SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY)

 - Class of 1975

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SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 246 of the 1975 volume:

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK UPSTATE MEDICAL CENTER 700 E. ADAMS ST. STKACUaC. NEW YOKK 13210 OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS AND STUDENT AFFAIMS AREA CODE 319 TELEPHONE: 473-4970 March i, 1971 Dear Mr. Aiaielloaskanazibaeslbattinobianrosablandboxerbrownbyrnebyrum- caldwellcarlsonchampagnecincottacollinscrounsedebolddimartinodispenzadorazio- dworker lebachereshaghianf age Imanfarre lifer ronfeygaetj ensgioiagoldmangoldman- greengrossberghallhastingshayeshechthelakhineshymes janickikaplankastenberg- kasulkekasulkekatzkatzkellykresskroetschkuzmalepagellslllttslowelllynchmace- magidmageemahonmahoneymarkellmelselmoganmroziewicznovellioharaokeefepalomba- pavypearlpetrocellipoolepyattquanraaschragusaratajczakravnikarrookerrosen- rudolphsaccosacksschlf fmansegalserbalikshapirosherryshortsiclltansilver- slotkinsodasofairsorkinsouthwellterzlantinkelmanvaldlnlverdiramewalshon- walstatterwelsherwalf fzlmlerwalfordzimneyzito; Our Admissions Committee is pleased to offer you a place as a member of our first-year class entering September, 1971. If you are still in college, this acceptance is contingent upon your maintaining a good academic record and upon the successful completion of your studies between now and the start of medical school. Please return the enclosed reply sheet within ten days of the date of this letter so we will know whether or not to reserve a place for you In our entering class. In order to signify your acceptance, please send us within ten days the enclosed preliminary registration form and non-refundable deposit of fifty dollars to be applied towards your first-year ' s tuition. Our Medical School does have a financial aid program and applications will be mailed in the near future. The deadline for return of the aopllcatlons is May 1, 1971 and awards are made In earlv summer. We look forward with pleasure to your becoming a member of our student body. A. Geno Andreatta Associate Dean and Secretary of the Admissions Comnlttee Ends. 1) Acceptance Reply Sheet 2) Preliminary Registration Form 3) Return Envelope P.S. Please forward your original transcript if you have not already done so. AURICLE 1975 i d rime . . . there was Yates Castle, which stood on the grounds of the present medical center from 1855 until 1954. It was then destroyed because of basic science building expansion. TW Wf ' - r ' - I- ' v .c.u;:ifc ' Km. 11 i Lj., .« IE:- I ox Qqi i u- Thereafter, extensive construction was undertal en in tfie years prior to the arrival of the Class of 1975. I- ' ' - ' r - ,s Tully 1 Syracuse 26 J ,. - Tully 3 Syracuse 16 Syracuse Watertown 73 Sponsored by the Syracuse Medical Aiumni Association OMIVERSITT HOSPITAL iCn « ■r i , 1 J L [ [ 4 4 vP U fe -m ' • ' ii ' — — _ - ■ _ _--4h K; « ' % — V ' J 55a 9| i 52S i ■im f] Y liltl Sponsored by the Department of Orthopedj| Surgery ■• YOU ONE-HUNDRED SOME-ODD X SW i ' S - . $ ' 1-% i.5 ?! ' t S « «st2 s ij ' ' ■lXfeL ' 5..-f ' S J -« .. .. ,..,«. .-y;t ?:f; : jJf % r y 10 BAGS OF EPIDERMIS... Sponsored by the Department of Neurology ...WILL NEVER BE THE SAME AGAIN otto M. Lilien, M.D. J BLJB-S ' e ii SSB liiijyjiL JB_t_BLiJ,. ' ' ■ ' ' 13 Sponsored by the Department of Family Practice Today ... You Don ' t H.J. DiStetano Have to Go to Class Any Day . . . 17 All the News That ' s Fit to Print Elje ?Celu Jlork Simes uAIECITV CDITIOri ro:, lXV ' ;. ' .A ' . 4:j74 NKW YORK. THURSDAY. AUGUST I. 19(1 NIXON IS NOMINATED ON THE FIRST BALLOT: SUPPORT FOR LINDSAY IN 2D PLACE GROWINGl U.S. STEEL ENDS f«;J (-- r ' ' CZECHS SEEING ■DAY PRICE WAR: LZ rT sliZ WAYS TO LOOSEN RISESGUTINHALF .-.™ ORIGINAL vn :e j Rest ol tntfostnf Ac«(J«$. ' Rslhng B«k to 2.5 ' Johnson i P t?-. ' Ml TR« HE y f. jj:]; ' J lo ' Cash Loans 10 Make ■■ ' . .. 5. ' l . ff, ? '   . ' jf ' i Mtt HOfMAW ' ■i ' . X ' Cr ' 1. 1 . El fc - , } - jf-? ■ 0,; rf) ;.. i 8 8 68 i 9 74 SI PPORT (Oa MVO : D mnn tralort nn Ihf ronvcmlnfl (loof •(l r RKlurd M M o« n«« r ■■: . ■. . - .1 r .--.rr; ' . r n ' m ' !!. .. r.., ;;, rrt T |rr«- nf Vi- liTt mtflf • HiniirO at h Ztlh All the News That ' s Fit to Print Sljc ' cUt Jlork eime$ CITY EDIT N VOL.CXXIU...Ho.t2M6 — NEW YORK FRIDAY. AUGUST 9 ;9;« — NIXON RESIGNS HE URGES A TIME OF ' HEALING ' ; FORD WILL TAKE OFFICE TODA A Sptreh to Nation 1-- lAptcU ' d Tonij, hl The l?7lh President First to Leave l o A ' .l ' he News ThaTs Fit to Pn- Sl)c Js ' cUf Jlork Siines CITY EDITION VOL CXXIII Ni:w YORK SIOMlAY. SF.PTHMBKR 9 1974 - FORD GIVES PARDON TO NIXON, WHO REGRETS ' MY MISTAKES ' U.S.-BoundPlaneWith88 Crashes in Sea Of i Greece ?kW EXPRESSED AllonTW.AFhKhtFromTclAmand ' , ,., , A.hcn, B.i.c.cd Dead Pai, t,n,a. Soffowat the Way H- Youth Croup Say. It Planted Bomb Handled Watefgat-: f3 . NO CONDITIONS SET Action Tj,,.., ,..„.. Nation and b-Chief. President Says i: nm HI am US 4 a« !.M M •. « [W 19 Nixon% m - ■ , , ' !?■ ' ■ -cr- - ; r  fi£r ' l Begin at once the cultivation of some interest other than the purely professional. --Sir William Osier Sponsored by the Department of Radiology -  It . l V Sponsored by the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Sponsored by Smith, Kline, and French Laboratories He must use his own insight wholeheartedly; he must not blunt the piercing impact of his own knowledge; but he must at the same time have in readiness the healing ointment for the heart pierced by it. 26 27 i Robert F. Rohner THE ULCER LIFE A 20th century American Painting by--Bob Sullivan, 29 Sponsored by the Department of Pathology 4 T - J V y «rt r-c. Life is short, and tlie Art long; the occasion fleeting; experience fallacious, and judgment difficult. Hippocrates 31 Sponsored by the Department of Surgery I ' : J L.. LIBRARY (?v::flu Hlf if.tl O ' ollfqt. 1 « V i Ik. The true past departs not; no truth or goodness realized by man ever dies, or can die; but all is still here, and, recognized or not, lives and works iJirough endless changes. Thomas Carlyle nniLIS, CL JSSIMI C THEiOPHRASTI BOMBAST, AB HO- HENHEIM, DICTI PARACELSI, Operum Mecfico-Chimicorum PARA D 5e O R VJM, Tomus penui iis Scxtus, •aicinx: mmitaaitc mum ac j tncturm , Reccnter Latinefaftus in vfum AfTfckirum NouxSC Vetcris Philofbphix foras dacus, 0 I rss ACoUcgkjBu rum PalthcnL - Nobili Francofurto. I THE ANCIENTS ' % The brain was first drawn out through the nostrils by an iron hool and the sl ull cleared of the rest by rinsing with drugs. The abdomen was then incised with a sharp flint knife, eviscerated, cleansed with wine and aro- matics, filled with myrrh, cassia, and spices and the wound sewed up. The body was then steeped for seventy days in sodium chloride or bicarbonate, and afterward washed and enveloped completely with linen bandages smeared together with gum. The relatives put it in a wooden coffin, shaped like a man, which was deposited in the burial chamber along with four Canopic jars containing the viscera. Description of an Egyptian embalming by Herodotus of Ancient Greece (5th Century B.C.) Egypt (3000-400 B.C.) Dominant medicine in the world for 2500 years Priests practiced medi- cine: jmhotep, a medical demigod, is world ' s oldest known physician (2900 B.C.) Ebers Papyrus (1550 B.C.) discovered in 1872; an encyclopedic treatise on disease, incltiding tumors Drugs tised included opium, castor oil, gentian Circumcisions performed Baldness treated with iTiixture of equal parts ink and cerebrospinal fluid Splints found on Diummies L Peru The picture at the right shows the art of TREPHINING, in which the sktills of living pa- tients were opened in order to let blood or cure epilepsy and other cere- bral disorders. Priests would seek stipernatural intervention throtigh pray- ers as the surgeon slow- ly performed this danger- ous operation. Sponsored by the Department of Neurosurgery Hippocrates (460-370 B.C.): The Father of Medicine Greece (1300-400 B.C.) Hippocrates (above) — some of his many contributions: — Dignity of the physician and an attitude of respect towards patients --HIPPOCRATIC DOCTRINE of humoral pathology: a disturbed balance of the four humors (blood, phlegm, yellow bile, black bile) led to disease -HIPPOCRATIC OATH --Excellent, still accurate descriptions of epilepsy, puerperal sepsis Gods and Temples of Healing, in which priests offered cures according to what they saw in their dreams Therapeutics: fresh air, good diet, pur- gation, blood-letting, massage Medical instruction private, often individ- ual without formal schools Rome (300 B.C.-240A.D.) Medicine an unworthy field; medical knowl- edge begins to decline Galen (131-201 A.D.) wrote over 500 books on anatomy, physiology, disease and therapy which contained many errors but re- mained the authority for over 1200 years more Drugs: opium, turpentine, wine, honey, grape juice, barley water Public health and preventive medicine important Below is a copy of JAPYX AND AENEAS, a Pompeian painting in which the doctor Japyx is removing an arrow from the thigh of Aeneas, the hero of Troy. G R E E C E R M E Three Surgical Operations: Ophthalmology, otorhinolaryngology, and proctology as conceived of and practiced in the Hth century. Miniature illustrating a surgical manuscript of the School of Salerno. (1100-1400 A.D.) Superstition with growth of Church and unquestioning of authority; Saints as- sociated with diseases and cures Medical School of Salerno (11th and 12th ceiituries)--a reawakening began Roger, a siircieon, introduced concepts of sutures and !i()atures in hemorrhage, secondary intention healing, and laudable pus The Black Death (1350-1600) killed one-fourth of the world ' s population, i.e. about 60 million people The Great Room of the Poor, opened in 1443 in France, is tlie world ' s oldest edifice in continuous use as a hospital 36 What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason! How infinite in faculty! In form and moving how express and admirable! In action how like an angel! In apprehension how like a god! —Shakespeare (1400-1600) Revival of classical learning, order re- turned with a spirit of inquiry PARACELSUS attacked medieval sacred cows such as Galen and helped turn medi- cine towards rational research and the use of chemicals ANDREAS VESALIUS of Brussels pub- lished De Humani Corporis Fabrica in 1543, a iiionLiiiiental work in medical history; he conducted anatomical demonstrations for phy- sicians, students and artists, and was ridi- culed by the Galenists AMBROISE PARE(1510-1590), known as the Father of Surgery, helped put aside cautery irons used to stop bleeding in am- putations and reintroduced ligatures WILLIAM HARVEY introduced a revo- lutionary theory of blood circulation in 1628 which overturned the beliefs of Galenists iRLSZLSV Paracelsus (1493-1541) aip ft 4.) Sponsored by the Department of Urology Drawings by Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) 38 The Physician Is 39 There are four luiniors in the body, namely, blood, pldeqni, yellow bile and black bile. They arc mixed in such a way and i such quantities that normally man retains his hcallli, If, o n- ever, they are diminished, or siipc rabuiidant , or tliickened, or retained, or if they escape, become bitter, l( avc their normal regions, or enter unusual situations, various situations occur in mankind. Sometimes it is u(HX ssary to nourisli lliCNliumors, sometimes to dilute them, sometimes to compensate, and some times to moderate them. Ik; Ijodyf brain; yellow The four humors have llieir seals in lour p blood dwells in the arteries and veins; phlecjm bile in the liver; black bile in |Ik sph ori , . . Blood luis a ruddy color, plilctim whik ' , yellow bilf. ' isreddirJi, blackbih} is blackand thick, I lieir (]iialiliesarr;af,lollowr,: fjlood is moist and warm; plilc(|iri is cold and mcjist; yellov liile warm and xfiy; black bile cold and dry. Therelore blood is bitter by naiiirr;; phlegm salt and swec. ' t; yellow bile sharp; black l)ilf strong and harp. It is obvious thai these humors rule differently in differ- il ages. In infants yellow bile and blood are more important; in adolescents black bile; in tfie malurc ' , lilood; in the olrl, phlr.-gm. til spring, summer, autumn, and winter ' , different humorr, rlonv- Mte. In the spring blood abounds; in the summer yellow bile; III the autumn black hi If;; in the v inter phlegm. We may add that I he differeni lnimors acl in the follov ing ly: blood makes the spiril wilder; yellow hile makes it bold- : hlar.k hi If-, firmer; plilefjin, sluggish , , . I iie Rise of f leflieine at Sale In the ] 2th Crnliiry 40 41 Sponsored by the Department of Pediatrics TOWARDS MODERN TIMES . . . ANNUAL AXNOUXCr.M KNT GEiNEVA .MEDICAL COLLEGE. r  SESSION OF lf?09-0O. RULES AND REGULATIONS Every Ktudent, prerious to his attendance upon Iccturrs, J ' hall wait upon llic Dean, in order to register his ninte. n: idvftce, and the name of ihc practiliont.1 with whom he has pursued his ine ]ical studiei:. and shall pay a matriculati ' in fee of eight dollars. He is recommended at the same lime tn take a general li k l, hy payin;; $:jJ. o, whi h will entide him to the ticket of each ur ' fe v r. Uthcrwi he shall ol tnin them within ten days after the commencement of lectures m any ilepartment from tlic respective professors. t ui ils who haTr atlendeil two full courses uf medical lecturcft, one of which i ouraes has been at this cnlU-gt-, are admilltc i without the [ aymcnt of Urture fees. Those «Jio have attended two full euUfMLS at other medi -al in «tiluions will Im- kd- ttetl to their l]rsl course at this college for one thirti uf the lecture fee in ad ' ltti ' ti :o the matriculation fee. DlKililCES. The candidate for the mcilical decree must be twenty-one years of age, of tr-Mwl noral character, have attended two full courses of oitdiral lecture , the la t at ihi- nstitutioii, nnd must exhibit satisfactory evidence of having prose utitl the Rlu-iy Df medicine for throe years under the direction of some rcjipc-taWe phy triBIl. He must also utidir jo an examination by the professors, in their rvsjK-ctivt; ,j .tulu-. n the presence of the Board of Curators, and present— nd defend when rc |uirvd —a dissertation on some medical subject, compo: and written by himself. FEE-S, PAYABLE IX AD AX( E. fliti ifulation ; payable nrr, « ty, tS.W iii ' ki ' ls Tnr the whole CourM  i.V (ira.lualion HfM lliinoh.-lralor ' s Ticktl, 3.00 Anatoniical Mutorial, . io Hiianl can be ol taiD«l from $2.00 to $3.00 per week. The Kacully |.leJi;e :hcni elvrs t ' spare no efforts that may contribute to the comfort of their pupils Hid their progress in professional study. Kurihei inlurnialiun may be obtained by addressing Prof. J. Towler. I lean of the Ka.ullv, (Jerieva, N, V. , lOls )ISPENSER ...AND PROGRESS?! 1 ' k stitk- in a healthy condhinn. Excerpt from The People ' s Common Sense Medical Adviser, by R.V. Pierce, M.D., 1935, Buffalo. Sponsored by the Department of Anesthesiology ' IVsticIc u;i--!c«I liv M i ' 4 Probing a painted skull • • . Complications of an M.I. . . . Cows ' milk is for calves . . . The student is on surgery to learn . . . Patients with post-pump psy- choses . . . Five things to remember out of our vast experience of medical school. Five out of hundreds of thousands — why remember these? It seems they each came to us via a face and mind eager to teach — from five people who taught well, and beyond academics, taught us how patients think, respond, and cope; how medical students and physicians do the same; how mistakes often precede our achievements; how to laugh and how to show frustration; and how, at the end of it all, to feel somehow accomplished. The hardest conviction to get into the mind of a be- ginner is that the education upon which he is engaged is not a college course, not a medical course, but a life course for which the work of a few years under teachers is but a preparation. — Sir William Osier And so with our feeling of accomplishment comes our heartfelt appreciation. We thank you. Dr. Benzo, for that extra and more insightful peek into our cadavers, and for easing those unknown bur- dens of freshman year; Dr. Cook, for weaving psychiatry with medicine and medicine with psychiatry and people with people and everything with a smile; Dr. Klumann, for stressing learning over labor and mak- ing us feel that someone did understand how a tired- eyed third-year student felt propped over a retractor; Dr. Oski, for Wednesday conferences on nutrition, death and dying, and such untaught subjects, and a Chairman ' s door that was always open; Dr. Rohner, for that amazing body of information you transmitted to us which we shall never forget and for ever know as Rohnerisms. TO YOU FIVE TEACHERS, for becoming to us all you are capable of being, for helping us to better understand the world of medicine and for taking a genuine inter- est in us as individuals, the Class of 1975, with our gratitude and affection, dedicates this yearbook to you. ( Charisma in a teacher is not a mystery or nimbus of personality, but radiant exemplification to which the student contributes a correspondingly radiant hunger for becoming. ,,,.,,. . .,, — William Arrowsmith 45 4 To me, the Class of 1975 will always have a special meaning because you were the first group I really got to know as lndividuals--we spent three very pleasurable years together. You taught me that the best students here are as good as the best students anywhere, and that the worst students are on a par with the worst students anyone else has to offer. I wish to express my gratitude for your thought- ful dedication of the yearbook as well as my com- pliments on your perspicacity. May you find ful- fillment in life and may they say of you, He she did his her damnedest, angels could do no more . DR. FRANKA.OSKI DR. PATRICIA J. NUMANN f The Class of ' 75 brings to mind the Knocker ' s Ball, Amy ' s thyroid, Charles and Roxanne ' s Monday after- noon rounds, the discussions about your surgery per- formance or non-performance, the time you all spent in the OR with me learning the function of the platysma, and all the monumental problems in choos- ing an internship . . . are there really too many sur- geons , what do you think of the program at Mecca General or East Nowhere , what do you think of fam- ily practice , I ' m going into medicine but would you write me a recommendation anyway , should I take an acting internship so someone knows me, my wife wants to go to New York but I want to go to Boston , my husband is a junior . . . Since lam from the Class of ' 65, I ' ll see you at reunions . . . always checking up on you . . . To me, you, the Class of 1975, are very special. Special because you and I shared the growing pains associated with start- ing something new. As you began your first year here in the fall of 1971, I was finishing my rookie year at Upstate. I was here to teach you, but we both were here to learn. As I mentally flip back the pages of years — which somehow only seem like hours--the blur of a hundred faces and a thou- sand memories funnels back into the dissecting laboratory. To- day, as I see you in smart clinic whites with new stethoscopes balanced precariously on cervical vertebrae, I remember your daily garb of yesterday — recking lab coats, pockets stuffed with greased forceps and candy wrappersi Today we place diplomas into your experienced hands which, only yesterday, we covered with countless Band-Aids. For you, the odor of phenol has been replaced by the essence of ether; case studies by case histories; the painted skull and pipe cleaners by patients. Yet, for me. Dr. Berger is still Amy Dwork; Dr. Reisman will remain Marcy Katz; and I ' ll probably never be able to tell the Drs. Kasuike apart! Yes, my new colleagues, I remember you well, and thank you for remembering me for the little I ' ve done for you. DR.CAMILLOA. BENZO 46 It ' s obviously difficult to assign one characteristic to a group as large as the Senior Class. You are how- ever, with few exceptions, the most blazing, obsessive- compulsives I have ever seen. I assume you know what that means. Beyond that, members of this class seem to have been able to strike a fair balance between working and playing. There are the scholars, the students, the gour- mets, the joggers, the sports car drivers, and above all, the travelers. I suspect the number of miles traveled by this class exceeds that of any previous class. If in- tellectual re wards are equivalent to continents and oceans crossed, you should be uniquely well informed. You ' ve been the kind of class that makes being a school teacher a pleasure. I appreciate the things you have taught me and to all of you best wishes for the future. r DR. ELLEN COOK A s N To me the Class of ' 75 has significance in three areas. First and foremost Is the replenishment of the profession. At the time the Hippocratic Oath is given, over a hundred people by ancient tradition will be recognized before man and God as being physicians. This is a sacred time of re- birth of our profession, or more properly the time that a new link is forged in the unbroken chain of physicians which began in prehistory and will never end so long as one hurrvan being cares for another. The second significance is the Class itself--in a sense it is an organism made up of 115 components each with a joy of life and learning. Under the present premedical pressures this may become a Class to remember as the last of its kind for a while. The last and least significant aspect of the Class of ' 75 are my personal feelings towards it. It was a means for me to make a livelihood; there are people in it who will remair my friends and colleagues; and for the first time for me the Class members were perhaps substitutes for my own sons and daughters. I ' m glad that I didn ' t have to pay for all your, tuitions. DR. ROBERT F.ROHNER 47 Where There Is Love for Humanity, There Also Is Love for the Art of Medicine. Hippocrates 48 Sponsored by the Department of Medici ADMINISTRATION and FACULTY ii«jiwi ' BWj g i ! iam ag!M • wwwwf mw- SmSS my T -rr f ■ I Dr. Richard P. Schmidt Newly Appointed President of the Medical Center Formerly, Dean of the College of Medicine STATE UNIVERSrTY OF NEV TSS IRVINO AVENUE Dr. Lewis W. Bluemle, Jr. Immediate Past President 1968-1974 To my Fellow Students: This is a time for reflection, for memories and for taking of further steps to fulfill hopes and aspirations. To our colleagues who a re graduating. Congratulations and best wishes ! ' Those of us who remain will try to maintain an academic home of which you can be proud. V This is also a time of change, not only in the stages of our careers but in our priorities and life-style. We have entered a period which will further test our strength, our resiliency and our ability to adapt. Successful adaptation to a changing way of life, to increasing social complexities and profound economic disruptions will be accomplished only by the most fit. We can do our part to be instruments of constructive change but we will be most sorely tested to live constructively with adversities we did not directly cause nor expect. In short, we must be part of the solution not part of the problem. Our Medical Center has grown and improved over recent years notwithstanding changing perceptions of our societal role, new mandates from society and increased difficulties in gathering resources which are necessary. As I write this, we are further in the midst of selection of new leadership occasioned by the resignation of President Lewis W. Bluemle, Jr. We must continue to grow, to improve and accommodate to change in circumstances which promise to be even more difficult. To do otherwise will be to quit and this would be irresponsible. Our students will continue to get a good education and we aim to make it even better. Our patients will continue to get superior care and we will make it even better. Our research will explore new areas of science and of society. Instead of helpless wailing over our problems, we will work to solve them. 1 am proud of this Center, its students, faculty and staff. I know we can do what we must. Sincerely, Richard p. Schmidt, M. D. 50 Dr. Walter E. Leavell Associate Dean, College of Medicine Dr. George F. Reed Dean Graduate Medical and Continuing Education Dr. Maxwell M. Mozell Associate Dean for Academic Program Development 51 I I STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK UPSTATE MEDICAt. CENTER 750 E ADAMS ST SvAACUSi Niw Yoaic ISZtO OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS STUDENT AFFAIRS AREA CODE 315 TELEPHONE 473-4570 TO THE CLASS OF 1975: We have arrived at the eve of America ' s bicentennial, as has your graduating class. American medical education is an integral part of that history. During the colonial period of American history, nine colleges were founded, but in all of these except the one in Philadelphia, the religious purpose was dominant ... .The first professional institution, other than theology which they provided, was in medicine, that subject being offered at the College, Academy and Charitable School of Philadelphia (now the University of Pennsylvania) as early as 1765; at King ' s College (now Columbia University)ln 1767; at Harvard University in 1782; and at Dartmouth College in 1798. It is reported that of the 3,000 physicians in practice in the United States at the close of the American Revolution only 51 had taken degrees in America, and fewer than 350 anywhere else. ( Education for the Professions , U.S. Dept. of Health, Education Wel- fare, Office of Education, 1955, pp 11). The number of medical schools reached their peak in 1904-05, total- ing 160. By 1929, these were reduced to 76 schools, mostly as a direct or indirect influence of the Flexner Report. Your medical school, the SUNY , Upstate Medical Center, has enjoyed a respectable position for a large part of this history and, in many respects, has contributed to the history of medicine by efforts of its faculty and graduates over the years. In addition to the reasonably favorable report of the October, 1909, site visit by Abraham Flexner (see pages 272-73, 276 of his report), you should become aware of this fine institution ' s history. As its graduates, you can be proud; as we are proud of everyone of you. You will soon have passed from medical student to alumnus status - an historical fact. The richness of this event, however, will be measured and enhanced by your contributions as physicians: practitioners, researchers and academicians - students of life, as we approach America ' s 200th year and the lOOth reunion of this Medical Center ' s Alumni, It was a pleasure having you during the past four years and we wish you much success and satisfaction in the years ahead of you. Sincerely, c A. Geno Andreatta Dean of Admissions and Student Affairs A. Geno Andreatta Dean of Admissions and Student Affairs Ronald Wolk Director of Admissions Financial Aid Officer .■ ' •■ v . Robert A. Vaccarelli Assistant to the President Director of Public Relations David A. Sinclair Vice-President for Administration Thomas J. Campbell Hospital Administrator 54 1. Dr. Donald C. Goodman, Chairman 2. Front row: Drs. Henry S. Di Stefano, Chester L. Yntema, Donald C. Goodman, Warner S. Hammond, James A. Horel, Philip B. Armstrong. Back row: Drs. A. Mariano Garcia, Ira H. Ames, Dennis J. Stelzner, John T. Mitchell, Douglas R. Robertson, E. Gregory Keating, Norton Barry Berg, Camillo A. Benzo. ,x a X t You Will Have lo Learn Many Tedious Things . . . Which You Will Forget the Moment You Have Passed Your Final Examination, but in Anatomy It Is Better to Have Learned and Lost Than Never to Have Learned at All. — W. Somerset Maugham i ' - 56 i t r ] V ICH OH I0CH3EMISTRY You know, I could never memorize it, either! Sir Hans Adolph Krebs Tuscon, Arizona December, 1974 59 ' ' • ' If ' - Molly, |,„ r; „„,„ ' •  ' U, Mt, , r Ki ' Unr.l (!. .,,n. ■...,, « ' il i r( M. ii,,,,,| I 60 5. IN A NIT ML Ml K% ' )W rUR PA.NCi 1 I. ,11 «.■ t jn.i- KARNF-ST f:V! YELLOW FEVER IM- h.Al IllN ■111 BY IS N(l I.ONCirn A Iilf. ' :F ' ' i lili mm 1 mum til I. IHT rt ' i START IN ON SUNDAY II 10 1 AND KEEP AT IT DNTIL NOON OH LATEH Martynas Yeas Bertie Argyris Justus F. Mueller Minna B. Rottieim Byron A. Bassel, Jr, UP TO THE MIDDLE of the 19th century, the practice of medioine was based upon the physician ' s ex- perience. It was not until Claude Bernard popularized laboratory medi cine, beginning in 1843, that ex- perimentally sound medicine replaced empirical practice. Spanning 35 years, Bernard ' s ex- periments revealed many secrets of digestion, pancreatic secretion, hepatic glycogenic function, vaso- motor nerves , and the mechanism of action of various poisons, curare in particular. Always willing to amend his theories when the facts did not fit,BernardwroteAN INTRODUC- TION TO THE STUDY OF EXPERI- MENTAL MEDICINE, which popu- larized and formalized the experi- mental method, and indeed portrayed it as an art. 1. Dr. James B. Preston, Chairman 2. Dr. Maxwell M. Mozell 3. Mr. David L. Putman m I ' ll 2. 2. 1. Drs. Thomas J. Csermely, David L. Blank, James B. Preston, Mahlon E. Kriebel, Otto H. Muller, Mary Ellen Trimble, Russell G. Durkovic. 2. Dr. Alexander Bortoff. pancreatic jiiluUt creaud bv J G ; to oK fTir the uitrtm .;• iA fT Title picture of dc Grjd 5 Of iht Pjru ' TfiXtic juKt, ( 1 fiiifk ?! DE GRAAF, PHYSIOLOGIS TAPS PANCREATIC |l ICl 63 64 K I i V. (riwr()iso ' I wn to .u V 4 tV ENSM S - r ' - E OlNTMENi ii ' :oL ' ! i ' lll ' Rescue ' Weak Men Five Hundred DolLii Life Insurance ;- i-; TAKE -liy-i - = ■■ LAYER ' S ; J. £HWi Pii-ts iMai Prof. Ji;:-:: L;t:rfe ' s Wrsdtif J FrcB:L r: ' .;i:i-„;; cf ••CALTHOS tlii-. Rruret Let llaLhocd. rnt u Ys■ tkial thcatmlm Mc luirly Fret h Scaled 1« ' i. ' : ; D oB szr;:;T sseuz What rhubarb, senna, or what purgative drug, would scour these English hence? Shakespeare, Macbeth, V,3 65 k k y The Father of Pathology GIOVANNI BATTISTA MORGAGNI (1682-1771) has been credited with the above title, for in 1861 he published, Concerning the Seats nd Causes of Diseases Investigated by Anatomy, a work which did much to dispel the ancient notion that diseases all represented general interference with body humors. He was particularly interested in the cause and location of apoplexy, cit- ing aneurysms as a common cause thereof. In 1743 he had described hard- ening of the coronary arteries: As I examined the external surface of the heart, the left coronary artery appeared to have been changed into a bony canal, from its very origin to the extent of many fingers ' breadth. He is also credited with the first description of heart block, to be studied 50 years later by Stokes and Adams. In publishing De Sedibus, a five-book work, he recorded the results of over 600 dissections he had made himself, and in the words of a contem- porary, The search for the sedes morbi has advanced from the organs to the tissues, and from the tissues to the cells. PATHOLOGY 2. 1. Dr. Rolla B. Hill, Chairman 2. Dr. David B. Jones 3. Dr. Bedros Markarian Dr. Gerald B. Gordon 1. Dr. Thomas S. Argyris 2. Dr. Albert Oler 3. Dr. George H. Collins PATHOLOGY SURVEY EXAMINATION • THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1972 1. The cardiac lesion accounting for the largest number of deaths Is A. syphilitic aortitis B. endocardial fibroelastosis C. patent foramen ovale D. myocardial infarction E. pericarditis 2. Congestion, edema, capillary buds, fibroblasts, and inflanimatory cells comprise A. granulation tissue B. hemangiomas C. acute inflanmatory reaction D. early phase of coagulation E. lobar pneumonia 3. Clinical infection with a specific bacterium depends, among other things, on A. whether the bacteria is gram positive or gram negative B. the resistance of the bacteria to common antibiotics C. the dose and virulence of the bacteria D. all of above • E, none of above i. Left ventricular hypertrophy is not caueod by A. coarctation of the aorta B. mitral Insufficiency C. chronic pulmonary disease D. systemic hypertension E. aortic stenosis 5. Bronchopneumonia frequently A. heals vlth scarring B. may be insidious in onset C. is related to debilitating disease 0. 2 of above E. 3 of above 6. All of the following EXCEPT ONE are characteristic of synptoaatic infectious hepatitis A. bilirubinRmla B. acidophilic bodies C. commonly leads to cirrhosis D. anorexia E. seen in closed Institutional populations 7. Rheumatic endocarditis most often involves • A. aortic valve alone B. mitral and pulmonic valves C. mitral and tricuspid valves D. aortic and mitral valves E. some other combination HIc est locus ubi mors gaudet succurrere vitae. This is the place where death re- joices to come to the aid of life. —Motto of the Pathological Institute of McGill University H a V e Y u E V e r S e e n T h i s P a g e B e f r e ' 77 ' 67 V( TRI 0 5PECULA- 0 ' ODUC ' O Dr. Robert F. Rohner 5 lUAT 0 68 T 1 -  V « • Many symptoms she ' d never had before • i ?; .. THERE ONCE WAS a vounqster, Lenore ' I m. THERE ONCE WAS a youngster, Lenore Jk«3% 41 i iose throat got excessively sore; ' tK • though this quickly did clear two weeks later appeared Jk She was febrile and nauseous and weak, 1 And discovered A hile taki ng a leak, that her urine was red, Mommy help me ! she said, So they let Lenore ' s doc take a peek He said, Mrs. Lenore, do you see 1 Her edema, periorbitally? 1 V mm. and with glomerular swelling and endothelial cell-ing There ' s oliguria and hematuria, natural l f t?- JV ' I here s oliguria ana nematuna, natural! % I What does that mean? the quite nervous mom cri She ' s got acute PGN, the doc replied, Immune complexes arrayed along basement membrane, I ' m afraid. But relax, dear, it all should subside . . . See this biopsy I have in my lab? It was taken with a quick renal stab; it shows marked proliferation and PMN cell infiltration. But in a week or so, Lenore won ' t feel drab. But by this time, the doc had created A new patient from what he ' d related; now the mother of Lenore was found pale on the floor And the child ' s disease? — self. J ' P rossberg w f 1. Dr. John B. Henry Dr. Allen L. Pusch Dr. Harold Peter Hawley Dr. Judith Mercer MacMath 2. Dr. Douglas A. Nelson 3. Dr. Frederick R. Davey Dr. Russell H. Tomar Dr. John B. Henry vov , auijtldM wy ovia IS titer ' H5 nctijg xn ,ia, U OMC Utai- U7LU a g iy mdf void do Uvt- ' mcst dax iac e-, , • .j Aptltc jixitnpe is ct ioltclc. f Uiims ave-y MHiHa sii yoHilUy and HOtaiHa MOtliUU 1. Dr. William J. Williams, Chairman 2. Dr. Murray A. Grossman 3. Dr. Donald C. Samson 4. Dr. John Zone Dr. Daniel Fuleihan 5. Dr. Rosemary Bel lino lit I M J E ■ ■ D 1 1 1 C 1 9 ! N ii E THE ORIGIN OF THE STETHOSCOPE . . . Sounds in the thorax were tradi- tionally heard by placiiKj one ' s oar directly to the patient ' s chest, a method hampered by uiiclcanlinoss, layers of fat, and patient modesty. One day in 1816, Theophilc Laennec, a French physician, was pondering the problem of an obese woman with suspected heart disease. Children were playing in the yard in front of him; he watched as one child put his ear to Uie end of a wooden beam .is anoth- er tapped the opposite end. Laennec, well acquainted with the techniques of percussion and sound transmission, hurried back to the hospital, rolled a quire of paper into a cylinder, and applied one end to his patient ' s chest and the other to his ear. Amazed to hear sounds more clearly than before, Laennec began experi- menting with many forms of this new instrument, and finally settled on a wooden cylinder about one foot long. The rest of his life was spent correla- ting his physical findings with autop- sy results until he could accurately predict disease within the chest. 1. 1. Dr. J. Robert Smith 2. Dr. Doreen Babott 3. Dr. Arlan J. Gottlieb 4. Dr. Frank L. Call 5. Dr. Eugene L. Lozner 6. Dr. Barbara Furie Dr. Bruce Furie 7. Dr. John J. Gullo 8. Dr. David R, Rowden Dr. Sandra J. Ginsberg Hematology 4. f m W. ' I L - Harvey ' s discovery of the circulation of the blood was a beautiful addition to our knowledge of the animal economy, but on a review of the practice of medicine before and since that epoch, I do not see any great amelioration which has been derived from that discovery. -Thomas Jefferson 7A ■g P ' ;, J m „ ■ j tt : lmonary 4. M 7. r RHEUMATOLOGY REHABILITATION MEDICINE 1. Dr. Richard Olans Dr. Donald L. Bornstein Dr. Donald Blair 2. Dr. Ken Imboden 3. Dr. John F. Keighley 4. Dr. J. Howland Auchincloss, Jr. 5. Dr. Robert Gilbert 6. Dr. Robert S. Finals 7. Dr. Seth H. Lourie 8. Dr. Leo Jivoff, Chairman 1. N E U R L c 1. Dr. Gilbert S. Ross, Chairman 2. Dr. Tomohiko Mizutani Dr. Carl J. Crosley 3. Dr. John K. Wolf 4. Dr. Martin Chipman 5. Dr. David C. Haas FROM THE BRAIN, and from the brain only arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, grief and tears ... It is the same thing which mal es us mad or delirious, inspires us with dread or fear, whether by night or by day, brings sleeplessness, inopportune mistakes, aimless anxieties, absent-mindedness, and acts that are contrary to the habit. These things that we suffer all come from the brain, when it is not healthy, but becomes abnormally hot, cold, moist, or dry. — Hippocrates IL. 1. Dr. Watts R. Webb, Chairman 2. Dr. John F. Neville, Jr. 3. Dr. John A. Meyer 4. Dr. Fredericl B. Parker, Jr. 1 I 1 1. Dr. Lloyd S. Rogers 2. Dr. Robert 0. Gregg 3. Dr. Ahmad H. Shatila Dr. Robert C. Hall 4. Dr. George Dutkewych 5. 6. 7. 8. Dr. David B. Stark Dr. Carl E. Bredenberg Dr. Norman Ackerman Dr. Michael H. Ratner Dr. Gregory Larson x A hi 78 M 1. Dr. Naji Abou-Mourad 2. Dr. and Mrs. John Aust 3. Dr. Howard Delozier 4. Dr. William R. Clark 5. Dr. Patricia J. Numann 6. Dr. Ramon Oceguera 7. Dr. Richard Burleson 8. Dr. Dennis A. Brown EVEN AFTER ANESTHESIA and asepsis became standard operating room pro- cedures, surgery on the brain was sel- dom attempted. It was not until 1870 (with the demonstration of electrical excitability of a dog ' s cortex ) that investigators sought to learn which part of the brain controlled specific organs and body functions. HARVEY CUSHING ' s contribution to the new field of neurosurgery included development of delicate surgical techniques, bolder procedures, new instruments, and electrosurgery. His classic writings. Intracranial Tumors, Meningiomas, and The Pituitary Body and Hypothalamus, published in the 1930 ' s, are still the definitive works in their fields. The brain has 10 ° eel Is each containing 10 macrompl- ecules. Each cell has 10 in- terconnections with other cells. At the age of 18 the brain loses some 10 cells every day but the macromol- ecular content of each cell is renewed 10 times in a normal life span. Guiness Book of World Records 1. Dr. Robert B. King, Chairman 2. Dr. Herbert Lourie 3. Dr. Young Jae Yu 4. Dr. Donald H. Stewart, Jr. 5. Dr. William A. Stewart Dr. Ronald F. Young Dr. Ghassan F. Khayyat 6. Dr. Luciano M. Modest! 7. Dr. Michael C. Shende 8. Dr. Robert A. Feldman 80 R T H P E D I C S SPINAL DEFORMITIES rhiln }iuH Method Ov« . ' 7.IK 0 ix t sui-t -. luJIj trt-jitM 1(1 111 ' - Li.-(t J7 ycam l hairviT Hie nrttnir if yimr sptnal ttjntrtioQ tl. Ti ' p fur you in ifit I ' Ml iiun MniKKi It ti:i IffTruf ' tit rr-licf BJitlhapplii- nitixiy tbousmU.- «b j dafpuinrl. Wbai It boM Uiitr tor otbm It Htiuuld t ' j l r i u. Ibis you c n liriivc to your oim ntla- 30 Days Free Trial to prove its value to you Mi(-tti -r • ! !«- ' oiuc •Ti l l. tliv 1-Mlu Dun Mrtlit-1. roiuiMtUiK t a Biij poninff B[ipMuJii- iinl ciim?«tnc ctrrcl-Oi oiler- j nj qi,ic1( r- lirf. gn-atw Ci mft-rt inul p  !rtit i)  r«iiiipif tc run . T(te Appli. ' in ' tx liwrii, r xil am) cu. lly adjuelcd. Tilt price i witt tn rvacL ol all. Cao Too Afford to Ignore this Offer? Puri ' lv nut fjip f iiilly a cur 30 Ann ' trial oner Blvn you v tfry cimiwv to prove tho viJuft i ( ttic Mcth ' id In Jf ' ur own taw You cann-ii buy u Thi! ' - ( ' ■urt AppHacre uritll y-.ii inMi- ' itfjtr f ' .r wi- will n-t si-II y .u nuo unill w( k-ji alt about joiir cad Li rb Ap[ ltan ' 7 Li etix iallv m ' le to muet tbo Om ' iLi Ui cacb portlculur caao. Send for FREE BOOK Pleaae d( rrlbc yur fftitr fully bo we can give jitu ileflmtc infijTuiall ' FD at ourt- To wrllf U. put OU UOdiT D ' f.MlK llMli Do 11 t.x!H ' PHILO BURT COMPANY 217 OJ.i clloM% BUIb- J-mo.io n. N, Y. Tfiouiands of Re- maiihabU Ones. Tiif truf Malonipnt of hclp- li men arx) ninnn anff ' -nry; fi ' .tii d«-rt milii« of the l.;,rk  b ' fouU ' l rrll ' -f. ( runt an 1 cun: irUh Ihn I ' hili Hun Metitod vo iU DU this book. To D ' .tc- Just a few cttM-« A youDjF woiuac be ]rl 1- dfn ut 20 aft ' T auflrnng : year to oov ktruog aiul vig.iri.iifl at T . A f- ' Mler min-Tinc ffreat palB tnun spinal tuber | r ' ll ' iits ttjr l« VUX f inj Irtitnutltfiprnvrinem aflw I ' -albrr i eke aod ■l«-l hracra hul tallM A Tier weanog tliv ' AUo lun Applfanef tit moniht he can valk trUhnut pain. A man so bvlplfw b« could Qui arlne from bU wriwJ-ebiUr found quirk relief In the I ' biU- Ii rt Meilifid Within a year bo was rldimr bon - b ck and playing letinls. Write for re boot and full Information today. 5. 1. Dr. David G. Murray, Chairman Dr. Richard T. Chiroff 2. Dr. Robert M. Sheridan 3. Dr. Kendrick A. Sears 4. Dr. Bruce E. Bal er 5. Dr. John iVlosher, Jr. 6. Dr. Hansen Yuan H %1 f l fs UROLOGY 1. Dr. Otto M. Lilien, Chairman 2. Dr. Zahi l ). Makhuli 3. Dr. Vincent A. Andaloro 4. Dr. William Buzz Roberts 5. Dr. Irving H. Goldman 6. Dr. Charles H. Lynch 7. Dr. Dennis J. Krauss 8. Dr. Martin J. Schor The French surgeon Serge Voronoff, caricatured at the International Con- gress on Tropical Disease held in Cairo in 1902. During his years in Egypt, Voronoff began to consider the possible rejuvenatory effects of testicular transplants. T R H I N L A R Y N G L G Y Can Easily Be Yours Trados Model No. 5 corrects now all Ill-sliaiifd nost. ' ) Quickly, palnlicssly, Berma- ncmlv and cumfortahly at linmo. it is tlio only adjustable, safe and Buarantecd patent dovlci; that will actually give you a per- fect luoklnt nose. Ovir 90.0UO s.illsfied users. For yoara ri-comniundi ' d by physician.?. 10 ycara of emerlenco In manu- facturine Noso Shapirs ii at your .scrvlre. Modil 85 Jr. fo ' clilldreD. Prize medal awarded by ble Wembley ExpoaltlOQ. LoDdOD. Bnel.Tnd, on Juno 8, liKin. Wrlio for testimonials and freo booklet, wlilch tella yo how to obtain a purfect looking no. ' ic. M. TKII.KTV, Pionwr Noie-Shaping SpociAlIet, Dept. 3146 Binghamton, N.Y. 1. Dr. James L. McGraw, Chairman 2. Dr. Barbara A.W. Streeten I 1. Dr. Richard J. Lessow Dr. George F. Reed, Chairman 2. Dr. Daniel D. Rabuzzi 3. Dr. Charles W. Parkins 4. Dr. Harvey M. Tucker 5. Dr. John M. Barlow 6. Dr. William J. Hunt Dr. Oswald I. Henriquez Dr. Norman E. Johnson 2. BSTETRICSAND 4 GYNECOLOGY iittimmninj 1. Dr. 2. Dr. 3. Dr. 4. Dr. 5. Dr. 6. Dr. Ms. Dr. Dr. 7. Dr. 8. Dr. 9. Dr. Dr. 10. Dr. 11. Dr. Dr. Robert Nesbitt, Raja W. Abdul Fathi A. Jishi John H. Hagen Renate N. Chevli Krishna B. Singh Frances V. DeGeorge Richard H. Aubry Samir Beydoun Shawky Badawy Muhammad IMaim Jack Rothman Hugh A. Clarke John Sorrentino David Brewer, Jr. Robert Segnit Jr., Chairman Karim TOWARDS MODERN GYNECOLOGY Like most physicians of his time, young Dr. James Marion Sims (1813-1883) had taken little interest in women patients beyond caring for ordinary ailments. But then in one month in 1845 he was asked to see three young slaves, all of whom had developed vesi- covaginal fistulas, a condition which at that time meant a lifetime of discomfort and seclusion. Just before seeing the third of these women, he was called to the scene of an accident in which a woman had injured her pelvis; by digital examination he discovered that her uterus was retroverted and that by admitting some air under pressure into the vagina her comfort could be restored. Sims had done this by placing the injured women in the knee-chest position, and he returned to his Mont- gomery, Ala. office and used a pewter spoon and plac- ed the young slave in the same position. As he in- serted the bent handle of the spoon into the patient ' s vagina, he reported, I saw everything as no man had ever seen before. The fistula was as plain as the nose on a man ' s face. He soon went on to develop an operation to correct these fistulas, and women by the dozens began to come out of seclusion to seek his help. The Sims position, a more comfortable adaptation of the knee-chest, and Sims speculum, bear his name today. In 1855, Women ' s Hospital, the first gynecologic hos- pital in the U.S., opened in M.Y., with 30 beds and Sims its only surgeon. Sims was later to become presi- dent of the A.M. A. and in 1878 he initiated an opera- tion for the removal of gallstones and named it chole- cystectomy. 6. 10. % •y I © ' © '  ' ;•••: ON THE INDULGENCE AND RESTRAINT OF SEXUAL DESIRE The act of generation is a voluntary one. But nature has so placed it underthe empire of plea- sure that the voice of discretion is no longer heard, and the will is often led captive. Hence, it is well, for hygienic reasons, to consider the laws . , . The too frequent repetition of the reproductive act is known to be followed by consequences injurious to the general health. . . The abuse of bodily pleasures produces lassitude and weakness. Beauty of figure and grace of movement are sacrificed. When the excess is long continued, it occasions spasmodic and convulsive affections, enfeeblement of the senses, particularly that of sight, deprivation of the mental functions, loss of memory, pulmonary consumption, and death. A condition of intoxication in the husband is a proper ground for refusal. Fecundation taking place when either parent has been in this state has produced idiots and epileptics. This has happened again and again. The cases on re- cord are so numerous and well authenticated, as to admit of no doubt in regard to the fatal effect upon the mind of the offspring of con- ception under such circumstances . . . — George H. Napheys, M.D. From The Physical Life of Woman , published 1869 1. Dr. Parviz Hanjani 2. Dr. John F. Gorman THE HELLINIZED LADIES of the Ptol- emaic period seldom nursed their own children. Definite contracts were made with slave women, who stipulated to nourish the child on milk up to its third year for a definite sum and their living. During the first six months, the nurse was to give the infant her own breast; the wet-nursing contracts called for pure unadulterated milk, i.e. that the nurse should not spoil her breast- milk by a faulty diet. During the re- maining eighteen months, the infant was nourished artificially on cow ' smilk. There was a regular daily delivery of THE BEST COW ' S MILK in a pitcher of 18 cotyles capacity; and unounc- tual delivery was severely punished-- but on legal, not on hygienic, grounds. 1. Dr. Frank A. Oski, Chairman 2. Dr. Marie J. Stuart 3. Dr. James A. Stockman 4. Dr. Mary L. Voorhess 5. Ms. Karen Smith Ms. Eileen Buchert CHILZ) ' m w « k- ' •n J P J f ' wjm k ' i k ■ ■w ■ ■ ■„ ■ - n §h 1 •i r- — 0: 1. Dr. William H. Bergstrom Dr. Roger Spitzer 2. Dr. Lanny D. Freshman Dr. Michael R. Brams Dr. David B. Eagle 3. Dr. Margaret L. Williams 4. Dr. Eleanor Williams 5. Dr. Walter W. Tunnessen 6. Dr. Steven J. Gross Dr. Carol A. Kavanagh 7. Dr. Mark B. Levin 8. Dr. Lois Henning 9. Dr. George Husson 10. Dr. Leonard Weiner Front row: Drs. Marie Blackmail, Manouchehr Karjoo, Leonard Hersher, Mary L. Voorhess, Frank A. Oski, Alfred Steinschneider, Herbert Schneiderman. Back row: Drs. James A. Stockman, Lytt I. Gardner, Michael L. Weitzman, Walter W. Tunnessen, Margaret L. Williams, Howard L. Weinberger, Mark P. Shampain, Albert J. Schneider, Roger Shott, William H. Bergstrom, James Brown, Daniel Daniels. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ON LEAD POISONING The first thing i remembei ' of this kind was a general discourse in Boston, when I was a boy, of a complaint from North Carolina against New England rum, that it poison ' d their people, giving them the dry bellyach, with a loss of the use of their limbs . . . We seldom drink rain water that falls on our houses; and if we did, perhaps the small quantity of lead, descending from such paint, might not be sufficient to produce any sensible ill effect on our boides. But I have been told of a case in Europe, I forgot the place, where a whole family was afflicted with what we call the dry bellyach, or Colica Picoto- num, by drinking rain-water. -1786 1. Dr. Lytt I. Gardner 2. Dr. Richard IMeu 3. Dr. Howard L. Weinberger 4. Winner, 2nd Annual F.O. Look-aUke Contest 5. Winner, 1st Annual Sal Bando Look-alike Contest 90 8. COMMOW ISthCEIMTURY REMEDIES IN ENGLAND AND IRELAND BALDNESS — Anoint the bald patches on the head with goose dung, and the hair will grow again. HEAD COLD — Pare very thinly the rind of an orange. Roll it up inside out, and thrust a roll into each nostril. The cold will disappear. J A UN DICE- -To cure the jaundice, eat nine lice on a piece of bread and butter. WEN--T0 cure a wen, you should go to an execution; after the criminal is dead, but still hanging, one of his hands must be rubbed twice over the wen. 1. Dr. L. Thomas Wolff, Chairman 2. Dr. Ernest H. Carhart 3. Dr. Robert B. Burtch 4. Dr. Murphy S. David 5. Dr. Gaetano Visco 6. Dr. Bernard Bernstein Dr. Edward W. Mullin 7. Dr. Robert Boska 8. Dr. Philip Kaplan PSYCHIATRY Pinel and the Insane Inspired by tiie death of a friend who had become insane, ran away to the forest, and was eaten by wolves, a French physician named Philippe Pinel (1755-1826) devoted himself to the study of mental diseases. Until this time, insane patients were chained, beaten and otherwise humiliated, sometimes jeered by curious outsiders who paid admission to see them and seldom visited by physicians. Pinel is best remembered for unchaining the insane, and instituting such items as exercise and fresh air in the therapy for the insane. His Traite medicophilosophique sur I ' alienation mentale ou la manle is considered a landmarl in the treatment of mental disorders. i 6. 92 1. Dr. Donald Oken, Chairman 2. Dr. Thomas S. Szasz 3. Dr. Ellen Cook Jacobsen 4. Dr. Jerry F. Morrow 5. Dr. Robert W. Daly 6. Dr. Rachel Levin 7. Dr. Frank A. Johnson Dr. John J. Danehy 8 Dr. John R. Ross, Jr. 9. Dr. Louis J. Ripich 10. Dr. Eugene A. Kaplan Front Row: Drs. Sidney A. Orgel, Thomas S. Szasz, Donald Oken, Magnus Lakovics. Back Row: Drs. Seymour Fisher, Eugene A. Kaplan, Richard H. Phillips, Frank A. John- son, Joyce Pernice, David B. Robinson. Anyone who spends money on a psycl trist should have his head examined. la- RADIOLOGY 1. Dr. Stephen A. Kieffer, Chairman 2. Dr. Robert H. Sagertnan 3. Dr. Beverly A. Spirt 4. Dr. Bernard Schneider 5. Dr. Donald D. Cameron 6. Dr. John McAfee Dr. Robert Richardson 7. Dr. E. Mark Levinsohn 8. Drs. Robert R. Ren- ner, Joseph V. Scri- vani, Edwin T. Dai- ley, Leo V. Gould, E. Robert Heitzman, Jr., Seuk Ky Kim, Eugene F. Binet. 9. Dr. Sudan Deuskar 10. Dr. Joseph A. Head 11. Dr. Wilbur S. Brooks 12. Dr. John P. Marangola 13. Dr. Richard D. Gerle 14. Dr. Milton Dunsky 15. Dr. Chung-taik Chung 16. Dr. Jay Scharoff THE DISCOVERY OF X-RAYS While working late one night in a dark laboratory on No- vember 8, 1895, well-known physicist Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen noted that when electric current was passed through a Hittorf-Crookes tube, which was covered with black paper, some barium piatinocyanide crystals which lay on the table began to fluoresce. He noted further than a screen of the same material showed fluorescence with glows of varying degrees when opaque objects were placed in front of the screen. He then placed his hand in front of the screen and saw upon the screen dense shadows of bones within outlines of flesh. Three months after publishing his results, the Journal of the American Medical Association wrote, The surgeons of Vienna and Berlin believe that the Roentgen photo- graph IS destined to render inestimable services to surgery. 16. 1. A ORAND Nimotnt iii.nHiiiiiiiiM.iii mm II (i«iN IT J t. itiy - -M 1 Mn.y ETENnS. ■ IMS. - 6AU0II8 or BAB Hi f V •u ' «i -rr4lsall la IIh ' HMallriirr nlwilrklrr I labalr It. ny.y nlllh.- Ii l)r l rr««i ttu- mm4irmrr.  • tr im llMna- Mlalrr lfc - IwtMmrnrf of IM- li fr«MB hi- ■ rliiS li ' i i« ' l r or a4b T . ThW rmmryr •• ■4 p4ni hHl ■ • uftprrttrm ttm of rfnaxrr am} kr ra rr alBr4. rrakabl; ■• sar nlll mUrmpt «• adit. Mil IIIIIIOI till t. . - •■ imii- iWw k. -WiJ I .■•fc- r LA06H. 8 6i DANCE, SPEU 01 nOBT, 4c. U ir ••f lme (•• iIm UnAtme trntt n( tUttr rhnnKdr TItr. - rai I- rrt M I- rt ' u-jt lu -m at Jm Ikal nktrb tk« t n «Mbn «  -• • • r. gf.t . II. Thr ;••« nlll Ih ' udmlnKtrrrd mtl} !• crnllr H4 n or iUf Mr l ri «|M rlMl llh . I ' hr ol -rt h !• Maikr br rNli-HrtlnNM ' Mt liirt r rr«|MTl. h Kriili 4 i MlDtlr -• -i-— ' ' •■•• . ' ■ %«!.•(««.  ..l.-«r.U lhr.l.l. kllMl v Ml-M| ..t . J liibH v„.tk. ip ). -. •• kil lh ■•■•■i.f ' h.n «l Ha- ht«VH ■ ' •!! pa-«M« t- •i.a- ihhM f r-.i-c— J -4 Ihc !••■  f • roll tr- i-Ml - l r A ri (■n.tv ' «■■• •.wif - ( Itv m- ! J.-lm(ai hr4 ■■r •! I-F ' T ,. 11. ,. . «|.d«.l (■.• ..r ..«■ . Mbrl. .l .4 S.lr «r Tk W ' t rj nH.I | rn|M-ni.- xf Ibt- ;«• nIM br rtpUinM l iIk r B ui mrrtm . itir rtilrrlMiiinirni rW . ir if « |«Bl«4 b} rlp-r ai ELECTRieiTT. ENTEITtlNMCWT Tl CaMCNCf tl ItlNI. TUU TT nrV TH. % 1. Dr. Edward T. Thomas, Chairman 2. Dr. Ashley A. Levy Dr. Allen B. Dobkin 3. Dr. Gabor B. Racz 4. Dr. Peter B. Kane 5. Dr. Hernando Y. Arandia 6. Dr. Peter H. Byles 7. Dr. William Evers 8. Dr. Samuel Zak 6. 7. The Discovery of Anesthesia The Time: October 16, 1846 The Place: Massachusetts General Hospital amphitheater The Surgeon: Dr. John Collins Warren The Anesthetist: Dr. William T.G. Morton Before the discovery of anesthesia, as simple an operation as setting a fracture made the operating room seem like a medieval torture chamber: The patient was stretched on a rack, his body attached to one set of pulleys, the offending part to another, while muscular assistants tugged with all their force. Boston ' s most distinguished surgeons sat in the amphitheater at 10 a.m. on the above day to hear Dr. Warren, somewhat skeptically announce that a test of some preparation was to be made for which the astonishing claim had been made that it would render the person operated upon free from pain. Morton, a 27-year old dentist now studying medicine, entered, reassured his pa- tient that he would relieve, if not entirely prevent, all pain. The patient, a man with a congenital tumor of the neck, said I feel confident and will do precisely as you tell me. As Morton adjusted his apparatus and began to administer the drug, the patient for one moment showed signs of becoming violent, and then sunk into a deep sleep. Open-mouthed spectators looked on as Morton told Dr. Warren, Your patient is ready, sir. The operation proceeded smoothly, as the patient did not move or make a sound. After the tumor was removed and the wound sewn up, the patient was allowed to regain consciousness, and Dr. Warren asked, Did you feel any pain? A slightly dazed patient answered, No. It didn ' t hurt at all, although my neck did feel for a minute as if someone were scraping it with a hoe. Dr. Warren turned himself to the audience and declared, IMG HUMBUG! ' GEMTLEMEM, THIS IS 97 You can make more friends in two months by becoming really interested In other people, than you can in two years by trying to get other people interested in you. Which Is just another way of saying that the way to make a friend is to be one. — Dale Carnegie I , Bed-Side Library for Medical Students A liberal education may be had at a very slight cost of time and money. Well-filled though the day be with appointed tasks, to make the best possible use of your one or of your ten talents, rest not satis- fied with this professional training, but try to get the education, if not of a scholar, at leaist of a gentleman. Before going to sleep read for half an hour, and. in the morning have a book open on your dress- ing table. You will be surprised to find how much can be accomplished in the course of a year. I have put down a list of ten books which you may make close friends. There are many others; studied care- fully in your student days these will help in the inner education of which I speak. - I. Old and New Testament II. Shakespeare III. Montaigne IV. Plutarch ' s Lives V. Marcus Aurelius VI. Epictetus VII. Religio Medici VIII. Don Quixote IX. Emerson X. Oliver Wendell Holmes — Sir William Osier 1 _ r 100 c .. Naliiinnl Boiini Mndical Kxaminors Hullc ' lin ul III J Hmm . . . I ' m sorry, but your application to see Mr. Andreatta is rejected. He has quite a busy schedule, but pei+iaps you could come back, oh, in . . , 1976? 103 K J mm f illi,,,iit-[= i f.-A 104 105 LASS OF 1978 p, fy t -%- 1 , 106 CLASS OF 1977 107 S iJ • 108 109 AND FRIEND As its first President, Car- lyle Jacobsen was the guiding light in building the Upstate Medical Center as we know it today. He was Executive Dean for Medical Education in the S.U.N.Y. Central Of- fice during the planning and construction of the first ad- ditions to the Basic Science Building (now renamed Weis- kotten Hall). He came to Syracuse in 1957 at a time when the Center was begin- ning its rapid growth phase. This involved the acquisition of urban land for a 25 acre campus, the building of the University Hospital and Dormitories, and the planning of the Campus Activities Building. In addition, there was a continual expansion of faculty, students, staff, and educational programs. Jake had a special fondness for planning new buildings, and the University Hospital represented a real challenge. The objective was clear: i. e., incorporate within this structure the physical facil- ities for inpatient and out- patient medical care, offices and laboratories for the clin- ical faculty, and suitable teaching areas for medical students and house staff. Furthermore, arrange the facilities for a smooth flow of patients, staff, and students for the maximum convenience of each and the least interference with each other. And furthermore, do it all within a relatively limited budget. Subsequent use of the hospital has demonstrated how well the planning was done, and the hospital stands as a con- tinuing memorial to Jake. For those of us who were privileged to know and work with him, his greatest monument is not a building but the memory of the man himself. He was intelligent, sensitive, dedicated, pa- tient, and he had the additional quality needed most by administrators the ability to live with frustration . It ' s the personal loss that many of us feel the most. W.W. Westerfeld, Ph.D. CARLYLE JACOBSEN, PH.D. (1902-1974) PRESIDENT EMERITUS UPSTATE MEDICAL CENTER 110 E SHALL MISS... ALAN I. DOMSKY,M.D. (1946-1975) RESIDENT IN PEDIATRICS h His love of medicine came from his love of life ... and the importance of making every day count. It is as much my personal responsibility to be- come the best pediatrician I can, as it is to share my knowledge with others who want to learn med- icine; someone has always been there to help me by answering my questions, and I always want to be there to help others learn to help children. ... the best medicine is learned by never be- ing afraid to ask questions, and always remember- ing to have the time to answer those of others. Ill STUDENT ACTIVITIES LEADERS MEDICAL CLASS PRESIDENTS Robert S. Pyatt ' 75 Margaret A. Sennett ' 76 Barton L. Sachs ' 77 Glenn Ehrllch ' 78 GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL Thomas Collins, President Jay P. Slotkin, Vice-President Margery Heneghan, Secretary Steven Goldstein, Treasurer CAMPUS ACTIVITIES GOVERNING BOARD Robert S. Pyatt, President Rowan DeBold, Vice-President Wesley K. Canfield, Secretary-Treasurer ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA Glen R. Mogan Joseph W. Helak KNOCKERS ' SOCIETY Joseph Byrne David A. Lynch HUTCHINGS SOCIETY Jeffrey S. Shapiro COMMENCEMENT Thomas Collins Robert S. Pyatt GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION Glenn A. Goddard STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (SAMA) Paul Grossberg Robert Kellman UPSTATE MEDICAL PARA-MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (UMPA) Sylvia Norton Billy C. Hines Dixie Gage Denise Haley 1975 GRADUATES 1972 1973 1974 DOCTORS OF MEDICINE You Enter A Noble Heritage, Made So By No Efforts Of Your Own, But By The Generations Of Men Who Have Unselfishly Sought To Do The Best They Could For Suffering Mankind. Much Has Been Done, Much Remains To Do; AWAY HAS BEEN OPENED... Sir William Osier EVERETT Al THOMAS BAESL JEFFREY ASKANAZl AMY DWORK BERGER fl JOHN J. BIANROSA LOUIS BLAND 114 H F 1 V 1 K f X ,;g i M A Recollection of the Class of 1975 . . . 1971: 3,727 had applied, and we were THE 120 chosen. Ages 20-34, 16 of us were already married, 53% had been bio majors at our 49 dif- ferent colleges. GARY C. BROWN JOSEPH BYRNE CRAIG J. BYRUM 1 r 1 NATALIE CALDWELL Keep the feet wet. —Lou Rimmler DANIEL L. CARLSON GLENN C. CHAMPAGNE 117 LOdK AT WHAT YOU ARE D0IK6 TO ME MR.GRASS 119 JOSEPH A. CINCOTTA THOMAS M. COLLINS MICHAEL CROUNSE PAUL P. DIMARTINO EDMUND D ' ORAZIO JAY ERLEBACHER JAMES DISPENZA ROBERT ELKINS JOSEPH ESHAGHIAN 121 DONALD FAGELMAN JOHN D. FARRELL BARRY J. FENTON Si ; ' • ' « .« , ' ' ' ' k MUCOPOLYSACCHARIDES and PEPTIDOGLYCANS weren ' t as easy to grasp as some other things . . . Did anyone ever tell you medical school was going to be easy? —Anonymous PAMALA FERRON JOHN D. FEY 123 I teach you to think, not to memorize. —A.M. Garcia Compare and contrast the sublingual and submaxillary glands. 124 125 The abiding concens of the medical student- health, birth, death, fear, competency, identity, and self-mastery— are ever constant. —From Medical Student: Doctor in the Making ROBERT E. GAETJENS PHILLIP C. GIOIA EMILE H. GHALIB ,4. ROBERT M. GOLDBERG MARK D. GOLDMAN STEPHEN GOLDMAN 126 KENNETH GRAUER ROBERT M. GREEN BRUCE GREENSTEIN 127 Since sperm can only exist at a temperature lower than the normal body interior, then the solution to the world ' s population problem would be to put all the men into a hot box. —Warner S. Hammond, 1972 PAULM. GROSSBERG ) NEIL K. HALL JEFFREY GROSSMAN y m m. CHARLES L HECHT ROXANNE RATAJCZAK HECHT JOSEPH W. HELAK 128 KEMNETH B. HYMES fri RICHARD F. KAPLAN 6.7 percent of actively practicing U.S. physicians are women— placing us behind all other nations except Spain, Madagascar and South Vietnam. —From The New Physician, 1972 . . . Well, we had 4.5 percent more than that in our class . . . Sophomore year . . . leading around new freshman for orientation, studying about parasites and hormones, trying out new black bags with expensive contents ... and that sort of business . . . Was that really i e t . r I a s I just heard? RICHARD F. KASULKE ..ftrif ' - f ' MARK KATZ ROBERT KASULKE JONATHAN KELLY KENNETH R. KOHEN LOUIS KORMAN 130 PETER KROETSCH Remember getting up to draw blood at 7 a.m.? ... You mean it gets worse next year?! . . . GARY R. KUZMA This is fundamentally serious business. — Justus F. Mueller 131 Pongids, chi-squares, and colobomas of the iris were interspersed with CPC ' s and pharm seminars— and they all came up again on the 1,060 questions of the National Boards, Part I. I ' lltiiKtlillliiliiimiilllllllHIitir iMMi 132 7 Hv 133 THEODORE LePAGE DAVID N. LISI WARREN C. LITIS, JR, m N jt% Vietnam waned somewhat as a political issue by 1973, but the Water— gates would soon open w— i— d— e. JONATHAN LOWELL DAVID A. LYNCH 135 SHARON MACE DALE MAGEE WILLIAM A. MAHON TERRY L. MACMATH GARY MAGID DENNIS M. MAHONEY 136 v v X ALAN N. MEISEL vy ' ; - GLEN R. MOGAN ELIZABETH MROZIEWICZ tl i 4 SYLVIA W. NORTON DAVID J. NOVELLI V KEVIN R. O ' HARA JOHN J. O ' KEEFE MICHAEL PAVY 139 Wfli THi: EXOM USEFUL fi! Fl UUinE TD LEHPNIt i5 1 PnDP £ FRIP 3 GDDD 4 EXCELLENT 4 MEF ' E FiNY OUEiTIONS flMEIGUDUiLY LlDPIiED NO PLEASE RNil.lEP ' E ' aP r(C ND •.•DU HrtVE PFl ' :Er ' THi: EXPM I.IITH 15 CDPPECT HrCi.iEP: THFlHI ' VDU . FpnbPHN :tcp ht ir , n Junior year . . . f a long-awaited chance to do 1 that first spinal M tap or Foley P catheter or skin suturing ... and sometimes re-starting ■ four I.V. ' s in ■ one night! fltoici r 140 Question For The Year: So what rotation are you on now? 141 SAMUEL I l. PEARL ALFRED PETROCELLI ROBERT S. PYATT t Song For the Year: When I wake up Early in the morning, Lift my head, I ' m still yawning. When I ' m in the middle Of a dream. Stay in bed, float upstream, (Float upstream). Please don ' t wake me. No, don ' t shake me, Leave me where I am, I ' m only sleeping. Everybody seems To think I ' m lazy. I don ' t mind, I think they ' re crazy Running everywhere At such a speed, Till they find There ' s no need . Please don ' t spoil my I ' m miles away. And after all, I ' m only sleeping. day. ■John Lennon Paul McCartney © 1966 Maclen Music, Inc. All Rights Reserved Used By Permission I ' m Only Sleeping by Lennon McCartney Norman Quan Bernard N. Raasch Veronica Ravnlkar 143 The education of most people ends upon graduation; that of a physician means a lifetime of incessant study. —Karl Marx Sure I get theNEJM, but that doesn ' t mean I read it. And what ' s this green journal they keep talking about, anyway? lARCIA A. KATZ REISMAN CLIFFORD ROSEN GRETCHEN H. ROOKER JOHN J. SACCO ANTHONY J. SCALZO 144 JADE SCHIFFMAN ROBERT W. SEAMAN ROBERT J. SEGAL 146 r JUDY SERBALIK JEFFREY SHAPIRO 1  ' II h RICHARD G. SHERRY 148 Senior electives, already? Whoa! Slow down, you move too . . . and I ' m not even feeling groovy about it. I don ' t even know what I want to be. Oh yes, a doctor, that ' s right. 149 1974: The U.S. looked back on itself- N S and prices all looked U You mean I have to be categorical or categorical asterisk or flexible next year? Can ' t one just rotate these days? V RICHARD B. SOUTHWELL KENNETH STEINBERG i A JAY P. SLOTKIN STUART J. SORKIN LAWRENCE STEIN JAMES A. TERZIAN 150 WearetheSSQ. -Shapiro, Sorkin, Quan But where are Ragusa, Wulff, and Zimler? DAVID M. TINKELMAN JAMES A. TRUAX m A fn Kf 1 - w V ' Ml jl H|P Sfli jffil ' « «« f S jjjn A mS Z:.Jr . 151 DFnkTMFn lOMI IHOSE OF SCIENTIFIC MINP AND INVI MK.MIVE SPIRIT CHO PURPOSE lO ' .J HVI HUMArJlTY L 152 ' Medicine absorbs the physician ' s whole being because it is concerned with the entire organism. —Goethe 153 •V ' 1 i 4 ANTHONY VALDII JOSEPH D. VERDIRAME GARY D. WALFORD JAY WALSHON BENNETT S. WALSTATTER 155 Being a senior meant time for studying what we most wanted, wlien and where we most wanted to do it— like Emergency Room in Los Angeles in December . . . ... But there was still an all- important decision to be made, as the Admissions Office of 1970-71 became the Senior Office of 1974-75: Robin, did that letter go out to the hospital in Denver yet? Whew! Thanks. As you begin the serious task of rank- ing your choices, remember that your Rank Order List should reflect only the relative desirability of a hospital to you. You need not know how you are going to be rated, your test results, etc. in making out your list. You will be matched with the highest program on your list that has an opening for you. -NIRMP Instructions WAYNE H. WELSHER ALBERT L. ZENS EDWARD ZIMNEY GARY J. ZITO SMIDGE.THfc lb LEROy ' OUlGK, CALL Mt A IXXTCR ' CALL ML A waoR ' WHAT ' S WRONKj ARt you blcK, ' NO-.I JU5T Grt DUAlK) FROM MDKAL XH(X;i ! • i ,111 |-.t 1 - „ - J BKBsS ' fl B la 5: 9 an t}a ' ' ' ■■■ ' i THE CLASS OF 1975: WHO WE ARE, WHERE WE ' RE FRO EVERETT AI JEFFREY ASKANAZI THOMAS J. BAESL AMY DWORK BERGER JOHN J. BIANROSA LOUIS H. BLAND JEFFREY J. BOXER GARY C. BROWN JOSEPH L. BYRNE CRAIG J. BYRUM NATALIE CALDWELL DANIEL L. CARLSON GLENN CHAMPAGNE JOSEPH CINCOTTA THOMAS M. COLLINS MICHAEL A. CROUNSE PAUL P. DIMARTINO JAMES A. DISPENZA EDMUND D ' ORAZIO ROBERT ELKINS JAY A. ERLEBACHER JOSEPH ESHAGHIAN DONALD FAGELMAN JOHN D. FARRELL BARRY J. FENTON PAMALA FERRON JOHN D. FEY ROBERT GAETJENS EMILE H. GHALIB PHILLIP C. GIOIA ROBERT GOLDBERG MARK D. GOLDMAN STEPHEN GOLDMAN KENNETH A, GRAUER ROBERT M. GREEN BRUCE GREENSTEIN PAUL M. GROSSBERG JEFFREY GROSSMAN NEIL K. HALL MOLLY HASTINGS ( ' 74) CHARLES I. HECHT ROXANNE M. HECHT JOESPH W. HELAK KENNETH B. HYMES RALPH JANICKI ( ' 74) RICHARD F. KAPLAN IRAS. KASTENBERG RICHARD F. KASULKE ROBERT J. KASULKE MARK H. KATZ JONATHAN KELLY KENNETH R, KOHEN LOUIS Y. KORMAN THOMAS D. KRESS PETER F, KROETSCH GARY R. KUZMA THEODORE LEPAGE DAVID N. LISI WARREN C. LITTS JR. JONATHAN LOWELL DAVID N. LYNCH Hastings-on- Hudson Brooklyn West Babylon Schenectady Brooklyn Bronx Ellenvllle Rockville Centre Syracuse Schenectady Syracuse Syracuse Malone Bellemore Waterville Schenectady East Syracuse Jamestown Albion Scarsdale Syracuse Rego Park Brooklyn Dexter Elmont Hilton Chittenango Brooklyn Beirut, Lebanon Dewitt Ventnor, N.J. Far Rockaway New York City Elmhurst Buffalo Flushing Bronx Flushing Candor Syracuse New York City Eggertsville Buffalo Utica Salisbury Cove, Me. New York City Dewitt Richmond Hill Richmond Hill Flushing East Rochester Jamaica Brooklyn Fayetteville ■ ' Tonawanda Endwell Rochester Syracuse Ballston Lake Newton Falls Syracuse Northwestern U Med Ctr, Chicago Presbyterian Hospital, NYC U of Minnesota, Minneapolis Syracuse Medical Center Hosp of U of Penn, Philadelphia Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Wilmington Med Ctr, Delaware Grady Memorial Hosp, Atlanta New England Deaconess Syracuse Medical Center Genesee Hospital, Rochester Syracuse Medical Center St. Joseph ' s Hospital Harrisburg Hospital, Pa. Pensacola Naval Hospital, Fla. Tallahassee Memorial Hosp, Fla. U of Texas at San Antonio Syracuse Medical Center St. Joseph ' s Hospital Massachusetts Mental Health Ctr Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Martland Medical Center, Newark Carney Hospital, Boston Wilson Memorial Hosp, Johnson City New England Center Hosp U of California At Davis Syracuse Medical Center U of Kentucky Med Ctr, Louisville Presbyterian U of Penn Med Ctr U of South Florida, Tampa Medical College of Penn, Phila. Washington Hospital Center, D.C. N.Y. Medical College, Metropolitan St. Margaret Memorial, Pittsburgh St. Margaret Memorial, Pittsburgh Montefiore Hosp Ctr, Bronx U. of Wisconsin Hosp, Madison U of Wisconsin, Hosp, Madison Wilson Memorial Hosp, Johnson City Syracuse Medical Center Ohio State U Med Ctr, Columbus Ohio State U Med Ctr, Columbus Syracuse Medical Center Barnes Hospital Group, St. Louis M.I. Bassett Hosp, Cooperstown U of California at San Diego Evangelical Deaconess, Milwaukee Syracuse Medical Center Montefiore Hosp Ctr, Bronx U of Wisconsin Hosp, Madison Strong Memorial Hosp, Rochester Jacksonville Hosp Educ Program Syracuse Medical Center Jewish General Hospital, Montreal Los Angeles County, USC Charity Hospital, New Orleans Genesee Hospital, Rochester Syracuse Medical Center St. Margaret Memorial, Pittsburgh St. Margaret Memorial, Pittsburgh Spokane Hospital, Washington Ophthalmology Surgery Surgery Surgery Anesthesiology Pediatrics Flexible Flexible Surgery Pediatrics Medicine Medicine Family Practice Family Practice Family Practice Family Practice Surgery Medicine Family Practice Psychiatry Medicine Medicine Medicine Family Practice Surgery Flexible Surgery Emergency Medic Flexible Pedi rics Medicine Medicine Medicine Family Practice Family Practice Surgery Pediatrics Medicine Family Practice Pediatrics Surgery • Pediatrics Medicine Medicine Medicine Medicine Family Practice Surgery Surgery Medicine Flexible Medicine Medicine Flexible Psychiatry Surgery Medicine Medicine Family Practice Family Practice Family Practice isa VHERE WE ' LL BE NEXT YEAR, AND FOR WHAT . SHARON E. MACE TERRY L. MACMATH DALE MAGEE GARY S. MAGID WILLIAM A. MAHON DENNIS M. MAHONEY ALAN N. MEISEL GLEN R. MOGAN ELIZABETH MROZIEWICZ SYLVIA W. NORTON DAVID J. NOVELLI KEVIN R. O ' HARA JACK J. O ' KEEFE ANTHONY L. PALOMBA MICHAEL D. PAVY SAMUEL N. PEARL ALFRED PETROCELLI ROBERT S. PYATT JR. NORMAN QUAN BERNARD N. RAASCH VERONICA RAVNIKAR MARCIA KATZ REISMAN GRETCHEN H. ROOKER CLIFFORD J. ROSEN ALFRED R. RUDOLPH JOHN J. SACCO MATTHEW SACKS ANTHONY J. SCALZO JADE S. SCHIFFMAN ROBERT W. SEAMAN ROBERT J. SEGAL JUDY SERBALIK JEFFREY SHAPIRO RICHARD G. SHERRY WALTER H. SHORT LEONARD SICILIAN DAVID W. SILVER JAY P. SLOTKIN DONALD P. SODA E. EZRA SOFAIR STUART J. SORKIN RICHARD SOUTHWELL LAWRENCE E. STEIN KENNETH STEINBERG JAMES A. TERZIAN DAVID M. TINKELMAN JAMES A. TRUAX ANTHONY F. VALDINI JOSEPH D. VERDIRAME GARY D. WALFORD JAY M. WALSHON BENNETT WALSTATTER ( ' 74) WAYNE H. WELSHER ALBERT L. ZENS EDWARD L, ZIMNEY GARY J. ZITO Syracuse Fairport Niagara Falls Bronx Floral Park East Aurora New York City Yonkers Syracuse Rochester West Seneca Westbury Buffalo New York City Poughkeepsie Franklin Square Endicott Somerset, Mass. Mineola Dewitt Ridge wood Brooklyn Lewiston Utica LaGrangeville Syracuse Howard Beach New Hartford RIverdale Jamaica Canton Mechanicville Wurtsboro BInghamton Fayetteville New York City East Meadow Roslyn Estates N. Tonawanda Scarsdale Brooklyn Manlius Rosy In Belle Harbor Scotia Albany Syracuse Wantagh Queens Village Binghamton Brooklyn Plainview Brewster Zell, S.D. Far Rockaway Melville Case Western Reserve, Cleveland Jacksonville Hosp Educ Program Case Western Reserve, Cleveland Western Psych Institute Akron City Hospital, Ohio St. Joseph ' s Hospital SUNY at Stony Brook Mt. Sinai Hospital, NYC Strong Memorial Hosp, Rochester Rochester General Hosp St. Joseph ' s Hospital Syracuse Medical Center St. Louis Univ Group Hosp Montefiore Hosp Ctr, Bronx Med Ctr Hospitals, South Carolina Stanford University Highland General, Oakland Bethesda Naval Hosp, Maryland Kaiser Foundation, Oakland Syracuse Medical Center Northwestern U Med Ctr, Chicago Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Henry Ford Hospitals, Detroit Berkshire Med Ctr, Pittsfield Syracuse Medical Center St. Joseph ' s Hospital Nassau Hospital Syracuse Medical Center Baylor College Affil, Houston Rochester General Hosp Syracuse Medical Center Albany Hospital Bronx Municipal Hospital Center Syracuse Medical Center North Carolina Mem, Chapel Hill Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago St. Joseph ' s Hospital Good Samaritan, Phoenix Syracuse Medical Center NYU Medical Center Syracuse Medical Center U of New Mexico, Albuquerque Long Island Jewish Hospital Kingston General Hosp, Canada Syracuse Medical Center U of Rochester Assoc Hosp Wilmington Med Ctr, Delaware U of Maryland Med Ctr, Baltimore U of Kansas Med Ctr, Kansas City Syracuse Medical Center Beth Israel Hospital, NYC Nassau Medical Center Hosp of U of Penn, Philadelphia Syracuse Medical Center Dartmouth Affil Hosp, Hanover Kings County Med Ctr, Brooklyn Pediatrics Medicine Ob-Gyn Psychiatry Flexible Family Practice Psychiatry Medicine Ob-Gyn Medicine Family Practice Radiology Medicine Pediatrics Medicine Surgery Flexible Rad.-Med. Medicine Radiology Ob-Gyn Surgery Medicine Medicine Medicine Flexible Medicine Medicine Medicine Flexible Medicine Pediatrics Psychiatry Radiology Surgery Medicine Flexible Medicine Psychiatry Anesthesiology Radiology Surgery Pediatrics Medicine Pathology Pediatrics Medicine Family Practice Medicine Medicine Surgery Ob-Gyn Surgery Radiology Pathology Medicine 159 DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY GLENN A. GODDARD Pharmacology CAROL L. PAPPAS Physiology LOUISE C. MERKENS Pharmacology JAN E. TOMPKINS Biochemistry DONALD C. MICHAELS Pharmacology ROBERT W. TUMAN Biochemistry CYTOTECHNOLOGY MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY NURSING RADIOTHERAPY TECHNOLOGY PHYSICAL THERAPY RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGY RESPIRATORY THERAPY 161 £i. ' V . ' , i- k ' - - K MOJ-Ti open h aclverrture. cxperiMerytr TVuis NiT ADMINISTRATION Dr. John B. Henry Dean Dr. Margaret Sovie Associate Dean 164 ADMISSIONS COUNSELLORS Lorraine Terracina Patrick Dimauro GENERAL STUDIES FACULTY 1. 1. Ruth Edelstein 2. Harriet Blanc 3. Edward Menkin 4. Geraldine Chavis I ' j n t t Ml t ' . ' Ki 168 1. Dr. Peckham 2. Dr. Weisner 3. Ms. Schneider 169 HOUSING V. liir Don Midlam Director Ruth Mothersell STUDENT ORGANIZATION: DORM SENATE Not Shown: Susan Beiber Clark Hall Mary McCarthy 175 Ui isat , - ' y? ' i■  -... ' ■ — - ' -■■- ' CHRP AURICLES STAFF 172 Editor: Mary Rushmore Cytotechnology Jill Taylor Medical Technology Kevin Roberts Nursing Judy Latkowski Mary Rushmore Donna Norris Debbie Montalto DeniseSunheimer Physical Therapy Christine Smith Nancy Shattuck Charlene Bouton Maria Piperis Radiologic Technology Cipora Judkovic Lynda Naegele Radiologic Therapy Larry Schultz Respiratory Therapy Judi Sherer Robert Bull Kathy Jolly Photographers Donna Norris Larry Schultz Pam Wilcox Art Cathy Peters Special Thanks to Nancy Scharmach of Public Relations 173 1! I ' I believe that man will not merely endure he will prevail. He is immortal not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustable voice ■- ?  but because he has a soul a spirit capable of compassion sacrifice and endurance. Anonymous. .t ' -r m I ■■ ' mmi P The silent patients speak by Anita R. Wildhaber, R.N. Though we can ' t speak, see, nor move of our own will, we are living beings. We are your stroke patients, the brain-damaged, and all your other patients who by illness or injury, are locked inside the dark, silent shells of our bodies. We can ' t cry out in pain or discomfort, regardless of how severe they are. We can ' t express anger, despair, disgust, nor even happiness. But hear us, you walking, talking, feeling, doing be- ings. Some of us are aware. We hear, think, and know. We are not living vegetables, nor do we think we would be better off dead. We still have enough self-respect to be embarrassed at hearing your conversations about your personal problems and your sex lives. We are frightened by your conversations that relate the latest gossip on the questionable ability of the doctor who is responsible for our care, for his knowledge must be used to save us if we are ever to recover. We feel shame at having our bodies exposed for any and all to see. It does matter to us that we must lie in feces or urine for hours, and our muscles ache with pain from the strain of remaining in one position without being moved. We can feel our mouths fill with mucus, drying and caking to form ulcerated areas. We can feel the stomach cramps from ice-cold tube feedings poured down the feeding tube with all the speed and lack of concern of pour- ing water down a drain. We can feel the pain of our skin breaking down from poor and careless nursing care. We can also feel joy — the joy derived from the firm, gen- tle, touch of a person giving us good care. We can rest more comfortably when we are bathed, when our mouths and lips are cleansed, when our bodies are correctly positioned, when good skin care is given, when our beds are made neat and straight. We can appreciate the kindness of words spoken directly to us and not about us. We can appreciate being told what procedures are about to be done be- fore they are begun. We can have some hope when you take measures to prevent our muscles from atrophying and you carefully place our hands and feet in function- al positions. For we know that the proper positioning, exercising, ' and supporting of our bodies can prevent us from being hopeless cripples when we break through our shells. Most of all, we are prayerfully thankful to you who give us the atten- tion, care, and respect you give your patients who are physically and mentally alert. It is you who give us hope and the courage to try to establish nerve pathways that will make these useless shells of muscle, bone, and tissue respond once more to our commands and in time re- turn us to the world of speaking, seeing, doing, functioning beings. ANDREA BURLEIGH JANET P. ELLER LAWRENCE PALMIERI JAN M. RIGHI 177 LAURIE LIPSY ROBERT L. SIMMONS CYNTHIA STRAIT JILL D. TAYLOR 178 CHRISTINE HIGBY RADIOTHERAPY TECHNOLOGY T E C H N L G Y MARIANNE C. BRAASCH PATRICIA S. BRADLEY LINDA ELLEN CHEEVER, LAURIE CONLAN Jim and Ted Photo: Karen Moroch Layout: Beth Hasenauer, Susan Strom BARBARA M. DeLUSTRO Merrilee Marianne, Joanne, Kathy ROBERTA DiMAGGIO JOHN GORMAN JAMES W. JABARA ELLEN HERKOWITZ BETH HASENAUER Photo: Jim Jabara KATHLEEN M. KENNEDY JOANNE M. KOSTERS 4 lERRILEE L. McNIECE ANN MARIE ROBERT Barb Photos: Jim Jabara, Karen Moroch • ' ! KEVIN W. ROBERTS PATRICK SHEARER SUSAN R. STROM KARLA JEAN LAUENSTEIN 183 Photos: Karen Moroch, Barb DeLustro V - SUSAN ALEXANDER VICTORIA BAILEY • MAUREEN V. BEDLE o . ' J BARBARA BOVAN NANCY H. BOYER MARY JANE BUCKNER - sJ ZOE ANN CHRISTENSEN CATHERINE A. CURRY BONNIE DE ATLEY ' p - , . • ' a ' MARTHA BENNET JANET BEUSCHER BARBARA BURKHART KATHY CARLEY SUSAN BONNELL I ANN DECARO ALICE DECKER MAJA ANDERSON, DIRECTOR CAROL ANN GATELY A MARY J. DISCHINO LINDA K. GLUNZ ELLEN TERESA GOODWATER fy I JULIANNE KICKBUSH CHERYL LADOUDEUR CHRISTINE LAMBERT CINDI DITTES DIANE MARIE GROTH NANCY F. EUCHNER v- l . C iUt- y ' - H i r ' - ife BARBARA HALL NANCY FRY . ' . A MARCIA L. JOHNSON -f J I 187 DENISE M. MARSHALL SUSAN L. MOCNY DEBRA MUELLER COLLEN M. MURPHY VIRGINIA MURRAY SUSAN NALLE SALLY WALTER O ' BRIEN GRETCHEN L. ONDERDONK CATHY PETERS THE DUTIES OF THE FLOOR NURSE In addition to caring for your 50 patients, each nurse will follow these regulations: 1 . Daily sweep and mop the floors of your ward, dust the patient ' s furniture and window sills. 2. Maintain an even temperature in your ward by bringing in a scuttle of coal for the day ' s business. 3. Light is important to observe the pa- tietit ' s condition. Therefore, each day fill kerosene lamps, clean chimneys, and trim wicks. Wash the windows once a week. 4. The nurse ' s notes are important in aid- ing the physician ' s work. Make your pens carefully, you may whittle nibs to your individual taste. 5. Each nurse on day duty will report ev- ery day at 7 a.m , and leave at 8 p.m ., except on the Sabbath on which day you will be off from 12 noon to 2 p.m. 6. Graduate nurses in good standing with the director of nurses will be given an evening off each week if you go reg- ularly to church. 7. Each nurse should lay aside from each pay day a goodly sum of her earnings for her benefits during her declining years, so that she will not become a burden. For example, if you earn $30 a month you should set aside $ 15 . 8. Any nurse who smokes, uses liquor in any form, gets her hair done at a beau- ty shop, or frequents dance balls will give the director of nurses good reason to suspect her worth, intentions, and integrity. 9 . The nurse who performs her labors, serves her patients and doctors faith- fully and without fault for a period of 5 years will be given an increase by the hospital administration of 50 a day providing there are no hospital debts that are outstanding. Circa 1887. Exact source unknown. ► MERYL QUI GLEY BARBARA QUINLAN MARK RIENHARDT % LUCRETIA ROBINSON ( JANET A. SAGEHORN SHERILYN SANTAW PATRICIA RADLEY JUDITH ROOT Q PATRICIA M. SAUMDERS MARGARET RAPKO DOLORES ROSSI SHU-HAYONG RICHMOND MARY E. RUSHMORE ENID SCHWARTZ KATHY L. SEIB BARBARA SMITH V ' u KATHY J. SOMERS MICHELLE TRIFOSO JUANA-TERESA VIECO if SUSAN STAFFORD A DEBRA WERFELMAN KATHERINE H. WINKERT KATHLEEN WRIGHT SUSAN M. ZOLADZ ALICE VEZEAU STANTON LAURIE STOFFEL BLANCHE L. STUART . CAMERA SHY: DEBORAH HOLLM KATHLEEN H. MAURICE JEAN SIROWATKA PATRICIA A. ZURENDA PAMELA BETH WILCOX THE NIGHTINGALE PLEDGE I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly: To pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully; I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug; I will do all in my power to maintain and elevate the standard of my profes- sion, and will hold in confidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling; With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work, and devote my- self to the welfare of those committed to my care. School of Nursing Founded in 1959 First A.A.S. degree program in the upstate New York area ' ■ S iSr « ,7i x L . ' -a b r kL t ' . i .l!i ' i T ' 197 CHARLENE BOUTON - .3 1 GLENN CHIN :M . 198 ANNE COMO nH[ -. THOMAS FAISANT CHRISTINE SMITH VICKI ZDEP JAMES WALCZAK I KARIN ZIEGLER w ' 9 I J I H E r FACULTY Then said a teacher, Speak to us of Teaching . And he said: No man can reveal to you aught but that which already lies half asleep in the dawning of your knowledge. The teacher sho walks in the shadow of the temple, among his followers, gives not of his wis- dom but rather of his faith and his lovingness. If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your own mind. —Kahlil Gibran I Left to Right: J. Vraciu, H. Blank, M. Schneider, D. Hewitt, K. Rsnno, J. Cuthbertson, M. Trimble; Mot Present: A. Herrick. PEANUTS MH ' FOOT 15 ASLEEP, 3U1 m TOES ARE AUAKE ) ' UJHAT SOOO DO FOR THE TO $TA ' ' AU AKe : lJkei?£ can they 60 without the foot?! c (1973) United Feature Syndicate, Inc. DO IT FIFW TI.1AE5 A PAV, AND VOU ' LL NEVER HAVE TO HAVE ACUPUNCTURE. ' 204 c (1974) United Feature Syndicate, Inc. I Think This Is an Appropriate Time . . to take a break Layout: Chris Smith, Char Bouton, Annette Iglarsh Photography: Glenn Chin, Annette Iglarsh, Gary Ig I arsh •.i THOMAS R. ADAMS DEBRA GLEASON CAROLYN BURNETT LINDA JANLEWICZ MICHELLE A. BURNHAM NANCY JO JAR VIS PATRICIA MAYERS JANET MUELLER PAULA NICOLETTA ANN Dl MARIA CIPORA JUDKOVIC BONNIE EKLUr ROBIN LEHMAN R A D I L G I C T E C H N L G Y JOYCE PALMER PAULA RAMSDEN CAROL ALEXANDER CELESTE BELYEA 1 IP pHHH H h %w M I ' i v R E S P I R A T R Y T H E R A P Y ROBERT L. BULL, JR, ELAINE M. CHANDLER ELEANOR F. COLTON CYNTHIA J. COSTELLO LEONA M. COMINSKY KATHRYN J. DAVIS TERRANCE W. DONAHUE 212 HEY, DOES HE HAVE POLKA-DOT UMDERWEAR SHOWIWG THROUGH HIS UMIFORM? EILEEN RENE DUNN ERICA. ENSIGN H ■ ■ ' H T3Br _ ' -■- 9fc ' IHI By L 1 n SI M iir T] i mi r ' |Kg« B H Hbj Lfi A y| bI IBIC d IH WHAT ' S GOIIMG ON TONIGHT . . . ? J. PROCITA AND CLASS XAVIER FIGUEREDO 213 DEBORAH FITZGIBBONS n ' p ' !i IRA GORDON SUSAN C. HALSTEAD THE CROWD PLEASER! JOE KIEFFER PAMELA M. HOWARD I GIVE ' TIL IT HURTS! 214 J HELLO, MOM . . . ? F. SMITH DON LYND REID A. MARMILLION DEBBIE McDOUGALL PAT McMAHON 215 KATHLEEN E. O ' SULLIVAN JO PALEN MARLIS E. PEARCE KATHLEEN I. PERKINS CHARLES K. RACE, JR, LINDA D. SCAIA 216 KAREN G. SMITH WE MARRIED MEN HAVE TO STICK TOGETHER! WHAT HE DOESN ' T KNOW CAN ' T HURT HIM! NOT PICTURED: NELSON DICKEY MICHAEL LASKY CHARLES ROMAN JOE SORBELLO 217 ' I NEED A VACATION! ' RUTH ' CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1975 A. GENO ANDRE ATT A Dean of Admissions and Student Affairs THOMAS J. CAMPBELL Vice President for Hospital Affairs DONALD C. GOODMAN Dean, College of Graduate Studies JOHN BERNARD HENRY Dean, College of Health Related Professions GEORGE F. REED Dean, Office of Graduate and Continuing Medical Education RICHARD P. SCHMIDT President of the Medical Center DAVID A. SINCLAIR Vice President for Administration BEST WISHES TO ALL GRADUATING STUDENTS IN COLLEGE OF COLLEGE OF MEDICINE HEALTH RELATED PROFESSIONS COLLEGE OF GRADUATE STUDIES FROM COLLEGE OF HEALTH RELATED PROFESSIONS CYTOTECHNOLOGY EX TRACORPOREAL TECHNOLOGY LIBERAL ARTS FACULTY MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY NURSE PRACTITIONER PROGRAM PHYSICAL THERAPY RADIOTHERAPY TECHNOLOGY RESPIRATORY THERAPY SCHOOL OF NURSING Wes Carey Barry Victor Dick Lee CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES To The Class of 1975 W.K.CAREY ASSOCIATES PHYSICIANS PLANNING SERVICE CORP. Administrators for: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF RESIDENTS AND INTERNS AMERICAN PROFESSIONAL PRACTICE ASSOCIATION AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF FOREIGN MEDICAL GRADUATES 1004 East Adams Street Syracuse, New York 475-5147 Dave Brown Rav Brown Doug Benedick Chris Bell 220 Emmett Orlando BEST WISHES FROM ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA HONORARY MEDICAL SOCIETY GAMMA CHAPTER MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1975: Glen R. Mogan, President Kenneth B. Hymes Joseph W. Helak, Vice-Pres. Richard F. Kaplan Jeffrey Askanazi Mark Katz Thomas J. Baesl Louis Korman Gary C . Brown David N . Lisi Joseph A. Cincotta Michael D. Pavy James A. Dispenza Leonard Sicilian Jay A. Erlebacher James A. Terzian Molly M. Hastings David M. Tinkelman WE WISH TO THANK OUR FINE FACULTY OFFICERS: WATTS R. WEBB, M.D. Councillor DONALD C. SAMSON, M.D. Secretary -Treasurer AOA SPONSORS: All-School C.P.C. ' s Each Month Annual Spring Grand Rounds 1975: Robert M. Heyssel, M.D., The Johns Hopkins Hospital Visiting Professorship in Nutrition To Be Held in 1976 Student Research Council WITH SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR FAMILIES . . . Mr. Mrs. K.Y. Ai Dr. Mrs. Jack E. Goldberg Thomas J.F. Quan Mr. Mrs. John M. Baesl Mr. Mrs. Benjamin Goldman Mr. Mrs. Daniel C. Raasch Mr. Mrs. John BianRosa Mr. Mrs. Irving Gordon Mr. Mrs. Gerald H. Roman Kay Boxer Ken Grauer Dr. Mrs. Richard Rooker Mr. Mrs. Charles Bouton Mr. Mrs. Jules Grossberg Mr. Mrs. Harry Rosen Mr. Mrs. Michael E. Bucci Mr. Mrs. James W. Haley James J. Sacco Jr. Mr. Mrs. Robert L. Bull Dr. Arthur H. Hecht Mr. Mrs. Edward Santau Mr. Mrs. Donald L. Burkhardt Mr. Mrs. Sidney Kaplan Anthony J. Scalzo Mr. Mrs. Raymond W. Burnett Mr. Mrs. Leonard Katz John Serbalik Mr. Mrs. William Byrne FrancisW. Kelly, M.D. Dr. Mrs. G.J. Seaman Mr. Mrs. Nathan F. Caldwell Carol A. Kickbush Mr. Mrs. Abner Segal Mr. Mrs. Alvin B. Carlson Mr. Mrs. Donald Kress Mr. Mrs. W.A. Short Mr. Mrs. Shung Chin Mrs. Darwin Lehman Mr. Mrs. Irwin Slotkin Mr. Mrs. John Cincotta Mrs. Amelia Lisi Mr. Mrs. Joseph F. Sorbello Ms. Theodorus J. Crounse Mr. Mrs. Warren C. Litts Mr. Mrs. Sidney Sorkin Mr. Mrs. Salvatore DiSchino Dr. Mrs. Milton L. Lowell Mr. Mrs. Richard B. Southwell Sr. Mr. Mrs. W.A. Dittes Mr. Mrs. Donald F. Lynd Sr. Margaret R. Stuart Mr. Mrs. Donald Dunn Mr. Mrs. Franklin McDougall John B. Truax Mr. Mrs. J.B. Elkins Mr. Mrs. Robert McMahon Mr. Mrs. Daniel A. Verdirame Bert Laura Erlebacher Harry Elsie Mogan Mr. Mrs. Abraham M. Walshon Mr. Mrs. P.C. Euchner Jr. Mr. Mrs. Michael Morette Mr. Mrs. Stewart Wilcox Mr. Mrs. Samuel Fagelman Mr. Mrs. Richard Nolte Mrs. Mary Ann Zens Mr. Mrs. Justin E. Faisant Mr. Mrs. Louis Palomba Ben Bernice Zimney Mr. Mrs. Philip Fenton Mr. Mrs. Laurent Pavy Mr. Mrs. George P. Zurenda 1 Mr. Mrs. Robert Gaetjens l| Mr. Mrs. Charles Gioia Mr. Mrs. William Pearl Mr. Charles Valdini Mr. Mrs. Robert S. Pyatt COMPLIMENTS OF THE RADIOLOGY DEPARTMENT AT GROUSE IRVING-MEMORIAL HOSPITAL 222 CONGRATULATIONS AND CONTINUED SUCCESS IN YOUR CHOSEN FIELDS FROM THE MEDICAL CENTER BOOKSTORE STAFF . . AND FACULTY AND ALUMNI FRIENDS! Howard G. Abbott, M.D. ' 52 Dr. Raja W. Abdul-Karim William O. Aikman, M.D. Dr. Murray M. Albert ' 31 Dr. Ira H. Ames Richard H. Aubry, M.D. JayG. Bamett, M.D. ' 64 John G. Bartlett, M.D. ' 63 Frank A. Bersani, M.D. Melvyn D. Bert, M.D. ' 67 J.T. Birardi, M.D. Dr. Donald L. Bomstein John D. Boyd, M.D. ' 23 Leonard H. Brandon, M.D. ' 52 Marvin Brown, M.D. ' 36 Richard L. Burleson, M.D. Robert B. Burtch, M.D. 3 ' 43 R.L. Butler, M.D. J.N. Burgess, M.D. Mr. Mrs. Charles F. Calligaris Erwin R. Centerwall, M.D. ' 42 Pyoung R. Chang, M.D. A.B. Chidester, M.D. ' 23 Willard Cohen, M.D. ' 56 Seymour Cohen, M.D. ' 53 Mary E. Steinheimer Collins, M.D. 223 Mark E. Conan, M.D. Richard H. Conklin, M.D. ' 69 Ellen Cook, M.D. ' 50 I.V.Cooper, M.D. ' 51 John R. Cooper Jr., M.D. ' 58 Robert M. Corwin, M.D. Richard Coulson, Ph.D. Theodore G. Dalakos, M.D. Drs. Duggan, Schiess, Sipple, Speller Robert Eich, M.D. Norman C. Elithorp, M.D. ' 54 Eye Consultants of Syracuse, P.C. Emerson F. Fackler, M.D. ' 41 RobertD. Fairchild, M.D. Jerome H. Flatow, M.D. EdwinJ. Foley, M.D. ' 31 Tom Fruehan, M.D. Dr. George S.Garfein ' 71 Michael J. Geiss, M.D. Dr. Robert Gilbert Alice Gracy Giordano, M.D. ' 20 Irving H. Goldman, M.D. Dr. Mrs. Alan G. Greene RobertO.Gregg, M.D. ' 34 Alan W. Grogono ' 44 r ' Stanley A. Groman, M.D. ' 35 Dr. Nathan M. Hameroff ' 64 1 ' Byron B. Hamilton, M.D., Ph.D. ' 59 Leon A. Harris, M.D. ' 45 Steven F. Harwin, M.D. ' 71 Harwood Weichert, M.D.s, P.C. Joseph A. Head, M.D. ' 39 E. Robert Heitzman, M.D. George C. Henegar, M.D. CONGRATULATIONS WilliamF.Hesek, M.D. ' 36 FROM Warren L. Hollis, M.D. George Holz Jr., Ph.D. f 105 175 ELIZABETH BLACKWELL ST. James A. Horel, Ph.D. George S. Patricia H. Husson, M.D.s Dr. George S. Husson CLARK HALLS Susan lannaccone, M.D. ' 69 FathiA. Jishi, M.D. EmilioL. Kabela, M.D. Manouchehr Karjoo, M.D. Howard D. Kelley, M.D. ' 42 Seuk Ky Kim, M.D. Dr. Edward S. Konwinski ' 52 FrankJ. Kroboth, M.D. ' 46 Dr. Robert A. Levine Lourie, Stewart, Shende, M.D., P.C. CONGRATULATIONS V TO THE CLASS OF 1975 • IT HAS BEEN OUR PRIVILEGE AND PLEASURE M iiw I SI CENTREX m OPERATORS ■1® N? Blue Cross® Blue Shield® II of Central New York A CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ' 75 BURNETT PHARMACY HAMMER ' S CAMPUS JEWELERS EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING THE LITTLE STORE WITH LITTLE PRICES 107 MARSHALL ST. 474-6986 BEST WISHES CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ' 75 EMPORIUM OF GREETINGS CARDS GIFTS THE UNUSUAL 734 SO. GROUSE AVE. Dr. Mrs. Eugene L. Lozner Bedros Markarian, M.D. Frederick N. Marty, M.D. T.H. Mason, M.D. ' 44 Samuel Joseph Mazza, M.D. ' 64 J.A. McKanna Ronald A. Miller, M.D. ' 52 Dr. John T. Mitchell Norman Mitchell, M.D. ' 28 Arnold M. Moses, M.D. John Mosher, M.D. EdwardW. Mullin, M.D. David G. Murray, M.D. Douglas A. Nelson, M.D. Dr. Robert E.L. Nesbitt, Jr. Drs. John Laura Neville RobertG.Noble, M.D. ' 65 Murray Nussbaum, M.D. Donald Oken, M.D. Dr. Mrs. Terrence M. O ' Neill ' 65 Sidney A. Orgel, Ph.D. FrankA. Oski, M.D. Joseph P. Ostrowski, M.D. Dr. Anthony Panzone, M.D. ' 21 Paul D. Parkman, M.D. ' 57 PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION For over 25 years, helping the medical profession bring better health care to the women of the world. . . and their families c OPC )97.; Ortho Pharmaceutical Corporation, Raritan, New Jersey 08869 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1975 FROM PAUL SEYMOUR LIQUORS 300 Gifford St. WHERE-PRICES ARE BEST AT-GIFFORD AND WEST Dr. Eduardo R. Perez ' 29 Angelo J. Raffaele, M.D. George S. Reed, M.D. Norbert B. Reicher, M.D. Ralph Reichert, M.D. ' 60 E.W. Rheinheimer, M.D. ' 16 Florence Rhudy-Crippen ' 50 Dr. Douglas R. Robertson Dr. Mrs. Robert F. Rohner ' 52 Albert Rothman, M.D. Dr. Charles B. Ryan ' 46 William J. Ryan, M.D. H.B. Santana, M.D. E.T. Schroeder, M.D. Kendrick A. Sears, M.D. Ralph C.Secor, M.D. ' 39 Dr. Herbert Schneiderman Short Blatchly, M.D., P.C. Robert J. Snowe, M.D. ' 64 Dr. Philip Solomon ' 41 Southern N.Y. Neurosurgical Group Arthur E. Spearing, Jr., M.D. ' 52 Robert M. Spitzer, M.D. ' 65 BEST WISHES AND GOOD LUCK TO THE CLASS OF ' 75 COSMO ' S PIZZA SHOP 143 Marshall St. PIZZA KING WHERE FINE FOOD IS A TRADITION 123 Marshall St. and ALL-NIGHT EGG PLANT 4457 E. Genesee St. CONGRATULATE THE CLASS OF 1975 I fflsiTf 802 S. CROUSE 478-1235 FINEST PIZZA BEER WINES FRESH DOUGH PIZZA The Only Restaurant on tlw Hill Fiiiiiily oiitiril tiixl itprnilril for oifr 50 years BEST WISHES FROM BRAD ' S Brews Victuals Stews 713 So. Grouse Ave. 727 So. Grouse Ave. Next to Post Office WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE AND WISH YOU THE BEST IN ALL ENDEAVORS Dr. David G. Storrs Drs. David Barbara Streeten Dr. M.J. Stuart Irving Swartz, M.D. Dr. Edward A. Swift Frederic Taylor, M.D. ' 53 Drs. Jay Helen Tepperman Norman Trabulus, M.D. ' 53 A. Albert Tripo di, M.D. Dr. Mrs. Walter Tunnessen Jr. Mary L. Voorhess, M.D. Dr. Robert L. Vought ' 32 Howard L. Weinberger, M.D. Irwin M. Weiner, M.D. Herbert M. Weinman, M.D. ' 65 Dr. Mrs. Ralph N. Weller 3 ' 43 Daniel Whiteley, M.D. ' 65 Margaret L. Williams, M.D. William J. Williams, M.D. Harvey Wolfe, M.D. ' 56 D. Woolfolk, M.D. Ronald F.Young, M.D. DonaldJ. Ziehm, M.D. ' 62 JohnHoepner, M.D. George S. Ninos, M.D. GharlesH. Lynch, M.D. CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1975 FROM (k uohiS 5 oner ltd Q Q (} 755 South Ccous (3 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1975 MID-ATLANTIC HOSPITAL AND MEDICAL SUPPLY, INC. BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1975 FROM noohawk DENTAL SUPPLY CO. INC. In Syracuse, Utica, Binghamton, and Albany SERVICE TO THE DENTAL PROFESSION SINCE 1916 ICE CREAM IS NOT JUST OUR LIVELIHOOD IT ' S OUR LIFE! BASKIN-ROBBINS ICE CREAM STORE (fe 1974 Baskin-Robbins. Inc ' M Flavors chosen on a rotational basis each month from more than 3I!1 original Baskin-Robbins recipes for ice cream, sherbets and ices. Cones, Shaikes. Sundaes, Sodas available plus Take home desserts of pies, ice cream sheet or layer cakes, ice cream ' n cake rolls and Hand- packed bulk cartons. Comer of Marshall St. and S. C rouse On the S.U. Campus Open 7 Davs A Week 1 1 am till I I p, III ARTURO ' S CATERING SERVICE Custom Catering: Serving One Person Or Hundreds MEA1 S SANDWICHES CHICKEN frf:sh douc.h pizza BUFFETS For All Occasions Eastwood 437-2819 New and Used Cameras and Equipment obarcontst EST. 1736 Your pictures deserve quality color processing, by Kodak. It DOES make a difference! 121 Marshall St. 475-3308 MTW9-6 ThF9-8 S 11-5 PIPES TOBACCO CIGARS IMPORTED CIGARS COFFEE TEA UNIVERSITY SMOKER Congrats and Good Luck Class of ' 75 RON GERRY 147 Marshall St. 476-6155 TO THE CLASS OF 1975: CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1975 DAIRYLEA MILK, ICE CREAM, DAIRY PRODUCTS You don ' t change from medical students in May 1975 to doctors in June. You have been doctors since you first had the idea to come to medical school, and it is our hope that you will remain medical students for the rest of your lives. 810 Burnet Av. 472-5511 CONGRATULATIONS! FROM THE MEDICAL CENTER LIBRARY L.I ... for Ihe Total Approarh to a Better Yearbook Your Official Yearbook Photographer GUIDE TO HOUSE OFFICER SELF- EVALUATION Area of Performance Excellent Far Exceed Job Requirefnenit Very Good Exceed Job Requirement Good Meet Job Requirement Fair Need Job Improvement Un ali tactory Doe Not IMeet Job Requirement Quality of Work Leaps tall buildings at a single bound Leaps tall buildings with a running start Can leap short building if prodded Bumps into buildings Cannot recognize buildings Promptness Is faster than a speeding bullet Is as fast as a speeding bullet Not quite as fast as a speeding bullet Would you believe a slow bullet Misfires frequently Initiative Is stronger than a Locomotive Is as strong as a Bull Elephant Almost as strong as a Bull Shoots the Bull Smells like a Bull Adaptability Walks on ater Walks on water m Emergencies Washes with water Drinks water Passes water in an Emergency Communicatiofi Talks with God Talks with the Angels Talks to himself Argues with himself Loses argument with self 232 YOU DOCTORS HAVE BEEN, AND ALWAYS WILL BE, EXPOSED TO THE CONTEMPT OF THE GIFTED AMATEUR, THE GENTLEMAN WHO KNOWS ' BY INTUITION EVERYTHING IT HAS TAKEN YOU YEARS TO LEARN. — RUDYARD KIPLING WARM WISHES FROM THE ZITO FAMILY TO THE CLASS OF 1975 LINCOLN FIRST COMPLIMENTS OF ROBERT R. MURRAY OFFERS SOMETHING FOR THE SELF- EMPLOYED PERSON WHO HAS EVERYTHING. SAMA HEALTH INSURANCE ADMINISTRATOR A $7,500 TAX DEDUCTION. 6806 Newbrook Ave. E. Syracuse, N.Y. 13057 437-2931 Call Len Paduano at 473-3625 and ask about Lincoln First Bank ' s Personal Retirement Plans. 1 Lincoln First Bank-Central One Lincoln Center, Syracuse, N. Y. 13201 STAFF AURiclEUS 1975 RK KMI ADJUVANTS 1 . Louis Bland 2 . Craig Byrum 3 . Jay Eriebacher 4. Robert Gaetjens 5. Robert Goldberg 6. Mark Goldman PATHOGENS-IN-CHIEF ' G iPHiccov ' f ' m GROSS ' ' 7. David Lytich 8. Terry MacMath 9. Robert Pyatt 10. Joseph Verdirame 11 . Gary Zito %fsscov.o ORif lZOV We would like to extend a very special thank you TO JIM CARR PHIL D ' ARMS LESLIE BERNSTEIN PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE SYRACUSE MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICE OF GRADUATE AND CONTINUING MEDICAL EDUCATION DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL PHOTOGRAPHY for their well-tempered advice, and technical and administrative assistance, TO PATTYE (with an E ) MURPHY AND VARDEN STUDIOS for their unending patience, efficiency, and smiles, TO JIM FELTRINELLI OF THE AMERICAN YEARBOOK CO. for his crash course in graphics, TO OUR STAFF, AND THE INNUMERABLE FACULTY, ALUMNI, PARENTS, FRIENDS, AND BUSINESSES whose moral and financial support made the 1975 Auricle a reality, and TO FLO AND JULES and SYL AND RALPH for their help in the conception of this project. It is therefore with gratitude, sincerity, integrity, determination, and several quarts of J B that this yearbook has been prepared. Looking back, we find the latter most necessary . . . 235 ; : -:? How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy! In youth, we are 00 king forward to things that are to come; in old age, we are looking backward to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even that is too often absorbed in some vague determinations to be vastly happy on some lutiire day, when we have time ... --Caleb C. Colton MtfMM ' ' ' r - I i


Suggestions in the SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) collection:

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 133

1975, pg 133

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 87

1975, pg 87

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 16

1975, pg 16

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 234

1975, pg 234

SUNY Upstate Medical University - Auricle Yearbook (Syracuse, NY) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 114

1975, pg 114


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