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

 - Class of 1955

Page 1 of 194

 

Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1955 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 194 of the 1955 volume:

4 H 11 if , H M,-1 ,E D W Nm. M mu 'F 1 ,Av y 3552 Q' ,Q Si X 'wkigi' . . , . 1 X 1 X in i I 'T ' -VIII!! i 5511592 . fi y ,. vp 1 ff'- E ru I pfliff -ci 5 .V.. ,, 5,17 W 4. 21,3 X fi ' 'UE I 1 . E 911 TI-IE CADUCEA 1955 Three To the patient- Whom We,ve prodded, scrutinized, thumped, and gouged Without pause for the past two years in fact, and the previous two in theory. About Whose Working, functional, and fantasy life we can know more in a half hour than together his minister, mate, banker and boss can in a lifetime. He approaches us with timidity and some dread-physicians are still half charlatan and half demigod to him-and we unconsciously added to that belief. We were trained to be ever at a distance from him except physically, and then We couldn,t get too close. We learned from him and annoyed him, and he responded by accepting and respecting us, a very satisfactory arrangement, but not Without responsibility. lf we tried as hard to understand him as he did us, We could become nothing except better doctors. We hope we cared for him. DEDICATIIDN 0F THE YEAR to the patient ix PREFACE The Caducearz is in a transition period this year. It is now neither a yearbook strictly for medical students, nor does it sufficiently represent all the departments in and around the hospitals to be called a yearbook of the University Health Center. Its logical progression, of course, is to the latter end. Its budgetary demands have increased substantially as have the sacri- fices imposed on its staff in order to publish it. Its only function is to tell a story, the story of those who entered the schools of this medical center. If it has in any measure done so, our efforts are repaid. TABLE GF CQNTENTS PAGE Senior Poll .................. . 8 Senior Medical Students ..... .... 1 4 Junior Medical Students ........ .... 6 2 Sophomore Medical Students ....... .... 7 8 Freshman Medical Students ...... .... 8 5 Dean Charles A. Doan's Message .... .... 5 0 Clinical Faculty .......................... .... 6 4 Pre-Clinical Faculty ........ .... 8 0 Fraternities .................. .... 8 9 Senior Nursing Students ..... .... 1 O6 ,lunior Nursing Students ..... ..... 1 34 Sophomore Nursing Students 136 Freshman Nursing Students ........... .... 1 38 Dean Mildred E. Newton's Message .... ....... 1 29 Nursing Services .... ,.... 1 50 Ancillary Services ...................... .... 1 43 The Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital ...... ......, 1 52 The Columbus Receiving Hospital ...... ,... 1 54 Caducean Staff ............................. ,,,.,,, 1 56 Advertisements ,,,,,, , 160 r,-,.Y,.-,g . nesffqa- V -- ls . . .. QUESTIQIN 0F THE YEAR Eight the class poll In years past a graduating class of 75 could be discussed familiarly and jok- ingly: there were class jokes and class personalities and class asses and everybody knew it-hem. With the advent of a doubled enrollment students didn't stop being students, but we lost track of the other section because we were fighting to stay in our own, at least during the pre-clinical years. The jokes were still there-like the time a hapless student chose ex-actly the wrong moment to rid himself of a little bothersome flatulence during Legal Medicine 733 and it came out clearly audible- and so were the personalities such as the one who spent a timed hour mapping out sensory deficits in the pectoral regions of a particularly well-endowed patient who had entered for an elective hemorrhoidectomy, but the stories never reached the Wide circulation they should have enjoyed. And the personality of the Class of 1955 by this lack of communication was never well defined. We decided early in the planning of this book that a poll of the seniors was a good way to find out about ourselves. A questionnaire was drafted, mimeogriaphed and distributed. 110 of the 135 seniors returned the poll, roughly an 8002 response and sufficient to assure some validity. Any conclusions reached here are obviously applicable only to those returning the poll. The only truly valid conclusion about the Class of 1955 is that it is uniformly composed of individualists however conformist they appear in the classroom or on the ward. On questions that allowed the pollee some variation in response there were invariably dozens of different answers. If it is true that the las-t geographical frontier has been passed, then it is none the less valid that some of the remaining pioneers in spirit have entered the field of medicine by natural selection. The Htypicaln senior is a man of many facets. He was born in Ohio of non-college parents in a moderate- sized city. He attended public school and attended an Ohio college before coming here. His parents' income is in the S5000-3510000 year bracket and he probably borrowed heavily from them to get here. More than likely he isnit a veteran, but more than likely he is married. Held like to see pre-med education broadened to include more liberal arts courses, but on the whole he thinks the majority of pre-med courses will be useful in the practice of medicine. He majored in the biologi- cal sciences, wasn't Phi Beta Kappa, and applied here because it was either near home or because of financial reasons. He's a fraternity member, and in his senior year he studied close to ten hours a week. During that week he took the wife out once but not more, and spent a little over 355 outside living expenses. He read the newspaper and the Saturday Evening Post that week, drank a beer or so, worked on his externship and returned almost nightly to his apartment or fraternity house. He's a non- smoker. He doesn't know about specialties, but be prefers surgery if any. He'll probably settle in ra small town in Ohio, and he fully expects to gross between 325,000- SS50,000 after he's been in practice ten years. He wants no part of National Boards and his biggest gripe about OSU Medical School is that its course content is im- practical. He graduated with a 2.6 -cumulative point- hour and thereis not much doubt that heid do it all over again ifuhe had to. That's the average senior and may the good statisti- cians forgive the necessary generalizations. Now to get down to specific details and answer some specific questions. THE LITTLE DOCS AND HOW THEY CREW All of the Class of 1955 listed their home town as somewhere in Ohio. It comes as a surprise, however, that only eleven of us were born outside the state, one senior listing Singapore, and one Madras, India, as his birthplace. The majority of us were born and raised in 'larger cities fover 100,000 pop.lg thirteen of us ad- mitted that we came from towns under 1000. Most of our parents never smelled the incense of the walls and halls of ivy, but if they did it was a better than 2:1 bet that it was our father-s, and slightly less than 50fk of 'them graduated from college. Percentage-wise, our pre-pre-medical education was given to us in the public high schools in nine out of ten cases, but seven of us attended private high schools and four of us, willingly or not, graduated from military school. Exactly one third of the present seniors listed Ohio State University as their alma mater. Of the thirty-nine colleges mentioned in all, only fifteen of us matricu- lated at colleges outside the state of Ohio. Two of us were Ivy Leaguers, one did some learning in the deep South, but none of us got farther west than the Univer- sity of Arizona. We took many courses in undergraduate days, most of them pre-med, but our majors ranged from pre-law through sociology to psychology, and we were prosaic enough to major in biology or the biological sciences, at least ll-Qfk of us were. Chemistry majors accounted for another 10721. Only ten of us majored in non- science courses. We are in the midst of scholars in the class of 1955, roughly one third of the class belonging to Phi Beta Kappa or some other undergraduate scholastic honorary, Alpha Epsilon Delta and Phi Sigma Alpha also being mentioned. Why did we go into medicine as a profession? 392- thought this was a silly question, but 3096 said they had a desire to help others and another 30fk listed scientific interests as their foremost reason, Fifteen per cent frankly didn't know and another fifteen per cent liked the financial and social security attached to the lVl.D. degree. A few said their father was a doctor and that's why they applied to medical school. Of all the possible medical schools we could have come to we accepted Ohio State for a variety of reasons, the two most frequently mentioned being its proximity to home base and financial reasons. One fifth of us couldn't get in any other place, but a good fifteen per cent believed the reputation of the school was a good and sullicient reason. STATUS QUO When our sons and daughters ask us what we did in the big war, daddy, only a little over one third of us can say we were actively involved. Our religious tendencies are predominantly Protestant, 75W of us answering to that call. Of the other religions about 10fk are Catholics and 156729 hold the Jewish faith. We also number a Christian Scientist and a member of the Eastern Orthodox faith. At least 68 of us are married, and thatis as close to 50'Zp of the class as one can get, non-poll answerers included. A few of us are engaged, but a third or more are still looking. Evidently exhausted by his four ardu- ous years in medical school, one enervated senior weakly scrawled apathetic', across the page. As to when we'd get married, the above one third resorted to the old dodge, when I meet the right girl. Possibly the same the origin of our species N me IfEoi 3 Yin. ,A 55 1' 7 .x m 1 0 Whai's your sociaX skaius? Married ........................ 63-192' Dkvorced ...., .... 0 Q70 1: Engaged ...... 5.670 4 ' Y' Looking .... .... 2 7.6Cf0 KX Unintefesked ...... ...... 1 3.7 ffo 1 x X g 0: 5 f A- N Du I I vs - do 72: lv X . 4 , 1'0 246 ? JV lik. efohgeo? I . My P of-11 f .1-fi-A N 5... riffs, X - 125i Y ., h ' 'Wy . A6 .q5.- . h Nhkgt N he ,A 969 K ' hh 9 M - , 9 ... I E Iycjo -1- ' W- 2 10 - I Q3 xx Q 1 . ' 229 x f 0 Q Howl okev do Nlou go N N We? A0 f ,K Xf -1 ,.,, 510 N Seve: M301 . o 5 Dmkwg 'acamm I I .. 2500 f Once pei mosxQo WV Q9 X 'V0 Yxo-N N060 Ao Nl ' Q 5 X' 'L-'5 ixwesliiwnco ' q l u' it Xkvfo Sveoke I ! Q Uwe ak Home -- Onan X VNU AM XQCIVU X655 X ,. X Vacxg ov flffo 'V HOW .f QNQ' -' 65610 Church? 0 han do YOU O +0 Aoxix 256656 NCVC1' '---4.-4.- 1 1-2 umesfyr. W Oncefmomh AEC? fl' 2 5 txmesfmouth My L ....,,,.,,,,-D EVCYY week uh' ' kj Mmosr daily 156k A X fl s 1, xx 'Vw L-...fl , ffm ,rj --.1--. -I . N 1., .. Q9 1,6 X I O O Wh ere are You inkefnimn Ohio ,nnl I 65,1o!O C Yi ' 3 X fm ---- - .... gmc 0 3 K 7 Michigan ,,.. Xilqcfc 1 - .-Xouda ........., H X-5,70 ,oo 1 Baskets U. 5. .... ..... 'I ,Lyojo NYM-week ........ . 6fl0f0 Outdxde U. 5. ...... 55970 mba: 0,4 YK' Ne 'iw 3 we we: YW 32,1240 sc.'0oXa'XXG Mono H a ow 4 N60 pe 0:3e we ..... In JVCV leffo el' e,,7y C 1 p ' Wrff , 63? 0 91- e ry 'A ..... 2,3 montll W XG ber ll? X M H101 0 6 Q Ol-6 th Ith .h J a '-1 1 Alma n 'Vee - 3 Sl da lqy 8Z ily ' 1 Qz i if E gggg apptfgw . ws You a+e, 'Fv:,, How much Mme do -aff: I Spend y ho 9 exp qou normak spend fi Less Wk? W mucznsesl skurxmq per week, no! S5 than 35 do ' l counkknq Xeckures and ' -310 GYNCXGS, as a se1fxor'l 310 32 . , C' Less Khao 5 his. ..,. ..,...... X 'lofp 3 S25 A7 5-X0 YX15. ....,. Mwfo NIO!-C th 126k El xo-as ms. ..,, ISEJCXO S50 IZ as-mo ms. ......,.,.,,,,,,, , 'wo on 14' I Mote than A0 hrs. .... Ofjf mf: --A , Nd X Jw Q XQ XX s X cg? or 11.65 X A xxx. Q51 -'J X -an infiuence to be reckoned with- senior as above, and there was only one such, said Hneverf' Bets, anyone? Depending on our status we take the girl friend or wife out between one and three times a month. About 101k of the class goes out less than once per month, and the playboys who go out almost daily numbered fewer than five per cent. WHO'S GOT THE DINC-DONC? The shrewd observation that mo-st physicians are close-mouthed about finances was confirmed in the results of this poll. Although the questionnaires were to be returned anonymously more seniors omitted answer- ing this question than any other one in the entire gamut of forty-five. The question about family income was so constructed that married and single seniors could answer it without making separate questions. Unfor- tunately, the question was misinterpreted by many and we have seniors listing their parents' income and not their own as head of a family. At any rate the median single senior's family income was within the 355000- 310,000 bracket. It is interesting to note that while no -single senior listed his parents' income as over 320,000, five married seniors checked their family income as above that figure. The weary editor, his bemused brain awash in all the statistics, leaves the interpretation to the reader. The median married seniors, income as -head of a family was within 252500-355000. If the wish is father to the deed, Weill beat Dad all hollow as it concerns breadwinning. 901k of us expect to gross between 25 and 50 thousand dollars after ten Twelve years of practice, one fsicj optimistic soul said he thought he'd gross upwards of 50 thousand. Six of us had no idea what weid be worth. WHO TOOK THE FUNNIES? This was one of those opinion questions and twenty- six different comic strips were mentioned as preferred. POCO, king of the Okefinokee, swamped everybody with a plurality of two votes, but Steve Canyon and L'il Abner were not far behind. One disapproving critic stated he hadnit uhad time to become a fanf' All things considered, we don't read much outside our courses. Three fourths of us had sullicient extra- curricular time to read at least one medical journal not required, Time, Life, or the SATEVEPOST, and the daily newspaper. About one third of us read a few novels a year, but whether or not these were on the Mickey Spillane-Frank Yerby-A. E. Van Vogt axis isn't known. 25W of us read 2-3 books of non-fiction a year, content unknown. POSITION OPEN: ROOM, BOARD, AND CLINICAL EXPERIENCE Wie needed financial assistance to get through medical school and we needed it bad. We used multiple sources, mostly our families and our savings from outside jobs, summer work, and externships. 10fk of the wives get a Ph. T. after their names for Putting Husband Through. Loans accounted for another 1017 and a few used the GI Bill. '6Bank robberyn was not accepted as a legiti- mate answer. 86fk of us by the slide rule have had at one time or another an externship in our medical school careers. One third of us lived in apartments most of the time outside the classroom and another 25? in one fraternity house or another. Another 2595 lived either in rooming houses or in private homes, their own or somebody else's. The remainder lived with parents or relatives. WHITHER THOU GOEST 86 seniors will spend their internship year with the state of Ohio, but we'll go as far east as Greenwich, Connecticut, as far north as Madison, Vifisconsin, as far west as San Francisco, California, and as far south as the Canal Zone. Ultimately we intend to practice largely in Ohio, but as far as specialization goes we differ widely and al- most equally. A third of us want to specialize, a third donit want to, and a third don't know. When pressed to indicate our choice of specialties, we prefer surgery 28 times out of a hundred. 17W of us like internal medicine, 136k ob-gyn, 927 anesthesia, and 6Wp pediatrics. Radiology and psychiatry were mentioned once or twice, but even so, almost one fourth still didn't know what they liked. The general practi- tioner received Gfyb of the votes. BULL SESSION When we relax from the trials of giving daily hema- tomas and talk about the people, the places, and the events of medical school living, we may toss down a trochenlager or so, but just how much do we really drink? Nobody committed himself to a D.T. ward in the future by saying he drank excessively, but 25? said they drank moderately. Four out of ten said they drank occas-ion- ally and another quarter said they rarely tippled. QW upheld the constitution of the W.C.T.U. Of the almost atmospheric number of teachers to whom we've been exposed we remember more than a few as having influenced us most. Here comes that pioneer spirit again: a fourth of the pollees didnlt think anybody had influenced their thinking, but of those who did 'think so, Dr. Robert M. Zoll-inger was most men- tioned. The good Drs. Jacoby, Schlumberger four Man of the Yearj, Holzaepfel, and Saslaw also commanded a respectable number of votes. 4-3fXp of the senior class agreed that pathology was the most important course in medical school. About 10W named physiology and another 10W listed physical diagnosis. Anatomy and medicine, the latter presumably in the clinical years, each received 5fZy of the total. There's not much doubt that we'd go through medical school all over again, even if we knew what we'd be facing. 88W of us shouted, f'Excelsior!7, and said we'd do it again. Three seniors refused to commit themselves. A bare two thirds of the class thought that the ma- jority of pre-med education was useful in our education as physicians. Did we have some specific recommenda- tions? Yes, and most of these concerned the addition of l-iberal arts courses to the curriculum. 4695 wanted to keep pre-med the same length but retain mostly liberal arts courses, while another 21929 wanted to shorten the course and retain mostly liberal arts courses. The write-in suggestion-s favored the addition of pre- clinical courses such as histology and physiology to the undergraduate schedule. National Boards were given a black eye by the Class of 1955. Two thirds of us thought they were not worth- while at all, but 18? thought only Part I should be required. About one senior in seven believed that we should take Parts 1 and II. Grades, their care and feeding, received much dis- cussion. 6027 firmly believed that a grade of usatisfac- tory or 'cunsatisfactoryv only should be given. About 30W liked the present system and less than 5727 wanted to abolish grading entirely. Roughly 60fZp of the class thought that the grades in the -pre-clinical years should be based on a final and two or three hour exams. Another 2075 wanted hour exams alone, and 100k each voted for the instructors, personal opin-ion of him and for a final alone. When we got to the clinical years our opinions changed radi- cally: at least a third of us wanted examinations that were oral entirely or in part. Another quarter liked the professors' personal opinion of him, and still an- other fourth wanted a final alone, probably written. Answers here ranged from uno exams in senior yearn to clinical ability onlyf' Our biggest gripes about the OSU Medical School were about equally split between complaints against inferior teaching in the pre-clinical years, oversized classes, and impractical course content, the latter re- ceiving a slight edge. Write-in answers were manifold: poor organization throughout-'fthe head doesn't know what the tail is doinggw the inevitable moans about the hierarchy system and the scut work, poor organization and teaching in Clinical Medicine and Uletting incom- petent students linishf' Are the classes too large? Do we lose sight of the other students by the artificial subdivision of the class into -sections and off-quarters? It appears that our median senior knew about thirty-five other seniors in more than a first-name fashion, nobody was gregarious enough to say he knew more than a hundred of the one hundred thirty-five very well, but 175k thought they knew 50-100 other seniors very well. As far as grades go we ended our senior year in healthy academic fashion. Of the ninety-six seniors who knew their point hour the median man had a cumu- lative of 2.6. The continuum ran from a low of 2.0 to a high of 3.7. THINGS TO COME Watch out for the Ides of March, 1976, for that's the median estimate of this senior class of the time of ap- pearance of the definitive cure for cancer. 10'Z7 of the class remained skeptical and thought there never would be a cure, but 3202 thought the answer would arrive within fifty years and 41012 thought it possible within twenty-five years. As to the cause of most malignancies, we were very cagey. Two thirds of us believed it to -be different de- pending on the cancer type and location. Of those who got out on a limb, 16729 believed irritants in some form were the basic malefactors, and the rest of the answers were evenly split between nutritional causes, metabolic factors, endocrine imbalances, virus or infectious causes, and heredity. Answers other than the listed ones on the questionnaire included one vote for upcychosomaticf' and one for 'ga characteristic integral with the original germ plasm of the patient. Wve rest our case. We've had a good time outlining the 'atypical -senior and filling in some of the grays. VVe accept no responsibility for false conclusions. De gusti- bus non est dispwiandzun said the lady as she kissed the cow. digestion time: four years Thirteen Fourteen SIIPHISTICATES 0F THE YEAR . the semors This was supposed to be the year of the big rest. It never happened. There were half-founded rumors that junior residents distributed pamphlets in the dead of night along the back alleys of Columbus advertising monkey gland operations and concen- trated elixir of youth. They came in droves to the Out Patient Department. Wfe under- stood quickly why phenobarbital is the most prescribed drug in America, and wrote for it with adolescent abandon. Staff men were no longer ogresg we argued with them seldom to any conclusion, but always with immense personal satisfaction. Histories and physicals had become workable in form, and largely unproductive. The surgery clinics and specialty clinics were isolated islands of knowledge demanding a special discipline for each. YVe squzzed the gas bags in anesthesia, usually as the patient was exhaling, and dimly appreciated the marvel of intubation. In ENT otitis externa or otitis media abounded, depending on the quarter you were there. We responded with less than rabid enthusiasm, unless one felt the call, to the challenge of the care of eyes and the fitting of glasses, but we left with a healthy respect for the staff. Sign, sign, who's got the localizing sign? became the game of the day in neurosnrgery. ive were squirrels on a treadmill in pre-natal clinic. The variety of complaints in gynecology was small, and the inscrutable thyroid gland became chief suspect in a gigantic detective story when we c0uldn't see, feel, or smell the culprit. In the labor rooms we cursed the day the pit drip was ever conceived and our first rectals were like waving a finger in warm air, but we caught the products of conception in their unglamorous packaging and felt more like doctors than ever before. Our extracurricular lives began to assume a focus again after three years. Not truly mature and exceeding impatient, we prepared and were prepared to leave. There wasn't any more time to polish our dull edges. A compound of bravado, self-confi- dence, cynicism, and nostalgia, we were about to see the day of internship descend upon us, and we wondered if we were equal to it. Obstipation rackpot resonance Vake up, Phil, re'rc graduat- ng am just culled he trip off. rc get the loot or nothing ,. if lf' 'Vg,,.., I 1 'x .-iq , Jlf? ' Mihai ,ir- , lg The day they g a v e birdies away Dig thp frater- nity pm Ir's saiitcecl HIOLITIIQIII CYS' fCIS Visiting fireman Fifteen Sixteen IABIES EDVVARD ALLEN, from Akron, attended Duke University and has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.5 he is n member of Phi Chi and 15 to intern at the UNIVERSITY HOS- PITAL in Columbus. LeROY LAURENCE APPEL, from Dayton, has a B.S. from the Uni- versity of Cincinnatig he is a mem- ber of Phi Delta Epsilon and is headed for the HOSPITAL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCON- SIN next year. STANLEY GEORGE ARTER, from Crestline, went to Ohio Northern but graduated with a B.Sc, from O.S.U.g he is a member of Nu Sigma Nu and next year goes to ORANGE COUNTY GENERAL HOSPITAL in sunny California. JAMES EDWARD BAKER, from Uhrichsville, attended O.S.U. and has a B.S. in Pharmacy from Ohio Northern, he is a member of Nu Sigma Nu and next year goes to ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lrma. LESTER ARTHUR BALLARD, JR., from Cortland, has a B.A. from O.S.U.5 he joined up with thc Phi Chis and is to intern at thc UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL in Columbus. QAMES ERLE BARNES, from Co- umbus, has a B.A. degree from O.S.U., is a member of Phi Chi, and is to intern at the UNIVER- SITY HOSPITAL in Columbus. DAVID ARTHUR BARR, from Sidney, has Il B.A. from the Col- lege of VVoosterg he is Z1 member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and goes to ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lima next year. WALTER CLARENCE BEAI-IM, from Midvale, has a B.S. from Otterbein College, he joined Alpha Kappa Kappa, and is to intern at ST. RITA'S in Lima. 'ak in Q ll. v a S ...X I-J A , Q. 1461 :W llfqi QA, gi H X B' A ? -an ' 1 l 'Yf A I - ugii . F Tv, .4 ,,-- l l Eighteen HERBERT EUGENE BEAN, from Vkfesterville, attended O.S.U. and has a B.S. from Otterbein Collegeg next year, he is headed for Tl-IE CHRIST HOSPITAL in Cincinnati. JAMES CLIFFORD BELT, from Columbus, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U., he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and goes to ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lima next year. GUY BIAGIOTTI, from Cleveland, has a B.S. from YVestern Reserve University and a NLS. from Ober- lin College, he is a member of Nu Sigma Nu and will intern at ST. VINCENT CHARITY HOSPITAL in Cleveland. BYRON BLAKE, from Grove City, has a B.A. from O.S.U. and 15 to intern at ST. RIT.-VS HOSPITAL in Lima. ROBERT JAMES BOLANDER, from Columbus, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U., he is an Alpha Ka pa Kappa and will intern at LUKE'S HOSPITAL in Denver, Colorado. NORMAN IJUNIOH BROWNING, from New lxiladel hia, has a B.A. degree from O.S.Lli, he is to in- iem at ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in ima. DONALD VVILLIAM BUNDE, from Cleveland, attended Baldwin- XVa1lace College where he got a B.S. degree, he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and will in- tern at ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL in Cleveland. PAUL EUGENE BURSON, from Oakwood, has a B.S. from Dcilancc College and also attended O.S.U., he is part of the Al ha Kappa Kappa Fraternity and, goes to BLODGETT MEMORIAL HOS- PITAL in Grand Rapids, Blish. next year. 4-W-vp ,- na w vo la - -if .5 , , ,qw A FX , j-4 5 -Q -.Ni Q T l .nv , W Sin gin 5 is A 6... J .1 . .-.E-...x-. Twenty ROBERT AIMA SA CHAPNIAN, from Toledo, has a B.S. from the University of Toledo, he is a mem- ber of AKK and will intern at the GORGAS HOSPITAL in the Pan- ama Canal Zone. IULIUS JOHN CHOSY, from Co- umbus, went to O.S.U.9 he is a member of Phi Chi and is to in- tern at the HOSPITAL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF YVISCONSIN. VVILLIAM FREDERICK CLARK, from Toledo, has an A.B. degree from Harvard, he served as Cadu- cean Editor and will intern at SEASIDE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL in Long Beach, California. WILLIAM COHEN, froin Toledo, has ax B.S. from the University of Toledo, he is a member of Phi Delta Epsilon and will intern at the HOSPITAL OF THE UNI- VERSITY OF WISCONSIN. ELMER CLARE COLLINS, from Cleveland, obtained a B.S. from John Carroll University, he joined Alpha. Kalppa Kappa and will in- tern at t e UNIVERSITY HOS- PITAL in Columbus. NIAURICE CONVERSE, from Warren, has a B.Sc. and a M.Sc. from O.S.U.5 he is a Nu Sigma Nu and will intern at ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lima. WILLIAM ARTHUR COOK, from Akron, has a B.S. de ee from the University of Akrongbllc is a mem- ber of Alpha Kappa Kappa and next year goes to CITY HOS- PITAL OF AKRON. DAVID ANTHONY COREY, from Columbus, has a B.A. from Hiram Colle e and attended O.S.U.g he is a Blu Sigma Nu and is to intern at NIERCY HOSPITAL in Tnlerlu. 4 wr PC- .ZX 555 ii? X Timm 1 s -cf Q Twenty-two WILLIAM JAMES CRON, from Columbus, has an A.B. degree from Indiana Uuiversityg he is an member of Phi Chi and will be at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL, in Colum- bus, ncxt year. PHILIP BOWEN CURTIS, from Columbus, did his undergraduate work for a B.A. degree at the Col- lege of Woosterg he is to intern it 11541-ZRCY HOSPITAL in Spring- e . GEORGE DANDALIDBS, from Lorain, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.g he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and will go to AKRON GENERAL HOSPITAL in Akron next year. CLIFFORD ANTHONY DAVIS, from Cincinnati, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U. and will intern at LOS ANGELES COUNTY GENERAL HOSPITAL. WILLIAM FRANKLIN DAVIS, from Ashtabula earned a B.S. dc- gree at Michifgin Stateg he joined Alpha Kapga appa and will serve an interns at ST. LUKE'S HOS- PITAL in C evcland. JOHN ALOYSIUS DEVANY, from Akron, attended Akron University for a B.S. degreeg he has been with the AKs and will intern at the CITY HOSPITAL of Akron. KEITH DEVOE, IR., from Colum- bus, has a B.A. from O.S.U.g heiis a member of Phi Chi and is to 1n- tern at the HOSPITAL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYL- VANIA. FLOYD DICK, from Cleveland, attended Western Re- serve University and has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.g is is an AK and wrll go to AKRON GENERAL HOS- PITAL in Akron. LZ E. ie -W 'Q iv 'Q v Q 3. fa 1' 1 '- iv 1- Pa 1 ! Q X, J ' A , V--1 f 55 ,11l 'Nl1 wss j ' iiiismk my ,awww 1 mm.,,w mi: 4-ti Q 03' 2Lf 9'? rw , ,, f - v lu' ..,1 W- nr 'hr W' I1 Y 1 v V 1.-, , - M Q A Q 4 1 1, g ,Ap v 4 'Q f. 1 Mb .-jx-'F' I ,,, a- ', 0 ig if . NS., 1' 11, Twenty-four IAMES G. DILLER, from Bluff- ton, has a B.A. degree from Wheaton College and will intem at BLODGETT MEMORIAL HOS- PITAL in Grand Rapids, Michigan. RICHARD CLEVELAND DISTAD, from Akron, earned a B.S. degree at Akron Universityg he is a mem- ber of Phi Chi and is to intern at UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS OF CLEVELAND. JAMES VVILLIAM DOOLOS, from Union, has a B.S. from the Uni- versity of Daytong he will go to UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL in Little Rock, Arkansas. JOHN FRANCIS DOTTER. from Columbus, did his pre-med work at O.S.U. and got a B.Sc. degreeg he is a Nu Sigma Nu and goes to BUTTERWORTH HOSPITAL in Grand Rapids, Michigan next year. JOHN DAVID DUNBAR, from New YVashington has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.g he is a Phi Chi and is to intem at MT. ZION HOSPITAL in San Francisco. LOHN ROBERT ESSIG, from uungstown, attended West Vir- ginia University and has a B.A. degree from Hiram Collcgeg he is :x Nu Sig and will intern at the YOUNGSTOVVRI HOSPITAL AS- SOCIATION. IANIES BAXTER EVANS, from Columbus, earned an A.B. degree at I-Iarvardg he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and will go to HENRY FORD HOSPITAL in Detroit next year. MILTON FADER, from Cleveland, has a B.A. degree from Western Reserve Universityg hc is to intern at MT. SINAI HOSPITAL in Cleveland. - ' ':' iii? 1 . , , .,. if -Au. Q-if Twenty-five Twenty-six VVILLIANI C A RL FILSINGEB, from Toledo, attended Purdue Uni- versity and has a B.S. from Toledo Universityg he is 51 member of AKK and is headed for IVIERCY HOSPITAL in Springfield next year. Bill is also a member of AOA. VVILLIAM C LI NT ON FIPPIN, from Columbus, has a B.A. from O.S.U.5 he wvill go to SPRING- FIELD CITY HOSPITAL in july. JOHN CLARENCE FISCHER, from Columbus, went to St. Louis University and earned a B.S. de- gree at the University of Toledo, he is an AK and will intern at GRANT HOSPITAL in Columbus. STUART BLAINE FISHER, from Canton, has an A.B. degree from the University of Michigan and attended Kent State and Ohio State Universitiesg he is a member of Phi Delta Epsilon and is to intern at NIT. SINAI HOSPITAL in Cleveland. ROBERT STANLEY FLADEN, from Akron, has a B.A. degree from the University of Akrong he also attended O.S.U.g he joined Phi Delta Epsilon and will go to LOS ANGELES COUNTY GEN- ERAL HOSPITAL next year. JAMES RAYMOND FOULKES, from Lima, has a B.A. from Asbury College, he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and is headed for MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL next vear. GEORGE ROBERTS GALE- HOUSE, IR., from Akron has a B.S. from the University of Akron, he is an AK and will intern at the CITY HOSPITAL of Akron. RALPH GEBHART, of Nliamise burg, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.g lie is a Phi Chi and is headed .for HURLEY HOSPITAL in Flint, Michigan. iP-3' va P L-R We 'mn nw fs. 577. .f . 5 .4 P5 J T wenty-eight JAMES FISHER GRAHAM, of Tipp City fame, received a B.A. degree from Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versityg he joined Phi Chi and next year goes to SEASIDE MEMORIAL EIOSPITAL in Long Beach, Cali- orma. SHELDON GARY GREEN, from Cleveland Heights, went to West- ern Reserve University and has a B.A. degree from O.S.U.g he is a member of Phi Delta Epsilon and is to intern at ST. LUKE'S HOS- PITAL in Cleveland. STANLEY LOUIS GROSSHAND- LER, from Youngstown, attended Youngstown College and earned a B.A. degree at the College of Wousterg he is part of Phi Delta Epsilon and will intern at YOUNGSTOVVN HOSPITAL AS- SOCIATION. VVILLIAM ROBERT HANNA, from Huron, has a B.S. from Otterbein Collegeg lie is an AK and will o to HARBOR GEN ERAL7 1-1c'is1'1TAL in Terrence: California. KENNETH VINCENT HARSH- MQAN, from Brooklield, received a B.S. degree from Baldwin-VVaIIacc Collegeg he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and will intem at ?Ta.LUKE'S HOSPITAL in Cleve- an ROBERT ALVIN HEINY, of Obetz, and Columbus, has a B.Sc. from O.S.U.g he is a Phi Chi and is headed for I-IURLEY HOSPITAL in Flint, Rlicliigan. CHARLES LEON HENAULT, from Stow, came here with a B.S. degree from Kent State Universityg he is a member of AKK and is to intern at the CITY HOSPITAL of Akron. VVALTER ERICH I-IEYSE, from Brooklyn Heights, reeeived a .B.S. from Capital Universityg he loined Alpha Kappa Kappa and will go to ST. VINCENT CHARITY HOS- PITAL in Cleveland next year. U5 M - -ar Thirty E. CREDE HIESTAND, from Old Fort, has a B.A. from the College of VVooster, he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and is to iri- teru at ALLEGI-IANY GENERAL HOSPITAL in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vama. LEO I. HIRSCH, of Akron, re- ceived a B.S. degree at the Uni- versity of Miehigang he joined Phi Delta Epsilon and next year will go to HENRY FORD HOSPITAL in Detroit. JACK ROLAND HOFFMAN, from Columbus, has a B.S. degree from Capital University which he re- ceived after coming here from In- diana University, he is an AK and will go to the YOUNGS- T O NV N HOSPITAL ASSOCIA- TION next year. BERNARD BRUFF HUSS, from Columbus, attended Denison Uni- versity aud has a B.Sc. from O.S.UL3 he is a Phi Chi and is to intern at ST. VINCENT'S HOS- PITAL in Toledo. EVERETT LINN JONES, of Lima, attended Ohio State Universityg he is a member of Nu Sigma Nu und will journey to Orange, Cali- fornia to the ORANGE COUNTY GENERAL HOSPITAL in july. AUGUST BENIAMIN JULIANO, from Salem, attended Miami Uni- versity and received a B.Sc. de- gree from O.S.U.g he is an AK and is to intern at DETROIT ME- MORIAL HOSPITAL. DANIEL ANDREVV KIBLEH, from Alliance, came here by way of Mount Union College where he earned a B.S. degreeg he joined the Phi Chis and next year will go to the YOUNGSTOWVN HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION. DAVID LEE KINSEY, from East Liverpool, has a B.A. degree from O.S.U.g he also attended Johns Hopkins University and lllI0l1'l1f Union Colle eg a Phi Chi and a good golfer, flue goes to UNIVER- SITY HOSPITAL in Columbus next year. I 3- F. R 1 , FH , 4 I r i 9 , Hyip fu., ,V-15:1 in ' .13 -. . .rp .:'H-- 4 ? Thirty-two ROBINSON PERKINS KIRKPAT- RICK, of Utica, has a B.Sc. from Capital Universityg he is to intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL in Col umbus. HERMAN C. KNOLL, from Cleve- land, has a B.A. degree from O.S.U.3 he is a member of Phi Delta Epsilon and Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern at PHILA- DELPIIIA GENERAL HOSPITAL. ALLAN RICHARD KORB, from Cleveland, received a BS. degree from john Carroll Universityg he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and is headed for MERCY IIOS- PITAL in Springfield. DIARION CORNELIUS KOR- STANIE, JR., of Chesapeake, came from Centre College with an A.B. clegrceg he joined Phi Chi and next year goes to ST. lVIARY'S HOS- PITAL in Huntington, WVest Vir- gllllil- CHARLES HOMER LAHR, IR., from Akron, has an A.B. degree from Oberlin College, :md he at' tended O.S.U.5 a member of Nu Sigma Nu, he is to intern at SAN JOAQUIN GENERAL HOSPITAL, in French Camp, California. HARVEY LASH, of Columbus, received a D.D.S. degree from O.S.U.3 he is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern'at UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL in Co- lumbus. ROBERT VVESLEY LEVERE. of Zanesville, has a B.S. degree from Ohio Universityg he will intern at the CITY HOSPITAL in Akron. JOHN OLIVER LINDOXVER, from Ashland, received an A.B. degree at Ashland College and attended O.S.U.g he is to serve his intern' ship at MIAMI VALLEY HOS- PITAL in Dayton. . Y W Q., MH f V ' - , x v , 4 'iff - A - A 4, ' U 53,62 7 ff f gf H I W if ' -I riwff' t' 1-2. V . ' X ' X M L-af m F., Thi rty- f our MICHAEL RAYMOND LINN, of Ripley, has an A.B. degree from Miami University, he is a member of AKK and is to intern at the CITY HOSPITAL of Akron. JOHN EIXIERSON LOUDEN- SLACER, from Toledo, received a B.S. degree from the University of Toledog he is n member of AKK and of Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern at the CITY IIOS- PITAL of Akron. IIOXVARD IVESLEY LOVVERY, from New Concord, received 21 ILA. degree from Muskingum Col- lege, he is a member of Nu Sigma Nu and Alpha Omega Alpha and is to intern at PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL. IIARRY CAMERON MACK, from Toledo, went to the University of Toledo and received an A.B. de- gree from the University of Michi- gan, he is ax Phi Chi, president of the Medical College Council, and will go to MT. CARMEL MERCY TOSPITAL in Detroit for intern- snp. ROBERT RICHARD MCCOR- MICK, from Lakewood, has 11 ILS. degree from WVcstern Reserve Uni- versity, he is an AK and next your is headed for NIT. CARMEL IIOS- PITAL in Columbus. MYRON ALLEN MEANS, from Columbus, has a B.S. from the University of Toledo, hc joined Alpha Kappa Kappa and will go to GRANT HOSPITAL next year for internship. CHARLES GORDON MENDEL- SON, of Springlield, came here by way of Ohio Wesleyan University where he received a B.A. tlegreeg he is a member of Phi Delta Epsilon, next year, he is to intern at the HOSPITAL OF THE UNIVER- SITY OF XVISCONSIN. EDXVIN GENE MEYER, From Kent, received a B.S. degree at Kent State Universityg he joined Alpha Kappa Kappa here and will go to the CITY HOSPITAL of Akron in July. I ' 1 f ,l,tA I' 1 'ff ,Q, 4 Fi!! Q x fx- 'ltgs Thirty-six ARMAND ALLEN MEYERSON, from Columbus, has a B.A. degree from O.S.U.g he is ax member of Phi Delta Epsilon and will intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL in Columbus. RONALD ALFRED MEZGER. from Columbus, came to O.S.U. with a B.A. degree from Witten- berg College, he is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, president of the Senior Class, and is to intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL in Columbus. LEONARD MONTELEONE, from Girard, has a B.A. degree from Youngstown College, and he at- tended O.S.U.g next year, he IS headed for ST. MARY'S HOS- PITAL in San Francisco, California. ROBERT DOUGLAS MYERS, from Bellville, received a B.A. clefee at O.S.U.g he has joined Phi C i and will intern at MCLAREN GEN- ERAL HOSPITAL in Flint, Michi- gan. ANTHONY JOSEPH NAKHLE, from Clevelan , attended John Cat- roll University and received a B.S. degree at Western Reserve Univer- sityg he is to intern at CLEVE- LAND CITY HOSPITAL. DONALD GENE NIKOLAUS, from Lexington, came here with zu B.A. degree from Ashland Col- legeg next year, he will o to MOUND PARK I-IOSPITIS.. in St. Petersburg, Florida. Don also has the honor of belonging to Alpha Omega Alpha. THOMAS ELMER OGDEN, from Columbus, has a B.A. degreejrom Ohio Wesleivan Universityg his in- ternship wil be served at GRANT HOSPITAL in Columbus. WALTER O'I'I'O ORLOW, came to Columbus by way of Daiton and then DePauw University w ere he received an A.B. degreeg he joined up with the AKs and next year goes back near home to MIAMI VALLEY HOSPITAL in Dayton. ,-W4 -mf, .4- 4- JL fn. X N ga 4 -A --' ivzzg-Q., .. f' X - A- 'gg-45jar, Cy,i ?f Y .AQ Vfi,-,r y fe-Q 'if 1. w ,V f 45, if . . -' -.' '25 X - tfffflt-xf .df f5':g'u QHf,,7 : ff, - 5 v H I 1' uv 4, Thirty-eight LEONARD NORMAN OZEROFF. from Columbus, has il B.A. de- gree fron-i O.S.I.I.g he is 21 member of Phi Delta Epsilon and will in- tern at the UNIVERSITY HOS- P'I'I'AL in Columbus. IRVVIN JEROME PAPISII. from Shaker Heights, came here with an ILS. degree from VVestern Re- serve llniversityg he joined Phi Delta Epsilon and next year will intern at MT. SINAI HOSPITAL in Cleveland. STANLEY 'IIIEODORE PINSKY, funn Bexley, attended O.S.U. where he reveived an B.A. clegreeg he is a member nf Phi Delta Epsilon and Alpha Omega Alpha, business manager of the Cadueeun, and is tu intern at PIIILADELPIIIA GEN- ERAL HOSPITAL. BORIS PUKAY, froni Yorkville, at- tended Vllestern Reserve Univer- sity and has a BS. from Ohio Universityg he is a member of ARK and is to intern at I-IURON ROAD IIOSPITAL in Cleveland. RICHARD RABKIN, from Cincin- nati. has an B.S. degree frum the University of Cincinnatig he is al member of Phi Delta Epsilun and is headed for DETROIT RECEIV- ING HOSPITAL next yenr. PAUL KENNETH RIDENOUR, from Arcanum, luis zi ILA. degree frnm Capital Universityg he is ai Phi Chi and will intern ut MERCY IIOSPITAI. in Toledo. JAMES CRANVFORIJ ROBlill'l'S. uf Akron, came here by way of Ohiu Wlesleyun University where he received zi B.A. degreeg he is an lnemher of Phi Chi and will serve his intership at the CITY IIOSIII- TAL of Akron. RICHARD GLENN ROI-IRER. from North Canton, has a B.S. dc- gree from Capital Universityg he will intern at MT. CARMEL IIOS- PITAL in Columbus. ads' 60 1 Cum., 57 3 'TN ,. Nz Q4 ld mx ,Xxx kkXyx1 ' fr' N .lfilum Thirty-:zine F orty ROBERT SEYMOUR ROSE, from Springfield, attended Columbia Uni- versity and has a B.A. degree from Temfle Universityg he is a member of Pii Delta Epsilon and is headed for the UNIVERSITY OF ILLI- NOIS - RESEARCH HOSPITAL in Chicago. STEWART IXICCLELLAND ROSE, from Columbus, attended O.S.U.g he is a member of Phi Chi :md will serve his internship at UNI- :ERSITY HOSPITAL in Colum- us. CHARLES WILLIAM ROSSEL, from Newark, started here at O.S.U. with a B.A. degreeg he joined Alpha Kappa Kappa and will intern at UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL in Co- lumbus. IRVING ROTI-ICHILD, from Co- lumbus, has B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Wis- consing he will intern at KINGS COUNTY HOSPITAL in Brooklyn. FREDERICK ROTI-IMAN, from Toledo, came to Columbus with an B.S. degree from thc University of Tolcdog he is a member of Phi Chi and will stay here at UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL next year. HENRY ATKINSON ROIVE, of Columbus, has a l5.S. degree from B'I.I.T., and he also attended O.S.U.g next year, he will intern at GRANT HOSPITAL in this city. PAUL VVILLL-XM RUKSHA, of Steubenville, attended the College of Steubenville and received a B.S. degree from Bethany College and a NLS. degree from O.S.U.g he will go to the YOUNGSTOYVN HOS- PITAL ASSOCIATION in July. VINCENT RUNCO, IR., .from MartiJ1's Ferry, attended Miami Um- versity before coming to O.S.U.g he is a Phi Chi and a member of Alpha Omega Alpha and next year goes to ST. LOUIS CITY HOSPITAL. was x ,H 1 , F orty-one F orzy-two JOHN HENRY SCIYIAEFIZR, from Columbus. went to University of Virginia and received zt B.Sc. de- gree from Capital University and a M.Sc. from O.S.U.3 he is a Phi Chi and will intern at BIT. CAR- MEL HOSPITAL in Columbus. ALLAN ZELLIC SCIIVVARTZ- BERC, of Shaker Heights, spent time at the University of Michigan and received a B.S. degree from Westerii Reserve Universityg he joined Phi Delta Epsilon and is to intern at IOHNS HOPKINS HOS- PITAL in Baltimore. HAROLD CARLTON SMITH, of Paulding, has a ll. S. degree from O.S.U.g next year, he will intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL. IOIIN OIIR SMITII, from Kenton, received a B.S. degree from Bald- win-VVaIlace College and attended O.S.U.g his internship will be served at NT. CARMEL HOS- PITAI.. CARL EDIVARD SPRAGG. from Adema, came to O.S.I.I. with a l3.S. degree from Nluskingum Col- Iegeg he leaves in june to intern ut SPRINGFIELD CITY HOS- PITAL. JAMES DEAN SPRINKLE, from Ashland,graduated from the College of VVooster with at B.A. degrecg he is a member of Alpha Kappa Kappa and Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern at PHILADEL- PHIA GENERAL HOSPITAL, RICHARD ALLEN STALXIM. of Cleveland Heights, received B.A. and B.S. degrees from WVestern Reserve Universityg he joined Phi Delta Epsilon and is to intern at CLEVELAND CITY HOSPITAL. RICHARD CHARLES STASTNY, from Avon Lake, has nn A.B. de- gree from Miami Univcrsityg he is an AK and will intern at the CITY HOSPITAL in Akron. X f as F orty- four YVILLIAIVI ROSS CARL STEW- ART, from Findlay, has a B.S. de- gree from lK'Ii:m1i Universityg he is a member of Phi Chi and Alpha Omega Alpha and is to intern at the UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL in Columbus. DON ANTHONY STOTZER, from Arehbold, went to the University of Michigan and received a B.Sc. de- gree from O.S.U.g he is a member of Phi Chi and next year goes back to the UNIVERSITY OF MICHI- GAN HOSPITAL. VVILSON JEFFERSON STOUGH, of Newark, did his work for a B.Sc. degree at O.S.U.g in July, he goes to ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lima for an internship. DORRENCE CONEY TALBUT, from VVhitehouse, attended the Um- versity of Toledog he joined the Phi Chi's and is to intern at GREEN- VVICH HOSPITAL in Greenwich, Connecticut. JOHN ROBERT TANNER, from London, attended Denison Univer- sity and O.S.U.5 he is a member of Phi Chi and Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern at MIAMI VAL- LEY HOSPITAL in Dayton. JESSE EDWIN TARR. of VVe1ls- ville, did his pre-med work at O.S.U.3 he is a member of AKK and is to intern at ST. LUKE'S HOSPITAL in Cleveland. VVILLIAM JAMES TEKNIPP, of Lakewood, went to St. Louis Uni- versity and has a B.Sc. degree from John Carroll Univcrsityg he is an AK and next year he is headed for CITY HOSPITAL in Akron. JOHN ROUSSEAU THORN- BURY, from Columbus, received an AB. degree from Nlizuni University and then attended O.S.U.g he is a Phi Chi and heads north to HUR- LEY HOSPITAL in Flint, Michi- gan, in July. 1 F I. ,, b and F orty-six NORMAN SIIELDON TRESSER, from Akron, has a B.S. degree from VVCSICIXI Reserve Universityg he is a member of Phi Della Epsilon and is to intern at the UNIVERSITY OP ILLINOIS-RESEARCH HOS- PITAL in Chicago. FRANK PAUL VARGO, from Cleveland, has a B.S. degree from Kent State Universityg his intern- ship days will be spent at the YOUNGSTOXVN IIOSPITAL AS- SOCIATION. COLUMBUS MARIO VENETTA of VVnrren, attended Vl'estern Re- serve University to get an ILS. cleureeg next year, he goes tn the YOUNGSTOVVN HOSPITAL AS- SOCIATION DONALD EUGENE VVAGNER, of Columbus, has u BSC. degree from O.S.U.g he is to intern next year at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL. VINCENT YVILLIARI VVAGNER, from Dover, has both B.A. and B.S. degrees from Bowling Green State Universitysi he is Il member of Phi Chi and is to intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPITAL in Co- lu mlms. ELMEH JACKSON VVARNER, from Greenville, did his pre-med work here at O.S.U.g he is a Phi Chi and will intern nt MIAMI VALLEY HOSPITAL in Dayton. .JARY LOUISE XVARNER, of Columbus, attended the Universi- ties of Arizona and Xvisconsin and received a B.Sc. degree from O.S.U.g she is a member of the vVOlJ1211l'S Medical Sorority and Alpha Omega Alpha and will intern with het husband at MIAMI VALLEY HOS- PITAL in Dayton. DAVID EUGENE VVAUGI-I. from Columbus, has a B.S. degref from the University of Daytot and will intern next year at ST. ELIZA- BETH HOSPITAL in Dayton. 6555. 1 , , 1 Q' , ,er ll. nf. . . fi- ff-fi 4 .2 F orty-eight WENDELL BRITT WI-IITACRE. from Chesterhill, did his pre-med work at O.S.U. where he received a B.A. degreeg he is to intern at PHILADELPHIA GENERAL HOS- PITAL. He also has the honor of belonging to Alpha Omega Alpha. FRANK TALBOTT WHITE, of Middleport, attended O.S.U.g he is a member of Phi Chi and goes to I-IURLEY HOSPITAL in Flint, Nlichigan, for internship. GEORGE ALEXANDER WILSON. from Columbus, has a B.A. degree from O.S.U.3 he is a member of AKK and will intern at ALLE- GHANY GENERAL HOSPITAL in Pittsburgh. VVALTER VVAYNE VVOLERY, from Portsmouth, attended Witten' berg College and has a B.S. degree from the University of Daytong he is an Nu Sig and headed for ST. RITA'S HOSPITAL in Lima next year. CARTER RANDOLPH VVRIGHT, from Cleveland, did his work for a I3.Sc. degree at VVestern Reserve Universityg he is to intern at LOS ANGELES COUNTY HOSPITAL next year. IOHN BERNS ZIEGLER, of Co- umbus, has both a B.A. and M.Sc. degree from O.S.U.g hc is a mem' ber of Alpha Kappa Kappa and is to intern at MT. CARMEL HOSPI- TAL in Columbus. LOIS RUTH ZIMMERNLAN, from TiHin, attended Heidelberg College and received a B.A. degree from Bowling Green State Universityg she is a member of the YVoman's Medical Sorority and plans to in- tern at the YOUNGSTOWN HOS- PITAL ASSOCIATION. F orty-nine Fifty u I x ,s ffl? N .- ..f 1 if ,X .is 'i l ffl DEAN 0F THE YEAR dr. charles austin dorm ffllllake me to see only the human being in him who suffers. -Maimonides, 1135 A.D. The physician stands in the community as a special authority, to whom one can go with trust and confidence. -Francis W. Peabody - 1923 i'Medicine is concerned with human welfare,-and orientation toward the social and behavioral, as well as the natural sciences is essential. -Dean Vernonw. Lippard - 1955 As the world becomes more and more industrialized, and automation increas- ingly encroaches upon the simpler artisan society of an earlier day, the art of healthy, happy and successful living becomes less and less readily attainable for the average individual. This is reflected in a steadily growing preponderance of socially and emotionally :maladjusted individuals with minor neuroses and major psychoses, -and, this during a time when organic diseases are yielding to scientific medical control as never before. From time immemorial the good physician, in any given period or epoch, has been recognized in his dual role of priest-philosopher and healer of the physical ailments of mankind. This is in the best Hippocratic tradition of our ancient and honorable profession, and is typified in the writings and practices of the great Hebrew, rabbi-physician, Maimonides, the 800th anniversary of whose life and 'times is being honored and remembered this year. The humanitarian philosophy of this intellectual giant of the Middle Ages is worthy of contemplation and emulation to- day, even as then. In his memorable Hprayerli he soliloquizes: ufieplenish my soul for the art, and for all creatures. Let not the thirst for gain and the search for glory in- lluence the exercise of my art ...... Sustain the strength of my heart so that it may ever be ready to serve the poor and the rich, the friend and the enemy, the good and the bad. Make me to see only the human being in him who sujers,-that my spirit may remain clear at the bedside of the sick, that I be not distracted by any foreign thought, to the end that I may have there present all which experience and science have taught. For grand and sublime are the scientific researches which have for their goal the preserving of the health and the life of all creatures. HCause the sick in my care to have confidence in me and in my art, that they may follow my counsel and my directions. Keep from their bed the charlatans, the army of relatives with a thousand devices, and the caretakers who know always everything,-for that is a dangerous breed, which, for vanity, cause all the best intentions of art and practice to be discarded, and lead often the creatures to death. Hlf the ignorant condemn me and mock me, cause the love of my art, like armour, to render me invulnerable, that I may .persevere in the right without regard to pres- tige, renown, or age of my enemies. 6Crant me, my Lord, the indulgence and the patience needed in the presence of stubborn and rude sick persons. Make me to be moderate in all things, but insatiable in my love of science. Keep from me the idea that I can do everything! Give me the strength, the will and the occasion to widen more and more my knowledge of things. I can find today things in my knowledge which yesterday I did not suspect! For the art is great and the spirit of man forges ever farther on! The tradition of Maimonides, as a great physician, still lives on! In our own day, we have prophetic medical statesmen who effectively re-emphasize the unique opportunity which 'physicians have, to provide the haven of relative security of mental and physical health, so eagerly sought by so many. Francis W. Peabody, late Professor of Medi- cine in the Harvard Medical School was one of 'these great spirits of the modern day, who, fully trained in the modern science of medicine, did not forget the im- portance of the art of understanding the patient's point of view. He was in deed and in fact the physician-beloved by 'his patients and his colleagues. ln a short treatise on The Care of the Patient , he re-states the world-old philosophy of our profession: 4'The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient. The clinical picture is not just a photograph of a man sick in bed, it is an impressionistic painting of the patient, sur- rounded by his home, his work, his relatives, his friends, his joys, sorrows, hopes, fears. The good doctor will balance the physiological data in his field against the condition of the patient as a person in his family and social background, he will try to increase the patientis security in an insecure world, to increase the patient's dignity as an individual and to make him feel it is important to his physician that this particular patient should return to his place in the world. As a result of these unique qualities and contributions, the physician stands in the community as a special zzuthority to zvhom. one can go with trust and conHden.ce. President Eisenhower, as recently as February 9, 1955, in a na-tion-wide broadcast directed particularly to phy- sicians, eptomized the spirit of personal relationship which characterizes our profession: 4'-the physician brings his healing ministry, not to the State or to the mass of people as such, but always to some man, woman or child-some individual human being worthy of his dedicated care. Cod speed you on your mission! To you, who are just merging your lives into that great, continuing stream of doctors, whose talents and sympathetic understanding have been and will be con- tributing to the love and respect in which our profession as a whole is held by society,-an enthusiastic and genuine welcome to our ranks! And through the coming years may you be blessed and rewarded with the full confidence and affection of your patients, than which there is no greater gift of Cod or man to man! CHARLES A. DOAN, MD. Dean Fifty-one -anatomy trionics from the front office- them junior Cleans ' DR. ROLLO C. BAKER, S' .1- Assistant Dean made palatable, his- kr' 1' DR. RICHARD L. MEILINC, Associate Dean -raconteur par excellalzlce, cfmost overwhelming circle medical acqztalhtances- an Of K . DR. JOHN A. PRIOR, Assistant Dean -calm and deliberation, active scholar, active teacher, active friend of the student body- alpha omega alpha DR. THONIAS OYNEIL RISING T0 THE OCCASION Frmit row: Dr. E. Ellison, Dr. Thomas O'Nei1 Cguest lecturerl, , Louise Vllarner, VV. Stewart, R. Mezger, V. Runro. Rrnv two: W. Korbin, D. Rigal, T. Pinsky, W. Filsinger, VV. VVhirac1'e, D. Niukolaus, I. Tanner. Row three: R. Keener, H. Lash, I. Sprinkle, H. Knoll. Row four: I. Strom, I. Loudenslager. These honored gentlemen, 10672 seniors, 352 juniors and l00'ZJ workers prove conclusively that the laboring brain is not without reward. Staff men quaver at their sight. They blend inspiration, analysis, and memory to suit the occasion. We honor the scholars of 1955! medical college council W, Front row: VV. Randolph, J. Allen, H. Mack CPresidentj, I. Devany, T. I-lcrwig. Row two: M. Merchey, R. Bushell, D. Pensiero, Dr. Edwards, and Dr. Donn. Row three: D. Ebert, S. Shensa, D. Ashbaugh, D. Nicolaus, and Dr. I. Prior. Their concern is our welfare, and tl1ey've taken over the Caducean's finances. In a few short years the legislative actions of this comfortable body of students have produced non-proctored examinations and a temperate Blue Ball. You can't win 'em all. F ifty-three Looks the same from up here 'Modern orrhonedics Pleasaqt clinic HJCIBDIICS Lucs in B-Hat , Cook until well done Resonance III11PHll'tfll thrnughuur Push, honey The Ph vsician' Bag Hamilton Hall Office S1317 Mrs. Margaret Colhurn, Mary Frame, Mrs. Dorothy Smith, Mary Ellen Hall, Miriam Young, Dr. Doan. The gals behind the guns. They've never been known to be unsympathetic, and it's estimated they pass out, write on. file away, or dispose of the processed contents of three virgin Canadian forests per year. Medical Students Wives Club fLefl to riglzzl Mrs. Edwin Lilly, Treasurerg Mrs. Louis Skimming III, Recording Secretary: Mrs. Kenneth Lovell, Corresponding Secretary: Mrs. Frederick Elder, Vice President: and Mrs. Walter Wolery, President. This group was founded in 1954 by Mrs. Stuart Fisher, Mrs. Whitney White, Mrs. John Essig, Mrs. Lee Cold and Mrs. Lawrence Ellick, with an aim to promote social and educational activities among the wives of medical stu- dents at OSU. The chief project for the year has been the development of the new students' lounge in Hamilton Hall. Fi fty- five IWILL rm wr AKETRRETCR ou-me X 'T G-g3.2ff5Qw'swQ0CH,.Q1fA V 9' W S N gan fr' 0 T4 E IQILL A X NOFL47' A ' x S 7 Sc xx VN 7 K 4 V Z 'rn' Q ,Y I f f - Q f . 5 X f -I. f- X ', ' Q I- 1 R' . ,. , ' 4 lr 7 f v-, f, TN ..,. ! z'cwLLfiQILAYA Rirmcrcg , X cj-QQ . . , -fff pigs fl N If fl K 6. DX W HHH Q, cf, 1 ff! 1 2 X O 5 X X MJ ff K -W f ,K M !if 'T gl-iff? ,,,ff ' ,E I if 1 ' I ' Q S X U K f , Y ' K T . X N ' A X I Y . QNX R X ..., - , ' - 'i i X i ,X ' if ' e N b I , R Q qs, X, ilf-1'-.79 :ir ff-ew X 'xx' . 'Vg fri. 1 x 1 fq gg F ifty-six A DAY IN THE LIFE OFA MEMCAL STUDENTS STOMACH -- CF 557 Qi? If W F! J! If If rf mf we N4 We oooo Momma LECETUREHIAR. ' ' Luncu ORKLGUIZ PRACTICAL ZNENPATIENTS ovsfznue AT cAfFrEmA comms warmup Bring him back in six months .md wc'li sec Thanks E or :he winshicld wiper, son. Dial Soap lust went bank- rum? XV hat about the capillaries in r 0 u n d the splcnic Ilexurc. bny, -N: .- wr. '1 ng' Xvlx lay's Penthouse The Bi g Mamou This is a typical spastic sto mach, 11ke yours, son. Vat do you m c.an 2 paro- lomc tissue? Fi fty-seven F ifzy-eight 9 ,A.. .r X ff xiii J fri -fe INS ales w ln nineteen-hundred thirteen, when war clouds hovered dark, There came a radiant blessing that split the clouds apart. One night there came a knocking at the door of the Schlumberger clan. Herr Stork had played his favorite trick, and there lay little Hans. While the rest of the world was dreary, while the rest of the world was stark, ln old Hamburg C. they drank and sang, and danced in all the parks. For the people there were happy over the birth of one so sweet, fAnd man you should have seen the ball that was thrown by the parakeetsj The Mr. and the Mrs. were pleased as punch, of course But little did they think back then he'd be dealing with a corpse. They naturally wished wondrous things for this little little babe so dear, And now another has come about, he's the ,55 MAN OF THE YEAR. But for the carelessness of a theretofore rather unim- portant prince riding through Sarajevo the polycystic kidneys of the Mirror Lake goldfish might yet be un- noticed. For in 1916, three years after his birth in Hamburg, Germany, young Hans and his parents were in the United States when World War Il became a world war in fact as well as name. Unable to return to Europe his father readily found employment as a mechanical engineer. A dignified gentleman with a handsome beard, Mr. Schlumberger was as capable at his work as his appearance indicated. In the early twenties as industry radiated westward Mr. Schlumberger moved with it and for ten years Milwaukee. Wisconsin was their home. Without fanfare or drumbeat our Man-of-the-Year slipped quietly through and graduated from the local school system. Could but Ol' Washington High have known to what great heights their budding ornithologist would reach. On one of the byroads of his travels while the family was moving to Atlantic City and he was inquiring of college entrance committees. the young high school grad- uate met an intern from a nearby hospital. This was the turning point. For this physician led our Man-of-the Year neither to the bedside of a patient. nor to the amphitheatre of the surgeon but-to the dim light of the autopsy room, where overcome by awe and reverence. he promptly passed out and was carried from the room. Needless to say a lesser man might well have been dis- couraged. But pressing forward with renewed vigor and determination our Dr. Hans obtained his B.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1933, and in the following fall was enrolled in the University of Pennsyl- vania Medical School. In 1937-39 he took a two year internship at Philadelphia General Hospital, and then accepted a post as instructor of pathology at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania Medical School. It was here that he met Dr. Baldwin Lucke who was well known for his original work on phagocytosis and cell permeability. Dr. Schlumberger was profoundly influenced by his personality and his work and has recently completed an atlas on kidney tumors which was begun by Dr. Lucke but left uncompleted by his death in 19541. In 1945 our M.O.T.Y. was put into uniform and for three years his work was chiefly routine in nature. But his fourth and last year in the service produced not only an important and interesting tour of duty in Germany but a very attractive and charming young thing who in July of 19-L6 took on the task of learning to spell Schlurn'berger,7 without hesitation. '1Lftsr f. 7 - V4?2.l-i,w':- . gAg,4,,.',-.. g il .i . i ,Lg - .i 'Q -. ,EAI .wu,:L..,.,.q,v!g., V , , , . im .ar.,,Q-3.5,-,ng-A.. .Y . A -9 'I'-ibf-xy' ' '--'1' -' - 5 ,. afar, - .va ' 1 1 1 -f He returned to Pennsylvania as an assistant professor but left soon after to assume the position of Pathologist at the Cleveland City Hospital and Assistant Professor of Pathology at Western Reserve University. A year later an opportunity to realize a combination of re- search and teaching presented itself at Ohio State and Dr. Schlumberger came here as an assistant professor, rapidly rising to his present status of full professor. ON HIS FAMILY: '6They're wonderful. Met mv wife while I was at the Armed Forces Institute fof Pathologyl in Baltimore. Sheis great with the kids. Let's see-thereis Ann 7, .Iane'6, and Charlie-I call him Gthe prince'+he's two. ON MEDICINE: Because of its broad base of zoology, biology, and pathology, medicine seemed to be the most promising general field for Dr. Schlumbergefs interests, zest, and capabilities. ON HIS HOBBY: Although nature study and the history of biology and medicine meet the actual criteria for hobbies his work in pathology has come more and more to occupy t'he time once given to avocations. His work has become his hobby. ON TEACHING AND RESEARCH: 6'Teaching's a great pleasure to me. Either research or teaching without the other i-s half a loaf. Prior to the 19th century research was regarded as the work of dilet- tantes. Now it's as it should be, research and teaching combinedf, 'cYou do research all the time. Not too long ago I was walking by Mirror Lake and noticed that those goldfish swimming around in there had great big tumors. I took a look at them and what do you suppose I found? Poly- cystic kidneys! HVVas walking by the Art Museum in Cleveland one day with my wife when I spotted these goldfish swim- ming around in a pool, and they had tumors, great big tumors. When I got home that night I found four of them in our bath tub. My wife had bribed the attendant. Boy, was I surprised. Turned out to be neurolemmomas t0o.', 'LYou don't need a lot of room and a lot of animals to do research. I once ran some experiments on cock- roaches. Had a series of two hundred consecutive cases. Kept :em all in a little boxf, The beer was Hat, but she wasn' t U.C.H.D. with- out sequelae If I had a nickel for every time I've done this-- OK. so I'm leaving Sixty -und cle Cher- mfms Called it dur French disease- C'mon, fellas, help me You got a D P g en- n r c-natal chmc :D I AM INTOXIOATED I I AM NOT A DIABETICI IF I AM FOUND UNCONSCIOUS OR BEHAVING ABNORMALLX MY CONDITION IS PROBABLY THE RESULT OF AN OVERDOSE OF ALCOHOL 'I AM A DRUNK-DO NOT PLACE SUGAR OR CANDY IN MY MOUTH ' DO NOT CALL A PHYSICIAN ' SEND ME TO JAIL-SEND ME DIRECTLY TO JAIL - DO Nor PASS c-so-no NOT con.l.EcT 5200 1 I I If 'f -' I QI 'L- 1 5 , ' I I F if , A I A I Z1 I X ,I f f 1 ' ' if N ...I T, f...A I A We , - f J , g 'Wh fx I - I , 'xy I ' 1--35 . , - I f if 2 Q :J 4 L 3--1-' T 3 ' , ml f ' 3-Li F '-'J-4 jfev Hoo- Bow Now HES GOT HER UHEIPE HE wAnr5 HER H! S 9' if tit, . xbnh. I i rt H SCRIBES 0F TIIE YEAR the juniors We were lost sheep and we had gone astray. Head nurses tolerated us, interns ignored us, residents chastised us, and staff men were horrified at us. This was the time of the long history-anybody discovered with less than nine negatives per system was probated until final exams. Time off for good behavior was to laugh. Wie kept the pen and ink manufacturers on two shifts per day. The daintiness with which we approached our first pelvics was a triumph of indecision. We were afraid to look the patient in the eye, and we were too embarrassed to look elsewhere. When we were on hematology we prayed for good veins tomorrow before retiring-and then had to call for the intern. To be able to start an IV on the first go-round, ah, that was a distinction. The Hrst scrub with the HZ and his department and our bowels turned to cold clayg we tied and the sutures became hawsersg we literally cut on the knot. They asked us everything. from the amount of protein in a quart of milk to the most intimate details of our sporadic love lives. lt was teaching by trauma, but learn we did-and fast. Wie were convinced Dante's Inferno had nothing on any nursing station at three in the afternoon. After the first few, autopsies became a time of surreptitious joke telling and gossip mongering. Isolation rounds with good Sam were the time of his life-he pitched and we caught it if we didnit remember the exact results of a lumbar puncture taken three weeks previously. A patient baldly asked one of us, uDo you really know what you're doing?', And we didn't, but why did she have to say it so loudly? It was all here for the taking, but who could drag it home? We had no frame of reference for our thinking and less organization. It was a big, booming, buzzing confusion and we clung to a rale, a diastolic murmur, or a llver edge for security and copied somebody elseis diagnosis. We knew it couldn't get any worse. but would it ever get better? Smctyltzlbo Firsl row: K. Tufts, W. Helwig, W. Reynolds, W. Korhin, J. Myers. Row Iwo: .l. Goldberg, J. DeMar1:o, M. Cohen, C. Bloedow, H. Manhart, J. Royer, J. Mason, H. Helman. Row three: W. Mc'Carty, J. Martin, C. Cochran, D. Miller, H. Kassel, M. Young, R. Stern, J. Grant, S. Rader. Row four: C. Gassoway, .l. Dayton, J. Katz, W. Eggleston, K. Solavolf, F. Lans- tlen. A. Koster, J. Evans, R. Shurmer, C. Loesvh. First row: J. Wilson, T. Piatt, .l. Hein, D Sobel, M. White, N. Csonka. Row two D. Dean, M. Bellin, G. Leighton, V 'l'i1'monia, W. While, G. Crawford, B Kraner, R. Greene, R. Kandel. Row three: J. Strom, G. Omlar, H. Dowell, C. Smith YV. Praetorins, D. W'arren, R. Shanfvk. .l Stephen. Row four: W. Sawyer. G. Bur- rier, K. Lovell, J. Goldrich, S. Stone, D Gilbert, R. Wynsen, J. Heitz. First row: W. Jones, R. Buvkns, C. Chrys- ler, E. Friedman, R. Gehring, A. Pultz, H. Frazer, D. Rigal. Row two: E. Stanley, F. Elder, H. Mahler, G. Patterson, W Sc-hamadan, C. Bruggemann, C. Congen- Row Three: E. Bratcher, J. Hays, D. Mas- sey. B. Payne, M. Kochheiser, R. 0'Brien C. Henderson, V. Schlicht. Row four: M Jacob, D. Miller, B. Mosier, R. Ma:-hida D. Page, H. Sengelman, C. Schoenfeld Row five: M. Jalfee, E. Zeller, P. Matlock L. Kritzer, D. Kellon, D. Silver. N, 5 B-47 Sixty-three a 1 fs 45? 2- .. : .FN .u fir ., N QW F -4. ..,,-Q3 ..,,3 -L new ru ,Jf.- - 1 .aw :L 15, :is Q., I ' ' ff 1-,-SH , .. .am-Vx: .1,.f:v A ' ' ,W - M hifi Ti. S-. J , 7124. -fr sc P31 iii' T, ..a. um 's-.. ..L, :wi-.,,,.-.ll .-.2 if- AJEZET ' at 4? , 'fi ,,.,, V, , Vs. -I I-,-,..:' V 124,11 -'Z-i'f,h7FV:-L M' ' , :exif .:--I, -fi.-M. .,-y . - , ..,gQ--.,.:,-f,. us' . K. S .X ,, - -1- 1-u-F--Y-pl. up- g. M...- .HH 2 J J 1 M. me 2:11 LL? :L v r -- w' L 15 YW W avg W 'E ' riff -f, K-1, . 1 , .-, -Q ,, I-q hr., - 'J , .-1-.Mak i-V , ff 7 .. nf1vue1:J,Cs ' -no 2:2 A V,-.1 :rf v Y 4' 'gg- 1,4A::,.-L1 .5..,. , - 65731 J rem -1 r sy' K 'fGfg?'35 1. Zkixtp-ij. N. A' , .:,.V.T,,gq3 ,. -ng, .,e':.efw: 3 I 1 X-1-.I El A A ' 1 H Q: .. Q.,- xQ xx Q RX N , 'X lf! X. Ill .---V -1 .11 Eiiiseiisn .. Q AL foam FACULTY iii- LITTLE MONSTERS These playful gentlemen committed Y0ung's Rule to memory at a very early age. They diagnosed bronchio- litis with rapture and dared us to find any text refer- ences about it. They were most concerned with Huid and electrolyte therapy and ran in retrospect one of the most progressive services we met. They impressed us that a child is not an adult writ small, but we found it hard to believe. Mothers? histories about their enfants terrible were a blend of superstition and neighbors' intuitions. Everybody vied for the T 81 A work-ups. URINE IS MY HEART ALONE They seldom see the patientis face so what differf:m-t- does it make if they have a beer or two before olllce hours in the afternoon? They can tell a blunted calyx fifty feet from an X-ray. Wheii they wear their rubber boots into the O. R. they really are going fishing. Long slender instruments, fashioned of rubber or metal. fas- cinate them, and they consider themselves successful if the patient slept a full eight hours. Swtty-six lvl f' ' lf El Mgflg . W Amt 'Q bf '5 We ORTHOPEDIC Front raw: C. Larrick, L. Yurko, .l. Elliott. Back ruw: H. Lacey, B. Wiltlaerger, W. Smith, YV. Kubiav, H. Worstell. ANESTHESIA Row one: W. Hamelberg, J. Matson, C. Zieg- ler, C. Trudeau, F. Flory. Row two: L. Clas- sen, .I. Bercovich, R. Weisinger, R. Wilson, I. Farugia. E. Ellis, P. Fomenko. RADIOLOGY Front row: Molnar, U. Henschke, H. Mean, J. Widrich, A. Jenkins. Row two: A Christoforidis, P. Meyer, F. Fiebel, D. Put- nam, R. Fiedman, A. Cohen, M. Saikewicz. Row three: M. Elson, I. Shapiro, B. Troungos, G. Callendine, E. Morris, A, Haralambopoulos C. Grillltli, s E lin L Iwi f I SKELETON CREW Charter members of the original Shake, Rattle, and Roll Club. Take away their X-rays and they become mere mortals. Their jargon is derived from many fields as is the essential knowledge they must have at their fingertips. Their tacit entrance requirement-s include the constitution and build of a football tackle, and an inher- ent love of the do-it-yourself instinct. Don't let the chrome plating on their instruments fool you, any car- penter could build a Taj Mahal or a two-seater privy with them. THE ALL-SEEING-EYE No one knows for use, but they are suspected of wear- ing leadlined athletic supporters. They have a pervasive store of information and like nothing so well as to be proved correct after a squabble in grand rounds. They can inject contrast media into each and every natural orifice and have invented new techniques when they got bored with that. Filling defects have nothing to do with dentistry to them, and by their implications they diagnose. S zxty-eight lgggpl , yum, 'EQ X L l l, filth ' . 93' TD W 433-- I l ,. AQVLV' --2 jex M I f c , x ! 15' 5 j Ill x if f-' X 6 as . f' 55 M . 'i PEDIATRICS Front row: W. Wheeler, T. Hiles, M. Graber, R. Cooper. Back row: E. Baxter, J. Riepenhoff, F. Vogt, T. Shaffer, R. McCIave, C. Kasmersky. PEDIATRIC RESIDENTS AND INTERNS Front row: E. Turpin, J. Vnzques. Row two: R. Shaw, D. Montgomery, R. Levine, S. Fleischer. Raw three: F. Barends, G. Brehm, W. Newton, W. Whittaker, R. Baxter. G-U Seated: William Taylor. Standing: I. Muhsin, J. Taylor, J. Williams, W. Jasper. I J fun ,ff 3 THE SOCKDOLACERS l,SIC3 The boards in this specialty inquire into their knowl- edge of flavism and of the prognostic significance of the domed HRH wave-you can see the dilliculty. We lloundered hopelessly for awhile and then started to concentrate on the lectures they gave us, as they in- tended we should. They are now writing NRXO Psycho- somatic overlayi' with increasing confidence. Some of the subspecialties of this general grouping include gastroenterology, diabetes, endocrinology, and cardiol- ogy. This was medicine as most of us dreamed it in adolescence, minus the glamor, of course. There is no royal road to diagnosis in this field. but a system of approach is all-important. PLATELET COUNTERS They were never optimists, but, paradoxically enouhg. they are among the most scientific and pragmatic at one and the same time. They go after bone marrows as if there were oil just beneath the surface. They make a unit length of vein serve more purposes than it was ever intended. From a few clinical signs and almost no symptoms come the most amazing polysyllabic diagnosis in the world. Seventy Fi I-1,0 ' ' 2 f ,Milt IQ 7m rl ',,, a5'i:'J- . .,,, Wig me iii,r i-il S' K all 'fax if , V , 4' if Q .1 g X ef ' sig' c Ml tx V 1 o 'D MEDICINE Huw one: B. Wl56IUill'l, W. Meyers. F. Lena- llan, .l. Milvhell. How Iwo: M. Kanter, F. Beman, .l. Conn, H. Hull. S. Saslaw. Row three: C. Shearer, C. Hummel, .l. Tnmashef- ski. C. lN'l0I'l'lf'E'. C. McKitrick, R. Wall. Row four: C. Sherlnurne, C. DeLor, D. Phelps, ll. Svlmvnw. .l. Sc-hieve. MEDICAL RESIDENTS Front Row: G. Bell, M. Fisll, P. DeMerit lChiefl, E. Neill. R. Van Horn. P. Metzger. Row two: R. Booth, T. Williams. R. Barker. C. Eng. R. Goldberg. J. Huston. HEMATOLOCY Stunrlilzgi .l. Egan, B. Bouronvle, H. Wilson, R. Booth. R. Wall, H. Pyle. Seated: Drs. Doun and Wiseman. 13 TI-IERE'S NO BUSINESS LIKE SHOW BUSINESS Theirs is the extroverted appeal of a sports car: super horsepower, clean lines of definition, and speed when you need it. Bridge -club gossip would be halted if they were to vanish from the earth. They are trained for nearly four years in what to do before and after the knife hits the skin, only lastly what to do when the skin is open. Fluid and electrolyte balance concern them more than this year's income tax. Only the most fool- hardy of those with varicose venis dare enter, and if youire an ectomorph your ulcer will perforate within the year. KEEP THE HOME FIRES BURNING Masters of the modified Scanzoni and the eponyms that go with every instrument they use, they quake with fright at the feel of a primip breech. No Inquisition could ever make them admit they were interested in serving more than half the population of the world. If they didnit like us there came a rash of medical induc- tions, and you know what that means. Their home lives are surely disorganized, but not so their diagnostic and therapeutic approach. Seventy-two tl tilt ta, at tr tt -AN K Qt? t 1 Q7 SURGERY K SURG. RESIDENTS Row one: R. Williams, E. Elli- son. R. Zollinger, H. Clatwortliy P. Hardyman, W. Hunt, K. Klas- seu, C. Meckstrotli, T. Roles. Row two! G. Trudeau, R. Rauch, W. Jasper, J. Lloyd, J. Muhsin, R. Watman, F. Flory, J. Matson, W. Hammellrurpf. Row three: .l. Bonta, L. Keitli, J. Thompson, J. Wolff, E. Dunsford, J. Rini, J. Terry, C. Ziegler. Row four: D. Turner, T. Leech, L. Clausen, P. Crawford, T. Walls, F. Ber- ridge, R. Wilson. Row ive: R. Weai'er, R. Wiessinge1', J. Far- oogia. Row six: P. Fomenko, R. Burk. s OBSTETRICS 81 GYNECOLOGY Row one: N. Livingston, W. Merryman, J. Bootselis, R. Boi- man, W. Copeland, R. Meiling. Row two: W. Scott, C. Pavey, J. Ullery, D. Cox, E. Zartman. Row three: R. Daley, J. Williams, F. Hapke, F. Hugenberger, H. Ezell. Seventy-three SKIN SHOW If it's wet keep it wetg if it's dry try most anything. Most of their referrals represent overtreatment. They donut have much of a chance to diagnose secondary Iues these days. When they give directions to the patient you can believe that they will include not only how much. but when and whereg the Sig. on their prescription blanks has been known to exceed the length of a rnaster's thesis. , I HEAR MUSIC These gentlemen brandish tuning forks at their victims as if they were preparing a Steinway for Ceiseking. Mastoiditis is a diminishing echo in their field. Wlhen doing indirect laryngoscopy grasp the patient's tongue timidly, jam the mirror past the vocal cords, and remon- strate mildly with him when he gags. The guillotine used in tonsillectomies rarely became: that. AN EYE FOR AN EYE Probably the only profession devoted to the conserva- tion of one sensory modality. One doesn't use sharpened sticks to rid the patient of cataracts any more. Their jargon is more overwhelming than any other field with the possible exception of hematology. There are few emergencies in this field, but when necessary they move with precision and dispatch. If the patient has a con- vergent strabismus after you've tested his near point. call for a resident. CET TI-IEE TO A NUNNERY Sexual stimulation is a more common cause of sneez- ing than cayenne pepper. Let 'em talk, they may transfer their neurodermatitis to you. The entire clinic is wire- tapped for future teaching material. After the patient has been prick tested here he looks as if someone had l, een shooting B-Bas at him at close range. Seventy-four fig? ll Jim? tl Q, f wh l N li t 'X tix .b I .. DY! 1' pl I A 2 J? QTL l uf, , 'w i it il X X 9 ll 9 Nllfllli It --231, , DERMATOLOGY Row two: J. McCreary, J. Shepard, A. Tron- stein. Row one: E. Heisel, L, Praver, W. Lovehury. ENT Row one: I. Jasevicius, H. Ruirk. D. Sauor, J Carsten. Row two: T. Smith, .l. Arthur, E Harris, .l. Arrington. Row three: W. Saunders C. Vlfaltf-r. OPHTHALMOLOGY Franz row: J. Andrews, D. Apolomio, S. Pot ter, H. Koenig, F. Taylor. Back row: .l Prince, .l. Thompson, M. Battles, T. Makley W. Havener, R. Magnuson, W. de la Motte T. Suie. ALLERGY Row two: .l. Mitchell, W. Mitchell, R. Mayors. l. Martin. Row one: V. Marchese, D. Harbin- son, I. Sivon. Vfith all that chicken around here we might get hit Free cautlxar- ides today Mfan of the Year in 21 hurry Thcy came from outer space Seventy-six 1 I -. w F, 0 .iq Q- T x if Kai' 1-fT ?f lp xl. ,. V 'ff I i cs- 'Ex K. Kylix at Then he bus his walkin cast chasin this blonde see-- Dmwi ng YViSC- mau routine Solo flight Helio. Ameri- ca, this is thc BBC , . Qw lf: LP TA-f ' vo ffltv ----- x Q V ,E 9 A V E5 Q W 1 y X ' f Win: rovves a .Z o e ench K :'g1',::pz:,C.'::':,:. A f 2 f ' smoke er rv or F N 7 dh, A . gg .ar 1 sf 'ff 5 j if 7f . . ' J I ol-8 are on .Hart Tha! flfs 1:1 V TJ Y v W W-Wolary if-1339i P'rYcA'fb'r'fy In ', ., N C 3 ' l 9 9 .J Y -1 I A 'J' ' x A Lg 9 if I-N 5 - which W flp' C U '7- .f 1, 41 i A L..a . H.. 1. fx, kj :-ff!! I -Hua new Alilkbi M232 a Zig L! N-HI'- ' 'Mwol'ry IMPPEISIZJR un you foo--- S' ty- Se 'QNX N cf! VY X fl . l l LQQTJ WVQIIIKE RS 0F THE YEAR the sophomores They piled it on neck deep from the very beginning. There were more different courses and labs than any normal schizophrenic should be asked to take. lt was still academic medicine, but it occasionally had the strong odor of re- ality, especially when the gross pathology specimens were displayed of an afternoon in spring. Our Betz cells were firing off constantly: we went around with 'perpetual headaches. In pharmacology we d ' l s wrote every conceivable vehicle known to man. including syrup of battery acid, just to justify our atten ance in c ats. They taught us the difference between a whiskey, a brandy. and a rum, and we raced to the nearest bar to make a more pragmatic test. Starlingis Law had no connection with Ornithology if 'that made any difference. There were so many reflexes concerning blood pressure homeostasis it amazed us that anybody could be out of vascular collapse for five minutes. ive diuresed ourselves without mercy merely to prove the integrity of our pituitaries and glomeruli. We took a last survey of bacteriology and agreed never to enter tropical medicine-who could even pronounce the names? They gave us more time to identify slides and specimens this year-it didnit do any good, there was twice as much to think about. Physical diagnosis offered the way out: we goosed each other in high glee looking for prostates and located the P.M.I. somewhere between the umbilicus and the clavicle. We bought ophthalmoscopes with enough gadgets to . . . . .7 satisfy Rube Goldberg and then forgot to twist the handle to turn on the light. So this was medicine, eh. One enterprising sophomore won five summer quarters off with a straight flush and received enough wealth from this accumulated fortune to assure all his unborn children a college education. venty-eight SOPHOMORES Front row: .l. Venable, R. Mac- Millan, C. Young, R. Visintine, C. Shuey, S. Shensa, V. Schiller, R. Ragucci, B. Ragucci. Row two: D. Reynolds. .l. Rech- steiner, G. McClung, J. Rhoda, N. Stone, S. Ticich, D. Nicoloff, W. Rogers. Row three: W. Shankland, .ll Prince, E. Wyn- sen. F. Treece, D. Pensiero, F. Mowry, R. Trump, M. Ogden. Row four: R. Malone, .l. Pixley, G. Silhiger, A. Mitchell, P. Press, E. Lilly, H. Pittman, W. Nichols, L. Skimming. Row Jive: T. Watkins, R. Soll, H. StoCkHsh, J. Patterson, l. Sandoz, M. Man- del. Row six: W. Saneholtz, R. Schwemley, D. Smith, D. Myers, R. Secrest, D. Spence. SOPHOMORES Fran! row: L. Ellick, B. All- dredge, L. Kachenmeister, J. Kuehn, R. Hess, C. Burkhart, H. Fishman. Row tw!!! L. Eul- lrerg, J. Funkhouser, .l. Black- wood, T. Goldfarh, .l. Hurt, C. Hay, D. Kurklander, M. Freese, M. Harshman. Row three: S. Chaney. .l. Brown, .l. Adams, N. Bellois, D. Ashhaugh, P. Bern- lnhr. R. Collier, W. Elderbrook, L. Goorey, M. Lenhart, M. Krause. Row four: B. Harirs, T. Fox, R. Bradrivk, D. Aiken, F. Kroetz, W. Dozer, R. Epps, R. Lamprecht. R. Emrick. Row five: .l. Leonard, W. Bond. M. Fred- erick, W. Graham, A. Fasola, R. Eymann, R. Babb. Seventy-1z1'n e WE'RE ALL BUGS Why any self-respecting organism preferred to grow in the hot and humid incubators we never did find out, but certainly we learned to expect greater reproductivity in the tropics. Either that or the walk across the Oval in the Spring quarter led to such conclusions. Riddles weren't a game but a way of life, and to some almost death. Most experiments didn't work out, but we learned how they were supposed to. The practicals here were a gentle relief, but the writtens were conceived by an arch field in a language we couldn't translate. ANATOMY ACTIVATED Teleology is a dirty wordg not why but how. The absolute refractory period is 0.2 second except in medical students where periods of four years are not unreason- able. National Boards i11 this subject could have been passed solely on the information a genius had mimeo- graphed on two sheets-by a genius. Some later lectures were marvels in orderly logic, understood by all but com- prehensible to one. Eight cups of coffee -at one sitting will give a urinary output of ll ml. per minute, a statistic of inestimable value found in no text but per- sonally determined. The normals we learned here were to be valuable in our understandings of the abnormal. INTERNATIONALE If one remained on this corner long enough a patois of every county would eventually confront him. We con- sidered this a likely possibility when on the first day we heard the warning. 'aff you flunk this course, you flunk the whole yearf' Fresh specimens were a delight if only to quiet the raucous who after a quarter or two were convinced they knew more than their current section man. This was a very thorough department: they took their examination questions from the lectures and the text. The flowing lines and erratic dimensions of the ceiling of M-100 inspired the department head's lectures almost daily. Ezghty NW l l .Q mg tl .lll M-lynn. ' '66 tlwlii MA ff till, Ill Q I- . I- . 'f -f wp -A f l, ' nlllugnnllull lf BACTERIOLOGY Sczzlml: R. Bois, J. Baldwin, C. Stahlv. E. Bohl, J. Birkeland, R. Marig, M. Dodd, C. Randles Stanrling: H. Weiser, G. Malaney, J Ridrilv, M. Rheins. T. Powers PHYSIOLOGY Row I: R. Stuvy. E. Ogden, C. Hitclic-ack, K. Brownell Rau' 2: V. DeFeo, Nl. Lessler, M Nishikawura, N. Bnrkle y. R. Crnlmhs. C. Angerer, Brazier, N. Coulter. F. Hartman PATHOLOGY Seutezl: J. MuMiIlen, H. Rinehart A. Horava, E. V0nHaam. C. Connors, J. Bloodworth, J. Lopez, G. Shinn- wura. W. Rive. C. Vaughn Standing: W. Newton. L. Crowley. B. Hurd, G. Ceelen, T. Benson. W. Sanllilowski, D. Huestis, S. Bnhis, A. Cardoso T.. 49 -P 25 inspi- Eighty-0 11,8 - ,-fi-'- -A Q4 By GHJH- you Ire rfgllf Stfalirfz -' X 1 if it fire cfrcfe af hhllu M f Eg! ,K Sr F! if ,Q W -I i-RYA-1.-' flii never mia! Hn meclamhs , f gf flue mzcluic, lfogaar- . . IW crpla in fl'-'rf rn 'v?'f' I 2 Tonrorroafs Lecfure H 2? J W nf fm W - 0000 ' 1 l , V If x ' Y' Q Anfg l ljhc grecn's too tnsr Yet. it down. ut JL 1111 down 1011- you ir's ICSUHLZ XVHII' cum.: cell 'e're not bcg- qrs, wc'rc ncvcs I f L , 2 v N . D011 t .point that tlung at me Sure I llunkcd, who didn't? More and more about less and less So I slipped her the curate, sec. and-- Eighty-three '--'ul I 32? il N 'F in v 'Q J Q l 177 197431 -225.14- TRUGLUDYTES 0F THE YEAR, the reshm ri We retired from our previously peaceful lives without benefit of cannon salute and the race was on. VVe learned definitions, swallowed jargon and regurgitated it until our families no longer understood us, and enlarged our vo- cabulary until by spring most of us had personally referred to Dorland for the meaning of usynousiologyfl We saw wives or girl friends outside of dreamsg we lived the nightmares. Some took notes and some bought them. There were those who took them in shorthand, those who made outlines of lectures beforehand, and those who started writing before the lectureris greeting. Nothing helped, there wasn't a touchstone for miles. When the first graded anatomy quizzes were returned, our egos took a collective beating-these guys meant to get us by the short ones and hold on! The time for worry began with breakfast and ended long after and despite prayers. We tried to comfort and solace our spastic brethren-Hif ever you wanted to see the blind leading the blind. this was it. Some metamorphosis had changed us into irrational beasties ready to gobble our more hapless classmates if the professor or section man was grading us. ive tried to memorize everything and therein lay our decline and fall. We got cocky occasionally and recited limericks whose meaning invariably bordered on the vulgar: There was a young man from Bombay. Who'd heard that lues had all gone away. But then he had tabes And saber-shinned babies, And thought he was Queen of the May. Uur casualties turned out to be self-inflicted mostly. Vlfe had the summer to lick the wounds and knew it was going to be too short a time for recuperation. Eiglrly-four FRESHMEN Row 1: L. Weisman, T. Wagen- lzrenner, K. Masouka, J. Shultz, J. Linscott, E. Vogel, D. Alden- derier, R. Thorn, M. Zangmeis- ter, J. Vasko, D. Wehling, W Reinhold. Row 2: E. Sherrer, W Stewart, D. Thaler, A. Stockum, W. Randolph, L. Leary, E. Ross, J. Oser, G. Mallo, J. McHugh T. Picard, R. Sharp. Row 3: V: Schultz, M. Phillips, R. Stanton J. Sauers, A. Holtzmuller, Schutt, C. Zepp, T. Wilson, Mehlman, E. Noble. Row 4: HUP mzgm SEE? C.:-S as 'U EFS 513: L-'E W :L Eg M. STM Egg E., -. :Urn 3: 0 :: W c E QU.: -:pf-2 cw? QF 'HPUSF1 . , . y . : . Snyder, F. Wright, J. Nofzinger, M. Kampfer, E. Melaragno, D Naftulin, R. Stuart, R. Rian, Redick. Row 6: F. Clegg, H mshinsky, T. Wright, R. Whit: mer, P. Montgomery, D. Mills, D. Nicodemus, F. Stroebel, R. Thomas, W. Sharp, R. McCoy. FRESHMEN Row I: H. Shaver, H. Mellette, L. Hyder, D. Burton, M. Ganz, M. Klema, R. Brashear, W. Hauser. Row 2: J. Terlesky, R. Klein, R. Holladay, J. Gibbs, R. Dillinger, H. Freidmau, R. Good- man, P. Kinkade, C. Boyle. Row 3: J. Brodish, J. Burman, V. Lenzo, .l. Albrecht, A. Klein, H. Hume, W. James, W. Licklider, R. Fisher, R. Helinski. Row 4: D. Hull, B. Barron, E. Kopstein, D. Cant, R. Bushell, E. Farn- ham, D. Kmetz, T. Huggins, J. George. Row 5: A. Hoodin, H. Grover, H. Abromowitz, J. Din- dot, R. Brush, G. Culberson, J. Gueuman, R. Katz, E. Johnson, R. Amicon. Row 6: R. Hartel, D. Gill, T. Herwig, J. Barth, E. Calangelo, D. Kenny, D. Holl- rnan, M. Kintner, E. Jurczyk. 9 - ir., , Q., E i girly- five X ffl? N' lj tr N fl nfl if at '-iss gig, Eglzi? , ,.l5 ? w ' ' Ill' Ill' i 'Il. ' im :iii FH! t f w If-r ill ,-X X N i N W vm CHEM l ...f iff 1 Six, ilxl X LAB I s G 3' :fi 1..- if ,:'- iffffiiifffiim GRAVES-CR AVES ET AL. Perfume manufacturers would give much for the secret of the ever clinging nature of cadaver odor. The hardiest among us appeared wan the first day-the weakest could dissect with the left hand while nonchalantly munching an ice-cream cone held in the right on the last day. They were truly determined to prove what we knew all along-we did not know our anatomy. Microscopic anatomy left us gasping-not for breath but for sanity. The question of the morphology of the white blood cell, to say nothing of its ancestry, is a death-defying leap into the deep unknown. I can visualize it, but I canit name itf, said in desperation will ever hold true. Fundamentals here learned ever alter our patient approach and eventu- ally make us doctors. Vllhat a surprise to find in the last week that not a single page in Cunningham could be approached with- out sorne degree of familiarity. FOREVER FOOD Strange indeed this curious mixture of alchemy where the science took root and the exact mathematics of undergraduate chemistry. Urine certainly represents more than urea in water and we still don't know what makes it smell so when heated. Blood, the more precious because of its personally painful procurement, offered as many com- plexities per ml, as 'there would be chemists at an A.C.S. meeting. We had at least one hundred forty-nine variations on the cycle of Krebs - at least, because the more spastic among us had several. Brother de- partments sharing faculty, staff, and labo- ratories offered the spice of aromatic waters along with real Rx blanks. Accord- ing to time spent lead poisoning is the major problem of medicine. Fluid and electrolyte variations then so abstruse now give us pause for regret. These men knew what they were doing, and what they would teach us would not be for naught. ANATOMY ww .l: R. Hayes, L. Edwards. R. 'n0ulf, D. Palmer, G. Graves, I. lglitis. Row 2: H. Aplinglon, C. ,orrigan, .l. Eglitis, W. Kampfer, V. Belt, M. Alpert, 0. Russell, W. fell. M. Hines. P. CHEM. S PHARMACOLOGY rant raw: A. Devor, J. Brown, C. llllllll. B. Marks. Back row: W. lI'Elj0l8l. E. Engelman, Stroufl. Eighty-seven, fi -1 ,,.,-f- - f..i.i ,l PfU'H0l.OGI V X ,L 3 K f 7-2 ,FS ZX V' 5 5 fm f jcrakxx ,Q 3 - 2, x Z3 I wit? . ,X f 'W 1 X 12 Q UW fi f 9 W 92 X Jw o 'ix f , I -CF R wig 1 ff , fp 56 1 WW 1 Y -QR ' .f A I X ' Hg , ?, VE Q ff S L '5 A ROMJGH TIME ON THE TEY74 - H711 Q IIELAXATIUN 0F THE YEAH 5 P L9,.5-'11 . 1' the fraternities Eighty t ' a. qu - . A , . A.. alpha kappa kappa CC: 4'Senior class spring fever and post-internship announcement let-down -two months, duration. HOPI: Until app. two months ago the senior class of Alpha Kappa Kappa was living CU and well, but on March 15, they received word of their internship appointments and since that date have not been anything like their usual heterogeneous selves. Lassitude, malaise, fatigue, nmorning after headaches and sighing respirations have marked their course. Because of the nice spring weather the rest of the boys have just felt lousy. PH: We survived the reign of Ernie Hotspur of Old Fort and 'have progressed into the dynasty of the large one. This past year marked the passing into almost complete oblivion of our dear, departed brother Brigg's brainchild. FH: better left unsaid. SH: The pt. as a group is pretty social. Vffe had many small gatherings and several larger uhlasti' type affairs. The dinner dance at the Union was a good one, but there was evidence of abstinence: the spring formal went over well and a noisy time was had by all. ROS: non-contributory. PE: This 50-odd year old organization is seen sitting comfortably on 10th Avenue in no acute or apparent chronic distress. Skin-some pinkness and some pale white to cream color. Head-unbowed. Eyes-clean. Ears- pealed. Nose--sometimes it smells. Mouth-needs washing-out occasionally. Neck-sure they do. Chest-empty of loot, but fairly full of spirits. Heart-RSR with murmurs esp. since the word that Maudie, our NMom , is recovering nicely and will he back to be our Hheartv again next year. The seniors send their best wishes to her, who helped us out so much in the years past. Thanks, Maudie. Abdomen-full of school and medicine right now. Sounds are clear and resonant. Genitalia-sure we have. Extremities-well developed but not too athletica-lly inclined. W'e lost almost everything but we did have fun. Maybe next year with a good physical culture program we'll come through. Neuro- logical-sometimes psychic. Impression: 1. Normal senior class. 2. Three other classes of men who are up ffl and coming along. Plan: 1. Spiritus frumenti, 30cc. qd. 2, Non illegitimus carborundum. 3. Up ad lib. 4. Bed rest prn. Ninety ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Row I: J. Rechsteiner, H. Mahler, G. Bruggeman, J. Leonard, E. Lilly, G. Leonard Row 2: J. Hayes, H. Pittman, G. Omlar, W. Eggles- ton, L. Like, N. Shuey, J. Bock Row I: F. Cox, J. Brown, W. Nichols, G. Mallo, E. Vogel Row 2: R. Cape, J. Roda, J. Allen, J. Gaeuman, .lurezyk Row 1: D. Barr, W. Bealim, J. Belt, E. Collins, B. Pukay, J. Sprinkle Row 2: M. Linn, J. Tarr, E. Dick, J. Ziegler, R. Chapman Raw 3: J. Devany, R. Stastny, C. Rossel, W. Orlow Raw 1: T. Picard, D. Kenny, L. Barlh, J. McHugh, Harpo. Row 2: D. Shanabrook, R. Taylor, Claude, Gripper. N inety-two . ..,. -1.,.. the saga 0 nu Sigma nu The past year has indeed been a memorable one for 'the high-spirited lads of NSN. After a minor altercation with the University concerning the drinking of Kool-Aide on the premises, a state of peaceful co-existence was estab- lished and time moved on. Summer quarter saw a skeleton force at the frat house, but we managed to get our Kix. The finishing touches were put on the basement bandstand in preparation for an active autumn quarter. The Kool-Aide Corporation declared a dividend on its common stock. Wlith the advent of the new 'Freshmen and the return of many grizzled veterans, NSN erupted into a blaze of un- rivaled social superiority. Hordes of downy-cheeked Freshmen, tanked-to-the-gills on Kool-Aide, literally beat on our hinges clamoring to become pledges. Others played coy, but were soon convinced with the aid of hlackjacks, trun- cheons, and brass-knuckles. NSN had emerged from social sterility and became a blazing star in the social firmament. Football weekends were heralded by gala dinner dances -'ach more lavish than the next and climaxed by the Lost Weekend Party featuring Stomp Cordon's Band with Hiawatha. The Kool-Aide corporation's stock increased 12 points by the following Monday. Winter quarter produced a new house manager every week, the iciest sidewalks on Neil Ave., and a flood of intern- ship brochures in the mail. Social activities maintained 'their white-hot pace, being climaxed by a gigantic stag-party for the entire medical school in some farmer's abandoned out-house in a wilderness north of town. Our bowling team, under the influence of narcotics, became runners-up in University competition, our bean-bag squad beat a fighting Girls' Industrial School term for the city championship, our jacks team won a thriller in the final minutes from a super-charged squad from St. Mary of the Springs, but our Chess team lost a heartbreaker to Columbus State School. The Kool-Aide Corporation had recalled all of its common stock. Spring Quarter brought an air of gloom to the fraternity-the damn Freshman had stolen all the lamps out of the living room. This quarter was to be the end of the line for a few of us. We were now to be unleashed on the un- suspecting public under the title of udoctorf' lt was with tear-in-eye and lump-in-throat that Nu Sig said farewell to her 4'Gallant Twelve , but such is the course of life . . , the old must ever give way to the young and strong . . . carry on, men . . . we,ve had our day in the sun, the rest is up to you ..... and as the real estate salesman told his son, l'Get lots while you're young, boylw Ed Note: NEN now controls 51W of the stock of the Kool-Aide Corporation. Ninety-four Seated: Charles Lahr, President, Slamling: Edwin Stanley, Steward: Tom Watkins, Social Chairman, Gene Abels, Secretary, Bob Visintine, Social Chairmang Howard Lowery, Treasurer iMike Galose, Vice Presi- dent. not picturedl Front row: Don Timmons, Robert Wynsen, Phil Mat- lock, Mike Klema, Bob Mounts, Row 2: Ed Stanley, John Dotter, Bill Dozer. ,lim Sauers, Nick Bellios, Bob Malone, Sam Chaney. Row 3: .lim Dindot, Dick Lamp- recht, Lloyd Redick, Allan Schutt, Bob Visintine, Roger Rian, Kayoshi Masuoka. Front row: Bob Shanck, Frank Crowe, Don Thaler, Tom Watkilis, Mike Vuksta. Row 2: Russell Eymann, Walt Wolery, George Loesch, Harold Dowell, Sid Stone, Dale Myers, Clarence Maxwell. Front row: Vic Lenzo, Bob Stanton, Darrell Cant, Bob Holladay. Row 2: Woody Randolph, Joe Oser, Bob Dillinger, Milton Lenhart, Maurice Converse, Guy Biagiotti, Linn Jones. Row 3: Bill Sawyer, Warren Axline, Bill Reinhold, Nick Csonka, Howard Lowery, Bob Essig, Bill Jones. i N inety- ji ' we PHI CHI OFFICERS: flflllltf Jackson, R. jfrump, liathe Qurl row A N611 I Thoinhury I kennedy Led along the paths of righteousness and scholarly endeavor by sincere and sonicrinies sol.,er seniors, tenaciously clinging to the tenets of Vesalius, Hippocrates, and lfacchus, and strengthened by the knowledge that Malthus must have been wrong, Phi Chi has become a symbol of medical achievement, relief of human suffering, and free beer. Deep in the heart of every Phi Chi lies a consuming desire to do good-- Ancl they do. Characterized by both the Eben J. Carey Award and the longest non- p.oGt lxar in the country, Phi Chi is a blend of seabreeze,' and glycyrrhiza. Ni rzezy-six lllodishly attired in Bermuda shorts and knee socks, the fashionable Phi Chis have brought a new note of glamour to the Health Center scene. Those knees . . those calves . . . those ankles . . . women swoon and little children throw stones. As happens to all altruistic institutions, attempts to discredit them are made. The U0leo Kingfs Procurement Plani' had its temporary at the Phi Chi house. One of the fellows, affectionately called Minot Mackn, was the Midwest contact. Banding together, the men of Phi Chi cleansed their escutcheon . . . SIN SHALL NOT CO UNHEWARDED! . . . Front rnw: T. Fuller, C. Zepp. J. Terleski, R. Bra- shear, R. Fisher. W. Stewart. Row 2: P. Ebert, T. XVilson, W. James. .l. Svhultz, C. Farnham. H. Hume. Row 3: R. Frymier. C. Royle. F. Stroehel, T. YVagenbrenner. R. Amir-on, .l. Kerth. .l. George, .l. Vasko. T. Huggins, l.. Leary Front row: YV. Rigslmy. S. Tir-icli, R. lNlanning, D. Boswell, .l. Mason, M. Ayers. Row 2: .l. Epps, M. Freese, F. llowry, R. Trump, B. Hess, F. Treeee. Row 3: D. Ashhaugh, R. Solt, .l. Sehwemly, R. Hurt. K. Welhorn, .l. Patterson. K. Coehran. Front row: B. Jackson, .l. Dayton, H. Helman, .l. Martin. D. McCarty. Row 2: .l. Tanner, W. Stewart, F. Rothman. .l. Graham, H. Mack, L. Ballard. Row 3: R. Distad. D. Stotzer, D. Kinsey, D. Tallmt, .l. 'l'hornbury, R. Heiny, R. Gelbhart. Front row: T. Neri, R. Cchring. Row 2: .l. Chosy, W2 Mosher. E. Zeller. V. Runvo. .Not picmrerl: R. Bushnell, C. Everet, B. Hauser, R. Hilinski, E. Kuehn, W. Sharp. R. Thomas, P. Bern- lohr, E. Dierksheide. W. Fouty, T. Hay, .l. Kennedy, .l. Kuehn, .l. Yynsky, H. O'Roark. D. Pensiero, .l. PiXlCY, .l. Shaw, .l. Yohst, .l. Nim-oloff, I. Sandoz, C. Chrysler, E. DeMarr-0. J. Grant. W. Helwig, J. Kathe, R. Keener, T. Klever, H. Manhart, D. Miller D. Mooney. C. Moritz. .l. Myers, S. Rader. W. Rey- nolds, .l. Russell, E. Sehlirht, R. Shurmer, K. Tufts, D- W3l'1'9n, H. Williams. .l. Wilson, P. Wollier, J. Allen, .l. Barnes. W. Cron, K. DeVoe, D. Dunbar B. Huss, D. Kihler, M. Korstanje, R. Myers, J. Roberts, S. Rose, .l. Schaefer, V. Vlfagner, E. Warner, F. White. s ii if ,wx 4, N inety-eight 4 ,gp- , A,- ff' al- 24 r. 9? ,JE 1 A .f ,r, A ,. -4' ,f :Q 1.7 N612 ' ' V . rs M J g I Nqr ... wr X V' N 22:5 ,-5 .. w-J N i nety-nine One Hundred phi delta epsilon The past year has seen the continued growth and progress of Phi Delta Epsilon. At the start of the school year, this fraternity, sixty-three members strong, embarked on an earnest program to improve its recently acquired home, social activities, and alumni relations. During fall quarter, a high fidelity set was installed in newly refurnished base- ment recreation room, already styled with flush ceiling lights and an asphalt tile floor. Words of wisdom and nugget sessions under the guise of CPC's were held by prominent alumni to acquaint the brothers with the various specialties. The speak- ers invariably stated the difliculties in entering their respective specialties saying, i'Never would have done it again. five don't believe them.l Nevertheless, much valuable practical information was obtained. The Homecoming Dance was a success, wel lattended by alumni. Publication of 2 newsletters had apparently helped to stimulate alumni interest. Wiiiter quarter witnessed :the annual Phi D. E. memorial lecturship. ln January, Cleveland's Dr. Claude Beck spoke to the entire medical school on the value of opera- tions for coronary artery disease. The new recreation room was dedicated by a rol- licking house party, soon followed by an old fashioned square dance. At the quar- teris end, some of the sophomores took off for Florida after the harrowng experience finals. Young man's fancy turned to his fraternity house with the coming of spring. Ping pong and occasional games replaced the grind and even freshmen loosened up. The fraternity's hard work acaremically was rewarded by being listed first in scholar- ship among medical fraternities. Two seniors, Ted Pinsky and Herman Knoll, and two whiz kid juniors, Jack Strom and Bill Korbin, were elected to A. O. A. Rim' 2: R. Goodman. BI. Harsh- nmn, ll. Barron. M. Ganz. Row I: A. Schwartzbcrg, V Schiller. E. Ross. R. Stern Run' 2: Fisher. N. Tresscr. N. Stone. VL Korbin. W. Cohen Row I: S. Grosshandler. L Appel, C. Knoll, R. Rabkin Huw 2: G. Burhalm, D. VVeisS, ll. Fishman. D. VVinters, B. Row I: D. Kurlander. S. Shensn, Yulish L. Kritzer, Il. Lashinskv K , . . ' '-7 ro Run' 2: T. Goldfarb. R. Fladeu, E. Friedman. A. lloodin. Row I: R. Rose, I. Papish, M Merchey Row 2: L. I-lirsch. D. Sobel, L Ozeroili Huw 1: P. Press. D. Klein, L. Ellick OFFICERS: Row 2: M. I-Inrshman. P. Press, . D. Kurlandcr Run' I: L. Hirsch. E. Friedman. M. Ganz One Hundred One uf.. iz- IHC! ' L. .l i Q, tip J .5 ji-mg is E 'fi it tsl. Q alpha epsilon iota THE DAUGHTERS OF AESCULAPIUS Banded together by faith, hope, and garter-belts, the 'cfemmesn of this medical school organized a sorority a few years ago for the express purpose of securing more and better ladies' rooms in Hamilton Hall and various other buildings. Dedicated in their work, so far they have been unsuccessfulg but the feeling is still high fthe supplies still lowj .... This year four unsuspecting pledges were entertained at a tea, picnic, and duly initiated into the Sisterhood .... The list of talented speakers enjoyed by the sorority this year included Dr. Ruth St. John flour faithful adviserl, Dr. Pauline Ronel, Dr. Helen P. Graves, and Dr. Frances K. Harding. Back row: M. Pattos, Dr. H. Graves, D. Burton, L. Heydu, L. Initiazes: Ann Holtzmueller, Lydia Heydu, Beverly Alldred e Kachenmeister. Dolores Burton. Front row: A. Holtzmueller, L. Zimmerman, M. Young, C. Bloedow. One Hundred Turo F . lin.-5,---1 rap- --,Y . Qnly two ar- nclcs on cin- hum since 1 8 3+ That scopalo- m i n e s u I 1: make s 'cm wild. A cool one Undermining our best ef- forts ,QQ Clip joint Cardiac graft taking well . . . D6C'S por- ridge cold . . . R e v e n g c of the creature z Q nursing services . 1 J ,x, , - , an f 4 if S IP' 1 ,N-, i '- My 'fix in X till A .-llliiiif ' Z wif MW as ,Q j.0Q,,,,!11 1. akin' geiyw One Hundred Six Seniors Fall quarter 1951, ninety-seven eager young ladies descended on USU to pursue their nursing careers. Most of the first quarter was spent with our noses buried in a map, but we soon smelled out the Heidelberg. We looked around at all the brainy looking people in our classes and wondered what on earth we were doing here. Our modesty suffered a big blow while we were adjusting to dormitory life, and lots of nice boys asked us to go to the submarine races. Oh, those wonderful races? Vlfe -couldn't possibly think of our freshman year without recalling the tyrant of physiology 506. How do you express your gratitude to a person who managed to give you an excellent background in such a basic science in spite of overpowering odds? The year dragged ou and we broiled grapefruit in nutrition, and got lost in the abyss of the cat's abdominal cavity in anatomy. We couldn't help wondering if all this really had anything to do with nursing. The beginning of our sophomore year and the great southward movement to Neil Hall and the big red castle began. Now at last we thought we were going to get down to nursing. But no, first we toured the sewers. Even though we toured the sewers, we came through in the latest fashion created especially for us in blue and white percale by Marvin-Neitzel. Then came our first 'contact with patients. Wle were so engrossed in the job we were to do. the patient got lost in the shuffle. We were really pre-clinicals, no bib to keep tucked in our aprons and no caps to get caught in the bed curtains. Months flew by and we fathomed the mysteries of in- serting a rectal tube and mastered the art of emptying a bed pan. The caps had been ready for weeks. At long last the great day came when we marched down the aisle in the big stone church, Miss Newton placed that little bit of linen on our heads, and we gave our oath of allegience to good old Flo. Now we were real-ly nurses. ive could do anything, we thought. How wrong can you be? And then came the day when our class, sixty strong, was split four ways and we were all sent into what they called specialties. I-lah! Some of us were thrown to the dogs at Children's Hospital. The dorm was nice. We got our fill of diabetes, heart disease, ulcers, and diet therapy, which we all dearly loved, while we were on medicine. The miracle of birth was revealed before our astonished eyes on OB, and the phone ringing in the middle of the night reminded us that surgery must go on no matter what the hour or how sleepy we were. We thought we were doing very well, but those in a position to judge thought we merely had C-itis-Cool, Calm, and Con- taminated. At the end of the quarter we finally drew what the word sterility meant. Not all of our time was spent in academic activity. Our class was struggling to raise enough money to banquet the seniors in the manner that they expected. Susie Douche was the hit of the evening. If you think you have heard some good prophecies you should have heard the one we wrote for those seniors. We even prophesied the in- vention of a self-placing urinal for unconscious male patients. The battle of the bug at Ohio Tuberculosis Hospital and the battle of the bag on public 'health were highlights of our senior year. Then came psychiatric nursing and we all looked at our roommates and wondered. Problems-Problems-Prob lems.-HThe loss ofa body part is a great traumatic experience. Vive also became temporary members of the Neil Ave. Plumbing and Fixture Association under the direction of the Great White Father. As surgical specialties progressed we climbed the proverbial ladder from the bladder to the brain. Brains- Brains-JBrains-So many and so few. Then there are those crazy mixed up ortho- pods that think we have to break our hacks to fix their bones. Thirty-one days of constant backachel And then came-Electives??? Wie worked all night, slept all day, and became accustomed to the graduatee's way. In conclusion-A forty hour week can't be heat, but I think 1711 retire and rest mv feet. M xg -i -E. g ,agopyl . ,I 'ii I Z 'FREE Q' Wil liff CHEST at 0 9 '- x-RAY y , mf A my lg I no 'V f 22510, , hy- 'T , 1 f I . f - .f Q , , f K . sg f. f Fx A.. -5 QW' i , 'J in 3 f--r ' 'fi , x I ..- T- -M Z- X 6 T X I - The 1501 Timers -f .17 K' j V . ' X V ff ,-L- I 'I 5. yi 1 ieU' p 4 T Q Q-1.143-Q 'S' li RQTTQH 1-H 9 Qvmlrera 2 nm 6 'iii -ll-.- V , ' TS One Hundred Seven ,,,.1 1 l T' A xx A IA l One PIIIIIIITCII Eight DTIARCII 1955 NANCY ANN CROCKER Ann Arbor, Michigan, BS.: Student Faculty, Suzie, Snao, NSNA, Torch Club, Vice Pres. Sr. Nsg. Class. Future Plans: University llospitnl at Ann Arbor, hliehigan. JACKIE LOUISE DILLON Chesapeake, Ohio, B.S.g Stephens College, Torch Club, Student Fac- ulty, Snno, Srme, NSNA. Future Plants: Columbus Receiving llos- pltz! . MARCIA BRADY ELEY Columbus, Ohiog ILS., Torch Club. Secretary, Student Faculty, Snao, Snac, NSNA, Treas. nf Soph. and jr. Nsg. Class. Future Plans: C0- lumbus Receiving Hospital. GLORIA GORDON li'l l'L BETTY ANN GLADMAN Christiunsburg, Ohiog B.S.g Capital U., Phi Mu, Torch Club, Treasurer Sigma Theta Tau. Future Plans: Umleeiclecl. JOAN CAROLYN GOTT Yvapalioneta, Ohio: 'l3.S.3 Ohio Wlesleyan U., Alpha Chi Omega, Student Faculty, Neil Hall Secre- tary, Vice Pres., Soph. Nsg. Class, Torch Club Pres., Snae, Sumo, NSNA, Red Cross. Nite Out . Future Plans: llealtll Center. ALINLI FLYNN I-IAINES Columbus, Ohio, B.S.g Snac, Sr. Class Treas., Student Faculty. Future Plans: Untleciclcd. TXVI LA jLl NE. JACKSON Toledo, Ohiog B.S., Snac, Student Delaware, Ohio: B.S.g Snac, Snaa Faculty. Future Plans: Public Future Plans: Delaware, 0l110- llealth Nsg. pbk Ulie Hundred Nine E w , , 1 ' ' , if 5 E l 'u Q I, l !.,,: malt l g One Hundred Ten YVONNE RAE LAUER BEUI.:kli YVALDEN MITCHELL Columbus, Ohio: B.S.: Pleiacles, Delaware, Ohio: B.S.: Snac. Snao. Lutheran Student Ass'n, Snac, Snao, NSNA. Future Plans: Health Center. Future Plans: Delaware, Ohio. JOYCE EHRLICH LESI-I DIARY A. SETTINIIO Portsmouth, Ohio: B.S.: Pi Beta Dennison, Ohio TLS.: Torch Club, Phi, Torch Club. Future Plans: Nursing in Akron, Ohio. MARTHA JOYCE LILLEY Urbana, Ohio: B.S.: Urbana Ir. College, Student Faculty Secretary, Snac, Snao, NSNA, Torch Club, Neil Hall Council, Senior Nsg . Class Pres. Future Plans: Health Center. JUNE BEST MALONE Youngstown, Ohio: BS.: Torch Club, Student Faculty. Future Plans: Undecided. Snac, VIC. Future Plans: Public Health Nsg. in Columbus. RIAUREEN BUNSHAFT SLONIM Cincinnati, Ohio: B.S.: Youngs- town College: Phi Sigma Sigma, Torch Club V.P.: Student Faculty, Fr. Class Council, Makio. Future Plans: Public Health Nsg. in Cin- cinnati. REBA JUNE STOCKUBI Canton, Ohio: BS.: Kent State U., 'Student Faculty, Snae, Snao, NSNA, Red Goss, Neil Hall Treas., Neil Hall Pres., WSGA Board, Pres. Soplr. and Ir. Nsg. Class, V.P. Council of Dorm., Pres. of Torch Club. Future Plans: Health Center. The CLSNKTS Uni-vers: F 'ff mis! sicjlif ' One Hundred Eleven. X . LOIS FLEMING TITLIS Columbus, Ohing B.S.g Sr. Class Secretary. Future Plans: Marriage and Family. JOYCE EVANS VV!-IITTAKER Grosse Point, Michigang B.S.g Snac, Snao, NSNA. Torch Club, Future Plans: Surgical Nursing at Health Center. One Hundred Twelve 3? f ug . rl- if E .Asif One Hundred Fourteen SEPTENIIIER 1955 XVANDA IIARIJING AIKEN Tillin, Ohio: l3.S.g Sigma Thcta 'l'au, Torch Club, xrlflll PWS. Suph. Nsg. Class, Pres. jr. Nsg. Class, Snac. Future Plans: OSU Health CL-ntcr. ' DONNA STINSON ALLISON Columbus, Ohiog B.S.g Student Fac- ulty, Snac, 'l'ot'cl1 Club. Future Plans: General Duty at llealth Center. MARILYN ANN .-XLLISON Callipulis, Oliiug B.S.g Student Fac- ulty Rep., Snac, YXVCA. l'uturu Plans: General Duty. SY LVIA C. ANDERSON Ashtabula, Ohiug 13.8.5 Golf Club. Student Faculty, Snac, Student Leader - Orientation VVe-ek, Torch Club, YYVCA. Future Plans: Publ liclllealth Nsg. in Los Angeles, Ca if. MARY CAROLYN ARNOLD X'Vcst Milton, Ohio: ILS.: Kappa Delta, Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, Student Faculty, Snac, Nite out , Caduccan stall. YXVCA. Future Plans: Psychiatric Nsg. MARILYN FLORENCE BEAN Ncwcomerstown. Ohio: B.S.g Dcni- son Ll., Chi Omega, Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, Student Faculty, Snac, Nursds liaskethall, Nite out , Senior Class Vice Pres. Future Plans: Pediatrics. BARBARA TllA'1'Clllill BEER Delaware, Ohio, ll.S.g Torch Clulx, Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: Public llltalth Nsg. in Nlanslield, Ohio. ELSIE MAE BODEY St. Paris, Ohio, 13.8.5 Symphonic Choir. Future Plans: OSLI Health Center. V 1 'ii-v '-7 1 ,,., , .I f w One H zuzdred F i fleen. igagg f wi 1, x, lik ls' is One Hundred Sixteen DONNA NIARIE BORNSHINE Columbus, Ohio: B.S.g Snac, Stu- dent Faculty, Nite Out 1952. Fixture Plans: O.R. Nsg. in Hawaii. ROMA YOUNG BOVVERS Toledo, Ohio, BS.: Torch Club, Snac, Student Faculty. Future Plans: Undecided. MARY IIIRTH BOWERS Kilbourue, Ohiog 13.8.3 Torch Club, Snac, Student Faculty, Freshman Class Council. Fixture Plans: Gen- eral Duty. MINNII2 LEIGII BRADLEY Mansfield, Ohio: B.S.g Torch Club, Suas, Student Faculty, YNVCA, VVAA, Makin Staff, Soph. Class Treasurer. Future Plans: Masters Degree Culumbus Teachers College. ELEANOR CECELIA CAV.-XNAUGI-I Cleveland, Oliing l3.S.g St. Iohn College, Cleveland, Zeta Tau Al- pha, Torch Club, Nite Out , 2, 5, -I Student Faculty, Caducean Staff, Newman Club, Snare. Future Plans: Public Health Nsg. in South America. NARCISSIA VIRGINIA COXVANS Columbus, Ohio: B.S.g Ifflowarcl U.. Delta Sigma Theta, Snac, Student Faculty. Future Plans: Umlecicled. PATRICIA ANNE DILLON S ringficld, Ohio: BS.: Pi Beta Pliii, Torch Club, University Chorus. Future Plans: Psychiatric Nsg. ur O.R. Nsg. HELEN JEAN EDXVARDS Loudon, Ohiog B. S.: Phi Mu, 'Uni- versity Chorus, Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: General Duty. i f' 4' One 'Hundred Seventeen J... Qi, F l F'-7 One Hundred Eighteen SHIRLEY RIDENOUR FENSTERMAKER Dayton, Ohio: B.S.g Torch Club. Snac, Student Faculty. Future Plans: General Duty. ELEANOR PULSE FERGUSON' Hillsboro, Ohio: B.S.g Sr. Class Sec., Student Faculty, Torch Club. Sigma Theta Tau, YVVCA, Univere sity Chorus, Snac. Future Plans: Puhlic Health Nsg. LMVANDA XVELCH GERZINA Columbus, Ohio, B.S.g Snac, Torch Club, Student Faculty. Future Plans: Undecided. JANICE RUTH GROVE Newark, Olxiog B.S.3 Stephens Col- lege, Kappa Kappa Garnrna, Cadu- cean Staff, Careers Day, Nite Out 1954, Student Faculty. Future Plans: Pediatric or O.R. Nursing. SHIRLEY ANN IIENDERSOX Irondale, Ohio: B.S.g Student Fac- ulty. Torch Club. YXYCA, Snac. Future Plans: Health Center. AVIS RUTH HILDEBRAND Edison. Ohio, BS.: Torch Club. Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: Surgical Nursing. PATRICIA LOU HISRICI-I Stone Creek, Ohio, B.S.5 Suac, Student Faculty. Future Plans: General Duty in Ilawaii. DIARY ANN HOGE New Knoxville, Ohio, B.S.g Snac, Student Faculty, University Chorus. Future Plans: Surgical Nsg. 111 St. Blarys, Ohio. time 3 One Hundred Nineteen 1 l W i,, Q... 5. One Hundred Twenty , ft: ESTHER MARIE IANES NATALIE RUTH KRESS Columbus, Ohio, B.S., Snac, Stu- lllesterville, Ohio: B.S.: Snac, Stu- dent Faculty, Torch Club. Future Plans: Health Center. MARIE IONES Columbus, Ohio: B.S.g Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: Gen. Duty or Public Health Nsg. in Columbus. MARY ALICE JONES Chillicothe, Ohio, B.S.gDelta Sigma Theta, Torch Club, Snac, Stu ent dent Faculty. Future Plans: Alecli- cal Nursing. NANCY MADELINE LAU Fremont, Ohio: B.S.gSnac, Student Faculty, Strollers. Future Plans: Psychiatric Nsg. at Columbus Rel ceiving Hospital. BONNIE JEAN LEE Lima, Ohio, B.S.: Torch Club, Pleiades, Student Faculty, Suac, Faculty. Future Plans: OSU Health Vlfesley Foundation. Future Plans: Center. PATRICIA I. KNIGHT Cortland, Ohio: B.S.5 Links, Neil Hall Commission, Student Faculty, 4-H Club, Snac, Torch Club. Future Plans: OB or Public Health Nursing. Health Center. JOAN G. LEXVIS Youngstown, Ohio, 13.5.5 Gamma Phi Beta, Torch Club, Sr. Class Treas., Student Faculty, Snac, Nite Out , Nurses Basketball, Caduccan Staff, YVVCA. Future Plans: Psychiatric Nsg. at Co- lumbus Receiving Hospital. E ,M .f-, TF ' 5f'2'1r' ll-'flffg - div.:- .,. ,. , 'Yi f -fri ux X 3.5 2 A f , . K is 1 rx... WS. Ov- v - X-. x Au ,fo X x .K t x N . , . 5. di' ..--....,, it Q, -, vw., , ,.,4f4,, -. '4 ,,i 'Yf'T i -' 1 , 1 U. , 'a 2 . J -f N. 'J' ' '-I I W One Hundred Tweruiy-two BETSY ANN McCi-XRTNEY Piqua, Olxiog B.S.g Alpha Gamma Delta. Snac, Student Faculty. Fu- ture Plans: Undecided. MARY CAROL lXIcKENNA Springfield, Ohio: B.S.g 'Torch Club. Student Faculty, University Chorus, Silhouettes. Future Plans: TB Nsg. MARCIA LORRAINE. MOSIIER Glenn Falls, N.Y.g B.S.g Chi Omega, Snac, Student Faculty, University Chorus, Festival Chorus, Torch Club, Neil Hall Commission and Council. Future Plans: Public Health or Medical Nursing. MARLENE E. BIUSHOCK Xvooster, Olmiog B.S.g Torch Club, Nite Out 2, 3, 4, Caducean Staff, Newman Club, Snac. Future Plans: Public Health Nsg. in South America. ANNE MARIE PARSONS Dayton, Ohiog l3.S.g Dclta Sigma Theta, Student Faculty, Snac. YXVC.-X. Future Plans: General Duty or VA. Nsg. in Dayton. Ohio. EDITH LEE PRYOR Columbus, Ohiog B.S.g Delta Sigma. Theta. Future Plans: Public Health Nsg. in Columbus. CAROLE MAE RINGLEY Massillon, Ohio, BS.: Delta Zeta, Torch Club, OSPA, Student Fac- ulty, Snac, Future Plans: Nsg. in Granville, Ohio. MARGARET M. ROBERTS Indianapolis, Intl.g B.S.g lX'l.ia.mi U., Delta Ganmm Nite Out 2, 3, 4, Torch Club, Caduccan Staff. Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: Undecided. v 1. . ...,,., .b, ' 1 f lf' One Hundred Twenty-three 5 One Hundred Twenty-four MARILYN JEAN ROLFES Springfield, Ohio, B.S.g Alpha Xi Delta, Torch Club, Student Faculty, Treasurer University Chorus VVSGA. Future Plans: Springfield, Ohio. BERYL GALLAGHER SCOTT Columbus, Ohiog B.S.g Alpha Delta Pi, Torch Club, Fr. Class Council, Vocational Information Council, Block O, Sigma Theta Tau. Futurc Plans: Join Husband. ETHELRINE SHAXV Lincoln Heights, Ohiog B.S.g Torch Club, Student Faculty, Snac. Future Plans: Public Health Nurs- ing in Cincinnati. PATRICIA CLAIRE SI-IAVV Columbus, Ohio, B.S.g Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau, Fr. Class V.P.g Soph. Class Pres., Student Faculty Trcus., Senior Year Student Faculty Pres., XVSGA Board, H.C.J. Ass'n Area Editor, Dorm Student Asst., Orientation Week Student Leader '53, Alternate '54, Delegate to Snao Convention '53g NSNA Cou- vention '54. Future Plans: Health Center. NIARY GILETCHEN STREHLER Johnstown. Pa.g B.S.g Torch Club, YYVCA. Future Plans: Gcncrnl Duty in Johnstown, Pa. ENID ARMINE. STRINGFIELD YVooster, Ohiog B.S.g Strollers, Torch Club, Nite Out '53, Snac. Future Plans: General Duty. JULIA DILGREGOR THORNBURY Caldwell, Ohiog B.S.3 Miami U., Delta Delta Delta, Senior Class Pres., Student Faculty Council, Torch Club, Sigma Theta Tau. Future Plains: Public Health Nsg. PHYLLIS ANN VIRDEN LaRue, Ohiog B.S.g Cnduccan Staff, Student Faculty, Block O, Univer- sity Chorus, Union Activities, Snac, YNVCA. Future Plans: Pediatric Nursing. .. , 5 frllivtz' x. -Y., iff.: -5 . ff? E N r One Hundred Twenty-five Q gi . . I INIARY L. VVALTON Dayton, Ohiog B.S.g Torch Club. Snuc, Student Faculty, F.C.C. Future Plans: Psychiatric or Puli- lic Health Nursing. JEAN ELLEN VVARNER Columbus, Ohio B.S.g Alpha Lambda Dcltu, Cuduccan staff. Chimes, Nlirrors, Mortar Board, Nite Out , Orientation VVcck, Religion in Life VVcek, Senior Senator, Student Council on Re- ligious Affairs, SFGS. Torch Club, VVcslcy Foundation, NVSGA Board, XVOrld University Service, United Appeal Drive - Chairman. Futurc Plans: Undecided. CAROLE. MAE ZAAS Cleveland Ilcights, Ohiog B.S.g Torch Club, Tau Beta Sigma. Av:- tivitics: Band. Future Plans: Pedi- atrics nr General Nursing Duty. One Hundred T wenty-six MERGENCY om: NO PARKIN G' PLEASE NURSING DEAN 0F TIIE YEAR mildred e. newton nursing office staff hented: J. Cl lx M. Argnst Stmulfng: M. Une Hundred Twenty-eight ar ', Miller, J. Izdnnston GREETINGS TO OUR GRADUATES- One of our outstanding public health nurses, Miss Mary E. Chayer, has commented that when a student leaves her school still curious, still 'thrilled with new adventuring, the chances are good for the future of nursing in her handsfi Sometimes we catch a reflection of this same attitude when you students come into the ollice for your pins on your last day. wearing your 'gwhitesv for the first time. Almost apologetically some of you say, NI never realized before how little l know. If this realization encourages you to keep a questioning attitude, you are indeed fortunate. Sometimes your instructors may have seemed impa- tient because it took so long for subject matter, class- work, and clinical experiences to acquire significance and meaning. In nursing we have an ideal teaching situation where theory and practice proceed concurrently and teaching patient-centered. Even then it may have been near the end of your four years before you could view all of your courses with full appreciation and understanding. Perhaps your public health nursing field experience helped you most in focusing all your knowl- edge and skills on the needs of the patient and his family. There, as in all other clinical situations, when you needed information to help your patient, you be- come aware of its importance. Such knowledge as that which enabled you to participate in the prevention of tuberculosis or to calculate diets, to use the correct teaching method or the appropriate social agency, and to skillfully care for a patient in insulin reaction or in premature labor, came to have high value in specific situations. Following graduation we trust that you will continue the habit of raising questions and will have the ability to find their answers. No matter whether you stay in one of our Health Center Hospitals or go to a small community institution, a large Veteran's Facility, or a rural health department, opportunities for learning will present themselves daily. We hope that some of you will pursue advanced study on the Masteris level, pre- paring for specialization in the clinical areas and in teaching. The greatest shortage in nursing today is in the group of those prepared for leadership position-s in teaching, supervision, and administration. We believe that those of you graduating from this School have the basic knowledge and skills needed to enter beginning positions, under supervision, in any field of nursing. From our observation we also believe that you have the -personal attributes which will help you to establish good relationships with patients, doc- tors, and other co-workers. We hope that you will invest yourselves deeply in your profession, for such an invest- ment pays rich dividends. Our congratulations to you as you go-we will always be interested in you and your success. Cordially yours, MILDRED E. NEWTON, Director, School of Nursing The Ohio State University One Hundred Twenty-nine nursing faculty Seated: N. Lytle, G. Price, H. Wallace, A. Wittmeyer, F. Mclfllhoe, W. Chambers, M. Newton lDir.l, F. Pc-nse, F Stewart, R. Urbana:-, E. Moore, B. Redding. Standing: .l. McArdle, A. Buckeridgc, B. Hudson, J. Coltcrly, P. Nicol, l. Nickerson, .l. lNlzu'Vivar. D. Schumann E. Leazenlmee. M. Plummer. .l. Artsingstall, W. Mr-Down-ll, S. Jones. D. Culver. M. Pensiero. Y r R Means Award for excellence in surgery - is The newly added graduate roster presented to Pat Shaw One Hundred Thirty F 1 fi - f H I Q F Q... I ' 'QI x 3- . - A W ik J 4 ' 'vm' ?Z:fW?,Q' J I J b 'x XQ I Z 9 i , f , ya' A QQ fb .iiffiii !,,-,, , ,, 5 Q X7 fin-.Q fr I D j HJ xi 7 ? gGQ19 Z'M it W 9'a1fUf59! Ag- V 1 HJ fl 'J 4 9 f . ff W j W1 Xlgirfgwf ff I UQ , , f A 1 in K i it D-Pol-... FN One Hundred Thirty-0 junior nurses ln the fall of 1952, one hundred and fifty girls descended upon the Ohio State University Campus with high 'hopes of soon being able to wear the blue and white uniform of the student nurse. Our faces beamed as we walked by the big new 'hospital and we looked with envy at each passing girl in white. But our first year, we were not in the hospital-instead we spent our time in such campus classes as chemistry, anatomy, English, etc. All this to prepare for the great day when we, too, could don the crisp, new uniform. ln organizing this year we elected Pat Moorman as our president, and to her fell the job of writing a constitution so that we, as a class, might have some- thing to work from. Vile studied very hard that first year and before we knew it, it was Fall Quarter, 1953, and time for us finally to begin working in the hospital. Well, maybe we thought we were something special the year before, but look at us now. Ninety-five student nurses polished white shoes, bought new, fresh white hose, carefully pressed uniforms, and made sure our caps were spotless and starchy. Wie were floating in the clouds! Yes, we were sophomores now and we elected Kay Wfallace as president to guide us through the year. Actually it didn't take long to get used to getting up at six o'clock in the morning, and working one day of the weekend wasnit too bad. Soon it was time to begin' rotations and then the rumors started: '4Did you know that we have to work both Saturday and Sunday at Kiddies'?,, 'They say welll be team captain every day! 'il heard we have to work mostly splits in the TB hospital! Yes, this was all discussed 'around the dinner table weeks before rotations started. As we moved into our junior year, we started our work in various fields of nursing. This year, Fran Rings was elected president. Our goal thi-s year was earning money for a future banquet and tea. To do this, we sold candy 'and held a rummage sale. Finally in March, 1955, we took another step forward-yes, eighty-two of us were handed. At last we were seniors! and by now we knew just what this nursing was all about. We elected Jody Craner as our president this year, and she has the problem of spending our hard earned money in planning a banquet for the graduating seniors and giving a banding tea to the students behind us. This takes you right up to the present in the Allison Class, and you can see that although we have been discour- aged many times and felt like quitting, we've really had a wonderful experience and many good times. But best of all, we know that our best year is just ahead of us. MARGIE DEARTH Acting Seciy One Hundred Thirty-two MARCH 1956 Standing: F. Todd, M. Lichtensteiger, E. Thomas, J. Wright, H. Crawford. DECEMBER 1956 Scaled: row 1: A. Ottney, M. Purmiter, K. Von Haam. row 2: ' D. Hotchkin, B. Bauer. row 3: R. Wurclell, C. Wert, A. Mueller, S. Simpson. JUNE CLASS 1956 Front row: .l. Petit, .l. Cramer, F. Rings, B. Schwab, M. MacDonald. Back row: C. Charles, C. Poe, N. Reiclmrd, G. Guntllcn, P. Cannavan, C. Dunahugh, N. Beagle. ,K if One Hundred Thirty-three S Muni 1 i um DQ, URW' WN HW AU. SPCCQMENY INTCRIC HCUNIQUE NO VISITOR' L'DN EI 5 TH UU5 I FU me Mi' lu W-POAB EOMvmsr.,.q 9' N lm. LOOK LJNAT umm mo TWO MCI on vow umm, g,,5' I Mb' ,yor 'YWIFI' IM? f U ,, Aa-V-if 5 F?7f ' T' -thus Myelo- cytc Ahecomes Myclocite B, and . . . Falllwi uter- EDU112 icvcx' Nobudx leaves this mmn 'ull get ll buck YVQ l deliver auytlung. Dr, Hamwi says he can bring 'cm down. Pkrc cnc L o us students VV h c n c v c r skies look may ffl THC . . . Extcrnship: poor pay, good experxcncc sophomore nurses . N A csix RX 'L x l. f X -:wg . XA - '..,:g,4:-52:1 87 , A f . , Z L 'I X it as W I ffff rr . iq fi MM. y .J 'x J, A X x l I ' 'tink Although we are still only first year clinical experi- ence students a resume of our past year may bring many laughs to us and also many memories for the oldest students. Until one sits down and thinks about it one doesn't realize some of the memorable incidents that have happened to us. How excited we were our first morning working on the divisions and oh, bow 'ggreenln Vlie had spent a restless night in anticipation and at six oiclock sharp we were up and scurrying into our c'beautiful new uniforms. Many of us were assigned to 6E with men, tubes, bottlesg and how embarrassed we were the first time we placed a bedpan and a urinal. At first we knew nothing except how to make beds and give baths, but as the quarter progressed we soon learned new pro- cedures and felt somewhat more stable in our being. There were many times when we became dismayed, but with our instructor's help we managed to pull through on top. Upon our return from Christmas vacation, the last we would have for awhile, we had learned to be able to dress in a shorter length of time and thus allow our- selves those extra few minutes under the covers in the early A. M. This quarter was highlighted by a lovely service at White Cross Hospital where we received white Bibles from the Gideon Society. Also during this quar- One Hundred Thirty-six A . ter we suffered many perplexing problems of studying, working, and adjusting our time to a suitable means. Somehow we made it and then began worrying about new procedures and learning to apply them on the floor with our patients. Among the biggest procedures that quarter was learning how to administer medications, and trying desperately to learn the math so we could successfully pass meds. Vife will never forget the experience of giv- ing our first medications. especially the first IM. The needle would shake for was it usj until we'd wonder if we could even hit the patient, let alone the right spot. By and by, this procedure, like others, became routine and now we can almost recognize a patient just as well by his back side as by his face. This quarter we have come a long way and finally are beginning to feel like a real part of the nursing team and the School of Nursing as a whole. Vile have started working on Student Nurse programs such as Career's Day, Student Faculty, etc. Also, we are able to do most procedures on the divisions without much supervision. VVe have adjusted ourselves to meet the greater responsi- bilities we now must accept. Although we know a little more we never cease to encounter many little incidents of interest that seem drastic at the time and humorous later. For example, there was one student working evening duty who bumped into a door as she was carry- L K vwiy 'Il . X f 1' - X .'. 'Xie-,s I A YN . ' . I m f K g il . ' . fa .ml-r I- V A - T l A N' MMVI i , I A ell M f --.. 1- J Qf a . 1 if R ll 0 55.- kl GPN I ' X 4 l , I ij? l ,I . N - 1 , X 1 1 V lf . X A W -N s i I , If -mel 1' 'I300-L ' ' 'l ing a tray of medications containing quite a few nar- coticsg she spent the evening making out i'Unusual Incident reports! Then there was a student who accidentally threw b.rn. filled ehnx down the laundry Chute! Many times we failed to read an order correctly such as the time a student took TPR's q 4 minutes instead of q 41 hours. Class time, too. can be embar- rassing-such as the time when the movie on HSelf Examination of the Breastn was shown by a fellow who was known by many of the girls in the class. Too much! There are times when we would rather not see our clin- ical instructors on the division. In order not to encounter her, one student ran down ten flights of steps to miss confronting her. All in all, our experiences have been many and now that we are preparing to go on with our career we can profit by our past experiences and go on to have more and exciting ones. Front row: S. Dienstberger, R Petrick, R. Jelinski, J. Eckelberry, E. Bilton, L. Cale. Back row: M. Green, J. Recher, K. Matter, D. Willard, D. Augsburger, A. Curtis, C. McGill, D. Law, D Barco. Top row: B. Himes, M. Lowry, S. Yensen, J. Richie, .l. Bonen, P. Woodward, J. Engleworth, P. Berry. Sitting: J. Agnone, C. Christy, J. Miethke, E. Huntsberger, P. Rollins, .l. Murbuugh. One Hundred T lzirty-seven freshmen nurses li 'ffl F , 1,4 ll l ll ! ,R up V lf' Ts , I jflhy I ll null X, M5 ' 1: It ' 1' lllllllllw J ,l il li! ll ' lil lj 5 . 41 -. '- firliitia ' ' f I!:i::i:l' N 4. , X ,,f,.'. 1 ment house visits. You can list us as hthe martyrs of the year with our sore arms resulting from shots- all this we have accepted as perfectly natural, but we are able to boast of one more important event in our class: who else has had such a really new. fat, and pink cadaver to work with in anatomy? We gape and stare in awe at the girls in blue-The towering hospital is our goal. Now don't make fun- we mean it-this is our beginning!! , '.,' X x 55251 5 4 A ffj . pf - ' ' ' 1 ,- ,. - ' 13091. . nr- l fly: + . - ff ' J' 'l 'I We .2-fz:5?.ff 1' bx ,. 69411011 i ,,,,:,, f N, QV, Qty' ' '. 1s:iz2!3X 4- or 4 W Ui -1 fl- g Q4 Duff- J is f ffm bww lj 'I I f l ' l 1' lull! Nxt w f an , f lgffiy 'W This is our beginning!! The Alexander Freshman K--l,g,,-' X ll !- XR lip, X -I Nursing Class-one hundred and sixty-two strong. ll! 'J ldv, X! pi 3, X- The class is organized and on it's way to do great 5 JUDO 0' ll '-i' 1' things. We all admit that we are Hgreenv but it won't ll ll 0 X ilfl il- be long before we'll be 'lone of the gang -and anyway i' by A X A we've 'had fun getting ready. lt has been a common 1 'J W X sight to see freshman nurses react with normal confusion N l 1 .xr f X over a small cut or faint in chemistry classg our favorite 1' X'-N 4 i, 14 nutrition student who attempts to poach an egg with no V n 'il' X in ff 'E heat under the Dan, and the reactions after the settle Fig, i 'lj . ' ' l , o f jr o Q One Hundred Thirty-ciglrt First row: S. Moore, M Thomas, J. Nicholson, S Haughun, A. Lincoln, M Lewis, E. Griffith. Row 2: C. Rose, C. Brook- hurt, D. Orr, N. Nesbitt, A Meyers, J. Keller, M. Mc- Guire, N. Lehman. Row 3: C. Davis, N. Carpen- ter, S. Long, A. Beckett, S Newell, J. Neville, J. Carper, C. Collins, J. Lane, J. Jacobs M. Fox. Huw 1: I.. Brown, L. Hill, E Miskin. B. Crubs, N. Lewis, N. Srope. S. Harp. Row 2: C. Barton. B. Parker, L. Truut. M. Brubeck, R Brown, J. Lang, C. Crahme E. Zerkle. H. McCurer. Row 3: C. Benton, M. Jones E. Yoder, L. Peak, N Wi'igl1t, B. Smith, E. Alex- ander, C. Roberts, M. Fort- ney, K. Shallis, M. Flannery R. Muller, C. Daniels. One Hundred Thirty-nine One Hundred Forty torch club I .V K 'rl H. ggll.. ww',i,,,m.mw :lj .fx MJ iii, . Rqw 1: K. Seig, M. Walton, P. Knight, I. Buster, B. Glarlmaui, M. Ely, I. Gott, C. McKenna. Row 2: A. Hlldelaraut, E. Stringlield, M. Bowers, A. Henderson, J. Petit, G. Niswonger, S. I-luff, M. Finlay, G. Morris, P. Helms, G. Gunther, A. Brandt, M. Schweitzer, H. Crawford. Row 3: L. Titus, I. Malone, 'LVL Mosier, J. Vermillion, NL Cramer, I. I-Iettles, Miss Mildred Newton, Miss Frieda Stewart, Nlrs. Geraldine Price, I Foster, C. Smith, C. Arnold, C. Zaas, C. Poe, H. Loftis, P. Canovan. Row 4: I. Hain, N. Sapko, P. Nloorman, B. Eagan, I. Baker, N. Reichard, M. Bradley, I. Sunbury, K. Charles, I. Curtis, M. I-Ienclricks. I. YVhitfakcr, M. Hall, M. Drake, E. Herren, lvl. Dearth, N. McDonough, E.. Neal, S. Sontas, E. Cavanaugr, W. Axkens, I. Graham, M, Bean. Row 5: M. David, N. Spoon, A. Hill, I. Garmhausen, K. Dunabaugh. S. Anderson, P. Peck, I. VVrigl1t, M. Leichenstei er, K. VVallace, M. Huffman, B. Carter, M. James, I. Lewis, I. Thornbury, M. Benson, M. Allison, Rings, M. Protzman, E. Thomas. nursing faculty council lx n X. l IF, Row I: L. Grubenholi, K. Kauffman, H. Bacha, E. Harnett, P. Graham, M. Pulcay, A. Howard, B. Jurzak, B. Hudson. Row 2: M. Moyer, J. Laverty, J. Herdman, P. Cole, R. Cecil, P. Nicol, I. Filler, D. Schumann, L. Mullins, P. Richter. Row 3: F. Nofziger, L. Jennings, L. Kruse, M. Whitaker, M. Mechling, I. Katter, E. Thompson, D. Siglin, Nl. Weller, E. Campbell, J. Cribbs. Not pictured: B. Elliot, A. English, J. Lawrence, B. Mohney, F. Morse, J. Orr, A. Reed, R. Sallef-, B. Williams. President ........... ......... P at Graham alpha tau delta Vice President ............. ......... ,............. E i leen Harnett Recording Secretary .......................... Kathleen Kauiman Corresponding Secretary..LaVonne Grubenhoff Schoeder Treasurer ,,...,.............,,...., ....,..............,.......... H elen Bacha Custodian Pins ............ ....... E Ilen Thompson Custodian ....................,.... ........... A nn Howard History and Education ....... ...... A nita English Marshall .............,........................................ Betty WilliaInS During the fall quarter of 1946, twenty-five registered graduate nurses attending this university organized a professional nursing sorority known as Sigma Pi Nu. The major goals of this sorority were to obtain a sorority house near the campus and to obtain national recognition. In November, 1953, the latter goal was reached. Sigma Pi Nu became the Epsilon Chapter of Alpha Tau Delta. a national professional nursing sorority, in honor of Miss Mildred Newton, Director of the School of Nursing. Its purpose is to foster friendship and fellowship among col- lege women of the nursing profession, to promote higher educational standards for women of the nursing profession, to inaugurate projects that enrich the specific field of professional nursing. Alpha Tau Delta holds two business meetings and two social meetings a month. Various other social and edu- cational activities are enjoyed, such as attending lectures and plays and participating in the university sport events, especially bowling and volleyball, Every quarter an Alumni Newsletter is published. Two formal dances are held annually. At present, Alpha Tau Delta is in the process of organizing an alumni group. Any student in the nursing profession in active attendance at this university may become a pledge member of this fraternity. Members must have a minimum scholastic average of 2.5 cumulative point hour and are expected to maintain this level. A total of fifteen hours must be completed at Ohio State University. Pledge status is for one quarter preceding active membership. One Hundred Forty-one jffiff V , X ' XXXX XQ Wf WN if fre-., , 12f','-if-f ., .,4, , ...-f-1 - . Q 'YQQJQTZJH ,lli MJ I I - - i,-,,..'-? ', ff-53 I, ' 'EJ- -,1 i,.3.iJ5-76'- '-as W 71,747 - - - Q17 f if P? Q . 1 H U- ' ' 5 W if-I? ,N ' 3K f Wg? f Hum 'ff f f X , f f u -1 I A ,f f KXKhdlNltnKx. 1 f 2 f ' - 1 - ff? - K Ill X fv f gx w ,IY7 sb-- 'ifmwf ,gfix 531 M 'N if 4' 319 L :L'I- V fe U llunm Forty-two ' ? ancillary services student medlechs. This department headis remark about Hroutine scr--ing procedures is now legend. If anybody remembers anything about the mechanisms of blood clot formation their perseverance is responsible. One Hundred F orty-four DR. HARRY L. REINHART Row 1: M. Leech, J. Davis, N. White. Row 2: E. Matthews, P. Bower, M Briggs, B. Knepp. Raw 3: C. Nixon, S. Schleuter, M Theurer. radiology techs. Doift cough during bronchograms, the patient may do likewise. Try to remember lo remove the heavy glasses after youlre in the lluoroscopy room. you may See what you're doing. Back Row: D. Cook, M. Bailey, .l. Orthro T. Wood, N. Coe, J. Hood, M Shari, N. Simpson, S. Cook R. Bullock. Mirlflle Row: F. Wll. M. Blue, P. Havnes, R Thompson, .l. Bidwell, .l. Palm A. Robinson, B. Korn, ,I Ohlinger. Front: .l. Amos, S. Kennard. C. Niebel M. Hulxer, .l. Hood. C. Rogers. DR. JACK WIDRICH 1 ' 0 4, . ' Q 99 K , ibn. L V ff' I 5 . A .2- ne Hundred Forty-fre physical medicine Students got information about the status of Ohio Statels embroiled athletes from this friendly service. Daily races through the whirly-pool, nee the Hubbard tank, are not uncommon. Sand bags are to be lifted, not thrown. Dry heat, moist heat, chemical and electrical heat, use them all, but with discretion. When all else fails, invent a new wrestling hold and get ,em mad. Row I: D. Calnan, E. Brown, A. Crawford, M. Christjohn, Dr. E. Johnson, Dr- B363 DY- D- Slow, G- Woods- V l Row 2' S Carter E Martin R. McElroy, C. Rhotcn, R. Hansen, E. Krause, J. Lauritzen, C. Banks, B. Makrouk. M. W,HIklIlS Row 3: L. Barber, Dr. R. Burk, Dr. Akan, D. Whitforcl, .l. Powell. B. Strohm. .l. Slagel. One Hundred Forty-six dietetics department Take everything with a grain of salt unless you're on a low salt diet. They know the difference between low roughage and low residue and make it work. STAFF DIETICIANS Front row: G. Lellti, M. Ockert, N. Close, .l. Bergold, V, Draim, S. Willson, L. Watters, B. Watkins, P. Lane. Back row: V. Beck, G. Dillow, A. Rockwood, Turner. Mrs. Lewis fDirector of Dieteticsl, K. Scohie, E. Broadwater. A. Deutschmann, S. Rader, N. Western. DIETETIC INTER NS Front ruw: M. 0'Neill, M. Lee. L. Hamilton, E. Taylor, M. Carver. lx Semml row: R. Harper, G. Scislowski, O. Seward, H. lzzi, P. Free,-lmette, M. Baker, E. Graham, J. Jewells. Q Pms-.D One Hundred Forty-seven ,. . L KK If . 'J,hx?- I , ' , af ' 1 Z, 4 ' n Q4 1 '-, + xe 8csflu?n?r-- ' 2' - XT ' ' 1' Q jg ' 5 Q giffff ffm--' A Havllg 3 Girl frreal- - - - 1 ' A A K ' 7 W Q mv NEP if 4 73' vi K J yr -n ,,..-. J! f jf i f 9:5-' -3' if W.WaIery a fqbflfbus lanafehliaf X raclaf 3-nc-na X 'f Nof llerffif X v gf I Q '73a Damn I-le 1 E I1 F Q M an ...+f3Q4 X s 7: xg -,,. . I O ,, ,A N A -ii 8 0 - -5- i ' K v-L nlflanly K. ' , 1 Profanadd P Wa VB Une Hundred Forty-ezght 1 i l No Comment l 'Describe the ourse of the e r v e s a s s 0- ciated with the phcno - palaf inc ganglion 'ertility rites linical viril- sm -li 1 fi' No tickee - no Washoe YVherc will it ever end? B i l a t c r a I Queckenstadt The consgant fight ugamst malnutrition nursing services NURSING SERVICE SUPERVISORS Row 1: E. Iddiugs, M. Friel, H. Parker, M. Minar. Row 2: L. Ruess. L. Schneider, A. Shanck, D. Stahl, B. Skinner, V. Olson. HEAD NURSES Seated: A. Fraas, H. Lehman, M. Cormany, G. Himes, L. Magruder, H. Crabtree, M. Carter. Standing: M. Earnshaw, L. Kagay, M. Burney, .l'. Robinson, H. Appel. I SURGERY NURSES ip row: C. Propps. C. Jones, T. Crawford Reardon. E. Mehler. Raw two: G. Stall Fredrick R Lo Qdon l Farst M Kellv , . g.. . .. , . . I . Newton, A. Rell, C. Whitney. Huw three. . Miller, D. Cloran, E. Sherrard, R. Reucler, . Kessler, C. Elliott. Row four: R. Yee. C. Linda. N. Liggett. C. Dropplenian. .l. amplmell. ANESTHESI A NURSES fared : .l . A hlmott. M. Oglelree. B. Cogzar. . Aol-zley, D. Ross. Standing: .l. Heinze. M. kinner. M. Davies, L. Taylor, A. Janakis. . Poliquin. P. Sites. .l. Seabrook. OUT PATIENT DEPT. NURSES 'a!e1l: S. Nlielke. A. Brubaker, L. Hall. ll. 4'-Kearney, C. Dickey. Smmling: V. Lewis. Fairless, R. Altmeyer. N. Hunley. M. zllker. H. Mecca, S. Reading, R. Helir. E. 'ink. M. Barker. .l. Rf7SPlllbi1lllTL y'l 'hu ii Q Ni.c Q52 . ' J' fig. , QL l I I r, X. 3' - e 4 4 i , . 1 ,., l , . , x A s 7' Xl - Y A 'Z 5-4 e Q E44 Truly the most relaxed service we are ever likely to meet. There is a calm, untroubled atmosphere almost tangible in these hushed quarters that is alien to the hurly-burly of general ward medicine. Nurses treated us with deference. appreciated our efforts in going after 'gastric washings, and tactfully mentioned that we had contaminated ourselves. Nobody hurries here, patients, doctors, nurses, or students. There is a feeling that time is a commodity that can be spent in considered abundance. Staff decisions are deliberate and thoughtful. The patient is offered phrenic crushes, pneumos, resections big and small, and chemotherapy for long stretches of time, but rest remains the sine qua non in the therapeutic approach. One Hundred F ifty-two ohio tuberculosis hospital TB STAFF Row 1: A. Charbonneau, R. Atwell, M. Buckles, N. Andrews Row 2: B. Gilman. R. Donnenberg, M. Caritt, M. Daneshvari, H. Leuchter Row 3: P Tchen R. Brownin C. - , gs Connors, M. Dikengil. TB NURSES Row I: M. Hall. M. Athey. L. Chap- pelear, M. Ebright, M. Crella, D. Hughes, S. Dreshach. Row 2: S. Risley, S. Timms, C. Trees, E. Brown, J. Moats, B. Unger, B. Mara K. Jones, E. Hayes, M. Zimpfer. psychiatric hospital This staff handles the triple play from Havelock Ellis-to-Krafft-Ebing-to-Freud in unabashed fashion. We weren7t sure what we were to do after we got here, or how we got here in the first place. The frank psychoanalytic approach has given way to Thorazine, electro-shrock therapy, limited psychiatric analysis, and ventila- tion therapy. We were never sure if the latter implied shooting holes in the 'patient a la Fearless Fosdick. Nurses become anxious on this service, interns become paranoid, and students get a limited idea of what utotal push involves. In the last four years this staff has had ever an increasing responsibility in our orientation to medicine, and rightly so. One Hundred F ifty-four NURSING STAFF COLUMBUS RECEIVING HOSPITAL Sitting: L. Sharp, E. Lewis CAsst. Dir. of Nnrsingl, F. Morse, L. Aldridge, R. Johnson, E. Blankenship, J. Malone, M, Eley, G. Ettl Szanfling: M. McCandless, A. Keith, .l'. Timanus, M. Ebert, S. Rossiter, S. McNary, E. Lanning fAsst. Prof., Co- ordinator of Mental Health Nursing Researchl, K. Moberly, F. Harvey fDir. of Nursingl, M. Foor, .l. Dillon PSYCHIATRY Front: R. Stevenson, I. Craig, R. Pat- terson, J. Whieldon, I. Pine Back: D. Tippett, T. Klug, H. Baldwin, D. Smith e lucas, C. Voegele, W. Simon, R. May ...QW , L an fi: . -' 562 Q we One Hundred Fifty-five Operation uUlcer-Maker, variously known as 'iputting out the Caduceanf' has tried the perseverance and imagi- nations of the entire staff in conceiving, producing, and financing this yearbook. The editor owes many thanks: To Ted Pinsky-for his organizing ability, his tolerance toward this editor's many shortcomings, and his amazing capacity to perform untributed hard work in getting and keeping this book solvent. He knew what he had to do as Business Manager and did it brilliantly, and even wrote some of the faculty copy. To Samantha Miller-for her versatility in keeping up with last-minute suggestions concerning the art layout, and for the quietly inventive and thoroughly polished majority of line drawings contained herein. If applause were thanks, she couldnit hear. To Dorrance Talbut-whose artistic temperament altenately delighted me and drove me to drink. Nobody likes to take group photographs and he is no exception. All pics of the hospitals including the frontispiece are his dis- cerning impressions, and the bulk of the formal portraits came from the back of his camera, too. To Walter Wolery, and wife, Rosemary for receiving more advertising than in any previous year for drawing many cartoons, for typing the majority of the copy, and for making the rounds of our clients so often they had to buy. To Bill Stew-art and Mike Dooley-for their hilarious cartoons about life in medical school and the genesis of the nursing student, respectively. To Charlie Henault, Don Wagner, Jack Tanner, Walt l-leyse, and others-for taking the wittily inspired candids that are sprinkled throughout the book. To Peg Roberts, Joan Lewis, Carolyn Arnold, and Phyllis Virden-for their liason work between the nursing school and this book, and the hours spent in slicing the photographs to somewhat reasonable shapes. To Jack Devaney-for extending his crane-like frame in all directions in making photographic appointments, identifying the pictures, and in general doing the scut work that is attached to the title of Man-aging Editor. To Jim Barnes, Fred Rothman, Dave Barr, Al Sc-hwartzberg, and Chuck Lahrwfor the Man of the Year bit by Jim Barnes, and for the fraternity copy from the rest. To ,lim Allen and George Dandalides-for making up the formal senior copy and for some of the outlines, respectively. To my OB-Gyn section-for covering for me so magnificently in my enforced absences during this quarter, and for leading me by the nose during the various exams. To Jack Warner, Charlie Mendelson, and Norm Tresser-for their efforts in Physicianfs Best Wishes, sales and distribution, and juggling the figures to reassure our creditors. Anybody else? WILLIAM F. CLARK One Hundred Fifty-six EPILIIGUE 0F THE YEAR to the medical student You must never consider what he is doing or who he is, whom he knows, or what he is thinking, in making the good diagnosis. Dismiss his authority, but under- stand his realities. Eventually you must assume his statusg learn to make the adjust- ment gracefully. Be more aware of the sins of omission than of commission in your brief relationship with him. Do not let his bribery be the price of your atten- tion, but once having entered into contract with him, work at length for his confi- dence. Analyze his awe, his frustration, and his bewilderment when it involves you, for if you have left him well, you have probably left him without an outward sign that you were ever there. Except as it concerns his continued life, do not attempt to control his external affairs, even then be cautious. You have no right to meddle with a creation that is not wholly yours. One Hundred F ifty-seven The members of the Senior Class wish. to thank the following people for their generous support of the 1955 Cuducean. Their subscriptions have in great measure made the publication of the book posszble Abbott, Kenneth Adams, Richard Ainsworth, Marion Allenbach, T. Al-pers, J. J. Ambuel, P. Arnold, Drew Arthur, James Atwell, Bob Avery, Allen S. Baden, David Barton, Stanley Basnett, Carl Battles, Morris Baum, Walter Beman, F. Blake, Emerson Bradley, William Brehm, Wayne Briggs, John Brown, John E., Jr. Brown, John Browning, R. H. Cahill, Robert Call, Arthur Carter, Vlfilliam S. Cellio, Lewis Clark, Ivor Clark, Samuel Clark, Thomas Clatworthy, H. William Clifton, .John Clodfelter, H. M. Cohen, Arthur Copeland, William E, 7 Cox, Dana Cross, Virgil Curtiss, Charles F. Daly, Robert Davidson, Horace Davis, Mel De La Motte, Vllalter De Lor, C. Joseph Dickens, Dale Dillahunt, David Distelhorst, Robert Dix, Carr Doan, Charles Donley, R. Frank Dorgan, J. Quinn Dunn, J. M. Durant, Rollin Edelman, S. D. Edwards, Linden Ellison, Edwin Emswiler, Herbert One Hundred Fifty-eight Engelman, Elmer Ervin, H. K. Evans, Harrison Evans, Robert Everhart, Merrill Everhart, R. A. Falkenstein, Dorothy Federer, H. Wi. Finke, Fred Forman, Jonathan Forman, Wiley Fry, Clarence Fulton, Huston Fulton, Richard Furste, Wesley Fusco, Eugene Gabel, John Gallagher, Francis Garvin, .John Goodman, Milton Gosnell, F. VV. Graber, Mary Greentree, Leonard Grifhn, William Hales, C. W. Hamilton, Xvalter Hamwi, George J. Hankinson, D. O. Hapke, Fred Harding, Charles Harding, Frances Harding, W'arren Hardymon, P. B. Harris, William Hatcher, Emerson Hatfield, Jaseph Hatfield, Paul Haynie, Campbell Heer, George Heilman, Robert Heisel, Eldred Heller, Gabriel Heydinger, David Heberg, John Henschke, Ulrich Hill, Edward Hollenbeck, Z. J. R. Holzaepfel, Jo-hn Hoover, R. B. Hummel, George Hunt, Vllilliam Jacoby, Ben Jacoby, J. J. James, Arthur Jasper, Jessie Jefferson, Harry Jennings, Raymond Jentgen, L. M. Jepsen, O. W. Jones, Margaret Junkermann, Carl Kahan, Jacob Karrer, Henry Keating, Robert Keys, Harry Kirk, Gilman Kissane, R. WJ. Klages, Reynold Klassen, Karl Klinge, J. E. Knies, Phillip Koons, Ruth Krech, W'illiam Kress, George Kubiac, Willis Lacey, Henry Landrum, Albert Larrick, C. M. Leach, Joseph LeFever, H. E. Leiby, A. L. Leithauser, Dr. Lenahan, Florence Lewis, Tom Long, Henry A. Lowery, John Magnuson, Robert Mahanna, Donald Makley, T. A. Manuel, Sherman Markwood, C. R. Marsicano, A. R. Martin, Bruce McCall, Edward McClave, Charles McClure, Charles W. McCormick, Thomas McFarland, Richard McKitrick, Charles McNinch, Joseph H. McPeek, Clayton Means, John Meiling, Richard Meredith, L. Miller, W. J. Millhon, W. F. Missildine, Hugh Moses, Jacob Murphy, Link Murphy, Robert Nelson, G. I. Neiswander, R. E. Obetz, Robin Palmer, Dwight Pariser, Herbert Patterson, Ralph Patton, Richard Pelliciari, Donald Phelps, Darwin Pickett, Robert Plummer, R. C. Praver, L. L. Pritchett, Clark Pumphrey, R. E. Puppel, Allen Putnam, Dale Rardin, Thomas Rauch, Robert Ridgeway, Joseph Riepenholf, John Robinson, Samuel Roettig, Chandler Rohr, Lovell Rosenow, Oscar Rothermich, Norman Ruppersberg, Anthony Ryan, Joseph Saslaw, S. Scheip, James Schieve, J. F. Schwarzell, Henry Scott, Wendell Seligson, Lester Seymour, Miner Shaflier, Thomas Silva, Charles Slotterbeck, R. F. Smith, W. S. Solomonides, C. H. Sparling, William Tarbell, Mabel Taylor, Jack N. Traphagen, Donald Turner, E. V. Voke, Edward L. Von Haam, Emerich Walker, Watson Wlallace, Richard Watson, Frank Watson, John Whetstone, Anna Wlhieldon, J. A. White, John Williams, James H. Wilson, Judson Wiltberger, Ben Wiseman, Bruce Wright, C. S. Vlfyker, A. C. Young, Robert Zartman, Edwin Ziegler, Carolyn Zollinger, Richard Zox, Maurice Une Hundred Fifty-nine A PROGRESSIVE 4 HOSPITAL featuring Educational Programs EXTERNSHIPS INTERNSHIPS RESIDENCIES I MERCY HOSPITAL Toledo CONGRATULATIONS from GRANT HOSPITAL COYlg1'lltlLlCltfO'l1S C0n1pIi7ngnf,5- Of from . . . ST. ANN'S MT. CARMEL HQSPITAL dre 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 iinest-Blue Ribbon RX work. You will learn as have thousands of other doctors-you can trust White- H Hines. The White-Haines Dptical Go. Blue Ribbon RX Service and Blue Ribbon Ophthalmic Products are supplied by 33 White-Haines oflices located in Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Ken- tucky, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan. General Offices: Columbus 16, Ohio. CA 4-5181 CA 4-5184 THE HEER PRINTING CO. The smart, new designs in office furnishings offer you an almost unlimited choice of modern decorative schemes for your working comfort. Perfectly suited to pleasant, relaxed working hours is this grouping from the Herman Miller Collection now being shown in our display rooms. Come in and see it soon, won't you? 386 South Fourth Street Columbus 16, Ohio Phone CApital 8-4541 One Hundred Sixty-one Compliments STEPHENS, PHARMACY of AL STEPHENS, Pharmacist CAM KING 089 W. Broad St. BR 9-5435 I' W' HUSTON DON HOFFMAN Best Wishes and Good Luck Congratulations from f h mm t 6 H. L. MCFARLAND S1 SONS HARDWARE 719 W. 11th Ave. AX 9-0366 1575 N. HIGH I AX 9 6869 L. C. BALFOUR COMPANY SEELIG'S PHARMACY See TOM GLASS for PRESCRIPTION DRUCGISTS Trophys-Party Favors-Rings 1826 N. High Columbus, Ohio 2520 Summit, Cor. Hudson Columbus, Ohio AX 93672 Phone: AMherSt 3-0415 BEST VVISTI-IES, GRADUATES . . . UNIVERSITY CLEANERS BEECHWOLD RESTAURANT 267 West nth Avenue Ballroom-Dining Room-Fountain AX 1-1291 4784 N. High AM 2-2262 ' CHYLIPASE HEP-NIN E B CERONIAZOL M-NEPHYSIN PEDIATABS SOMORSED TRIDILATIN RESEARCH PHARMACEUTICALS SINCE 1886 FEATURING - CORRECTS The Inborn Error of Lipid Metabolisrnf, - Helps Bring Your C-eritaric Patient Out of the Shadows - New Office Administered Heparin-Lipotropic Therapy - Dual Action Muscle Relaxant - Delightfully Palatable Medication for Little Folks - Somnifacient or Sedative in Single Dosage Form - Triple Action Vasodilator for Hypertension and Angina Pectoris THE COLUMBUS PHARMACAL COMPANY COLUMBUS 15, OHIO One Hundred Sixty-two H. Braun Sons Company SERVING STUDENT 61 PHYSICIAN SINCE 1857 0 Drugs 0 Equipment 0 Instruments , 0 Sick Room Supplies so E. Long CA 4-7166 BEST WISHES - - - Congratulations to the Graduating Class . . . WAGGENER DRUG CO. , Pre.s-criptions-Fountain Service FREDDY S DAIRY BAR 247 King Avenue AX 1-2020 1666 Neil Avenue COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND One Hu ndred Sixt CONGRATULATIONS FROM SAM KOONS Representing CIBA ed Six ty-four M 6 R Lahoratorief is loleafea' to wr footer of the l M sz R Pediatric Research Conference Reports to the Ittatehtf ofthe Ohio State University M offical School Aoailtthle reoortr cooer the jhllozothg Jahjectf: POTASSIUM METABOLISM EIQYTHIIODLASTOSIS FETALIS RENAL FUNCTION IN INFANTS AND CHILDREN IMMUNITY AND HYPERSENSITIVITY, RELATIONSHIP TO DISEASE IN MAN VITAMIN B6 IN HUMAN NUTRITION FAT METABOLISM DIABETES MELLITUS IN INFANTS AND CHILDREN lVrite to Medical Director, M 6 R Lzzhomtorier, Colzmzhzftr 16, Ohio, for the reports desired. Please give mzme, local addrerr, and internship appointment, if a member of the gmdmztirzg clan. M 8: R offers for your consideration in future pediatric prac- tice, Similac Powder and Similac Liquid, infant feeding with fats so changed, proteins and minerals so modified, caloric dis- tribution so balanced that there is no closer equivalent to the milk of healthy, well-nourished mothers. A source of zzzztritiomzl protection for the full jiri! year. a, ' 4 o :- SF M 8: R LABORATORIES, COLUMBUS 16, OHIO vo . , . The Best Part of a. Manfs Life Consists of His F riendshfipf'-A. Lincoln GEORGE H. SHAPTER, IR. The Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. BEECHWOLD PHARMACY SIAM C. HAHN, Ph.C. 4622 North High Street Columbus, Ohio BUCKEYE CAMPUS SHOP Formal Wear Rentals 1608 N. High AX 9-9676 Congratulations to the 1955 Graduates DON ELSASS DO 8584 Representing M Sz R Labs. Compliments from JACK AND BENNY Famous for Good Food OPEN 24 HOURS 6 E. Broad St. CA 4-4776 SCHOEDINGER 61 COMPANY Funeral Directors E. State at 5th CA 4-6105 2542 W. Broad BR 4-3439 VARSITY BARBER SHOP Four Expert Barbers Open 8-6 223 W. 11th Ave. Best Wishes CULTER.'S DRUG STORES 1472 W. Fifth Ave. 2686 Westerville Ave. - One Hundred Sixty-five Congratulations to our new cloctors and nurses PRESUTTFS VILLA FAMOUS FROM COAST TO COAST FOR ITALIAN-AMERI-CAN FOODS 1692 W. Fifth Ave. HU 8-6440 ROBERT E. HILDRETH SPECIAL AGENT ESTATE PLANNING 81 PROGRAM INSURANCE FOR PIHYSICJIANS NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 4:2 E. Gay Street Phone: Office CA 4-5237 Columbus, Ohio Phone: Res. HU 8-6657 ANSON L. BROWN INC. LABORATORY SERVICE FOR PHYSICIANS 41 South Grant Avenue Columbus 15, Ohio Box 506 HISTORY OF-THE OHIO STATE COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, being a collection of source material covering a centu-ry of medical progress. 1834-1934-572 Pages Published at S10 Our price new 31.00 LONG,S BOOK STORE Columbus, Ohio Anvil MacTavish-Med. I.- needs job counting money on halves. Wife and eight children. Also have tux and will travel. Call UN 5254. S :gigs K 4 ? OBSTETRICAL - GYNECOLOGICAL PHARMACEUTICALS 6: BIOLOGICALS For the Medical Profession GFIQ ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION RARITAN, NEW JERSEY One Hundred Sixty-.six WE DT-BRI TOL CO PA Y O Manufacturers of fine pharmaceuticals O Distributors of Physician and Hospital Supplies I 0 Retailers of Quality Student Equipment ....g.-ggglllj THREE CONVEN I ENT LOCATIONS O 51 E. State Street -CA 4-6108 O 1660 Neil Avenue -AX 1-7407-7408 I 721 N. High Street-CA 1-3153 QUALITY DEPENDABILITY HERBERT LOECHLER Sefvinf-I the Physician in: coUP.TEoUs SERVICE CA 4-9131 PERSONAL ESTATE PLANNING LIFE-ANNUITIES-ACCIDENT SICKNESS-HOSPITAL-SURGICAL AND CATASTROPHIC PLANS THE HARRIS COMPANY New York Life Insurance Co. 17 S. High St. Columbus, Ohio Phone: CA 4-8203 igg OPTICIANS Best Wishes From CM ABBOTT LABORATORIES Complete Automotive Service 105 E- Broad St- at Columbus, Ohio GLEN ECHO SERVICE CENTER 441 E. HuClSOn AM 2-2249 One Hundred Sixty-seven l C 13 i 15, 'H where other therapy fails. A ll Q Ei X hhe nssmu tml . : , . 1: .- el . Z S 15 f w i 5 3 517f'f'4? - 1 -' .SSX 5 mia, 'fr M . lfll When other .. J 1 external therapy Sgjlx 2 1-fag-F il lllw R, f. xgzfll, ,- ,, ,pl fl .f l'.:', If 'H up f ll f vi fl ' 1llf5llF'f fVL'i-2 ' ll SSSITIS to get lquljywnxl. lllhgq-25 V 5 W if .,,, mill' l Ejitigf i 5 .ll if 1, ' jf ,L ' -' n 5' accelerate healing with Study , after study after study corroborates the notable ' success of Desitin Ointment in easing pain and stimulating smooth tissue repair in lacerated, denuded, chafed, irritated, ulcerated J tissues-often in stubborn conditions 1 l in wounds iespecially slow healing! burns cnemicn column ulcers 70 ship Street Providence 2 R I idecubitus, varicose, diabeticl THIS IS LEDERLE. . A community of more than 4500 men and women-scientists, technicians, and other specialists-working in modern laboratories . . , developing, testing and producing new medicines . . . striving to improve those already in use. Other Lederle research throughout the world furthers this extensive program -a program designed to provide the medical profession with the latest pharmaceutical, biological, and dietary discoveries. More than half a century of service and achievement has made Lederle a world-renowned name. LEDERLE LABORATORIES DIVISION AAIERIEAA'QHHHIIIIYICUMPANY Pearl River, New York One Hundred Sixty-eight I., ROMEO'S Genuine Italian Food Columbus Original Pizzeria TICE 8: ASSOCIATES Representing THE MIDLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Specializing in Life Insurance Programs for Seniors 1576 W. 5th Ave. Columbus, Ohio THE MASSACHUSETTS INDEMNITY C A R P' Y O U T P I Z Z A INSURANCE COMPANY HU 8-0163 HU 6-1643 Non-Cancellable Guaranteed Renewable Disability Income Insurance l jimmy Massey and Romeo Sirij, Managers East Brozlcl Street Yom' P7'6SC7'ipfi0TL Phairinacy MILLER DRUG COMPANY Fifth Ave. 61 High St. AX 9-5036 P. E. RUTHERFORD W. P. RUTWHERFORD AMPLE PARKING IN REAR PRIVATE AMIBULANCE SERVICE The P. E. Rutherford Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AX 9-1153 AX 1-1716 2383 North High Street Columbus, Ohio NATIONWIDE INSURANCE On September 1, 1955, 'we're changing our name to Nationwide Insurance, and will, in time, become nationwide in operation. But Weill still remain an organization of, and for, our policyholders. FARM BUREAU INSURANCE CUMPANIES Home Office - Columbus, Ohio Congratulations from BOB PORTER Representing BAKER'S MODIFIED MILK FR 2-6213 CLINTONVILLE ELECTRIC CO. 3361 N. High sr. Columbus' Largest Existing Appliance Sales and Service Dealer Lloyd B. Hinton, Owner AM 2-1157 Since 1888 EVANS and SCHWARTZ ORTIHOPEDIC SHOE COUNSELORS 0 Downtown-479 N. High O Bexley-2461 E. Main O Grceland-5041 N. High Une Hundred Sixty-nine Compliments of your PFIZER Representatives Harry Chorpeuning Bob Maxwell Ralph Ramey Robert Reichert fx 3 U 1 . I Q I COLUMBUS ORTHOPAEDIC 50 North Sandusky Street A NEW HOME FOR THE TYPE OF SERVICE OUR MEDICAL PROFESSION IS ENTITLED TO. YVe invite you to visit The Surgical Store of Columbus MIICROSCOPES SURGICAL AND DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS PHYSIOTHERAPY EQUIPMENT MODERN EXAMINING 8: TREATMENT ROOM FURNITURE ', CF. The Columbus Hospital Supply Company 2271 E. Broad E CA 1-6888 Compliments of PARKER STUDIOS 2036 N, High sf. One Hundred Seventy I Congratulations Congratulations from . . . from I l CHILDRI-EN'S MERCY HOSPITAL HQSPITAL 5 af ii Congratulations from ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL I feef like eva-ry have I fd! 8 e woman cu! ln here wdlu I I-NHC lofffe Q croaklng 3 . j A IM Valar y Congratulations from . . . ST. VINCENT'S HOSPITAL TOLEDO, OHIO CEN TEN N IAL YEAR 1855-1955 One Hun ddq y LAKEWCOD HCSPITAL CONGRATULATES The Class of 1955 WE INVITE your attention to this institution for your postgraduate education. Lakewood Hospital, with 838 beds, is approved for In- ternship and Residency in the major specialties. Every advantage for 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. CRAWFORD, M.D. Superintendent Lakewood Hospital Lakewood, Ohio One Hundred Seventy-two Pliarmaceutical Services C0ngi fH7lllflfi0nS from . . . Scientific Services THE BUILDERS 0F and sT. JOHN ARENA Chemicals AND FIELD PRACTICE HOUSE 9 ....,L,fgf:.g,,.,q.,sg,..,.... THE KAUFFMAN-LATTIMER CO. IOSEPH SKILKEN 85 CO. Columbus, Ohio 383 South Third sr. Columbus, Ohio DRINK 3 GLASSES OF MILK EVERY DAY Congratulations CARL MYERS , M ens Furnishings - Hats - Shoes - Gifts Representing 1. B. Boerig Co. EV 7143 1630 N. High St. Columbus 1, Ohio Congratulations SMITTY'S DRUGS from . VARSITY FLOWER SHOP 1892 N' High 'St' AX 9-0200 Opposite Hamilton Hall AX 9-2424 Congratulations fron-L Fastest in Service-Finest in Food 1912 N. High sr. 12 E. 15th Ave. CROSBYS DRUGS Ne e' Closes 7 A. M.-12:30 A. M. , . V I Fri. at Sat.,ti12:30 A. M. 2661 N' Hlgh JE 9424 One Hundred Seventy-th THE OHIO VALLEY HOSPITAL THE HOSPITAL The Ohio Valley Hospital is a modern, well equipped 209 bed general hospital, fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Ac- creditation of Hospitals and ap- proved for one year rotating internships by the Council on Medical Education and Hos- pitals. The hospital has a School of Nursing which is approved by the State of Ohio and is ap- proved by the National League for Nursing. STEUBENVILLE, OHIO THE MEDICAL STAFF The Medical Staff of the Ohio Valley Hospital is Well departmentalized, and has 70 members, all well quali- fied in their particular field. The Departments of the Staff are: Medical, Surgical, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and General Practice. Specialties such as E.E.N.T., Urology, Dermatology, Pediatrics, Orthopedics, Pathology, and Roentgenology are included in these various Divisions of the Staff. Each Department is 'headed by a Chair- man. THE INTERN STAFF The Intern Staff quota is eight men who are determined in accordance with the Matching Plan for interns Iappcplntfscg by the National Inter-Association Committee on Internships, selected by the Intern Committee of the e ica ta . THE MEDICAL EDUCATION PROGRAM Interesting and instructive lectures by well qualified Staff members and educational films are shown with lectures. Regular Grand Rounds are made with attending Staff and daily organized Ward Rounds with the Resi- dent Staff. VVeekly Clinicopathological meetings are held with Interns actively participating. journal Club Con- ferences are held with informal discussions of interesting articles in the various journals. The Interns attend Staff Departmental meetings and monthly meetings of the Fort Steuben Academy of Medicine featuring nationally known physicians as guest speakers. Weekly Tumor Clinics are conducted with the Interns participating under the supervision of Staff Doctors. The Interns are given four weeks training in Outpatient Service at a Univer- sity afiiliated Hospital. The Intern is on a rotating service with three months in Medicine, three months in Surgery, and the other six months assigned to the other services. RESIDENCE AND RECREATIONAL FACILITIES Recently completed large modern building for intern's quarters, attractively and comfortably furnished, at- tractive lounge with TV and other recreational facilities. Modern kitchen -facilities are included for preparing between meal-snacks. An adequate Medical Library is readily accessible in the Hospital. Adequate time for rest, relqreation, and reading is assured all members of the Intern Staff. Night duty is minimum due to the rotating sc edule. COMPENSATION Q I Monthly compensation of 3225.00 with full maintenance including meals, uniforms, and personal laundry. TI-IE CITY Steufbenville is located in the heart of the Ohio industrial area on the beautiful Ohio River, a wealthy section in which iron and steel are the principal sources of employment. The City has a population of 36,500 and serves a trading area of approximately 98,000 residents. There is an excellent shopping district within convenient trans- portation reach from the hospital, as well as numerous recreational facilities. APPLICATIONS FOR INTERNSHIP Illustrated brochures are available upon request. Interested medical students are invited to'visit the hospital at any time. For further information write to: Chairman, Intern Committee, Ohio Valley Hospital, Steubenville, Ohio. One Hundred Seventy-jour Greetings to all my medical friends and congratulations to all 1955 graduates Who, for the first time, oflicially assume the title, M.D. You richly deserve this Well-earned designation. SAMUEL S. LOYER An Origin-al and Continuous Caducean Advertiser-Patron 50 West Broad Street CA 4-4254 Columbus 15, Ohio BSANKERS COMPANY DES MOINES, IOWA THE MARVIN-NEITZEL CORPORATION TROY, NEW YORK MANUFACTURERS SINCE 1845 OF STUDENT NURSE APPAREL AND HOSPITAL CLOTHING EXTENDS BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1955 One Hundred Seventy- Ga -Ned Congraitulations to the Gracluating Seniors We are happy to have seroefl you flaring Your M erlical School Days ancl We are looking forward to seeing you again t CAMPUS NEIL CENTER NEIL AVENUE AT TENTH CH ATTANOO GA Congratulations and Best Wishes to the CLASS OF 1955 We stand ready to serve you as your pharmaceutical needs arise WARREN-TEED PHAMACEUTICALS 582 West Goodale Street Columbus 8, Ohio DALLAS LOS ANGELES PORTLAND One Hundred Seventy-six ? FLOWER HO PITAL, 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. ' Opportunities to Work closely with almost 100 staff physicians CURRICULUM A 1:2-month rotating internship is offered with the following curriculum: MEDICINE SURGERY 1. General Medicine .,........,,......,,....,..,.. 5 months 1' General and Em?flZQI10y 'Surgery ..4... 4 months with sub-specialties, including Cnrdi- with 5ub'5P9Cl31Ue5w mol'-'ding Ere, ology, Diabetes, Dennatology and Ear, Nose, Throat, Gynecology, pediatrics. Omce practice in phy, Orthopedics and Genital Urinary. 51018115 ofiices. OBSTETRICS 2. Outpatient Clinic and Physical Q 1. Obstetrics-at least 30 deliveries, Medicine ........,,.....,..,.....,.............., l month present nt 120 per month ,.......,.,, 2 months For more information about Flower Hospital's intern program, write to Administrator, Flower Hospital, 3349 Cherry Street, Toledo 12, Ohio. One Handray Seventy-seven. I AU LTMAN HOSPITAL CANTON, OHIO l Aultman Hospital, 625 Clarendon Avenue SW., Canton, Ohio is a 301 bed hospital, member of the N.P.A. lts admissions during 1954- totaled 113173, and has an active out-patient department. The Aultman Hospital offers a 12 month rotating general internship and has 14 openings. Beginning stipend for interns is 3200 per month. Aultman offers an active teaching rovram, roffressive staff, and an at- D D U tractive city and surroundings to prospective interns. The approved residency program offers 6 residencies in Internal Medicine, 5 residencies in Obstetrics and Gynecology, 3 residencies in Pathology, 2 residencies in Radiology, and 8 residencies in Surgery. For further information contact George R. Wren, Aultman Hospital, Canton 10, Ohio, Phone 6-7361. One Hundred Seventy-eight W O C I-I E R 1 S 201 EAST BROAD STREET Specializing in Microscopes Haemacytometers Welch Allyn Otoscopes and Ophthalmascopes Tycos Baumanometers Syphygmonometers Office Equipment, Furniture A Pioneer in 1839 As M odern As 1955 -and all Physician's and Hospital Supplies CA 1-1435 For PURE OIL Come TO: Congratulations and Best Wishes for Success to the Class of 1955 BYALL AND KINNEYS TOM THUMB RESTAURANTS North High at Eleventh AX 9-0516 We Appreciate Your Friendship and Patronage Congratulations from MEDICAL ARTS PHARMACY BOB CRQVE 327 East State Street Representing Parke-Davis CO, Owned and Operated by Registered Pharmacists MOE CLASSMANS Dang-ing Nightly COLLEGE SHOPPE MEN'S WEAR KITTY SHOW BAR 1584 N. High AX 9-0568 Fourth Ave. and High HQQPER'S PHARMACY FEIL FUNERAL HOME 6: AMBULANCE SERVICE High af Dunedin AM 23585 225 King Avenue Columbus 1, Ohio Congratulations - - - Class of '55 from PAUL E. SHIRK LIFE INSURANCE CONSULTANT O SPECIAL PROGRAMS for - - - - O ESTATE PLANNING MEDICAL STUDENTS O PHYSICIANS 1625 West Lane Ave. Office HU 8-8422 Columbus, Ohio Res.-HU 8-9575 One Hundred Seventy-nine St. Rita's Hospital Lima, Ohio St. P1ita's Hospital, conducted by the Sisters of Mercy, is a 350-bed general hospital, located in Lima, Ohio, a thriving industrial center of 50,000 population, within convenient transportation 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 hos- pital oilers 10 general rotating internships yearly to qualified applicants. Approved residencies are available in Internal Medicine, General Surgery, Pathology, Ob- stetrics, and General Practice. Intern service is of 12 months duration, with in- struction 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 constituted of members of the teaching staff. All departments of the hospital contain members certiied by their respec- tive Boards and Associations. The teaching program includes daily conferences as follows: Monday, Clinical Pathological, Tuesday, Radiology, Wednesday, General Practice, Thursday, Obstetrics, Friday, Surgery, Saturday, Tumor C-linic. 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. One Hundred Eighty BILL KAY Original Firm Established 1861 HERE'S WISHING YOU SUCCESS AND HAPPINESS J. E. HANGER COMPANY M anufactmwrs of JAKE SHAWAN PROSTHETIC APPLIANCES Insurance Planning Service Licensed Specialists in Suction Limbs F itters and Firm certified .by 26 N. Grant Ave. American Board for Certification Columbus, Ohio Offices and Fitting Boom Air Conditioned by Carrier CA 4-3447 HU 8-4307 541 W. Town Street Columbus, Ohio I COLUMBUS' MOST UNUSUAL DRUG STORE 2717 CLEVELAND AVE. AT WEBER RD., COLUMBUS ll, OHIO AMherst 3-3222-3-2527 One Hundred Eighty-0111: 'fahn S Olllier Again A faniiliar and reassuring slogan FAMlLlAR...bECdllSE it has appeared in xii thousands of the coun!ry's finest year- gll books for the past half century. REASSURlNG...l76CdMS6 those years of 4 specialized experience bring complete service, outstanding quality and de- A pendable delivery to the yearbook staffs with whom we worlz. + ,IAHN an OLLIER ENCRAVING CO. 817 W. Washington Blvd. Chicago 7, Illinois 1 ,ly l -13 One Hundred Eighty-two Autographs


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

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

1951

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

1952

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

1954

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

1957

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

1960

Ohio State University College of Medicine - Caducean Yearbook (Columbus, OH) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964


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