURED: Frances Todd, Irene Hughes, J. Wright. DECEMBER CLASS OF 1955: ROW 4: Marie Jones, Janice Grave, Ethelrine Shaw, Joan Lewis, Sylvia Anderson. ROW 3: Helen Edwards, Enid Stringfield, Marie Jones, Mary Ann Hage. ROW 2: Carol McKenna, Pat Dil- lon, Donna Stinson, Rae Mangan, Donna Barnshine, Pat Shaw. ROW 1: Elanor Pulse, Carol Ring- ley, Marilyn Bean, Nancy Law, Wanda Aiken. NOT PICTURED: Ann Henderson, Jean Warner, Betsy McCartney, Ann Parsons, Marilyn Allison, A. Hildebrand LaWanda Welch, Pat Hisrich, Maureen OâHara, Lynn Ballinger, Mary Walton, Shirley Ridnour, N. Neise, Peg Roberts, Bonnie Lee, Pearl McCarthy, Becky Thatcher, Pat Knight, Minnie Brad- ley, N. Cowen, Sue Shutt, Marlene Mushack, Beryl Scott, M. Hirth, Elanor Cavenaugh. MARCH CLASS OF 1955: ROW 2: Martha Lilly, Mary Set- timio, Twila Jackson. ROW 1: Joan Gott, Lois Fleming, Jacqueline Dillon. ae ââ ââ ee NANCY BRANDENBURG BAUGHN Washington Court House, Ohio Torch Club Pres. Sigma Theta Tau Sorority B.S. Nursing Work in the Clinic GAIL BUNSHAFT Youngstown, Ohio Makio Staff SNAC Phi Sigma Sigma Sorority B.S. Nursing Pediatric Ns le le} DORIS DOTY COSTELLO Mahwah, New Jersey Sr. Class Treas. Stu. Faculty Nsg. Asso. Council Torch Club B.S. Nursing General Duty Nsg. LENOR RAPP COCHRAN Mt. Vernon, Ohio Torch Club Delta Zeta Makio Staffâ1948 B.S. Nursing Obstetrical Nsg. ADELE H. COCHRAN Middlesex, Pa. Torch Club =r. Class Sec. SNAC Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Council Night Out B.S. Nursing Public Health Nsg. HELEN A. CRUICKSHANKS Queens Village, New York Pleiades-Lyra B.S. Nursing Orthopedic or Public Health Nsg. 101 BETTY JO FRARY DEEDRICK Mt. Vernon, Ohio Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. CouncilâSec. â51 752 Torch ClubâSec. Sigma Theta TauâSec. Sr. Class Pres. Caducean Staff B.S. Nursing General Duty SYLVIA EDMONDSON HITES Columbus, Ohio Torch Club Sigma Theta Tau Mirrors ChimesâVice Pres. Mortar BoardâTreas. YWCA Student Senate WSGA Board Alpha Lambda Deltaâ Treas. Jr.-Class- Pres: B.S. Nursing Public Health Nsg. SYBIL MONICA JONES Cleveland, Ohio S.N.A.C. Torch Club Theta Phi Beta Sorority B.S. Nursing Nsg. Education MARTHA GOETZ NETHERS Dresden, Ohio Torch Club Treas. Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. B.S. Nursing General Duty 102 CAROLE FULLER Cincinnati, Ohio Red Cross Asso. WSGA Browning Dramatic Society Pi Beta Phi Sorority Torch ClubâVice Pres. Pres, Stu, Faculty Govt. Asso. Council Night Out B.S. Nursing Obstetrical or Psychiatric Nsg. DARLENE CAROL HEUSSNER South Amherst, Ohio Caducean Staff Stu. Faculty Nursing Asso. Council Neil Hall Council II Night Out II III B.S. Nursing Surgery or Psychiatric Nsg. ETHEL TANNENBAUM MEIZLISH Dayton, Ohio Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Council B.S. Nursing Obstetrical Nsg. HELEN ELAINE PRINCE Steubenville, Ohio Torch Club Phi Mu Sorority B.S. Nursing General Duty or Public Health Nsg. MARY JOAN STEINER Pandora, Ohio Symphonic Choir University Choir B.S. Nursing General Duty LOIS LIVINGSTON WOODBURN Forest, Ohio Torch Club Vice Pres. of Sr. Class B.S. Nursing Public Health Nsg. MARILYN ATHEY Shadeville, Ohio Nsg. Basketball Team SNAC Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. B.S. Nursing International Airline Hostess 103 NANCY ANNE STEVENS HART Columbus, Ohio Alpha Phi Sorority Stu. Faculty Govt. Council Night Outâ1952 B.S. Nursing Obstetrical or Psychiatric Nsg. VIRGINIA STALTER BARR Columbus, Ohio Nursing Basketball Team WSGA YWCA B.S. Nursing General Duty INGA BLECHSCHMIDT MARTHA ANNE BOSSE CAROLYN BEVINGTON DOROTHY EDWARDS Crooksville, Ohio Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority Torch Club SNAC Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. DONNA BUKEY Columbus, Ohio YWCA Torch Club B.S. Nursing Stu. Nurses Asso. of General Duty Nsg. Columbus Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. YWCA WSGA B.S. Nursing Public Health Nsg. Amherst, Ohio Gamma Delta Pleiades Torch Club B.S. Nursing General Duty Nursing and Marriage MARY LOUISE CAMPEN Columbus, Ohio Torch Club Pleaides I II Soph. Nsg. Class Pres. Capt. Nursing Basketball Team III SNAC B.S. Nursing Health Center or Obstetrical Nsg. DILZ Columbiana, Ohio Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. SNAC Sr. Class Vice-Pres. Torch Club B.S. Nursing Obstetrical Nsg. PATRICIA McLAUGHLIN DRESSLER Massillon, Ohio Delta Gamma Sorority Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso.â Vice Pres. Torch Club Sr. Class Pres. Makio Soph. Editor YWCA Night Out B.S. Nursing General Duty or Public Health Nsg. Hebron, Ohio Fresh. Class Treas. SNAC Torch Club Mid-Mirrors Pleiades University Chorus United Stu. Fellowshipâ2nd Vice Pres. I II Stu. Fellowship 3 4 VIC Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. B.S. Nursing General Duty DOLORES LEIGH FREEMAN Cincinnati, Ohio Delta Sigma Theta Sorority B.S. Nursing General Duty 104 JOYCE GRAFT Vienna, Ohio Torch Club YWCA I Il B.S. Nursing Pediatric Nsg. GLORIA JEANNE HARRIS Frankfort, Ohio SNAC Sec. Soph. Nsg. Class B.S. Nursing V.A. Nursing MAMIE RUTH HALSELL Cincinnati, Ohio Delta Sigma Theta Sorority | Torch Club U.S.O. Hostess (O.S.U.) SNAC Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. B.S. Nursing Nsg. Education-Pediatric Nse. o SALLY ANN HUNTER Dayton, Ohio Phi Mu Sorority Makio University Chorus Student Leaderâ1953 B.S. Nursing Marriage Surgical Nsg. 105 EDNA KIRKPATRICK GURR Wooster, Ohio Torch Club B.S. Nursing Indefinite Plans _ ISABELLE HIGH Chesapeake, Ohio Foil and Mask B.S. Nursing Indefinite Plans CAROLE ANN HOOVER Westerville, Ohio Torch Club Past Pres. Stu. Nurse Asso. of Columbus Past Pres. Stu. Nurse Asso. of Ohio Chairman 1953 Nat. Stu. Nurse Convention Delta Zeta Sorority Vice Pres. Soph. Nsg. Class B.S. Nursing General Duty BETTY LOUISE JOHNSON Columbus, Ohio Sigma Theta Tau Sorority Torch ClubâVice Pres. Jr. Class Sec. B.S. Nursing Pediatric Nsg. MYRNA KNIGHT Columbus, Ohio Pleiades (Lyra) Treas. II Torch Club Sigma Theta Tau Sorority Sr. Class Sec. SNAC B. S. Nursing Marriage and General Duty Nsg. SONDRA McNARY Elwood Heights, Ohio Alpha Delta Pi Sorority Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Council Torch Club OSU May Queen-1951 B. S. Nursing General Duty Nsg. PHYLLIS CASTLE PIERO Urbana, Ohio Torch Club B. S. Nursing General Duty Nsg. JOAN ROHR Columbus, Ohio Alpha Xi Delta Sorority Torch Club WSGA SNAC b. S. Nursing Marriage and General Duty Nsg. co) CAROL JEANNE KROEGER Akron, Ohio Alpha Gamma Delta Gamma Delta Torch Club B. S. Nursing General Duty SHIRLEY MIELKE Columbus, Ohio Torch Club Class President I SS INTALC. B. S. Nursing Future PlansâMarriage and Obstetrical Nursing _ JANE RISSER Bluffton, Ohio Sigma Theta Tau Torch Club Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Council Jr. Class Pres. Alpha Delta Pi Sorority B. S. Nursing General Duty Nsg. JANET ANN SIEG Richwood, Ohio Kappa Phi Sorority Pleiades SIN aay Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Neil Speil Dormitory Paper B. S. Nursing Navy Nurse 106 BARBARA SMEDLEY Cincinnati, Ohio Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Torch Club B. S. Nursing V.A. Nsg. MARILYN LOUISE TOBIN STOIA New Albany, Ohio Freshman Class Pres. University Chorus Kappa Phi Torch Club SNAC Assit. Treas.-Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Council B. S. Nursing os) General Duty Nsg. ROSEBUD YEE Columbus, Ohio Nursing Class Treasurer 1954 SuNeASG, B. S. Nursing Indefinite Plans | BEVERLY ZEDIKER Mansfield, Ohio Alpha Xi Delta Sorority B. S. Nursing Indefinite Plans JOYCE CROMBIE KITINOJA SHIRLEY CAMPBELL Conneaut, Ohio PHILLIPS Torch Club Columbus, Ohio Alpha Chi Omega Stu. Faculty Govt. Asso. Indefinite Plans Council Night Out SNAC Public Health Nsg. MARY LU LORIMER EMILY ANN GEISE WALLACE Lima, Ohio New Concord, Ohio Alpha Chi Omega Sorority Gamma Phi Beta Sorority Torch Club Intramurals Jr. Class Treas. Jr. Class Treas. Indefinite Plans Raise a family 107 108 HE School of Nursing curriculum does not actually take up all 24 hours of each day, al- though there are times . . . but these pictures show that some people get off some of the time! Neil Hall erected a fine tribute to the bruising Buckeyes during the homecoming celebration. After-the-game snacks were well accepted, as you can seeâin fact, few persons starve in this school. There are also such things as the Christ- mas parties at Childrenâs Hospital to provide a touch of poignancy, and the more strenuous ac- tivities are made available for those who have active thyroids... Wal Caducean Staff I would like to use my perogative and devote this space to a short eulogy on the members of a very excellent staff. Without their help and collective - conscience | doubt that this book would have been ABArar published by this time next year. Don Linton, officially designated Associate Editor, had the unenviable task of arranging the appoint- ments and reappointments ad nauseum for the senior pictures. In addition he has been most helpful with advice and comments, as well as furnishing some of the most candid of the candid photos. Jim Munger, our Photography Editor, started out with the understanding that he wouldnât have to take pictures, but ended up shooting about 75% of the pictures in this book. His uncomplaining efforts have, again, been essential in the final outcome. Clockwise from lower left: Don Schutt, Lee Gold, Howie Sigal, Jim Munger, uojury uog, Bob Capper, Darlene Abusner, Bob Reinhart. Bob Capper, the Managing Editor, wrote copy for all the faculty section, the section heads, the fraterni- ties and many of the candid picture captions. In addition he was free with advice and criticism at all timesâagain, thanks, Bob. Don Schutt took and idea that we had and expanded it into the very appropriate drawings you have seen beginning each section of the book. You can well imagine what the book would have looked like with- out his talented penmanship! Howie Segal and Ed Schneir, Associate Editors, were very helpful with our initial planning of the book and helped to start us off on an even keel. Howie also did the scut work of identifying group photos. Lee Gold, Photographer, took the shots on the in- side front and back co vers, and did the fine photo- grams which you noted following the juniod section. Betty Jo Deedrick and Darlene Heusner, the Edi- tors of the Nursing Section were the most faithful and efficient of the staff, never missing a meeting and getting all their copy in on time. As for the business side of the pictureâTed Richards and his staff have done an amazing job. Norm Atkin, Advertising Manager, has managed to sell personally more ads than I though would be in the entire book. Bill Lippy, in charge of sales, has come through just as he promised, although we never expected him to come within shooting distance of the figure he set up as a sales target. Gill Brehm, Chuck Hamilton and Ed Krigbaum per- sonally contacted nearly 500 doctors in the local area in order to get the great subscription page which has done perhaps more than anything else to make the book financially sound. And we want to thank our sales staff as a whole for doing the excellent job they did. I would like to extend since thanks to Jahn and Ollier, our engravers, who did such beautiful work on the pictures, and to Heer printers, who carried through with their end in spite of being allowed only 214 weeks to print the book. Also a large boquet to Ruth and Lydia Markov, who willingly underwent the tortures of typing all this for the printer! With all the help, itâs obvious that I had little personally to do except point and say âI want this done.â I did write the copy for the beginning of the various sections and made up the layout for the book, but aside from that, it was a breeze. Again, thanks to a swell staff and all their work. BOB REINHART, Editor Paul Kerr, Ted Richards Bill Lippy, Norm Atkin Gill Brehm, Chuck Hamilton The members of the senior class wishes to thank the following 1954 Caducean. T. Allebach J. J. Alpers Drew J. Arnold Charles R. Baber Rollo C. Baker Morris L. Battles Walter Baum Hugh G. Beatty Floyd M. Beman Paul E. Brady Wayne Brehm John E. Brigzs Richard H. Brooks John Brown, Jr. Olan P. Burt Paul T. Carroll Lewis W. Cellio Ivor G. Clark Samuel G. Clark Thomas E. Clark H. Wm. Clatworthy, Jr. Harve M. Clodfelter William Copeland Dana W. Cox Virgil L. Cross Robert F. Daly These subscriptions have in great measure made Horace B. Davidson Mel A. Davis G. Walter delaMotte C. Joseph DeLor Dale R. Dickens David G. Dillahunt Paul H. Dillahunt Carn f= Dix Charles A. Doan R. Frank Donley J. Quinn Dorgan J. M. Dunn Rollin R. Durant Ray E. Ebert Sam D. Edelman Edwin H. Ellison Herbert D. Emswiler Elmer D. Engelman H. K. Ervin Harrison S. Evans Harry E. Ezell, Jr. Samuel R. Fairchild Dorothy Falkenstein H. W. Federer Frederick C. Finke Rivington Fisher 112 Jonathan Forman Wiley L. Forman Joseph C. Forrester Morrison J. Fox Thomas E. Fox Clarence Fry Huston F. Fulton Richard L. Fulton Wesley Furste, II Eugene Fusco John A. Gabel Clarence M. Gallagher Jos. M. Gallen John P. Garvin Howard D. Giles M. Goldberg Norman E. Goulder Leonard B. Greentree Wm. R. Griffin C. W. Hales Fred E. Hall Walter H. Hamilton George J. Hamwi F. C. Haney D. O. Hankinson Fred B. Hapke Chas. W. Harding Frances Keller Harding Warren G. Harding, II Phillip B. Hardymon Wm. B. Harris Emerson R. Hatcher Charles J. Hatfield Paul M. Hatfield H. Campbell Haynie George J. Heer Robert A. Heilman -Bldred Bo Heisel Gabriel C. Heller Charles H. Hendricks R. J. Henry David K. Heydinger John E. Hoberg Zeph J. R. Hollenbeck John H. Holzaepfel R. B. Hoover Oliver W. Hosterman George P. Hummel Ben E. Jacoby Arthur G. James Jessie Jasper Harry J. Jefferson physicians for their generous âBest Wishesâ contributions to the the publication of this book possible. Torrence A. Makley, Jr. Thomas E. Rardin Wm. Stanley Smith Raymond L. Jennings L. N. Jentgen O. W. Jepsen A. Beaumont Johnson Chas. E. Johnston Carl S. Junkermann D. D. Kackly Henry W. Karrer Robert A. Keating Harry J. Keys Gilman D. Kirk R. W. Kissane Reynold E. Klages, Jr. Phillip T. Knies Ruth A. Koons M. A. Krakoff Wm. J. Krech George O. Kress Willis T. Kubiac Henry B. Lacey Norris E. Lenahan Tom F. Lewis John W. Lowery Robert H. Magnuson Donald L. Mahanna Robert L. Marshall A. R. Marsicano Bruce C. Martin Chas. W. Matthews Edward W. McCall Charles R. McClave James H. McCreary Charles J. McKitrick Richard L. Meiling W. J. Miller W. F. Millhon W. Hugh Missildine Joseph L. Morton Jacob Moses Link M. Murphy Dwight M. Palmer Richard Patton D. Donald Pelliciari Robert E. Pickett Wendell D. Postle, D.D.S. L. L. Praver John A. Prior Clark P. Pritchett Robert F. Rauch Harry L. Reinhart Jos. A. Ridgeway John P. Riepenhoff Samuel W. Robinson L. Chandler Roettig Lovell W. Rohr Oscar F. Rosenow Carl W. Roth Norman O. Rothermich Anthony Ruppersberg, ir, Samuel Saslaw Hans Schlumberger Henry H. Schwarzell Wendell P. Scott Lester Seligson Miner W. Seymour Thomas E. Shaffer C. C. Sherburne Earlin J. Simms Robert E. Sinclair Clayton E. Smith John P. Smith George T. Stine Robert F. Sylvester Jack Neel Taylor Wm. N. Taylor S. J. Telerski Wm. E. Todd Harry W. Topolosky John C, Trabue J. P. Urban E. von Haam Watson H. Walker Richard H. Wallace Paul W. Watkins John S. Watson Anna Marie Whetstone J. A. Whieldon John D. White B. R. Wiltberger Claude-Starr Wright A. C. Wyker Robert E. S. Young Robert M. Zollinger Richard W. Zollinger Maurice L. Zox With the 1954 issue, the Caducean advertising staff has re-inaugurated the Hospital Advertising Section. You will find in this section information about fully approved and accredited training programs in hospitals of varied locations. For further information write to the directors of the various hospitals at the addresses listed. We would like to take this opportunity to thank all our advertisers for making this one of the most suc- cessful advertising sections the Caducean has known. Sincere thanks also to President Howard Bevis for, his kind cooperation. âNorman Atkin, Advertising Manager. SUBSCRIBING HOSPITALS Page Cleveland Heights, Ohio Doctors: Hospital caste en ee 119 Columbus, Ohio Childrenâsâ Hospital's... .:he cate 120 Grant Hospital?.s |. ciccsccuas hte co tie tt arr 120 Mercy Hospital es ccni. 8a a wet ease 119 Mount-Garmel:Hospitaly aie fe ee 119 St., Ann's; Hospital: tor Woment:..2).5 0 120 St) Francis: Hospitaltzcs. 2s eee ee ee 120 Lakewood, Ohio Lakewood Hospital! 2a, «..;ccctameee ten eee Un ee ee 116 Lima, Ohio Lima, Memorials Hospital as ,.22. 2 117 Sts Rita.sthospitn eee ee ERP E CAR of et eM ot ean 119 Toledo, Ohio Flower Hospital ...... Sdeidlhcan « Aigueueo cade Gal Race ee a 115 St.. Vincent's Hospital Gah 2eac. ee ee ee 118 FLOWER HOSPITAL, Toledo, Ohio ... an institution of 165 beds and 30 bassinets, serving the Toledo area, asks prospective interns to examine these features of its intern program: @ Extensive contact with a great variety of patients. © An effective educational program. @ Financial arrangements in keeping with current requirements. Âź Opportunities to work closely with almost 100 staff physicians. CURRICULUM A 12-month rotating internship is offered with the following curriculum: MEDICINE SURGERY 1. General Medicine 5 months 1. General and Emergency Surgery 4 months with sub-specialties, including Cardi- with sub-specialties, including Eye, Ear, ology, Diabetes, Dermatology and Pedi- Nose, Throat, Gynecology, Orthopedics atrics. Office Practice in Physiciansâ and Genital Urinary. offices. OBSTETRICS 2. Outpatient Clinic and Physical 1. Obstetricsâat least 30 deliveries; Medicine 1 month present at 120 per month .............. 2 months For more information about Flower Hospitalâs intern program, write to Administra- tor, Flower Hospital, 3349 Cherry Street, Toledo 12, Ohio. 115 LAKEWOOD HOSPITAL CONGRATULATES The Class of 1954 WE INVITE your attention to this institution for your postgraduate education. Lakewood Hospital, with 338 beds, is approved for In- ternship and Residency in the major specialties. Every advantage of a municipal and private, voluntary hospital is combined in an ef- fective teaching program which is complementary to a wealth of clinical material. An illustrated brochure is available upon request. You are invited to visit the hospital and will be welcome at any time. | Please write: R. B. Crawrorp, M.D. Superintendent Lakewood Hospital Lakewood, Ohio FACTS ABOUT THE HOSPITAL Lima Memorial Hospital is a modern well-equipped 286 bed general hospital fully approved by the Americal Hospital Association, the American Col- lege of Surgeons, and by the American Medical Association for one-year rotating internships and for one-year residencies in general practice. THE MEDICAL STAFF There is an active medical staff of 65 physicians, seventy-five percent of whom are board certified. The full-time pathologist is board cert!fied. The full-time radiologist is not board certified, though eligible. The full-time assistant radiologâst is not board certified, though eligible. INTERNSHIPS AND RESIDENCIES Lima Memorial Hospital offers eight approved rotating internships and f sur approved general practice residencies. THE INTERNSHIP YEAR A one-year internship program is provided which gives four months on general medicine, two months on general surgery, two months on obstetrics and gynecology, two months on pediatrics, E.E.N.T., and emergency room and two months on orthopedics, urology, and traumatic surgery. The Department of Pathology conducts an educational program providing good training in routine laboratory work. The intem assists in most surgical operations and obstetrical deliveries. Emphasis is placed upon teaching the intern the use of the more common technics of the specialties through which he passes. MEDICAL EDUCATION The instruction of interns and residents is by daily ward rounds with the vâsitâng staff, attendance at autopsies, and conferences five days weekly. The conferences are arranged to cover the subjects of the greatest interest to the house staff. Weekly surgical-pathology conferences, bi-weekly medicine, gen- eral practice, surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, x-ray, and clinicopathological conferences and monthly conferences in orthopedics, urology, pediatrics, and E.E.N.T., are held. In addition, the members of the house staff are welcome at the monthly meetings of the hospital staff and the monthly meetings of the county medical society. RESIDENCE FACILITIES Living quarters are provided for residents and interns within the hospital. Apartments for married interns and residents are available in the vicinity within a reasonable distance from the hospital. The hospital administration office will aid residents and interns in finding apartments in the city. RECREATION Adequate time off for rest, recreation and reading is assured all members of the house staff. Night duty is brought to a minimum by a rotating schedule. SALARIES Interns receive a salary of $250 per month, plus a bonus of $25 per month whâch is g'ven at the completion of the year of internship. Residents re- ceive a salary of $300 a month, plus a bonus of $25 per month which is given at the completion of the year of residency. THE CITY OF LIMA Lima is the largest inland city in Northwestern Ohio, within 200 miles of the ten largest cities in the east north-central states troit and Cincinnati, Toledo and Dayton, Chicago and Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Indianapolis. This community has developed a substantial production of many nationally known products such as locomotives, school buses, power shovels, electric motors, neon signs, steel castings, diesel engines, rubber products and cigars. The growing city of Lima is an excellent source of employment for wives of interns and residents who desire to work. midway between De- APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNSHIP AND RESIDENCIES Aplications will be considered for July 1 each year. Interested medical students are invited to visit the hospital at any time. For further information, contact ADMINISTRATOR, LIMA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL, LIMA, OHIO. 117 ST. VINCENTâS HOSPITAL INTERNSHIP PROGRAM The internship program is approved by the Council on Education and Hospitals of the American Hospital Association. Appointments are for one year. A liberal salary and complete maintenance are furnished in addi- tion to two weeks vacation. RESIDENCY PROGRAM Approved residencies are available in Medicine, Sur- gery, Othopedics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, Neuro- surgery, Radiology, Pathology and General Practice. Ap- pointments are made from the intern staff of St. Vin- centâs and other approved hospitals. MEDICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM The conference schedule includes weekly Medical and Surgical Grand Rounds. There are weekly conferences in Obstetrics and Gynecology, Urology, Pediatrics and General Practice. Interdepartmental conferences, Sur- gical and Medical departmental meetings and a Medical History meeting are also on the weekly schedules. In Radiology, conferences are bi-monthly; tri-monthly in Pathology, and monthly in Orthopedics. A combined Surgical and Clinical Pathological discussion is held bi- monthly. A weekly Diagnostic Clinic is maintained in the Out-Patient department in conjunction with a weekly program of individual departmental Out-Patient Clinics. Each individual clinic has its assigned day and hour schedule where consultations with the active staff are arranged if necessary. Toledo, Ohio THE HOSPITAL St. Vincents Hospital, the oldest and largest in the Toledo area, serving a population of more than half-a-million people. Established in 1855 by the Sis- ters of Charity, Grey Nuns, its bed capacity is 500. With its new $5,000,000 building, its en- larged Radiology department and its recent $250,000 remod- eling of the birth and nursery section, the hospital is fully equipped to care for more than 20,000 admissions in 1954. All types of medical and surgical patients are treated in all speci- alties except the psychoses. THE CITY Toledo, on the Maumee River at the tip end of Lake Erie still retains much of the provincialism that char- acterizes the American mid-west. A friendly place to live, it is often called the glass center of the world and the worldâs largest manufacturer of oilfield equipment. It is the home of the internationally famous âJeepâ. More coal is shipped from Toledo docks than from any other. But Toledo is also a city of churches and of good schools. Toledo Museum of Art is outstanding in its no- table collection of glass, paintings and sculpture. Its win- ter seasons present famous artists and musical groups. The Sports Arena offers ice skating, hockey games, and often brings to Toledo nationally popular orchestras and entertainers. Housing within the city and near the hospital is avail- able. Neighborhocd stores dot the entire city and large department stores and specialty shops are in the down- town area just a 10-minute drive from the hospital. Flanked by Detroit, 60 miles to the north-west, Cleve- land only 125 miles to the East and Chicago, only a few hours away, Toledo reflects the industrial pattern of the century with busy highways today and a look to the future with expanded traffic lanes by air, by rail, by water and by roadway. 118 St. Ritaâs Hospital Lima, Ohio St. Ritaâs Hospital, conducted by the Sisters of Mercy, is a 350-bed general hospital, located in Lima, Ohio, a thriving in- dustrial center of 50,000 population, within convenient trans- portation reach of the major cities. The hospital serves Lima and the surrounding area in a 25-mile radius, constituting a total population of 275,000. Approved for Intern and Resident training, the hospital offers 10 general rotating internships yearly to qualified applicants. Ap- proved residencies are available in Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Pathology, Obstetrics, and General Practice. Intern service is of 12 months duration, with instruction in Medicine, Pediatrics, Obstetrics, Surgery, the Surgical Specialties, Basic Science, and Neuro-Psychiatry. Clinical and basic science departments are organized under the direction of committees con- stituted of members of the teaching staff. All departments of the hospital contain members certified by their respective Boards and Associations. DOCTORâS HOSPITAL CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OHIO @ 12 Fully Approved Internships Âź Stipend: $100.00 For further information write: S. M. Spears C.E., Ph.D. 12345 Cedar Road Cleve. Hghts. 6, Ohio Congratulations TTOTe MT. CARMEL The teaching program includes daily conferences as follows Monday, Clinical Pathological; Tuesday, Radiology; Wednesday, General Practice; Thursday, Obstetrics; Friday, Surgery; Saturday, Tumor Clinic. Prospective interns are invited to visit the hospital at any time in order to acquaint themselves personally with its facilities and training program. Informative brochure will be sent upon request. Congratulations PLOT ian. MERCY HOSPITAL 119 GRANT HOSPITAL 125 South Grant Avenue Columbus 15, Ohio Invites any member of the Class of 1955 desiring either an externship or internship to contact the Secretary of the House Staff Committeeâ Phone ADams 5151âextension 60âfor information and application blanks. one Compliments of ST. ANNâS Congratulations HOSPITAL ec TORT ee CHILDRENâS HOSPITAL Congratulations from ST. FRANCIS a HOSPITAL 120 Oe i Ss ) ANY âJahn Ollier Againâ | 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 121 The Stadium sHor Menâs FurnishingsâHats and Shoes PARSEL 1630 North High Street UN. 8789 COLE'S PHARMACY Prescriptions POLLOCK 4589 N. High LA 1833 POND Congratulations from Two Friends of the Senior Class PRICE ANSON L. BROWN INC. LABORATORY SERVICE PRIEST FOR PHYSICIANS 41 South Grant Avenue Columbus 15, Ohio Box 506 122 SAMUEL S. LOYER Life Insurance Consultant Greetings to all my medical friends and congratulations to all 1954 graduates who, for the first time, officially assume the title, M.D. You richly deserve this well-earned designation. SAMUEL S. LOYER An Original and Continuous Caducean Advertiser-Patron 50 West Broad Street CA. 4-4254 Columbus 15, Ohio BANKERS âfe COMPANY DES MOINES, IOWA A Good Place To Buy Your - - - Your Prescription Pharmacy INTERNE SHIRTS WHITE TROUSERS AND COATS All SizesâIn Stock MILLER DRUG COMPANY Good Quality At Low Prices | | LEO-MEYERS CO. Fifth Ave. High St. UN 5036 Cor. High and Chestnut MA. 4156 Columbus, Ohio BILL KAY 123 UP... DowN.... Foeus-.. Ht PAwEK --.- foevs __. ZIDEVAVS.__ Focus aa Lo Vow tre. - S6Âą0S 2. RCH, HimMMEL, WRone zLive If Congratulations . . . Class of 54 from PAUL E. SHIRK LIFE INSURANCE CONSULTANT @ SPECIAL PROGRAMS @Âź ESTATE PLANNING for ---- MEDICAL STUDENTS @Âź PHYSICIANS PAUL E. SHIRK 1625 West Lane Ave. | Columbus, Ohio OfficeâH U-8-8422 Res.âHU 8-9575 124 PANIS PLATTEN SADLON SCHNEIR SMELKER 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 is CAMPUS NEIL CENTER NEIL AVENUE AT TENTH a Congratulations and Best Wishes to the CLASS OF 1954 We stand ready to serve you as your pharmaceutical needs arise WARREN-TEED PHARMACEUTICALS 582 West Goodale Street Columbus 8, Ohio CHATTANOOGA DALLAS LOS ANGELES PORTLAND WA CONGRATULATIONS from VARSITY FLOWER SHOP Opposite Hamilton Hall UN 2424 McFADDEN Compliments of: CAM KING JOSEPH HUSTON CURT KOONS CHARBERTS SANDWICH SHOP Fastest in ServiceâFinest in Food McPHERSON 1912 N. High St. 12 E. 15th Ave. Never Closes 7 A. M-12:30) Ay M; Fri. Sat. til 2:30 A. M. Courtesy of D. HARVEY DAVIS FUNERAL HOME Summit St. at 16th Ave. MICHEL MILLS i Wel wl Tales Cave oj Une av dilony On ent â OPRITZA 126 QUESTEL LABORATORIES DIVISION AMERICAN Ganamid company RICHARDS MALE GLASS ae) tt hte ah A Sorin Sk MIE lds Makers of fine RIDGWAY pharmaceutical, biological, allergenic, RIDOLFO and vitamin products RUSKIN WOCHERâS 201 EAST BROAD STREET A Pioneer in 1839 Specializing in As Modern As 1954 Microscopes Haemacytometers Welch Allyn Otoscopes and Ophthalmascopes Tycos Baumanometers Syphygmonometers Office Equipment, Furniture âand all Physicianâs and Hospital Supplies MA 1435 COLUMBUSâ MOST UNUSUAL DRUG STORE 2717 CLEVELAND AVE. AT WEBER RD., COLUMBUS 11, OHIO JE. 2527-3222 . âThe Best Part of a Mans Life Consists of His Friendshipâ A. Lincoln S J 7 Tae AG CO GEORGE H. SHAPTER, JR. The Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. Manufacturers of UALITY PHARMACEUTICALS SEGELâS â PRESCRIPTIONS 9 â pete AG 1567 East Livingston Ave. Columbus 5, Ohio ee ee) BAS PBs 2 VEE Phone FA. 6631 TICE ASSOCIATES ) Representing anys THE MIDLAND MUTUAL MEDICAL NURSING BOOKS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Browsers invited among our 1500 new used titles Specializing in Life Insurance Programs for Seniors free catalog THE MASSACHUSETTS INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY Non-Cancellable Guaranteed Renewable Disability Income Insurance 122 East Broad Street ADams 1291 LONG'S BOOK STORE Four FloorsâFour BuildingsâSince 1902 ABEL o ABRAMSON YES SIA, WE SELL MICROSCOPES --. INTERESTED IK MoBOCULAR OR cfe ER. -: Pinec-ria @.- ââ A ACKERMAN SMITH-STEVENS TAILORING CUSTOM SUITS AT MODERATE PRICES 1894 N. High WA 9373 BEST WISHES - - - eta WAGGENER DRUG CO. PrescriptionsâF ountain Service 247 King Avenue WA. 2020 ROMEOâS Genuine Italian Food Columbus Original Pizzeria ARMBRUSTER 1576 W. 5th Ave. Columbus, Ohio Cw KR epee UT PLZ 7 A KI-0163 LY-1643 Jimmy Massey and Romeo Sirij, Managers 129 M R Laboratories is pleased to offer copies of the âM R Pediatric Research Conference D. BROWN Reports to the students of the Ohio State Univer- . sity Medical School. Available reports cover the following subjects: 1. Carbohydrate Metabolism 2. Calcium and Phosphorus Metabolism e L. BROWN 3. Pulmonary Hyaline Membranes 4, Potassium Metabolism 5. Erythroblastosis Fetalis 6. Renal Function 7. Immunity and Hypersensitivity 8. Vitamin B in Human Nutrition 9. Fat Metabolism CARPENTER Write to Medical Director, M R Labora- tories, Columbus 16, Ohio, for the reports desired. Give name, local address, and internship appoint- ment, if a member of the graduating class. Âź COHEN M R offers for your considera- GNTURY tion in future pediatric practice, Rs - Similac Powder and Similac Liquid, S o infant feeding with fats so changed, me wraoe s proteins and minerals so modified, rw ° caloric distribution so balanced that ey a S there is no closer equivalent to the NT NUN milk of healthy, well-nourished mothers. COVAULT e 130 CAPPER DEL GRECO DESBERG DORMIRE EBERLY 131 Always glad to offer Best Wishes and Good Luck via the Caducean ROGER ZION MEAD JOHNSON CO. CAROLLOâS RESTAURANT 3319 Westerville Rd. LU 3380 STEAK HOUSE 1120 N. High UN 1794 PIZZARIA 2010 N. High UN 7723 ain't Wat So es Kind Oe AW omen , VDoc' a) EUBANKS HADDER FELDHEIMER JOHNSON FOXMAN JACKSON FRYE JOHNSTON GILCREST KANSKY 132 RESEARCH PHARMACEUTICALS SINCE 1886 FEATURING GERONIAZOL â - Helps Bring Your Geritaric Patient Out of the Shadows HEP-NINE B - New Office Administered Heparin-Lipotropic Therapy NEPHYSIN - Dual Action Muscle Relaxant PEDIATARS - Delightfully Palatable Medication for Little Folks SOMORSED - Somnifacient or Sedative in Single Dosage Form TRIDILATIN - Triple Action Vasodilator for Hypertension and Angina Pectoris THE COLUMBUS PHARMACAL COMPANY COLUMBUS 15, OHIO To interpret your RX .... Your optical prescriptions, wherever you may send them, will be interpreted in wafers of glass, bits of metal and zylonite. The quality of this ounce-or-so-of materials can control by specifying brands of known standards. But the effectiveness of your RX depends on the hands which fashion these materials into the individual correc- tion .. . White-Haines craftsmen have the skill that only years of experience can give. Their hands of skill produce the very finestâBlue Ribbon RX work. You will learn as have thousands of other doctorsâyou can trust White- Haines. The White-Haines Optical Co. Blue Ribbon RX Service and Blue Ribbon Ophthalmic Products are supplied by 33 White-Haines offices located in Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Ken- tucky, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan. General Offices: Columbus 16, Ohio 133 Original Firm Established 1861 KERR J. E. HANGER COMPANY Manufacturers of PROSTHETIC APPLIANCES Licensed Specialists in Suction Limbs Fitters and Firm certified by et American Board for Certification Offices and Fitting Room Air Conditioned by Carrier 541 W. Town Street, Columbus, Ohio KLEINMAN KRIGBAUM 2 Bs a aest Cae o⏠lows Ws Theyâ Cc veu. KRILL Seew . 134 McCUTCHEON OBSTETRICAL - GYNECOLOGICAL PHARMACEUTICALS BIOLOGICALS MAGILL For the Medical Profession STARKEY ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION MORRIS RARITAN, NEW JERSEY STEVENS CARR SCHUTT SIMONS MOORE Blood Sputum Allergy Effusions Urinalysis Feces-Vaccines Blood Chemistry X-Ray Diagnosis Throat Cultures Pregnancy Tests Stomach Contents Basal Metabolism Surgical Pathology Pneumococic Typing Agglutination Tests Outogenous Vaccines Electrocardiography Premarital Serology Wasserman Kahn Tests Dark Field-Spirocheta Clinical and Pathological LABORATORY Established 1904 370 E. Town Street Columbus, Ohio Âź H. M. BRUNDAGE, M.D., Director M. D. GODFREY, M.D. Prompt Service Telephone: MAin 2490 y a= er 136 BEECHWOLD PHARMACY SAM C. HAHN, Ph.G. SAM C. CHAIN, Ph.G. 4622 North High Street Columbus, Ohio MUNGER Congratulationsâ SAM KOONS Representing - - - CIBA HUGHES Since 1888 EVANS and SCHWARTZ ORTHOPEDIC SHOE COUNSELORS Âź Downtownâ479 N. High Âź Bexleyâ2461 E. Main Âź Gracelandâ5401 N. High UCKER For Your Assurance (HY CERTIFIED HI} MADSEN « ] ) COLUMBUS ORTHOPAEDIC APPLIANCE COMPANY (@) 4 COTTERMAN 337 South High CA 1-5275 We are pleased to present our new LINTON PHARMACEUTICAL SERVICE DEPT. Directed by RALPH A. SEARS This service is offered as a source of complete phar- maceutical information for you. VOEHRINGER The KAUFFMAN-LATTIMER CO. WHOLESALE DRUGSâLABORATORY SUPPLIES 263 N. Front St. Columbus AD. 3141 LIPPY We invite you to visit The Surgical Store of Columbus MICROSCOPES SURGICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS SNYDER PHYSIOTHERAPY EQUIPMENT MODERN EXAMINING TREATMENT ROOM FURNITURE The Columbus Hospital ran Supply Company 271 E. Broad MA. 6888 138 Medicine for the Healthy Insurance is a medicine that you must take before SOQUEL you need it. So be sure in advance that you have enough, and the right kinds. FARM BUREAU INSURANCE COMPANIES HOME OFFICEâCOLUMBUS, OHIO MEDICAL ARTS PHARMACY ey 327 East State Street Owned and Operated by Registered Pharmacists SCHOEDINGER COMPANY Funeral Directors E. State at 5th AD. 6105 2541 W. Broad RA. 3439 BEATTIE Courteous Service ADams 9131 The Harris Company WALTERS OPTICIANS BRANNON 106 East Broad Street Columbus, Ohio FULLER Compliments of JOSEPH SKILKEN CO. GENERAL CONTRACTORS GOLD 383 S. Third Street Columbus, Ohio LYAN PROGNOSIS: EXCELLENT! WHEN MALCOLM MOONEY MAKES YOUR PORTRAIT Malcolm Mooney Studios 1958 N. High St. UNiversity 6000 McFARLAND P. E. RUTHERFORD W. P. RUTHERFORD Âź AMPLE PARKING IN REAR PRIVATE AMBULANCE SERVICE The P. E. Rutherford Co. METZGER FUNERAL DIRECTORS UNiversity 1153 WaAlnut 1716 2383 North High Street Columbus, Ohio 140 Compliments of NEWLAND HILL TAILORING CO. FINEST CUSTOM TAILORING 1932 N. High UN 2864 ROBERT E. HILDRETH SPECIAL AGENT OâFERREL ESTATE PLANNING PROGRAM INSURANCE FOR. PHYSICIANS NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 42 E. Gay Street Phone: Office CA 4-5237 Columbus, Ohio Phone: Res. HU 8-6657 Best Wishes CULTERS DRUG STORES 1472 W. Fifth Ave. 2686 Westerville Ave. For PURE OIL Come To: R. SMITH BYALL AND KINNEYâS North High at Eleventh UN. 0516 Moe Glassmanâs College Shoppe Corner 11th and High Street ARROW SHIRTSâINTERWOVEN SOCKS MENâS WEAR UNKEFER Compliments of JOHN LUCKHAUPT JOHN BUCKON Your WINTHROP-STEARNS REPRESENTATIVE HALEY SAUDER JONES M. SMITH ONKST SNIDER VAN FOSSEN TETERIS VONTHRON WHETSTONE WENDT-BRISTOL COMPANY The prescription Stores of Columbus @Âź Manufacturers of fine pharmaceuticals @ Distributors of Physician and Hospital Supplies @ Retailers of Quality Student Equipment THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS e 51 E. State Street â AD 6108 Âź 1660 Neil Avenue â WA 7407-7408 e 721 N. High Street â MA 3153 QUALITY DEPENDABILITY ° Almost everyone has heard the one about the world beating a it path to the door of the man who builds a better mouse trap. This time-honored gem of philosophy tells us that if weâve got a it S good product, all we have to do is sit tight and let the public seek us out. b tt Itâs true that a product must be good to win its way in todayâs etter market-place. But it canât win unless the public is aware of e02e0eee its existence. Before people part with their hard-earned cash, they want to know how and why a particular product is better t ell than another product, and they want to know what it will do for them. The mouse trap philosophy doesnât give them the answers. th em. For more than eighty years, the Heer Printing Company has helped folks tell the public about their products through the medium of the printed page. Next time you have a product or why an idea that you want people to know about, stop in and let us ; help you put it across. People canât beat a path to your door unless they know itâs open. HEER PRINTING COMPANY 364-386 S. Fourth St., Columbus, Ohio VARSITY BARBER SHOP Four Expert Barbers BURK Open 8-6 223 W. 11th Ave. ZELL PRESCRIPTION CENTERS 289 E. State 685 Bryden AD. 7176 FE 55385 Congratulations and Best Wishes a ak for Success to the Class of â54 TOM THUMB RESTAURANTS We Appreciate Your Friendship and Patronage Congratulations from EGAN-RYAN 403 E. Broad MA 6665 KROEGER ; HOOPERS PHARMACY High Dunedin LA 8585 Compliments of ed) ae Marwins FLICKINGER MENâS WEAR 1872 N. High WA 8355 Compliments of ROBT. H. McCORMICK UNIVERSITY FLORISTS 243 W. 11th Ave. UN 2916 SCARPELLI Congratulations from JIMMIEâS DRUG STORE 3347 N. High LA 0807âLA 8991 144 H. Braun Sons Company SERVING STUDENT PHYSICIAN SINCE 1857 e Drugs Âź@ Equipment Instruments Âź Sick Room Supplies 80 E. Long ADams 7166 CENTLEMEM, THII INFILTRATION You SEE 14 TYPICAL OF ARErIVE THBERCHLOS |S ee Wo 7- = @o S F @Âź © ASKAM The Caducean Staff wishes to thank the following men : KOENIG for their fine cooperation in furnishing art work for the 1954. CADUCEAN: Jim MuNGER FODOR Don Linton | L Photograpl Jmm Koenic | Pree, LEE GoLp Don Scuutt | i Art and Cartoons Joun Jones SCOTT BATTERSON 146 Congratulations from H. L. McFARLAND SONS HARDWARE ae 1575 N. High UN 6869 Congratulations from CROSBY'S DRUGS 2661 N. High JE 9424 The Buckeye Campus Shop BREHM DISTINCTIVE MEN'S WEAR 1608 N. High UN 9676 Congratulations from JONES PHARMACY 3515 N. High Courtesy of LYNN DRUG CO. 1950 N. 4th St. KL 3751 CHARBERTS SANDWICH SHOP Fastest in ServiceâFinest in Food 1912 N. High St. 12 E. 15th Ave. Never Closes 7 A. M.-12:30 A. M. Fri. Sat. âti 2:30 A. M. WALLACE Congratulations and Extended Fest Wishes Medical Class of 1954 THE MEDICAL LECTURE NOTE SERVICE Bee SNE 329 W. 9th Ave. Bill Hanna KL 3963 329 W. 9th Ave. INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Beechwold.Pharmacys: 50s te Seas 136 His... Fira verve rms Se ya as am, Sih ee 145 Anson R. Brown... Ron Ores ee 122 buckevyetGampus. Sb0D) 5 -40-8- --cap se 147 ya eae Weinine ye eee ee ok onde ee een ee 141 Gammpirs-iNer)) Center 320. 2.24... cre 125 Marea OS eee ere Na eg Se 4 ee ras 131 GASH eTE 8 ooo tee neste essa oh eae er eee 147 Children HogpitalÂź z..a co ee 120 Ulinseal-Pathological, Uabs.. 2. eee eee 137 Cele e kod A LEILA CY god eo cach 2 ants ee 122 enumnpus re harmacal: 5.22... 2. eee 133 Columbus: Hospital Supply 24.2422 sees 138 Columbus Orthopedic Appliance ..................-------- 136 EE Dr ene Me oi lL fs lean ent 147 sprite acta 9 Fao ae eae ee a a lee ES Cory, ly Ci 141 Davis wouners| Home: 2... 0-2 ee ee 126 PVA TEE Or SC ULWCAT EZ oo... oa Ren ease ke Te ee 136 ETON 211 soe be oy OE SIR RRNMNEEE TL RENN Sap peins 144 tarny oureat. POSuPan ce: .. scr ges ae dec eee 139 GSaTMer a. LIT Sue tcee elke oe te coerce ee ee 128 EPEC IE Os] ere 8 eens gees ae Geis gu Ri teers rae ee 120 Hanger Orthopedic Appliance .....................:.....-.- 134 Harriss Opie C als cece ss ee eee ee 139 Robert_E-Hildreth Insuranceâ..--20 2. ee 141 SAU PRA IE erste: ede Auer s tara atâ mines UE ey 141 Heerâ O'rintir ge. 6 sata ese tee eee ee eee eee 143 Hooperser Warmacy acca sere te eee 144 Jimmies: Drugstore x2 host esh ae cee 144 Jones C0 keene ree po ees hk a ee ees 144 Kauffman: Latimerernc. 7. ae see eee 148 Bill. Kay fee ee re eee ee 123 Sam Koons 2... vet see ets ee ee, 136 Lary 1S ete tacio ee onan 128 Lederle Laboratories (23. a ee 26 148 Samuel-S. Loyer! 3.226 -c1 ne eee 123 Lorigâs i507) ee acre eee ore 128 TieO-M@y6rs: 2-2 catecazeccna-ssetcese soto Suaneteeg ee 123 Lynn) Drug: C0.â ies 147 M. RLahboratories ee 130 Marvinâs:Menâs Weats.23300 3.50 144 Malcolm. Mooney: 23.24.2..002. ee ee 140 Robt.sH McCormick |. 2 ee ee 144 McFarland. Hardware... 22is72.s4e0 eee 147 Medical Arts:Pharmacy 24.0.2. 30neoe ee 139 Miller: Drug jie ene 123 Ry A. Nickerson y.c222.-102k eee 126 The âNote: Service 2:22 .Gincte 147 Ortho Pharmaceuticals. 2. ee 135 P.) E.Rutheri ord V..:,.cse. ior 140 Romeo's: 2s..5sc8eiseteicdewiesene-h Ac ee 129 Schoedinger: Con 139 sĂ©gelâs Pharmacy ..2.5 95. a). 20-t94 =e 128 Geo.. H. Shapter 45.5.cc2cniaseeece: ae ae 128 Paul (Ey Shirk 7.c.c4--nee cee eee 124 Jos.;Skulkenâ? 2a ee 140 Stadium sshOp iste) iss .cdacao eee cee 122 smith-stevens lailoring sc 2.40 2 eee 129 Herman: OD Tice ni 4. es ee 128 roms Pinan beie2 22:8. sce cence, cee 144 Varsity: Flowers ..:...-22...°3), 4a ee 126 Varsity: Barbers...5.c255.-42.2-5 51 144. Wazggener Drig. ie, 2 a ee 129 Warren: Teed 5.20.5 (Re cae See eee 125 Wendt-Bristole ssc stew ieee ee ee 143 White-Haines (Optical Âź 225s eine ee 133 Winthrop-Stearns 22 2c tan ee ee 141 Wocherâs tii. ett aitecs. oe cee ae 128 Zell Drugs = shirts See cere ee a 144 Roger Zion. .-.s-cre. acne ee 131 Binsieionies } : F A } iu | â | } : ' bil : | ; â : ts : Ă© i aay | : + be aaa hres , i % = ts NOWIAIR Neat Oey . _ ; ; - 3 F ; a H 4 i  5 a Fy 5 bs ; ) % ' te H os r | me MERLIN AAAS ATES LAG SERENA PIR CIEE OTT IE RISE SSE PATA SI NOSES EASE IP: RPP Behe RP = Sets x . aa = achat ee woe abe eka 55 Np te teat Ne 8A yee a Ss Re eer Sores! ee io Sen Lee â7! By = Aer. ny Fee fa Pt A eA pao re % x Mee Speak eu :
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