Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1949

Page 20 of 294

 

Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 20 of 294
Page 20 of 294



Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 19
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Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 21
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Page 20 text:

chemistry beakers, bobbing kymograph markers, and tangled nerve pathways will linger for a good many years, the aspect of this particular era that shall always be with us is the entrance of the personality of Dr. John A. Kolmer into our medical lives. Who among us can ever forget those days when Dr. Kolmer paced the floor of the amphitheatre, his hands clasped behind his back, his head bowed as he warned of the indispensability of clinical skill in diagnosis. Through the years that followed. I)r. Kolmer was to play probably a greater role than any other single instructor in teaching the fundamentals of medicine. Long after his and all other lecture notes lie yellowing in some closet corner, we shall remember that warm feeling of pride we felt when this solemn gentleman, whose every mannerism reflects the brilliance of his achievement, climaxed our freshman year with the words. “Ladies arid gentlemen, let me welcome you into the clinical side of your careers as future doctors in the practice of medicine. Bottom, left: Schindel and Nixon . . . Now, what dors it all mean? Bottom, renter: Dr. Kimmel and Mol-than . . . Kmbryologically speaking. Bottom, right: Dr. John Kolmer . . . Let me welcome you . . .” Right, center: Dr. Kdward Chamberlain . . . the hilar density is important. 16 I

Page 19 text:

a wrist cramp as in her soft-spoken, never-excited manner she filled our notes with meticulously outlined masses of information. Later, the boss and l)r. Collins continued in patient earnestness to soften thick freshman skulls. Then, too. there was the laboratory. Here the regular staff, assisted by Mrs. Jean Weston, Miss Wendy Wester, and the comely Miss Dottie Ellis tried desperately to keep five-thumbed hands from completely fouling up apparatus and produce results within the range of probability. Also in the lab was Dick, the chief technician who kept us in childlike awe as he nonchalantly smoked a kymograph drum without burning it. kept his shirt clean, all with never a finger print on his face or the drum. He shellacked the records without getting his trousers stuck to the table or the records to each other, and he took the most ferocious dogs out of the cage without spilling a drop of his hlood. He also sold us seraphins for half the hook store price. Looking hack, these many worth-while hours can never be measured in so many words. As Dr. Oppcn heinier said, when he demonstrated ventricular fibrillation in a dog's heart. “No word of mouth can describe something like this; to see it and feel it is to know it.” Correlated with our neurophysiology, after we had sweat hlood for the anatomy finals, was a thing called neuroanatomy. Armed with the newest pastel shades of pencils and reams of diagrammed papers, we listened to Drs. Weston and Kimmel explain how about two kilos of nervous tissue isn't actually complicated just hopelessly baffling. Desperate!) we tried to draw a blue line following Dr. Weston as he bounded up and down a ladder, tripping happily across the black hoard following the fibers as they crossed the first sheet, caught the second as it flew past on the diagonal, bisected our cuff, turned green when we broke the blue pencil, and raced on thalamus bound. Nothing could stop it until the sheet with the thalamus blew out the sixth floor window into the spring atmosphere and Broad Street soot. (Oh. well, there are still lots of other tracts, so one thalamus more or less can't mean too much.t Saturday mornings found 603 filled to standing room with students, wives, and prospective spouses as Dr. Spurgeon English began to explain everything, from the oral stage to why medical students make punk husbands. Here we learned that the psychiatrist calls it “id.” that we are plagued with a chaperonish super-ego, and that “ego” docs not mean our thumbs hooked in the vest pockets of our conservative pin stripes. We left feeling sure the normal people of the world are definitely a subversive minority, that we are doomed to marital battles, and that it might be well to eye our classmates with an air of suspicion. While the memories of steaming, smelling bio- Lcft: I r. Morton Oppmlieimer ... To see il and to feel il is lo know il. Center: Drs. Oppenheimer and Sokalchuk watch the freshmen cavort. Ri ht: Dr. Grcislicimcr . . . soft spoken, never excited. 15



Page 21 text:

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Suggestions in the Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

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Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

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Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952


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