Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 28

 

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1942 Edition, Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1942 Edition, Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Page 10, 1942 Edition, Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1942 Edition, Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 28 of the 1942 volume:

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Q! 5t.'mfl Tfii h A ff- AMAA L Us - Pill?-lit .-- 3 ' --A- ' wan 5' y i:?L,3E,, - Published quarterly by the students of Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing June - 1942 C llove of Physicians Department of Nursing - o O i ,B Columbia University, New York, N.Y. M Surgssns 6525- W- 00, .5202 f U . 3 1 '5f 'mnfnve STAEFM, 0- ,J EDIT R-IN- IEF-, ----- aracruarnha Pearson BUSINESS r4uAGEi ------ ----Dorothy Vernon ART EDITOR ------- -IJ-.,-:Anncnne Fitch TYPING EDI' R ------ 1--7---fiah cs Aiken e , - . 4 , a Wx, Y in . H- -. ' --f I 4 4 'P fr 6 . n. ' ' iz.',-M.. y 3 sn A i...:L 'I 5 . I 0 4 ' I -0 This graduation issue of Student Prints is dedicated by the Fiftieth Anniversary Class to all of you who have gone before us. Your gift to us was one of high ideals lasting traditions, and a trusting be- lief in the worthiness of our school and its profession. For this We are grateful, and only ask that our group may take its place with those of the fifty years past, hoping that We too, in some small way, have left our share in the life of the school. Harriet Heffernan President of Class of '42 nUS WAS--US ISN Us was weary - us was worn Us for three years now has born The trial and woes: us no how shirk The hopeless task of student work. Don't it awful? Us is working just the same, Us is at the same old game, Us is happy, us is gay, Us 15 sporting pins today. Don't it lovely? Annette Fitch THE OUTLOOK Graduating this year, we are met by a world in travail and despair. One with more problems than we have ever faced before, with problems greater than our most active imag- inations could picture. Mostly now we are over that first feeling We experienced last December when inside we crumbled and whispered that we couldn't do it. B ut that emotion has disappeared and has been replaced by the knowledge that we must put first things first, and lay aside our own high plans until we finish up the problem of the moment. It is all well and good to think of it all so logically, but the fact remains we still Wonder. Wondering if the dreams We dreamed before this year can ever come true now. Wondering what we can do to hurry it along, wondering where our duty lies, and how we can best fulfill it. Nor are the answers to all our queries plainly shown. In the winter months that passed since the beginning of the war several things have surely occured to us. First the conviction that there is work of infinite value Waiting to be done, and that it is the job of all of us to see, understand, and to do it. For all belong to the com- munity and must share the ordeal through which it must pass. We as a group are more fortunate than most, for we have had a head start. Our work is always indispensable and of lasting importance. We are already especially equip- ped for our job. Universally new people are dying in Want of kindness and mercy, as well as in want of food and shelter. Can we not then accept a greater task quiet- ly, realize it's importance and with our own tools attack our work, as our part in the battle? It little matters whence we begin for everywhere We are neededsthe important thing is to begin. Our small part may seem of little value. Perhaps its results will never be knmfn to the world nor make apparent change. Gradually though, will be seen the fruit of our labors, and we can be sure victory will be ours. Knowing that, we can go on when the Work is hard and painful, remain steadfast in danger, find consolation in sorrow, and in the end find victory. For awhile then we must give up our search for security, our anticipation of joys, and the pleasures we desire. As Thackeray has said, WBravery is never out of fashionP. with a clear head, a stout heart, triumphant spirit and, above all, a sense of pence in our own personal lives we will soon find where we want to go, and finding the way, will proceed with speed and power. Mhrtha Pearson 9- 0 9 3 1 IN RETROSPECT rxk i 2 Q It was Friday afternoon, September ' 5 ,, eighth, that the last half of the X ff class of '42 arrived and met in Stur- X i ', a - ges for the first time. A howling . 7.2 by Xfxx black Washington Heights storm beat . , Kg Y-5 D against the windows--our first intro- N mfixf -I Q ,. i duction to many more which followed. xggijh tk g1HLx But the class was together for the X :N I V Q' first time, and soon we begnn our lives wk E el ! Q, as Probies, with the wearing of the 'i in t ,A1 grey, weekly anatomy quizzes, and food , 9 - A I 5 from home giving a strange assortment. ,. 't 4: 1 , . 1 . In October the Senior class fcted us with a party and four ef the class X! - won prizes in the Scavenger Hunt----- W goldfish, long since dead. Christmas next with a Christmas party, and the lovely ard ever thrilling carolling to cheer the first Christ mas away from home. At last January 50, the Welcoming Cere- mony and the next morning we appeared at prayers, striped, capped and proud--part of the school. June 4th was graduation day for our big sisters--those kind, and helpful seniors, who had smoothed a rough way often for us--and we wondered as we watched them receiving their pins-- would that time ever come for us? Things happened--so many, and so quickly. As Juniors a History of Nursing Class pageant depicting the history of our school. We typed Florence Nightingale letters for l our collection, ran the Red Cross drive in the Medica Center, took our places in Student Government. During our three years we said a sad goodbye to Miss Miss Ludes, Miss Mutch, Miss Roser, and Miss Reddigg welcomed to our faculty Miss Gill, Miss Montel, Miss and Miss Harrell. We were the first class to have c teria service at lunch and dinner, and thus discover what wood the tops of our tables were made. We also started a Psychiatric affiliation Hnext dooru rather Hell, and Pettit, fe- Of than S at Bloomingdale, initiated Ndim out'proctors, moved beds to elevator foyers during air raid drills, and bubbled babies in blackouts. And then, that night following Pro- fessional Problems class, when Miss Conrad announced that the national emergency had involved so many of us, that seniors might marrv if their fiances were to b sent overseas, and that they might return to fihis . training. Then April we registered with the rest o the country for our sugar rationing cards and now take our nr sugar three times a day in iniividual wax paper begs: and also car fully save the remaining grains so maybe someday: we can make a fourth of a fudge recipe. Ninety-seven of us began together, and but sixty-nine, are left to graduate. Four of us have left trainin 'for marriage, and our first baby is almost a year old, th, two more expected at any moment. Three engagements ire supposedly announced, but, the indications point to mady more soon---sooner than you think! Our short course students are already blazing a bright and pleasing trail with three head nurses, and yes, a faculty member. It's been three years filled to overflowing. Filled with tears and laughter, lots of broken hopes, and long-wishod- for Jreams. Mostly we've liked it, and now, the end of all this is fast approaching. We're breathlessly in the midst of our own graduation and the celebration of the school's fiftieth anniversary. In the midst, too, of comprehensive examinations, senior orals, the alumnno dance at the Waldorf, looking for white shoes, mailing graduation invitations, with ease studies, psychiatric finals, or a neuro-anatomy quiz thrown in for good measure. Still--we hopefully pray for 1 blue and white-- June ffurth. And then, for each af us, our own special ily. ind Prayers at last on Finishing Day. Katherine Mahoney CLASS WILL Read at our Senifr Class banquet, May 7, 1942 We, the underdogs of 1942, being of sound bofly and rattl'5d grain, do hereby establish and publish this our last will and testament, wherein we gladly extend our God-sent gifts, and sympatheticelly bequeath our multifirous Woes, trials, and manifest temptations to our successors: l-Mike Mahoney leaves her amazing ability to get along with the queer folk to anyone else who needs it. 2-Rose Bendock's throaty voice to the next hospital page... just call 271. 5-Justine Dennehy's 'where innocence is bliss attitude' for the happy people with the faculty of getting into trouble. 4-Helen Chapple flings the torch to the next president of Stuient Government--it's burning her fingers. 5-Muffy Pcarsen's lovely smile to die World...everyone needs it. 6-Pedeflous, Scheenmaker, VanHoesen, Kilburn and Co's cap- acity for enjoying themselves to all the weary and down- trodien. 7-All Seniers finishing later than Sept. lOth leave their extra time to anyene wishing to make it up. 8-Annette Fitoh's flair for verse and werse tr anyone Wish- ing to live alone and like it. N 9-Jeannie Stambough's calm serenity ta all the harassed Freshmen 10-Saum, Christensen and Chesna leave their secret formula f r elevation of Vitamin C level Ui the dietary iepartment. ll-Jeannie Dunean's gamin grin to anyone Wishing to Warm the heart of a stone. U 12-Dorothy Buckinsham's high ideals to the many that need them. ' 15-Anne 3dwsrd's hair twitching to the persons wish- ing to make nervous wrecks of their friends. 14-Dot Fesrn's supreme optimism to anyone drying sinks in the operating room. l5vDottie Heotor's ability to put in a word for anyf one to those who are inclined to do the opposite. 15-Jo Hallinnn's well stocked lerder to Maxwell Hall on dsys when the memls are lean. 17-The dripping shower in llth North Corridor to anyone who can stand it. 18-Beth Mnrt.ns end Scotty Davidson lesve their hard working alarm closks to anyone who doesn't care much about the time. 19-Jann Edgar refuses te lesve her men. To the forthccming seniors we lenve our ability to get nowhere fest with petitions. To the freshmen, our beloved little sisters, we lesve the best we hed in us. - And last, but by no mesns least, to the fseulty.... we leivelill Signed, sealbd, ecknewledged and declared by the Class of 1942, this 7th day of Hay-1942. Annette Fitch and Beth Martens 1 Rsmazmssa BEST--n ---- ---- -trying to find my clothes when something interesting came up. ffm , OMJMODI .,wn I., ,,.f r1.1x.4 I A 'f ffl -those five minute breakfasmfimfore prayers. I 'Y J-if . 'M !,9' fy -Bard Hall. qw 4'o 5ffu!u1fgg5,,pfrwpnaJ Xmnxx, xi, QLwAM4iC. g A! -the Hudson and walks to the ?alisades, f ,:2LL4fC!6M4f7Q5?ir44', -the glorious feeling of sleeping until 9200 a.m. only to wake and discover I'dCmissed an S530 class. iQ iE't4L'.asfoL'- -43'L'Q... agbulance rides at Willard ar er. ' f -lighting my candle at !gfgfHg'and4h, '. i1itliQMMill figuratively never burn out. 6,5 qv ,!jf Qlffjhvnu -my first Practical Nursing exam--much bravado until I entered Ml25, and , en, andfjfen--Q0 APSE! ,,c4'Y.2L ltlizsf ' fxdf' -the coldness of tn rooms pn the North side, but the View of the snowy Hudson and the bridge that came with them. 6i36EkLf?Z2gAih?!ZE26g2.r!K 43 , ,. ' 4, 43,1-.f -how eagerly I ran to answer gy buzzer on thc nights I was not on calll' I. fi? f-J,fCdil ,gh g y20'L.J' L- -that old refrain! c gee D cry stronglyu. ..,. ' 4 U X fy , . . .- --a-hu., , .-1, ,,,,.. -the Cheerfu qChc:, .,i, I 3 hdfhff ' . kg HL.,- -en roidering on 60 bcwnics--nP,H.H ,r f ' Q I X cu 'zfk' Kline 5 -tearing down the hall in thc cold gray dawn to the Qlock to see if mine was roally a half hour fast, or nly ten minutes , , ,fyq O U M -my Senior year. ff 4-dbdwf 2Z'44i4tnJ okaxwcll Hall at 5230 a.m. on Sunday mornings. -my fric s. , , J2FfiTAZ-Lc21Z- fliM?4'1Lf7-' H 1 L f ,J f -f1awn's rcfllcctcd g ow 5,!f1fZtli'1C Pa isadcs. jphmwwf -Christmas corolin by cindlcli - -my first s.s.E.:-.gYXXO'M'M 'G Ndlomns 1 fa,gfL4.Zg4f1Lff fZ4kAu6Z2Aaf -conversations at 21 Oli... ,, , - th loor bri gc parties. 1 . 41. Lgaucll J -trying to cwtch the 2200 p.m. trggh from Penn smti . I ' on oErL.'?.L4. Whnomv -sleep I didn't gotg notices I 4idn't seoa alarms I didn't4hcorg and buzzcrs Qggt didn't buzz. -tho Hu'1s n i ll its 'fro ifguuqk aOM'wCaA,? . O n . s. OHDIC-my. -S tw.: x'W,IwLa -passing G nbottom shcetn. , . ' , alum 540-.-44, -my fivorito outdoor spgQ1--sunningaohhfhc roof. ', Z' Xp L Lu! Wfamlff -copping'nni the five months prooeiing that ovonti JA x -mifmigm tfilks all over Maxwell HQ1,15Xg3p0 Qfimqi: . , 1 Luwliv 'L'f04f'U W' . -6'50 A.M.--finding one of my futy shoes had fillen into the Borden. 3 f H C Xl-!1.A5Q,4.1.U DQWAJ7 -various lemon squeozers qt mosiftimoslitkf . t :A 5:14 -Q 1 -spx-mg, 1942. 'Lf 'Q 5 IM ,fp L- . -Miss Rogor's voice saying- Wc'ro fimit' ng you to Harkness today, Miss FoEvI'1'1 . ' Fw L. , ' fi. SCLXO -me constantly saying, WI must go on m iict tomorrowu. -Cfmrols on Christmfrs EVGQ i 9- M Mf.s0i5x' X1X0+v-- s 'I -Lost stuzs, ond no lsunirjxsiins. O b 91255404- -Tho weird noises and shadows associated with my first experience on night duty. E-Xqz,r.f'xe,if H4.PQ4fw.Jvx-f a gots over the Hudson. - !'X ' W mi z ibi 15 bo 6mQiXCm Nx5 A ' - ' -fn n err o a ooo nur V , A s Y s Joy, I . . . if., -fit-Lf -wearing spots--black stockings wit no feet. . , , f'-'T-crjA..c1A. fxfuvur'-11306 -my first delivery. Q? 1 , gowsrv as Ch .. Jfw-ff-hx -Q bicycle ride on the walks of Control Psrk, sni the resulting 352.00 fine. ,.--, 1 f A f- 'H 'l..ffe.J'V- '7 4' -this life wc lead. 'Zxg X QkkNm-CNm.K A -Sundry niinight--the lnuniry still to bc put out. .2 ,nfvwn ' fmt: HX C,.u' 7 P '- ming of e new 'Tay onunight 'Iuty 64,0219 If -:.:1'1c'1y -exemsfg yn' consequent Ano tofmy ret kos. -twat ouxom oh' thi lasgiai ' 1 -the time when as Gtiffne Mars' fE'fYf1'pped and fell at a crucial point during an operation by Dr. Whip- ple. And he asked, Did e faint -Dashing madly from the fioor: :foL?Y14 5r31'f1oor launfry looking for iron jlmatkvfcrks, 5.11-ff-:l '4 'kg 14,-1,-of -my first bed ,,a4ti2n't--after ry twenty minutes of effort, she get up and walked to the solarium! -Ste lin JCQD Q. J I- g. z.,m1,'ni,v,- D. ' -QLKQAETE-'fg9fe1ftn.Ga11ef:f'aEi 1 nf-rl being me first in the class tfmfinish. f-Cfazftfc 0a 7'04'611 -Hampers in the o.R. :W A 1 . 41.454, A Q09 ' Y -Six radios playing six' jifferent orograrzs on e llth floor. I I. :.5Zg- ,Q ,Lu-fir, IT CAN 'T HAPPEN HERE Prophecy of the class of 1942 -- here we are ten years hence Helenmgrle Anderson special duty nurse superde-luxe. Elrginia Andersgn frrntier nursing in the sruth ftheir stan- dards are up these daysl. Qgtty-Crouse and Begg-Bggdoek still running soeials for lonely medical students. New on tour of the eountyy. DorQthylBueklngham proud mama, Whose oldest son, Clifford, sings soprano in St. James Choir.' Kltjy-Barnes wife of Dr. St. Greenadeer heads the Bundles for Englewood movement. gay Chesna wife, mother, and eongresswoman, has just intro- duced a bill to whitewash the walls of the Pennsylvania coal mines. Helen Chrlstenson Supervisor of Nurses at the Haekenslash Memorial Hospital. Alice hamilton spprano, Jo Cagylll violinist, and Vera Masuk ballerina, just gave a benefit recital at Carnegie Hall for all the nurses who failed to register their Regents diploma and therefore can't get Work! Qelen Chgpplg finally took her last lesson and is audition- ing at the Audubon in NLily White Hands Hulan. Q Elizabeth Dlllingham through her ardent efforts in Maine has started the nation using the Elliot Group Tent. Qean Duggan a public health nurse is bringing red hair ani sunshine into the highways and byways of Vermont. JeanlEdgar has quite a family--of ten or so the kist We heard. She and her husband the dector Kit was the doctor she married I thinkl are collaborating cn a series of maga- zine articles entitled UKeeping Your Youth--Family or Non. - Qot Fearn president of the International Women's Athletic Association was just discharged by Dr. Stevenson. Her 48th Harkness Admission. gene Hgltgg has finally married Ed. 'It was worth waiting ten years fora she allowed the papers to print. V Qc Hallinan of the firm nHallinan the Hatter' has just created another millinery rage--'Broccoli Beret with the fritter flounce,U a throw-back to training days. Ann Edwards is receiving royalties on her in- vention of an eight-hour bedl-guaranteed to electrocute anyone disturbing the sleeper before the eight hours are up. Annette Fitch facetious president of 'No Dis- paraging Remarks About Edna St.Vincent Hillay Association.u Qorinda Bell is the mother of three-year old triplet sons, Walter, Joe and Penner. Quldah BlairQ Qennigieve Tottell and Ruth Davis are someplace in China, clothing the starving Armenians. guth Galloway is supervisor oi K4Floor and 'Honestly kids I don't know a thing about it.' Qerry Bradley has gone back to Amherst where,she' has started a school all her own. MarjoriegHasscltinc is now lecturing for the Lily Company on 'Medications I Have Khown.' -A lane VanHoesen and Betty-Sghoonmaker were the idols of the student body of P.H.. Now running the P.H.O.R. they give P.H.'s five days a week to students, and only graduates are on call. Haril Pedeflous Has been cited by Parents Ihgazine as the ideal Mother of 1952. Qgrotgy Hector npnears all over N.Y.C. subways as nHiss Subway l952,n Harriet Heffernan is at last her pleasant self again 5u5'To EEC tremendous income from her wall- kncwn reducing diet. Qgan-Lggakis is the founder of a fund for soundproof rooms for student nurses. So far she is the only benefactress. ' Magion Corke Alas! is Miss Carver's successor in the Sloan labor room. Qgstine Dennehy one of the world's ten best dressed women keeps her income up by running a nLearn to Driven school. Marion McGovern and her four year old daughter model mother and daughter clothes for Best 8 Co. of N.Y.C. Marion-McGrath a shadow of her former self, is modeling hair styles for Charles of the Ritz. Margaret Mead has been asked to add a chapter to Harmer and Henderson on NHow to obtain proper elevation of the affected parts.0 Qeth Martens is still adding to her nut-hatchery for her forthcoming Pedeculi Exhibit. gatherine Mahoney was last heard of collecting drift Wood to keep the light burning in the Bridge lighthouse. Edna Morrison, we regret to report, is a patient on the Sth floor of Psychiatric Institute scream ing for volunteers to play for prayers. Egrge Norcom is still in Alaska. She got stuck ,there at the end of the war as an Army nurse and now she can't get back. EaureengQ'Halloran--we can't arouse, so we don't know what she is doing. Qcgtty Dayidson is now president of the Indiana P.T.A. and is loving it. She's running all the meetings. Muffy Pearson is just as ever Hwy candle burns at both ends, it will not last the night ----- But ah my foes, and ah my friends, it leaves a lovely light . getty Saum has just introduced her scrub-up technique: Scrub one, pauses scrub two, pause: scrub three, pause ---- and those poor germs. Qagion Howall is supervisor of a nursing school in Jersey. She immediately instituted a new time schedule. Four hours of duty every day but Saturday and Sunday, those days the school closes. Qharlotte Keith and Barbara Tanis are double- dating with baby carriages, and its all sunshine and diapers now. Jane Lindsey is promoting the Chamber of Commerce in Florida and Lois Perinchief was all set to be a Long Island matron, but she's so far behind in her bill at Franklin Simon that on the side she's modeling leg art for the Gorgeous Gam Hosiery Company. Qlorence Peterson spends a good deal of her time writing to Dorinda. She keeps sending pictures of her own red-headed boys for Dorin's approval, and they just can't agree whose boys are the red-headestl Effie Pickerell is wracking her brain on how to get more Shalimar. She's down to the last few drops that Julie gave her way back in '42 and oh dear! Qot Reilly has the approval of all. She has just endowed a room in the infirmary, proceeds for which came from her fortune-telling tsa room on 42nd Street. Qoris Sagyer writes she still peaches and cream complexion, Poco soap. Dotty Vernon married Byron at ing all the things she had to has her beautiful due to the use of last, after finish- do. Doing very well on a school teachers salary too--as only Dotty could. Ellen Sinclair has at last taken the decisive step she's really going to be an infant's nurse, 'cause she loves the babies so much. Alice Sorenson is spending all her time collecting maple syrup to send to Maxwell Hall for fritters. getty Lou Turngg did just as she said she would-- married Hughie and loves it: and now that he's used to it, he does too. Lorraine Woods is having the time of her life--the only 11 Women in amentery the state legislature, and Naccording to Pirli- Lawn it's quite agreeable. Eorgnret Whitten is happy. She's running L Floor by tele phone from Pine Bush. Qynnie Kilburn is idiing to the lirder by lecturing to High School Charm Clubs on HFmcial Expressions and Their Part in Everyfley Living. Egncy Mamsley is teaching public heelth to the Ubangi Warrior district ini they aren't going to let her leave 9 Ethel-Harris has perfected UThe ?atients' Joyous Reideru which remains suspended in mid-air by the force of gravity Detty Phila-is s igning 'Houses one leiv -Jean-Qtambaugh tact man--sort Qgnnie Mgueeri happier than she has ever been. She's de- like she wanted to if and writes Nevery- s me alone, ani I can eat what I w1nt.n is Working for Apeda studio--personal con- of. is through worrying new and takes life as calmly as the rest of us. Qotty Weinberger - Happy in love, Barbara Philips - Still sunshine and flowers--with the 'men st1lTeafiTg it up! Beth Martens Annette Fitch 'iff wi X7 ' g,fi..,.....-f- . 1' Jxwfxx ff 'fl Q cf ' Wf 'EW I ' 'I' 1 I 1f'.', lrzmstli, I E 1u't. 11km tf o. czzt -- fw. 'f H -nh ' w QPU' Q Q 'Y 'x 4 '-F ' , Q s 'x K 'Y ' 5,5 ' L 5, 'Y -. ' . if 'Q ref J 'W ' y . ' Q - 4 , aviix , A 1 ' I W- , uv , Huis! -V K 1. lr ff' 'gift H' . in ff ,M 5 - W L . 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Suggestions in the Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 8

1942, pg 8

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 10

1942, pg 10

Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing - Stripes Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 9

1942, pg 9


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