Temple University School of Medicine - Skull Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1965
Page 1 of 440
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 440 of the 1965 volume:
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SKULL EDITORS • STUART SAGEL • BARBARA SCHWARTZ • MELODY JACOBY • DELPHINE SUTTON Temple University Medical Center • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania temple university health sciences library Dedication . . . I N the course of a medical education, transition from the accumulation of knowledge in the basic sciences to its application in the clinical evaluation and treatment of human disease represents a major milestone. For the medical student, a crucial factor in his attempt to bridge this gap is a solid foundation in the fundamentals of physical diagnosis. For if that foundation be firm, upon it may be built (through the daily observation of patients and a continued program of academic study of disease) the ability to recognize the specific pathology at hand and therefore to initiate a sound plan of management to correct it. We were particularly fortunate in having for a subject so vital, one well fitted for the task of presenting it to us. The problems of enlisting the best men in the respective departments to speak to us each Saturday, and insuring their presence in the classroom on the appointed day, doubtlessly consumed considerable time and effort. Added to these problems were those of making the necessary arrangements for our weekly treks into the various clinical departments of Temple and its affiliated hospitals. His avid pursuit of the principles and techniques of bedside diagnosis led to a collection of observations which were presented to us in clear, concise, and highly informative lectures and were later published as a text, Notes on Physical Diagnosis. Our ovation on the last Saturday of our Sophomore year was perhaps the loudest, longest, and most sincere we have yet given. But this man’s service to us goes beyond his course in physical diagnosis. As juniors some of us met with him again during our clinical clerkship in medicine at the Episcopal Hospital. There he assumed the responsibility for one of the medical wards in order that the patients be available to us. He conducted daily teaching rounds with enthusiasm, and forcefully drove home the artful application of bedside medicine. This year he conducted an elective in medicine for seniors at their request. Hence it seems fitting that we consider the background of this man who logs such an amazing number of hours in student contact and instruction. He was born in Philadelphia on October 8. 1920; and in early youth he set his goal at becoming a physician. He was an honor student at Central High School and Temple University where he acquired a B.A. degree in Chemistry in 1941. He became a medical student at Temple the following September. During his student years he decided that his particular interest was in the field of 5 TO With Dr. Soloff and members of the Radiology Department of Temple, he became a pioneer in the developing field of angiocardiography. These workers made significant strides in developing and perfecting the techniques and describing the classical findings in a variety of cardiac lesions. diseases of the chest. While still a medical student he also developed a lasting interest in the use of radiology as a diagnostic tool. In 1944 he earned his degree of Doctor of Medicine, and at graduation exercises was awarded the faculty prize for attaining the highest average in the senior year. During his internship at the Jewish Hospital of Philadelphia (now Albert Einstein Medical Center. North Division) he was stricken with tuberculosis and became a patient at the Eagle-ville Sanatorium. Two years were spent there in a dual role as patient and resident in diseases of the chest. Frequently he made rounds in a bathrobe and was known as “Dr. Z to his fellow patients. He recalls with amusement having often resuscitated patients who had suffered air embolism during therapeutic pneumothorax, then submitting with some apprehension, to the same treatment. His interest in radiology was nurtured while at Eagleville for he often fluoroscoped as many as fifty patients in a day. In 1947 he returned to Temple as a resident in internal medicine and was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1952. The same Board gave him its certification in Cardiovascular Diseases in 1958. A member of the staffs of Temple and Episcopal Hospital since 1950. he serves now as Clinical Professor of Medicine at Temple, and Teaching Chief in Medicine at Episcopal. 6 JACOB ZATUCHNI, M.D. In addition to his textbook, this prolific writer has authored or co-authored a total of seventy-five articles dealing with a host of medical problems ranging from Ebstein's disease and cardiac planigraphy to thiazide diuretics. At present his research activity is focused on gathering clinical data concerning a new diuretic agent, ethacrynic acid. The rosters of the Pyramid Honor Society, Alpha Omega Alpha, and Sigma Xi include his name, as do a number of medical societies including the American College of Physicians and the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. A large amount of his non-professional time is consumed by the application of his philosophy of continuing education. Several hours daily are spent in perusing the current medical literature. A cross-referenced file which he began in his junior year of medical school has become a voluminous source of readily available, detailed information on an infinite variety of medical problems. He has recently taken up golf and enjoys getting out on the links for recreation. In addition, he enjoys traveling with his family: his wife, Evie, and their four children. Stephen, age 16, Dory 15, Beth 13, and Michael 9. Together they have travelled extensively through the United States and abroad. He speaks with fondness of his wife's understanding of the large amount of time he devotes to medicine, to Temple, and to medical students. That this necessarily separates them in time and space is made more bearable by her encouragement and a common dedication to his ideals. To our private, oft unspoken admiration of his philosophy we now add this tangible evidence of our appreciation for a man who has dedicated his life to fostering continuing education in clinical and academic medicine — the dedication of this 1965 Skull to Dr. Jacob Za-tuchni. 7 Faculty and Admin-i strati on zations C ail did s Medical Technologists ' THEME T HE entire class has been nourished from a common fount of knowledge and experiences, yet, each individual's reaction to these stimuli remains unique and thus preserves his identity. However, the greater these stimuli promote diversity of interests, opinions, and abilities, the more uniformly high in caliber becomes the quality of the graduating class as both practicing physicians and members of the non-medical community. Recognizing the importance of this, we have chosen a text and symbol which emphasizes our yearbook’s unity through diversity. Our tripartite theme symbol — the hand of a woman, the eye of an eagle, the heart of a lion — reminds us that the physician's ability to practice medicine is only as good as the integration of his skill, his outlook, and his character. While aggressive in attacking disease, his hand must be sensitive and gentle; while focusing on the current problem, his mind's eye must not overlook the dynamics of the whole patient; and while wrestling with the horns of a dilemma, the physician must find within himself truculent courage to choose a course of action and leonine strength to meet consequences. Like our sectioned crest, each cardinal point of the Declaration of Geneva calls to mind one of the multiple facets which comprise the making of a Doctor and thus unifies our yearbook’s separate glances at the various aspects of our medical education. So too, we hope that its admonitions and injunctions may unify our individual public and private aspirations in one common call to conscience as we practice the art of medicine — a moral commitment to practice it with humility, dignity, and respect for human life that has been our common heritage as the perpetuators of our predecessors' example. 22 DECLARATION OF GENEVA Now being admitted to the profession of Medicine, I solemnly pledge to consecrate my life to the service of humanity. I will give respect and gratitude to my deserving teachers. I will practice medicine with conscience and dignity. The health and life of my patients will be my first consideration. I will hold in confidence all that my patient confides in me. I will maintain the honor and noble traditions of the medical profession. My colleagues will be as my brothers. I will not permit consideration of race, religion, nationality, party politics or social standing to intervene between my duty and my patient. I will maintain the utmost respect for human life from its conception. Even under threat I will not use my knowledge contrary to the laws of humanity. These promises I make freely and upon my honor. Tfo. being admitted to profession of Med ?? icine . ■ • enlors CLASS HISTORY Medical education is insidious. Its ultimate aim must be perspective: Less how to act than when to act; less what is said than by whom. Its most sure approach is infiltrative; its greatest ally time. Such knowledge comes late to the seeker and sooner to the innocent. Prematurely unbecoming, it is the full-term child of Knowledge and Responsibility. Their wedding is unheralded but the feast is long and sweet. Second generation offspring are care of the sick and teaching others who come behind, with the joy that comes from hard work well done. Patience and Thoroughness warm the bed where this pair sleep; Apollo himself turns back the sheets. FRESHMAN YEAR After the incipient scramble by the five fraternities for their lifeline of new members, immersed by an inundation of new faces and mixed emotions, the Class of 1965 settled down in 1961 to a new life. At Temple, as at most medical schools, the introductory academic offering is anatomical. Insofar as any area of medicine is straightforward, anatomy is straightforward; its factual framework helps soften the differences in intellectual direction between collegiate and professional education. We were fortunate in having for our first semester shepherd John Franklin Huber. His reassuring smile, coupled with a long-practiced technique of using one’s first name, was comfortingly out of place in an educational system which cultivated institutionalized insecurity. It was out of place 27 and in transit provided our first introduction to Arthur Nelson, M.D., the new Assistant Dean for Student Affairs, former military engineer and quasicompanion along the way. The second of the nationally known men we met during the Freshman Year appeared in the person of Raymond C. Truex. Temple was as new to him as it was to us, but he had one distinguishing, all-important ally: A head-spinning knowledge of human neuroanatomy. The student of Truex is the student of a willing and able teacher. The su- and we knew it; just as we knew that his overall, oversimplified General Concepts of Umbilicus were not really all that one had to master before healing the infirmed. Yet, even when his bland verbal unction for our ego decubiti wore monotonously thin (as it did within a few weeks), we had at times to muster up enough self-deceit, having exhausted our cynicism, to believe that perhaps wishing will make it so. Daddy is a title not lightly earned and certainly not lightly worn. We now know that aside from his paternal interests in Freshmen, JFH also enjoys an international reputation in Anatomy and in progressive medical education. In the anatomy lab we met our first (and for most, last) cadaver — face down. The usual crisis of the first lunch eaten in one's grease-sticky apron was soon met and conquered. Freshman happiness is olfactory adaptation. Resignedly, families bowed to the odiferous presence of fledgling medics in the house; even desperate student nurses invested formaldehydic excursions in their marital hope chests. If the lab was an education in the static certainty of origin and insertion, it was also an exercise in the unpredictable dynamics of heterogeneous human interrelationships. Through table to table politicking, we selected one from our ranks to function as the spokesman for his peers in a series of struggles waxing both sublime and ridiculous. Would there or would there not be an honorable Honor System? This highly rhetorical question fruitlessly occupied the group mind for many hours, perb ambidextrous presentations of Robert Troyer (particularly his three-week synopsis of the nine-month maturation of an embryo) will not soon be forgotten by this generation of Temple students. Equally admirable were the frenetic fact-filled hours with Carson Schneck, particularly as he tried to outline the complex anatomy of the hand and ear in impossibly short hours. In Anatomy, it must be said, we had fun mixed 28 with fact. Lorenzo Rodriguez’ lightning wit and laconic comprehensiveness urbanely balanced M. Noble Bates' cheerfully unending approach. Gail “Lights Out Crouse’s demure manner often camouflaged a ready laugh and easy affability. His colorful lantern slide lectures frequently left more than one freshman in the dark. These, along with those by Herbert Stauffer and his shadowy friends, clearly demonstrated, if nothing else, that complete happiness is somnolent olfactory adaptation. Ostensibly occupied in learning, we devoted much of our time in lab and lectures to studying our classmates and projecting our self-image. Most of the class entered Temple expecting to find the cream of the intellectual crop: The creative, imaginative, well-read scholar that each knew in his heart was the real he. Class discussions convinced each “thinker that, alas, he was an island io a sea of intellectual boobs who. as the Saturday night parties confirmed, were sensual savages and latent alcoholics to boot. Only as we, as individuals, became more sure of our own innate worth were we able to find the goldmine of personal resources in our colleagues. Admittedly, some of those mines never appeared to contain more than fool's gold — but one can’t be sure when the bright glare of his own ego distorts his symbolic vision. The Philadelphia Athletic Club hosted the annual melee (more formal and less delectate than the weekly frat saturnalia) that served as a funereal reminder to sophomores that neophyte ignorance is bliss, and to freshmen that more haggard days were less than a year away. Other peripheral sorties into medical history and public health led by Fred Rogers gave us some of the last chances any group had to hear the fiery John A. Kolmer, ever young beyond his years. With the conclusion of Anatomy passed the relaxed attitudes of Roger “Let’s look that one up together Davidheiser and Daddy's enlightened S-X-U. If opposite poles were ever to attract, it should have happened in the Spring of 1962 when predictable Robert Hamilton and volcanic Morton J. Oppenheimer locked horns in a struggle for any time not preempted by ping-pong and pool balls. Organized men, which some must surely be, have a friend in Robert Houston Hamilton. As he inimitably says, I can understand why you gentlemen are so often late. ... I was late once myself. Along with the Professor’s sincere dedication to comfortable organization, the departmental verve is Bob Baldridge, scintillating if cynical, a man who sees beyond the outline. Was endocrine metabolism ever more lucid before (or since) Joe Boutwell “structured it for us? The versatile Jonathan Cilley 29 proved that unimaginative lab demonstrations need not lack a mischievous spontaneity. Aptly qualified for the task. Howard “It don’t do no good” Robinson assembled the data that established the immortality of the white rat (he never dies; he just fades away in malnutrition). The biochemical machine would seem to be destined to run for all time, lesser lights ever at hand to shine where older more brilliant flames once burned. In Chemistry, we knew where we stood. We also knew how to stand higher. With a course systematized as precisely as a chemical molecule, the weakness of Chemistry was its blatant temptation to play a numbers game and therein to miss the forest for the trees, the polymer for the peptides. The Physiologic Struggle, awesome in unscheduled exams and Philip Bard's ponderous text, with vast knowledge to be gained if only the perspective were clearer, overwhelmed the freshman mind — up to this time successfully leashed and curbed by limited concepts. In this area of the basic sciences, where, more than any other, important questions lie incompletely answered. Bard's text, useless by virtue of its inadequate index, failed to do more than make even the questions seem indistinct. In large part, the memory of formal Physiology is ephemeral: Often-vague principles were well enough presented, negligibly tested and totally unclarified through being unable to see one’s mistakes in order to correct them. A competent Physiology staff melds irretrievably in the mind with a flurry of swirling facts and incompletely grounded concepts. From the Chief down, this department glows with talent. Morton Oppenheimer's demonstration of the levels of central nervous system function in variably dener-vated cats should be remembered by all who saw it as a masterful teaching and learning exercise. More likely, most will recall the fear we had of Oppy's legendary TNT temper, furious when provoked. Mary P. Wiedeman is a much-published author always anxious to introduce the student to the intrigues of microcirculation and basic research. Frank Barrera and Guido Ascanio, accomplished cardiologists both clinically and in research, were able only to provide cursory coverage of electrocardiography — an area left inexcusably unexplored for Temple students. Giddy Joan Gault’s chirruping paeans to pulmonary physiology wafted us off on a non-stop, 17-day excursion both above and below the earth's crusty surface. John D. Evan’s (no. not of Evan's Blue fame) sympathetic attitude was welcomely appropriate and complemented by the tremulous careful presentations of E.A. Ohler. Warm Spring afternoons squandered in tedious, stifling Chem or Physio labs gave us the time and the reason to re-examine our values system: What are we doing here? Why are we here? Where are we going? And is it worth getting there? Having traded the fresh air excitement of intramural football, the carefree leisure of college for the magical disappearing act of Bence-Jones protein, one was left feeling that, perhaps like those old Manhattan Indians, he had been taken. Then we again learned that there really were Sophomores: First by joining them for their dance in the late Spring, and then, more forcefully, by realizing that Summer had come, that the intrigues of final examinations were now dim history once more, and that we were indeed the Sophomores at the TUMS ‘fact factory.’ This realization proved to be as good for the tummy as the familiar commercial product — if not a helluva lot better! 30 f SOPHOMORE YEAR The sophomore year — year of transition — to quote our first lecturer of that year, was not simply a transition from the classroom to the patient. That year also carried us over from the fairly legible writer to the inveterate scribbler, from the factually inept but stable freshman to the fact-filled but rather paranoid student of clinical medicine. It was a year of personalities — unforgettables ranging from A (for Aegerter) to Z (Zatuchni). Some we remember with nostalgic smiles, unable to recall others without gritting our teeth. It was the year of our first introduction to real” patients, and our first uneasiness about achieving the essential objectivity of medicine. It was the year in which we were first introduced to the patient of recent demise. How well we all remember that first autopsy! An upsetting experience for most of us, to say the least, very upsetting for some (rumor had it that some classmates had to be carried from the morgue), nonetheless, a very important experience for all. We ended the summer of 1962 with our first pathology lecture, bringing those who yet dreamed of crowded beaches. European cities and home- town hospitals down to earth with a bang. Tweedy Dr. Aegerter. a rather imposing, pacing figure on the podium of Room 316, presented us with a precedent-shattering noteless lecture on the importance to our future careers of the coming year (especially the part called Pathology), plus a rather disheartening schedule of weekly quizzes. And that same afternoon we learned of our test every three weeks in Microbiology. Three weeks looked like quite a bit of time at that point, but it seemed to get shorter and shorter as the semester progressed. The first three weeks were spent rather leisurely, but. . . . Following that third week it was a constant scramble: Cramming for the weekly Wednesday Pathology quiz, spending the weekend catching up, and then again cramming for the Pathology quiz, hopelessly trying to save some time (and energy) for that fitful third week when we had both Pathology and Microbiology quizzes. Only at the end of the semester did that cyclonic carousel stop, with most of us suffering from the vertigo, nausea, and prostration (and no one holding the brass ring). Fortunately, first semester was not complete drudgery. Several of the sessions in gross pathology were quite droll. One such episode was the day that the cone vision of an entire group of second-year students failed them. Presented with a liver and asked what color the cut edge was, most thought it was purple. After a convincing tirade by ‘Lizzie’ Lautsch on how this was a nutmeg liver and was therefore brown, not purple, most in the group agreed it was brown. Only a few dolts still insisted it was purple. The fact of the matter is that it was — oh, well, it really wasn't that important. The slide-projected parts of the gross quizzes were equally amusing. You had time either to look at the slide or to write down an answer, never both. And on the (eventual) return of our papers, it was almost impossible to believe that such horribly red-penciled papers could still be passing, though they often were. Why fight it? Distinguishing idiosyncracies crop up pleasantly in our memory as they pleasingly intruded into our short tenure as pathologists: The dry wit of Jim Arey (not the Arey, but as good as any Arey could 31 be); the terrier eyebrows of ‘Diamond Jim’ Brody; the frequently-cancelled onomatopoetic Rauer hours; Irving Young’s dissonant symphony of micropathology (brought back on key by the whether or no of Walt Levy); Tuesday’s inside tips from Gus Peale on Wednesday’s far-out questions; the unfailing repeats from Capt. Easy (Smith); silent slapstick at the weekly Heinz and Harvey shows. Microbiology was a phenomenon of and by itself, filled with numerous diverting personalities and experiences. We soon (but not soon enough) learned that impossible tests with improbable questions (worth at least twenty-five points) about some outbreak of something or other in Germany or Switzerland or Georgia or someplace casually mentioned by ’Earnest Earle’ ( fast component to the right ) Spaulding were S.O.P. Gerry Shockman usually included a tricky little query in the quizzes; it wasn't his fault that all of us got his question wrong — we should have listened more closely to his unimaginative ramblings about unimaginable beasties! Dr. Zubrzycki’s satiric aside after satiric aside kept us laughing in spite of ourselves. Dr. Morton Klein's convincingly coherent, dramatic lectures on the common cold, all types of viri, and the regulation of cellular metabolism left us with the conviction that we had been told something of vast importance, which indeed we had. •Mumbles’ Schreck’s cool objectivism and carefully-ordered lectures were a source of admiration on all sides. The knowledgeable but unintelligible Dr. Blank spoke to us of Trichophytom r-r-rubrum and other fungi. But the most lasting memory from Microbiology will be the departmental Christmas present — a literary little something to keep us from being overcome by ennui during the holidays. Not many of us got bored that vacation, a little tired of reading poorly-written journal articles and a bit claw-handed perhaps, but not bored. The second semester of our sophomore year allowed us a little room to breathe — at least until the first Pharmacology test, which seemed infinitely far away at the beginning of the semester (compared with the time sequences to which we had become accustomed). But our education in the art of scribbling continued. Drug upon drug in lecture upon lecture, with chemistry, mode of action, absorption, metabolism, excretion, dosage, side effects, etc., etc., for each, piled up into pyramids of fantastic dimensions. Those clever little bar graphs posted after the exams seemed to em- phasize that, though we might all be in the same boat, some of us were sinking fast. The Pharmacology laboratory was egocentrically interesting since we were at last observing in vivo therapeutic preparations for humans. Diverting were the firework displays which shook the entire building and could fail to impress only the most blase. Our sessions as pharmacists under Carl Mayo’s tutorship, when we made lotions, ointments, cough medicine, etc., were almost as much fun as finger-painting was in kindergarten — and were taught as if we still were. Everyone in the Pharmacology department, however. was always ready to give us a little shot of intellectual epinephrine to spur us on if we teetered: Ben Rusy with the intricacies and indelicacies of passing gas; unpronounceable and irrepressible Papacostas; bouncy, bubbly Marc Reidenberg; effusively altruistic Connie Harakal; ’Rog’ Sevy, the Chief, with facts, without frills, without end. 32 All were benevolently understanding and we were grateful. Hematology, the alternate time consumer of that semester, provided us with all the latest dope on anemias, thrombocytopenias, dysproteinemias, leukemias, and hemoglobinopathies, and with the opportunity to learn some of the clinical laboratory techniques. There we sat, smiling sadistically in spite of ourselves, needles shaking menacingly in our hands as we awaited instructions. (Our guiding medical technologists, female, obviously came of good blood themselves.) Occasionally we diverted our attention to the microscopes; it was manifest that clotting could not be a conscious effort — we would never remember all the steps. The CPC's were unchallengingly patent and their discussions not particularly stimulating. The exams took a form new to us, that of case histories, and, antithetically, were neither self-evident nor dull. The second year was also the year of our unforgettable introduction to Jake Zatuchni's elaborate and exacting science of physical diagnosis. Inspection. palpation, percussion and auscultation became our creed. We gawked at co-travellers in subways, on the street and in crowds; we palpated friends (male or female according to one's particular proclivity); we percussed walls, table-tops, chests, abdomens and heads; and we auscultated family, friends, and neighboring conversations. Every Wednesday, the odds in our favor (two of us and only one patient), we carried these four cardinal tools of the trade to the bedside. Nevertheless, most of us came away missing huge chunks of history and not having the faintest notion of what our inspection, palpation, percussion and auscultation had demonstrated. But it did serve to break the ice. Our second year marked our introduction to the clinical sciences of medicine, surgery, and pediatrics, where we were sometimes awed by the enormity of it all. sometimes irritated by the minutae. And Spencer Free deftly introduced us to the uses and abuses of the numbers game in Biometrics. Spring, 1963, marked also a return to the old stand bys. Anatomy was reassuring in that nothing much had changed: People still had the usual number of umbilici; the television sets were still on the blink; ‘Daddy’ Huber had a new kind of teaching device and the same old ones; and M. Noble was still talking. The omnipresent Psychiatry, via Eugene Baum's tapes and Frank Hoffman's empathetic personal recollections, was a source of interest and amusement at times, of disconcerting introspection at others. Fred Rogers persevered, soft in tone and desiccant in humor, in his presentation of Epidemiology and the pitfalls of a publishing author; he may never know that we had to pay Grune Stratton an exorbitant sum to delay his book and thus eliminate at least one final exam. And of final exams, it can be truly said that Radiology's (carbon copy of the previous year's) was one exam we were really glad to see. Perhaps the most symbolic example of the transitional nature of the sophomore year was the National Board Examination. This signified the culmination of our basic science training — we were leaving, at least as regards formal training, this part of our lives behind and were stepping forward into that caliginous abyss between the basic sciences and their application — clinical medicine. It was indeed a year of transition: From legibility to illegibility, from stability to lability, from 33 laboratory sciences to clinical medicine. Yet, in the profound guiding words of Dr. ‘Bob’ Cohen we found refuge and a certain sense of immortal security. . . . First of all, don’t kill the poor bastard!” JUNIOR YEAR We came from the mountains and the camps, we came from the clerkships and the labs, we came from the shore and a variety of things unmentionable. The Autumnal migration back to academic alcoves of Temple Med occurred for the last time for the Class of ’65. This year marked the termination of many, many years of a schoolboy ritual, the summer vacation. It marked, too, the beginning of the hardships and satisfactions of clinical medicine. Gone would be the shelter of our homes and the lecture hall. Our classroom and lab would now be the hospital with its hierarchy of staff, its rituals and routines, and, most different, our patients. These last were to be the challenge. No longer were we to be the understood, but the understanding. No longer to be served, but to serve. No longer to be tolerated, but to tolerate. September 9, 1963, was the jumping-off point. Some were prepared, others were not. But, ready or not, stethoscope in pocket and black bag in hand, a little knowledge supratentorially and no experience subungually. we began the third year of our medical education. In spite of being low man on the totem pole (including deference to nurses, nurses’ aides, clerks and even orderlies), we had to attempt to maintain an aura of professional integrity and dignity before patients. Learning how. when, and what to say to patients was a most important job, one for which we were ill-prepared or even forewarned. The Medical Service was an extremely variable entity. It ranged from the cherished pearl casting” of Jake Zatuchni at Episcopal, to hours of napping in the libraries of Einstein, with the teaching of Dr. Howard Warner at PGH falling neutrally in between. For better or worse (for the patient), we joined the retinue of attending physicians. Now doctor,” what can you do? Let’s see ... a history and a physical exam. H. P. ’s and pink blues. Have you ever sneezed three times in a row? How is your ‘nature?’ Does your breath smell? What color and how big are your bowel movements? Then the perplexities of the physical exam ... Is it egophony? (I can’t even hear rales through a silk nightgown.) Murmur?. . . What murmur? Er. .. excuse me but you’ll have to unhook your ... ah, yes. (What is the normal for the long diameter of the testicle supposed to be?) Then came Surgery. This would be easy, no more long H. P.’s! Meanwhile, back in the 0. R., welded to that ignominious torture device, the Deaver, there was much for us to see and to learn . . . two feet away from the operating field! Some did get some sightseeing done — on the way to Rolling Hill Hospital, where great contributions to learning were being made by dedicated and gifted teachers. or at the Stein,” when “Crazy Julie” would drop his drawers. 34 After we had put in time on the so-called medical and surgical services, we were indeed a bit wiser. We had seen some of the realities of the practice of medicine. We learned, too. that the days of sincere dedicated teachers were fleeing: Many now cared only for the title, for the research grants, for the cheap labor, for the Blue Cross numbers: rare were the truly eager and sufficiently gifted persons to educate and inspire. Yes. the metamorphosis was continuing. Yet. for most of us, one big question cried for an answer: When were we going to learn any medicine and surgery, other than by the process of self-education? No one was denying the importance of reading and supplementing clinical experiences by his own initiative, but where were the clinical experiences to be gained and ellucidated so that we might exploit them for knowledge? In Pediatrics, the usual rules of history taking no longer applied. Asking parents to describe what is wrong with their offspring requires a most untrusting and scrupulous ear. Anorexia means that the baby didn't eat his spinach. Dyspnea means that the kid has a snotty nose. Retarded development means that the child walked at a year while the neighbor’s walked at ten months. The physical exam of an adult has no comparison to that of a child. A comatose CVA could be a picnic in comparison. Being bitten, scratched, struck by one’s flashlight (used as a peace offering), yelled at by Mother, and even urinated upon at 20 paces were commonplace events. Somehow, above the yelps, we managed to train our respective Organs of Corti to filter out the high frequency contaminants and really hear rales. By and large we all managed to learn some Pediatrics. Especially profitable were the afternoon clinics at Temple, where we benefited from the supervision of the St. Christopher’s staff. The clientele, however, placed another demand on our education, viz. that of a new vocabulary. Terms such as vomicking. failin’ out. passing clogs, smiling mighty Jesus,” cold in the bronickles, were a few of the neologisms indigenous to this society. Obstetrics is the only area other than Pediatrics which allows children under twelve in the hospital — with the proviso that they be in active labor (apologies to Dr. R. V. Cohen). For many of us. the fascination of the miracle of birth has subsided since our first junior year exposure. From an academic viewpoint, Obstetrics was challenging and satisfying since it offered a concise, well-organized body of knowledge which, when combined with sufficient clinical exposure, could be mastered with some facility. The two OB services, however, were dichotomous in their defects. Whereas the Temple service was adequately staffed with supervisory personnel (with little to supervise), the PGH service was a matter of learning by doing, without much instruction. The latter included debating with Hahnemangers over deliveries. The common denominator of both places was the Scutworker’s Syndrome — characterized by sore ears (BP ears), contraction feeler’s hands deformity, bleary eyes, dysosmia, and insect bites (mostly lice). Writer’s cramp was another frequent component. Various sorts of neurotic patterns have been noted, all with a paranoid element 35 (this as a result of sitting with a groaning prima-gravida for 10-20 hours in return for being given the privilege of inspecting the placenta). Our introduction to the North Philadelphia Chapter, Unwed Mothers of America, was. at times, disconcerting. Finally, further additions to our vocabulary from the local dialect (such as public hair. failin' off the roof, two ball libation, the miseries, obees, burnin in the tubees. fireballs in the eucharist. vajaba ) were necessary to establish communication with one’s patient. A bloody good show” it was! The three remaining services are remembered for the quantity of information and factual material that was covered in brief periods of exposure. Especially worthwhile was the Chest Disease Service at PGH with Drs. Cohen and Ottenberg. The intricacies of physical and roentgenological diagnosis of chest pathology were among the best presented concepts of the entire year. Neurology and Dermatology, although causing feelings of personal distaste among many, must be credited with more than routine fulfillment of the teaching goals. An adequate representation of our junior year requires a retrospective overview of aspects more aesthetic. Many of us were preoccupied with gripes which were of little significance. Having to take the Chest exam within an hour of the most stunning national tragedy in an age. however, seemed a most bizarre inversion of value perspective. Inconsistencies were not limited to isolated days: Throughout the entire junior year a disarming lack of correlation prevailed between clinical and didactic material. To add insult to injury, the lecture series (a two hour marathon tag team test of endurance at the end of an already trying day) omitted some important subjects (e.g.. thyroid, electrocardiography. herniae) expectantly assigned, in vain, to the faculty of the affiliated 'teaching' hospitals. Almost abruptly, the junior year ended — in a hubbub of thirteen final examinations perfunctorily given and taken as part of the voodoo ritual heralding the senior year . . . which awaited us but two weeks away. SENIOR YEAR June eight. Who are the mighty; where are their weaknesses? In Erny Amphitheatre we learned that we were most definitely not the mighty — and to the disbelievers our weaknesses were only too soon pointed out. Then, in a brilliant coup of one-upsmanship. we made our exodus to the land of milk and honey (and bologna sandwiches) for our first, last and unexplainably free lunch at Temple. The quarter system devised by the well-meaning administration so that the senior medical student might see all. do all, and hopefully learn all. left us wishing we had spent more time committing to memory some of the on-your-feet type of knowledge that had been covered, but only weakly impressed. during the previous three years. The surgical quarter of the senior year was a neatly wrapped package of a few weeks here, a couple of weeks there, all gauged at a pace rapid enough to keep even a Jesse Owens panting. Twenty-eight consecutive days and nights of the sleep-eat-work; work-eat-sleep routine during A. D. duty was anything but routine. For the first and last time in his four year program the senior student was the main Medical Authority” to deal with the patient. Frequently, he was the only physician the patient ever saw. At least we felt that we were needed, that we were performing a valuable service, that we were no longer wasting the patient's time in needless reduplication. Finding within ourselves the fibre to meet acute life-threatening situations demonstrated a thousand times more forcibly than attaining the 99th percentile 36 on National Boards that we were capable of practicing medicine. Here one assumed as much responsibility as his ability dictated, reassured by the knowledge that expert consultation advice was only a three digit extension number away. Disillusioning, perhaps, in an Accident and Emergencies dispensary were the requests at two a.m. to look down a sore throat which had been present three weeks or to put a Bandaid over the eschar of yesterday’s superficial cat scratch. But, hate as we might to accept it, we were informed that that is the everday medicine for which the Ivory Tower of Exotic Diseases had prepared us. Almost comic relief was provided by the regulars’’: The alcohol-anesthetized patients who wanted Halsted to sew up their wine bottle-inflicted laceration while Billroth removed last Saturday's sutures. The North Philadelphia ’Knife and Gun Club’ provided rich experience for all hands. If the senior was undersupervised and overrelied upon in the A. D., it took no more than one day on his staff man preceptorship to remind him of how useless one human being could really be. As the pulsating end of a Deaver or the onlooker at dressing rounds, the student was again a student. The student on Surgery was also an H. P. machine. After an 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. day in the OR, even W. Emory’s free lunch did not make his, Son, would you mind working up my 27 new admissions? any easier to stomach. Yet, since we were neither legally nor medically qualified to perform the actual surgery, what was there left to do but retract and peer into the dark bloody hole. If nothing else, senior surgery finally fixed some of Daddy Huber’s freshman anatomy in mind. We looked forward to again being the patient’s sole physician on the wards but. lo and behold, so did the residents. On the private side we were treated like gentlemen, maybe nugatory gentlemen, but gentlemen; on the wards we were treated by the fetoid Florence Nightingales with the contempt usually reserved for male nurses. Working every third night did not increase our tolerance limits any. either. Whether one spent two weeks passing Foley catheters or imbedding himself in plaster of paris during the Urology-Orthopedics stint probably was determined more by his relative success in sublimating any left-over penis envy and fecal smearing compulsion than by logic. One of our unfortunate colleagues was evidently more motivated by the death instinct when he replied to John Royal Moore. But, Sir, I thought you said it was okay to say ’okay.' The surgical machination — keep ’em too tired to realize how tired they are — was exquisitely augmented by conferences to organize, papers (on assigned topics) to research and present, oral and written learning exercises (including a specific question from the journal reading assignment). This philosophy was so effective that, not until one was a good three weeks into his next service could he reflectively raise (and answer) the question: Where did I go?” (To surgical rounds.) What did I learn?” (Nothing.) If there was any oasis in this didactic desert, it was in the daily in patient seminars, particularly those high lighted once weekly between July and January by Dom DeLaurentis’ lucid analysis of fluid and electrolyte balance. Disarmingly facile in contrast to the pace of Surgery was our stint on Out-Patient Medicine. What more pleasant way to begin a service than to hear the nasal twang of Dr. Berkowitz whisper. Those of you who are under the mistaken impression that your vacation has just ended will be happy to learn that it has been extended six weeks. Indeed, the hours, the attitude of the staff, and the general working atmosphere of the Comprehensive Medical Clinic made for one of the more enjoyable experiences of a year in which all else at times seemed dwarfed by the rude in- troduction to middleof-the-night medicine. In retrospect, the aim of Crock Clinic was not to teach an understanding of all the complex socio economic and emotional problems that accompany or initiate physical illness, for this would be impossible. (How does one respond to the all too familiar words of the obese patient: But, Doctor, I have to eat to keep my strength up. ) Rather, the future doctor must continually teach himself to always be alert to these human problems so easily overlooked. How then does one critically suggest that a student look twice at his technique of handling patients? It really is not difficult: simply have him look once at his mistakes via television and tape recorder. Thanks to Dr. Hirsch. this very original method of self-evaluation spiced our six-week tour with many moments of laughter heartily supplied by those not being taped . . . and many moments of self-realization when one had an opportunity to hear himself inadequately attempt to extract a comprehensive history from a comprehensively ill patient. Pediatrics, with the exception of its nuisance-value term paper, remained the last of the cake services in the senior program. For those who had whiled away some of their junior days at S.C. H.C., little had changed — except that the hours were now longer and Waldo was at last gone. Those who had missed Junior Pediatrics at St. Chris now had the chance to get their kicks from being vomited upon by their first trisomy or Riley-Day. Otherwise it was as you were for Peds . . . the second time around. Quite logically in Obstetrics, the new cometh forth. But this year we also witnessed the ungainly birth and development of a new order as Russell Rambn de Alvarez became head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology. Bringing with him a vast array of general medical knowledge as well as a reputation-making familiarity with embryonic metabolism, he has, in addition, the ability to traumatize fear-struck senior medical students with his driving personality (also of wide repute). His arrival deprived future senior students of a beneficial contact with many devoted professors on the six-week guided tour of puberty to menopause, for many of the staff left to go to other hospitals. Fortunately for transitional stability, a few hearty personalities withstood the civil revolution. Remaining behind (not necessarily for long) were the erudite compassionate Clayton Beecham; psychiatrically oriented Joe Daly, who divides Woman into tres partes; and Harold Shulman proselytizing for the importance of scientific data (and who looked like he himself had been processed the night before by an IBM computer). Louis Hober-man, who had precipitated D. T.’s in us as juniors as his multigravidas precipitated, was still saying. What do you think. Chief? and You know better than that. George. during the tumor conferences. The textbook — J. R. Willson and friends’ nebulous but dogmatic manual of bedside procedures, which we had underlined in our junior year — remained the same . . . only the techniques, dosages, and drugs to be used differed as a result of the hierarchal commutation. The ward gynecology service under the control 38 of the residents left over from last year smelled of what was going on. To the everyday, rather faintly like something, uh. left over from last year, plaintive cry of the resident, Where is she going? Some residents with short memories for their (as his patient with nummular eczema was being recently accomplished student days substituted wheeled down the hall to have a kidney biopsy), high decibel levels for high level instruction. Private gynecology was a waste: A waste of time, a waste of effort. Essentially, it consisted of writing never-to-be-read H P's and wielding idiot sticks in the OR. When finished circumcising cherubs, playing nursemaid to the juniors, and holding hands with a Pitocin drip, most felt that we had a good comprehensive understanding of OB-GYN mechanics and an astral number of soon-to-be-forgotten facts about obstetrical and gynecologic problems. On the medical wards, our tenure began and, for some, ended in utter confusion. After we had discovered that we really need not feel as responsible as it had been reputed we would have to, each in turn settled back and looked around a little. What greeted our eager gazes was a scene in which no one seemed to have the faintest idea a nurse would courteously reply, How the hell should I know, she's your patient. Equally helpful, the senior student volunteered, She doesn't have anything scheduled. It seemed, like the Sphinx, only the orderly knew — and he wasn’t telling. Some patients disappeared for days at a time — nobody had seen them; they weren’t in the bathroom: they weren’t in X-ray; they weren’t in surgery — of course, when they again turned up on the ward and were questioned as to their whereabouts for the past week, they would say something like. Waddya mean where'v I been, I ain’t been nowhere. And there was the patient who had had nineteen LE preps done; after due investigation it was discovered that no one had ordered an LE prep! Some of us got used to it (and some perhaps, never will). Another worthwhile experience on the medical ward was the opportunity to observe firsthand the medical hierarchy in action. Given a controversial situation, the intern, resident, staff physician and, sometimes, even the senior student would each present a very logical and objective argument (with ample literature references, of course), each proving different and seemingly contrary points on the subject in question. Should we give chloramphenicol. which is more effective according to the report by the Chicago group read by the staff man, or should we give penicillin, which is safer and really just as effective according to the report by the Massachusetts group read by the resident, or should we give . . .? We should give chloramphenicol. Sometimes the final decisions appeared just a bit arbitrary. But then, experience is the best teacher. Then there was private medicine in Parkinson Pavilion, the land of the pampered patient, the elusive educator and the no-spikkee-dee-English night nurse. Bowel movements were for six weeks the center of the universe. After innumerable calls at two a.m. to see a patient who had not defecated for the past four days, after being stopped innu- 39 material. And the night nurses! It wasn’t too hard to collect your thoughts at 5 a.m. with a babbling telephone receiver in your hand, having just fallen into your first relaxed state in twenty-four hours. Even the bump on your head from hitting it on the top bunk when the phone rang did not seem too bad. But after five minutes of deciphering an excited accent only to find that a patient was to have an IV started in two hours and that his doctor was not even in your group. . . . Oh, well, c’est la medicine. merable times in the corridors to hear an anxious patient request a stronger cathartic, and after ordering countless enemas, it began to appear that at least two-thirds of the nation's population had fixated in the anal period. One poor soul with diarrhea kept a running record of his defecations in a diary, and would read from it proudly or sadly (according to how his progress dictated) each morning. Then there was the patient who hadn't gone for twenty-three days; since her abdomen wasn’t distended, no one could figure out where it went (we didn’t think to look under the bed). Finding staff men to make their appointed daily rounds proved to be a time-consuming phase of gamesmanship (in the midst of making rounds on our own twenty-five patients, running from floor to floor to put IV heparin in a catheter as readily available to the nurse and patient as it was to us, and doing five H. P.'s.). However, the time expended in cornering them proved to be a profitable investment via gains from both review and new THE MAKING OF A DOCTOR: RETROSPECT AND PERSPECTIVE The twenty-year program of formal education that culminates in the degree of Doctor of Medicine is an evolution not only of mind and body, but of expectation and aspiration as well. In the proposition and problem of increasing self edu- 40 cation, we were rarely thwarted, occasionally assisted and stimulated, seemingly frequently left to our own devices according to the personality of our mentor. Increasing concommitantly were the extrinsic and self-imposed expectations that foment the strain of being all things to all people. Impeding the progressive educational process, tradition implemented its stability. In iconoclastic reaction formation, the guilt for knowledge not gained was too often projected on to those responsible for our education.” Only as the termination of a formal Truex, Aegerter, Kolmer. Nelson, Bacon, Durant. Willson, Huber, Jackson. Kirkpatrick, Dubin, English, Wycis, Helwig, Reardon, Burney. Shimkin. ad soporificum. While it sometimes seems axiomatic that the bigger the name the worse the lecturer, in the majority of our experiences at Temple our contact with theseOlympians has proved immeasurably profitable; we are better physicians not only for hearing their words and observing their techniques firsthand, but also for having the chance to discover that the truly great in any field are first and foremost sensitive and dedicated human beings, not merely lifeless by-lines. So it is that on June 17. 1965, we go forth to practice medicine throughout the world with pride — pride in our benefactors and pride in ourselves, proud that we are graduates of Temple University School of Medicine — and the conviction that the potential of each opportunity need be the only limitation on our aspirations. education nears does the truth become blatantly apparent — the only responsibility of consequence is that of the student ... to be true to himself. Yet. at all levels of education the strength and weakness of any school lie in the faculty. Which raises the question, What is in a name?” For Temple graduates the answer is Plenty!” Their cocktail party name-dropping embraces Babcock. fl MURRAY STANLEY ABRAMS, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, B.A. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon 1965 42 ARTHUR JAMES ALDERFER, M.D. Perkasie, Pennsylvania Goshen College, B.A. Christian Medical Society Student American Medical Association 43 GEORGE W. BAKER. JR.. M.D. Shippensburg. Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College, B.A. Phi Chi 44 FRANCES ANN BARONE. M.D. Throop. Pennsylvania Marywood College, B.S.. M.S. Alpha Epsilon lota 1965 ■■ STEVEN BAYLESS, M.D. Cleveland, Ohio Denison University, B.A. Phi Chi 1965 46 STEPHEN T. BENKO, M.D. Windber, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Johnstown College 47 STEVEN R. BERG, M. D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University. A. B. Phi Delta Epsilon 48 ROBERT FRANK BERISH. M. D. Johnstown. Pennsylvaina Pennsylvania State University. B.S.. M.S. Phi Chi 1965 49 CHARLES MILLER BIDDLE. IV, M.D. Moorestown, New Jersey Princeton University, B.A. 1965 50 TODD FRANKLIN BOFF, M.D. Union, New Jersey Bethany College, B.S. Rutgers University, M.S. Phi Rho Sigma Student American Medical Association 51 MACK BONNER, JR., M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, B.A. 52 ROBERT BUTLER BRERETON. M.D. Milford, Delaware University of Delaware, B.A. Phi Rho Sigma Student American Medical Association 1965 53 WILLIAM BATES BROHM, M.D. 1965 54 Punxsutawney. Pennsylvania Denison University, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa ERICH EDWARD BRUESCHKE, M.D. Eagle Butte. South Dakota South Dakota School of Mines and Technology. B.S., E.E. Phi Rho Sigma 55 RUTH ELIZABETH BUCK, M.D. Erdenheim, Pennsylvania Wheaton College, Illinois, B.S. 56 RUSSELL SAMUEL BUFALINO, M.D. Meadville, Pennsylvania Allegheny College. B.S. 1965 57 MAX EMERSON BURR, M.D. Newton Falls, Ohio Hiram College, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa 1965 58 FAITH ANN BUSTARD. M.D. Collingdale, Pennsylvania Wheaton College. Illinois. A.B. Northwestern University. M.A. 59 LON WAYNE CASTLE, M.D. Kulpmont, Pennsylvania Temple University School of Pharmacy. B.S. 60 ROCCO FRANK CHIRIELEISON. M.D. Reading, Pennsylvania Albright College. B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa 1965 61 LEONARD GEORGE CHRISTIE, JR.. M.D. Bernardsville, New Jersey Virginia Military Institute, B.A. Christian Medical Society 1965 62 ROBERT A. Cl MINI, M.D. Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania Washington and Jefferson College. B.A. 63 MERRILL A. COHEN, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Albright College, B.S. 64 ELLIOTT H. COLEMAN, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, A.B. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon Skull Staff 65 1965 tatanv tai$x . KS • Qwv vwx M ca 66 ANTHONY J. CUCINOTTA, M.D. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Haverford College. B.A. Alpha Kappa Kappa Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society Sophomore LaRoche Award. 1963 67 GERALD E. DALRYMPLE, M.D. Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Washington and Jefferson College. B.A. Phi Beta Pi 68 ROBERT J. DEITZ. M.D. Allentown, New Jersey University of Utah. B.S.. M.S. Rutgers University, Ph.D. Phi Rho Sigma 1965 69 ENRICO J. DIRIENZO, M.D. Penndel. Pennsylvania LaSalle College, B.A. Phi Rho Sigma 1965 70 FRANK J. DONATELLI, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Temple University. A.B. Phi Beta Pi 71 EUGENE ANDREW DRAGANOSKY. M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania La Salle College. B.A. Phi Rho Sigma 72 NEIL B. EDWARDS, M.D. Lake Ariel, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University, B.S. 1965 73 ROBERT JOSEPH ELLIS, M.D. North Wildwood, New Jersey La Salle College, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa Babcock Surgical Society 1965 74 WILLIAM FRANCIS FEARN, M.D. Westmont, New Jersey St. Joseph's College, B.S. Phi Rho Sigma 75 DAVID EVERETT FISHER, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania. B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon 76 WILLIAM ELWOOD FITZKEE. M.D. Mount Wolf, Pennsylvania Gettysburg College. B.A. Christian Medical Society Phi Chi 1965 77 FREDERICK M. FOLEY, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Villanova University, B.S. 1965 78 WAYNE k. FOSTER. M.D. Havertown. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University. B.S. 79 FRANK LANE FRANCE, M.D. Monongahela, Pennsylvania Bucknell University, B.S. Phi Chi 80 ELIOT FREEMAN. M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon 1965 81 RICHARD EUGENE FULTON, M.D. Clarion, Pennsylvania Allegheny College. B.A. Phi Chi 1965 82 RICHARD LEO GAERTNER. JR.. M.D. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University. B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa 83 IAN SANFORD GALE, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Lehigh University Alpha Kappa Kappa 84 JON KENT GARMAN. M.D. Bethel Park, Pennsylvania Duke University, B.A. Phi Chi Student American Medical Association 1965 85 KENNETH D. GERMAN, M.D. Cuba, New York Houghton College, B.A. Christian Medical Society 1965 86 ANDREW GEORGE GILFILLAN, III, M.D. Beach Haven, New Jersey Mulhenberg College. B.S. 87 JOHN RUSSELL GORNY, M.D. Erie, Pennsylvania John Carroll University, B.S. Phi Chi 88 S. WARREN GROSS, M.D. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University. B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon 1965 89 JOHN F. GSCHWENDTNER, M.D. Punxsutawney. Pennsylvania Allegheny College, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa 1965 90 GLENN MARTIN HALUSKA. M.D. Cleveland. Ohio Western Reserve University. B.A. 91 MARTIN HAUSER. M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, B.A. 92 WILLIAM HAWKE, M.D. Luzerne, Pennsylvania Wilkes College. B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society 1965 GORDON GRAHAM HEINER. M.D. West Point, New York Harvard College, A.B. Johns Hopkins University, M.A. 1965 94 WASHINGTON CLARK HILL, M.D. Camden, New Jersey Rutgers College of South Jersey, B.A. 95 BENTLEY AARON HOLLANDER, M.D. Flushing, New York Temple University, A.B. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon 96 ROBERT ALAN HOLMES, M.D. North Plainfield. New Jersey University of North Dakota. B.A.. B.S. Phi Chi 1965 97 RAYMOND FRANKLIN HUDANICH, M.D. Fords, New Jersey Fordham University, B.S. Phi Beta Pi 1965 98 CHARLES ROGERS HUMPHREY, M.D. Bradford, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh, B.S. Phi Beta Pi 99 CHESTER BOWDEN HUMPHREY. M.D. Chevy Chase, Maryland Dickinson College, B.S. Phi Chi 100 DAVID WILLIAM HUNTER, M.D. Latrobe. Pennsylvania Johns Hopkins University. A.B. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Beta Pi 1965 101 PHILIP GABEL HUNTER, M.D. Shillington, Pennsylvania Bucknell University. B.S. Phi Chi 1965 102 GARY GRAHAM JACKSON, M.D. Allentown. Pennsylvania Gettysburg College. A.B. Skull Staff — Literary Editor 103 LARKY STACEY JOHNSGARD, M.D. Wahpeton. North Dakota University of North Dakota. B.A., B.S. Phi Beta Pi 104 MILO L. JOHNSON, M.D. Brighton, Colorado University of North Dakota. B.A. 1965 105 WILLIAM HENRY KEHRLL M.D. Orlando, Florida Cornell University, B.A. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Chi Rugby Club 1965 106 ROBERT STEPHEN KISH, M.D. Mt. Bethel. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University. B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa 107 RICHARD LANDIS, M.D. Boyertown. Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University. B.S. 108 FRANK BENJAMIN LANE. JR.. M.D. Boyds, Maryland University of Maryland, B.S. Skull Staff — Photography Editor 1965 109 ARTHUR PETER LINGOUSKY, M.D. Sheppton, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Phi Rho Sigma 1965 M. BARRY UPSON, M.D. Wynnewood, Pennsylvania Temple University. B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon ill RICHARD FUNK LOCKEY, M.D. Lancaster. Pennsylvania Haverford College, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa 112 ROBERT PHILLIP LONERGAN, M.D. Olyphant. Pennsylvania University of Scranton. B.S. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society 1965 113 CHARLES LEWIS LONG, M.D. Groesbeck, Texas U.S. Naval Academy, B.S. Skull Staff 1965 114 JEREMY ROGER MACK, M.D. Hackensack. New Jersey Ripon College. B.A. 115 RICHARD M. MAG ILL, M.D. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Dickinson College. B.S. Phi Chi 116 HENRY MAGNANT, M.D. Lanoka Harbor, New Jersey University of Dayton, B.S. Phi Chi 1965 117 WILLIAM RICHARD MALCOLM. M.D. Yonkers, New York Dartmouth University, B.A. 1965 118 ROBERT A. MARCINIAK. M.D. Watkins Glen. New York Cornell University. B.A. Class Historian Phi Chi 119 ROBERT FLEMING MARVIN, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Yale College. A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa Christian Medical Society Rugby Club 120 PAUL HERBERT MENZEL. M.D. Emmaus, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College. B.S. Skull Staff — Business Manager 1965 121 JOSEPH D. MOLONEY. M.D. Enola. Pennsylvania Shippensburg State College 1965 122 VINCENT REGIS MOLONEY. M.D. Enola, Pennsylvania Shippensburg State College, B.S. Phi Beta Pi 123 EDWARD GEORGE MORHAUSER, M.D. Collingswood. New Jersey Villanova University. B.S. Phi Rho Sigma Class Treasurer I Student American Medical Association 124 1965 STEPHEN M. MORRIS. M.D. Huntingdon Valley. Pennsylvania Temple University. A.B. Class Treasurer II.III.IV Phi Delta Epsilon 125 ANDREW MUDRAK, M.D. Sharon, Pennsylvania Westminster College 1965 126 CYRIL NEWMAN, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, B.A. Phi Delta Epsilon 127 ROBERT FIELD OLDT, M.D. Easton, Pennsylvania Lafayette College, A.B. Phi Chi Rugby Club 128 GEORGE HAMILTON PENN, II. M.D. Washington. Pennsylvania Washington and Jefferson College, A.B. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Beta Pi Skull Staff 1965 129 GERALD WARNER PIFER, M.D. Indiana, Pennsylvania Bethany College, B.S. 1965 130 HimiiMii. ROBERT CALVIN REED, M.D. Chautauqua, New York Princeton University, A.B. Phi Chi Rugby Club 1965 132 SALLY PASTORELLE REED. M.D. Cleveland, Ohio Denison University, B.A. Alpha Epsilon lota Class Secretary, I,II,III,IV Skull Staff — Seniors Editor 133 MINTON RITTER, M.D. Doylestown, Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania, B.A. 1965 134 PHILIP GWYNNE ROBERTS, JR., M.D. Lansford, Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh. A.B. Phi Chi Rugby Club 135 ANN ROMATOWSKI, M.D. Allentown, Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College, B.S. Alpha Epsilon lota 136 SHEILA T. ROSE, M.D. New York, New York Smith College, B.A. 1965 137 STUART S. SAGEL, M.D. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University. A.B. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon Skull Staff — Co-Editor 1965 138 A LI MEHRABAN SAMI I, M.D. Resht. Iran Franklin and Marshall College. A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa 139 ROBERT CARL SCHMUTZLER III, M. D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Drexel Institute of Technology, B. S. Class Vice President, II Phi Chi 140 JOHN ALLAN SCHNEIDER. M. D. Palos Verdes Estates. California Duke University University of Southern California. B. A. Phi Rho Sigma 1965 141 BARBARA HARRIET SCHWARTZ. M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, A.B. Alpha Epsilon lota Skull Staff — Co-Editor 1965 142 MARJORIE ELEANOR SEYBOLD, M.D. Collingswood, New Jersey Cornell University, B.A. 143 ANNE ELIZABETH SHAFER, M.D. Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania Mount Holyoke College, B.A. Babcock Surgical Society 144 WALTER LEE SHAFEER. M.D. Jones Mills. Pennsylvania Juniata College. B.S. Phi Rho Sigma 1965 145 HANO A. SIEGEL, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University, A.B. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon 1965 146 SAMUEL C. SLIMMER, JR., M.D. Reading, Pennsylvania St. Joseph’s College, B.S. Phi Rho Sigma 147 JERE P. SMITH, M.D. Quakertown, Pennsylvania Haverford College, B.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa Vice-President — III, IV 148 SAMUEL VINCENT SPAGNOLO. M.D. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Washington and Jefferson College. B.A. Babcock Surgical Society 1965 149 THORNE SPARKMAN, JR., M.D. Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Harvard University. B.A. Class President II.III.IV 1965 150 HERBERT SPOLTER, M.D. New York, New York New York University, B.S. University of Southern California, M.S. Phi Beta Pi 151 EDWARD CHADWICK SQUIRES, M.D. Ames, Iowa Haverford College, B.S. Iowa State University Temple University 152 WILLIAM ROGER THIELER. M.D. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Dickinson College, B.S. Phi Chi 1965 153 PAULINO EVO TOCCIIET, M.D. Summit Hill, Pennsylvania St. Joseph’s College. B.S. Phi Chi 1965 154 EUGENE RAPHAEL VALENTINE, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania La Salle College, B.A. Phi Rho Sigma 155 RICHARD DAVID WEISS, M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University. B.A. Alpha Omega Alpha Babcock Surgical Society Phi Delta Epsilon 156 RICHARD THOMAS WELHAM. M.D. Annapolis, Maryland University of Pennsylvania, A.B. Phi Chi Rugby Club 1965 157 THOMAS JOSEPH WHALEN, M.D. Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania Villanova University. B.S. Temple University La Salle College 1965 158 BARBARA KARLHEIM WILLIAMS, M.D. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Lebanon Valley College. B.S. 159 PETER LEE WINTERS, M.D. Olean, New York Allegheny College, B.S. Phi Chi 160 JOHN JOSEPH WITOWSKI, M.D. Olyphant, Pennsylvania University of Scranton, B.S. St. John’s University, New York, M.S. Babcock Surgical Society Phi Rho Sigma 1965 161 ROBERT E. WRIGHT, M.I). Archbald, Pennsylvania University of Scranton. B.S. St. Johns University of New York, M.S. Babcock Surgical Scociety Phi Rho Sigma 1965 162 JOHN C. PAUL WYSOCKI, M.D. Kingston, Pennsylvania King’s College, B.S. Class President — I Phi Rho Sigma Student American Medical Association 163 NATALIE A. YURICK, M.D. Oneida, Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University, B.S. Alpha Epsilon lota 164 JOSEPH A. ZECCARDI. M.D. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Villanova University. B.S. Babcock Surgical Society 1965 165 CLASS OF 1965 HOSPITAL APPOINTMENTS Class of 1965 Murray S. Abrams Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania J. James Alderfer St. Luke’s Hospital Bethlehem. Pennsylvania George W. Baker, Jr. Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital Johnstown, Pennsylvania Frances A. Barone The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania Steven Bayless The Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Stephen T. Benko Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital Johnstown, Pennsylvania Steven R. Berg Hospital of the Good Samaritan Los Angeles, California Robert F. Berish Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital Johnstown, Pennsylvania Charles M. Biddle, IV Cooper Hospital Camden, New Jersey Todd F. Boff Cook County Hospital Chicago, Illinois Mack Bonner, Jr. U.S. Naval Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert B. Brereton The Delaware Hospital Wilmington, Delaware William B. Brohm Hartford Hospital Hartford. Connecticut Erich E. Brueschke Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Ruth E. Buck Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pennsylvania Russell S. Bufalino Hamot Hospital Erie, Pennsylvania Max E. Burr Genesee Hospital Rochester, New York Faith A. Bustard The Byrn Mawr Hospital Byrn Mawr, Pennsylvania Lon W. Castle George F. Geisinger Medical Center Danville, Pennsylvania INTERNSHIPS Rocco F. Chirieleison The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania Leonard G. Christie Hartford Hospital Hartford, Connecticut Robert A. Cimini Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Merrill A. Cohen Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Elliott H. Coleman Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Alfred T. Cox Church Home and Hospital Baltimore, Maryland Anthony J. Cucinotta Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Gerald E. Dalrymple Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital Santa Barbara, California Robert J. Deitz U. S. Public Health Service Hospital San Francisco, California Enrico J. DiRienzo Nazareth Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Francis J. Donatelli Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Eugene A. Draganosky Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Neil B. Edwards Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert J. Ellis University of Minnesota Hospitals Minneapolis, Minnesota William F. Fearn Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital Camden, New Jersey David E. Fisher Mount Zion Hospital and Medical Center William E. Fitzkee York Hospital York, Pennsylvania Frederick M. Foley Mount Zion Hospital and Medical Center San Francisco, California Wayne K. Foster Cooper Hospital Camden, New Jersey Frank L. France Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Eliot Freeman University Hospital Ann Arbor. Michigan Richard E. Fulton Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital Santa Barbara. California Richard L. Gaertner South Side Hospital Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania Ian S. Gale St. Joseph’s Hospital Phoenix, Arizona J. Ken Garman University of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville. Virginia Kenneth D. German U. S. Naval Hospital Oakland, California A. George Gilfillan The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania John R. Gorny Los Angeles County General Hospital Los Angeles, California S. Warren Gross Albert Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia, Pennsylvania John F. Gschwendtner Sacred Heart Hospital Allentown, Pennsylvania Glenn M. Haluska Highland Hospital Rochester, New York Martin Hauser Nazareth Hospital Philadelphia. Pennsylvania William Hawke The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania Gordon G. Heiner Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Washington C. Hill Walter Reed General Hospital Washington, D.C. Bentley A. Hollander Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert A. Holmes Butterworth Hospital Grand Rapids. Michigan Raymond F. Hudanich Tampa General Hospital Tampa, Florida Charles R. Humphrey Bellevue Hospital Center New York. New York Chester B. Humphrey Hartford Hospital Hartford. Connecticut David W. Hunter Cincinnati General Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio Philip G. Hunter Maine Medical Center Portland. Maine G. Graham Jackson Southern Pacific Memorial Hospital San Francisco. California Larry S. Johnsgard Butterworth Hospital Grand Rapids, Michigan Milo L. Johnson Presbyterian Hospital Denver. Colorado William H. Kehrli Charity Hospital New Orleans, Louisiana Robert S. Kish Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg. Pennsylvania Richard Landis The Reading Hospital Reading, Pennsylvania Frank B. Lane, Jr. Tampa General Hospital Tampa. Florida Arthur P. Lingousky U. S. Naval Hospital Oakland, California M. Barry Lipson Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pennsylvania Richard F. Lockey Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Robert P. Lonergan Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Charles L. Long U. S. Naval Hospital St. Albans, New York Jeremy R. Mack Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Richard M. Magill Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Harrisburg. Pennsylvania Henry A. Magnant William R. Malcolm The Reading Hospital Reading. Pennsylvania Robert A. Marciniak William Beaumont General Hospital El Paso. Texas Vincent R. Moloney Tampa General Hospital Tampa, Florida Edward G. Morhauser U. S. Naval Hospital Oakland. California Stephen M. Morris Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pennsylvania Andrew Mudrak Trumbull Memorial Hospital Warren. Ohio Robert F. Marvin Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Cyril Newman U. S. Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton. California Paul H. Menzel Allentown Hospital Allentown. Pennsylvania Robert F. Oldt Santa Monica Hospital Santa Monica. California Joseph D. Moloney Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital Harrisburg, Pennsylvania George H. Penn U. S. Naval Hospital San Diego. California Sheila T. Rose Gerald W. Pifer Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Peter F. Pontzer Altoona Hospital Altoona, Pennsylvania Robert C. Reed Presbyterian Hospital Denver, Colrado Sally P. Reed Presbyterian Hospital Denver, Colorado Minton Ritter Albert Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Philip G. Roberts, Jr. St. Luke’s Hospital Bethlehem, Pennsylvania Ann Romatowski Temple University Hospital Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Stuart S. Sagel Maimonides Hospital of Brooklyn Brooklyn, New York Ali M. Samii University Hospitals Madison, Wisconsin Robert C. Schmutzler Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pennsylvania John A. Schneider St. Mary’s Hospital Long Beach, California Barbara H. Schwartz Children's Hospital Detroit, Michigan Marjorie E. Seybold Temple University Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Anne E. Shafer The Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Walter L. Shaffer Conemaugh Valley Memorial Hospital Johnstown, Pennsylvania Hano A. Siegel Maimonides Hospital of Brooklyn Brooklyn, New York Samuel C. Slimmer, Jr. The Reading Hospital Reading. Pennsylvania Jere P. Smith The Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore. Maryland Samuel V. Spagnolo Washington Hospital Washington, Pennsylvania Thorne Sparkman, Jr. Charity Hospital of Louisiana New Orleans, Louisiana Herbert Spolter Germantown Dispensary and Hospital Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Edward C. Squires Lankenau Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania William R. Thieler Northeastern Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Paulino E. Tocchet U. S. Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton, California Eugene R. Valentine Pensacola Educational Program Hospitals Pensacola, Florida Richard D. Weiss Albert Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Richard T. Welham U. S. Naval Hospital San Diego, California Thomas J. Whalen Washington Hospital Washington, Pennsylvania Barbara K. Williams Suburban Hospital Bethesda, Maryland Peter L. Winters Methodist Hospital Indianapolis, Indiana John J. Witowski U. S. Naval Hospital San Diego. California Robert E. Wright Nazareth Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania John P. Wysocki District of Columbia General Hospital Washington, D. C. Natalie A. Yurick The Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr. Pennsylvania Joseph A. Zeccardi Mount Zion Hospital and Medical Center San Francisco. California 172 I will give respect arid gratitude to my deserving teachers . . . ” acuity and A dminis tr ati on ADMINISTRATION MILLARD E. GLADFELTER Ph.D.. D.Sc. in Ed.. LL.D.. Litt.D., L.H.D. President of the University HOWARD W. BAKER. M.D. Chief Administrator of Temple University Medical Center ROBERT M. BUCHER. M.D. Dean of the Medical School The stream of medical knowledge moves forward so steadily that you will probably not be able to associate these years in medical school with any specific scientific phase or concept. Each individual in the class may recall specific, isolated incidents in the laboratory or clinic related to a classmate or teacher. Perhaps the only words which all of you will share as a reminder of your final years in this institution are King-Anderson Bill.” At this time, it is impossible to forecast the re- sults of proposed Federal legislation which is designed to alter the financing of health care. Of greatest import is not the method of financing but the question of how well the medical profession can face the demands upon it and still retain its heritage of professionalism and unselfish care to humanity. In this respect, I believe the future is clear. The qualities which I see in each of you give me the assurance that the patients who will be entrusted to your care are in good hands. 176 Robert M. Bucher. M.D. L. E. BURNEY. M.D. Vice President for Health Sciences A NEW CHALLENGE TO AN ANCIENT CREED Of all the words that appear on the pages of this 1965 yearbook, there are none more important to the physician nor more challenged by American society today than those words from the modernized version of the Hippocratic Oath which preface each section. During the years of your medical education, the ideals and freedom expressed by the Oath have come under attack from an unexpected source, the patient himself. Some of those who seek the physician’s help currently are asking the courts to redefine the practice of Medicine by legal decisions on such questions as: The right of a physician to reassure his patient with promising words of healing if he cannot guarantee a complete” recovery ( The health and life of my patients will be my first consideration”); what constitutes an error of judgment on the part of a physician ( I will practice medicine with conscience and dignity”); and whether a physician who renders aid to accident victims can be held liable ( I will maintain the utmost respect of human life from its conception”). What the result of this patient-legal pressure will be is, as yet, not clear. One thing is sure. The public itself has ambivalent feelings about the way our profession should be practiced. One moment. it wants the doctor to hold to the ethical creed which has guided Medicine so well for 23 centuries; the next, whether for financial gain or disappointment over lack of perfection, the patient in some instances wants to curtail the freedom of those who practice the art of the ancient profession. It is not likely that any one of us will himself be able to prove to the public the value of having the freedom to continue to follow the ethics of the Hippocratic Oath. However, together, as physicians who take our places of leadership in civic affairs and who individually strive to maintain the time-proven goals of integrity, compassion, humility and dignity, we may well relieve the unmerited and injurious pressures on the art of Medicine. It is good to remember that Hippocrates also said: Life is short; the art long.” Leroy E. Burney. M.D. 177 178 IN MEMORIUM DR. JOHN DAVID EVANS (1911 - 1964) His broad interests in the lipid field were of a positive nature; that is, he sought always to see the contribution in a research or an idea; in this way his interests were a constant source of inspiration and refreshment to his associates. As a scholar he strove continually to grow and improve himself in his. chosen scientific discipline by formal study, extensive reading, laboratory experimentation, and learning from his students and associates. Technical excellence and rigorousness in his proofs were the guideposts of his experimental work. He showed a fine appreciation for what he considered was high quality work by others and was critical of that which did not measure up to high standards. Not content to maintain a status quo in his research efforts or re- search program, not self-satisfied, but continually reaching for growth and achievement in his discipline further characterized this dedicated scientist who is recognized as one of our foremost biological workers of his day in the field of fatty acids. He was warm-hearted, friendly, and greatly concerned for justice and fairness in human relationships, showing no compromise to injustice. Yet he was compassionate and forgiving — characteristics best seen by those close to him who knew his loyalty. He was not known as a mixer but he greatly appreciated his friends. He died an active man and living according to these characteristics which will long enrich the memories of those who knew him. Dr. L. Norcia ANATOMY John Franklin Huber. M.D. Excuse me. sir. was that liver on rye or aorta on toast? Raymond S. Truex. Ph.D. Listen John, once and for all. who's running this department? J. Robert Troyer, Ph.D. I'm working on a yearly booster for rabies immunization. Lorenzo Rodriquez-Peralta. M.D. John keeps on trying to get me to tell him who my barber is. Roger H. Davidheiser, Ph.D. Guess who just won the Nobel Prize? BIOCHEMISTRY Leonard N. Norcia, Ph.D. “The Crisco Kid Robert C. Baldridge, Ph.D. If you think about it for a moment, — you’ll still be confused. Jonathan H. Cilley. Ph.D. I wind Grandfather Clock. PHYSIOLOGY Guido Ascanio, M.D. Not all Cubans are starving. PATHOLOGY Maria B. Valdes-Dapena, M.D. I haven't gotten that rhythm method down yet. Ernest E. Aegeter. M.D. My relationship with this class is rapidly degenerating. Augustin R. Peale. M.D. The boys wanted a new picture of me. Walter M. Levy, M.D. I would be hard-pressed as to Ernest M.iassont. M.D. You mean to tell me that those large blue cells in that PAP are cancerous — all this time I thought they were artifacts. c Elizabeth V. lautsch. M.D. Roses are red, violets are blue, but the goddam slide is brown. Harvey F. Watts. M.D. Sorry, Liz, but you've been color blind for years. Morton Klein. Ph.D. I went out in the rain last week without my boots and caught a cold. Leonard J. Zubrzycki. Ph.D. Damn it. I've got dysentery. MICROBIOLOGY Earle H. Spaulding. Ph.D. Believe it or not. I'm looking directly at my notebook. Gerald Shockman. Ph.D. Notice anything new Tony? Anthony J. Lamberti. M.S. Yeh. there's a louse on your tie. Kenneth M. Schreck. M.D. Underneath I'm really spastic. Theodore G. Anderson. Ph.D. We're getting our culture plates from Hershey now. PHARMACOLOGY Roger W. Sevy, M.D. We never evaluate a student unless he falls on the graph. Ben F. Rusy, M.D. Lately I've been having trouble sleeping at night. Charles A. Papacostas. Ph.D. No, the smear isn't named after me. Marcus M. Reidenberg, M.D, Yippee. Martin W. Adler. Ph.D. RATS! I think he's dead. Carl Mayo. Ph.G. Who didn't bring in their milk money, kiddies? 187 INTERNAL MEDICINE Thomas M. Durant. M.D. There is only one place to intern. Isadore W. Ginsburg. M.D. So you ordered a serum porcelain level? Robert V. Cohen. M.D. I thought the Beatles were still in England. Jacob Zatuchni, M.D. My hands are insured for $250,000. my ears for $250,000. my eyes for $500,000, and my mind is just invaluable. William S. Frankl. M.D. I do the charts . . . Alton I. Sutnick, M.D. . . . and I read the X-Rays. Donald J. Ottenberg, M.D. Who did you call a baggass? John Lansbury. M.D. I'd get up, but my hip hurts. Richard A. Kern. M.D. When I became Emeritus, they stopped washing my lab coats. Felix Cortes, M.D. So the ball got stuck in the valve, so what? Albert J. Finestone, M.D. When you get as many house-patients as I have, you'll be able to afford a king-size Littman too. William L. Winters, Jr., M.D. And if I had a son, I wouldn't call him Peter. Howard N. Baier, M.D. It would happen to you. too. if you drank Alevaire. John H. Kolmer, M.D. Four dils S. Phillip Bralow, M.D. I don’t know what your trouble is either, sir. Sidney Goldsmith, M.D. It’s a cinch I absorb my tats allright. ' Stanley H. Lorber, M.D. I make my own pink ladies. Emanuel M. Weinberger. M.D. Lamont Cranston Bertram J. Channick. M.D. Always palpate substernally for parathyroid glands. Michael McDonough, M.D. I’m still young and innocent enough to teach students when I make rounds. 192 John R. Durant. M.D. Dad wants me start from the bottom. George E. Ehrlich. M.D. Son of Magic Bullet Norman Learner. M.D. Glasses make the man. I HEMATOLOGY H. James Day, M.D. I'll pass those Boards yet Rosaline R. Joseph, MO. What's that you're reading, Bill? Lyndall Molthan. M.D. This is where deAlvarez should go. William E. Barry, M.D. Jim's new article on how to prepare for specialty Boards. DERMATOLOGY James H. Graham. M.D. Ballooning degeneration. Frederick Urbach. M.D. Cream, ointment. Wildroot, — what's the difference! PSYCHIATRY A. Victor Hansen, M.D. Tell the bastard he’s crazy. Theodore M. Barry, M.D. I've been in Medical Clinic ten years and never seen a patient. 0. Eugene Baum. M.D. I even take my tape recorder to the bathroom. Herman Hirsh. M.D. Smile, you’re on Candid Camera. Bruce R Sloane. M.D. Head of the Headshrinkers Harold Winn. M.D. The students aren’t the only ones who fall asleep during psychiatry lectures. Francis H. Hoffman. M.D. I wonder why my mother gave me a girl's name? Adrian D. Copeland. M.D. So what if I lied about the test? OBSTETRICS AND Laurence E. Lundy, M.O. I'd stay if he'd ask me. GYNECOLOGY James H. Thaidigsman. M.D. Nobody even knows I'm here to tell me to leave. Alfred L. Kalodner. M.D Shalom! Russell R. deAlvarez. M.D. The new broom sweeps the house clean. George J. Andros, M.D. Hello — United Airlines? A one way ticket to Michigan please. Clayton T. Beecham, M.D. No! It's just that I like the climate in Danville. James P. Quindlen, M.D It's been reported that I taught a student once. Michael J. Daly. M.D. We Irish never did approve of the Inquisition. Lewis K. Hoberman, M.D. Tweedle-dee Colin Campbell. M.D. At Temple, teaching is our least important product. • i John P. Emich. M.D. De' who? PEDIATRICS Victor R. Vaughn, III, M.D. At St. Chris’s, teaching is our most important product. Joseph M. Garfunkel, M.D. . . . and so on like that. Nancy N. Huang, M.D. I graduated from U.C.R.A. James B. Arey, M.D. Will the real Dr. Arey please stand up? Robert H. High. M.D. A high point. John A. Kirkpatrick, M.D. They say I'm too nice to have written a book with the Aeg. June M. Dobbs. M.D, What does PKU stand for? Henry W. Baird. M.D. How do you like new truck? my Norman Kendall, M.D. I really wanted to be a full-timer at St. Chris. SURGERY George P. Rosemond. M.D. I always keep abreast ... on Dr. Peale's desk. 200 M. Prince Brigham. M.D. In a few years I may be a King. NEUROSURGERY Henry T. Wycis. M.D. Tweedle — dum Frederick Murtaugh. Jr., M.D. There's a shortage of chalk in the hopital. Michael Scott. M.D. Find the scotty dog. 201 Kyril B. Conger. M.D, King of the Water Ways. Lowrain E. McCrea, M.D. dilatation a day keeps the stricture away. Lester Karafin. M.D. I'm the chief of the high ball clinic. A. Richard Kendall, M.D. No. doctor, IVP does not mean urinating intravenously. ORTHOPEDICS John R. Moore. M.D. Yes sir. Dr. Moore sir, thank you for your picture, sir. John W. Lachman. M.D. The King and I 202 OTORHINOLOGY ANESTHESIOLOGY James C. Erickson, III. M.D. No, Doctor, the Fluo-thane shouldn't be going into the esophagus. BRONCHOESOPHAGOLOGY AND LARYNGOLOGY Charles M. Norris. M.D. Give me the number of the Jackson Clinic. Gabriel F. Tucker, Jr. M.D. My idea of a foreign body is Gina Lollabrigida. PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION Frank H. Krusen. M.D. The Prodigal Son. Bernard Sandler. M.D. You wouldn’t believe it. but I was a quadraplegic once. PROCTOLOGY Harry E. Bacon. M.D. There's gold in them thar hemorrhoids. Samuel W. Eisenberg. M.D. Just bend over, this won't hurt a bit. NEUROLOGY Joseph U. Toglia. M.D. A little off the top. but leave the sideburns. Gunter Haase. M.D. If I had a hammer . . 204 Sherman G. Gilpin. Jr.. M.D. Stick out what tongue? Renata L. Soulen, M.D. Look Ma. no cavities. RADIOLOGY Herbert M. Stauffer. M.D. I used to be a 90 pound weakling. Robert Robbins. M.D. Spell Robbins with two B's and you pass. Henry W. Woloshin. M.D. Is this a left anterior oblique? Gustavus C. Bird, M.D. I can see right through you. Mary W. Denk. M.D. Denk you. Marc S. Lapayowker. M.D. These are the negatives from last year's beach party. COMMUNITY medicine If i . L. oie'ger. M.D f ' ,tches. scratch. Neal W. Chilton. D.D.S. I ve got twenty one percent fewer cavities. Fred B. Rogers. M.D. Speak softly and carry a big stick. Spencer M. Free. Jr.. Ph.D. Significant 206 I found Dr. Baum’s tape recorder in the Men's Room. Thomas W. George. Sr., M.D. Hey. Lenny. I made it too. an t Noble Editions JUNIORS Albrecht. Janette S. Anderson. Richard H. App. Peter B. Applestein, Bruce Bagley, Parker K. Baker. Robert J., Jr. Balfour. Robert I. Battaglia. Charles R. Berenato, Anthony J. Bindie. Richard P. Bove. Alfred A. Brazel. Joseph F. Brobyn. Thomas J. Brown, Leo T. Brown. Zane A. Buelow, Robert G. Bulette. Dorothy C. Bulette. John W, Bury. Charles D. Chaefsky. Robert L. Coleman, Robert L. Cordes. Dorian H. Crooks. John E. Cunningham. William F. 209 D'Addario, Richard T. DeVenuto, Joseph J.. Jr. Dickson, Thomas B., Jr. Falkenstein. Sheldon J. Feierstein, Mervyn Follmer. Ronald L.. Jr. Frazier, John E.. II Friebel. Harry T. Garren, Wendell B. Geha. Dwight G. Gehringer. Edward J., Jr. Goldsmith, Myron H. Gotwals, Clayton K„ II Grabois. Martin Green, Harvey L. Greybush, Joseph N. Gross, Lawrence S. Grossman, Eric J. Gruber, Michael L. Harasym, Emil L., Jr. I 210 Hirsh, Steven L, Horwitz, Milton R. Hunt, Robert N. Hutton. John E. Jackman, Lawrence S. Jennings, John J. Junkin, David M. Kabo, Robert D. Kennedy. Peter S. Klein, Kenneth S. Klein, William J. Klopp, Donald W. Kohl, Ernest J. Korn, Carlton J. Kornmesser. Thomas W. Kunnes, Richard Kunnes, Roberta S. Labowitz, Russell J. Lachman, Martin J. Lattimer. Gary L. Lawrence, Ronald R. Levine. Mark A. Lisiewski, Jack A. Lowenthal, David T. 211 212 Macek, Ralph C. Maloney, James D. Mayer, Louis E. Mazzoia, Robert D. McConnel. Charles R.. Jr. McCroskey. Robert C. McKibben, Patrick J. McMahon, Patrick C. Meier, Robert H.. Ill Meine, Frederick J. Michaelson, Thomas C. Miles, Vincent N. Miller, Franklin J., Jr. Motfet. Richard L. Moore, Patrick D. Moran, John E. Moran. Timothy F. Moses. David C. Mutchler. Ralph W., Jr. Naponic, Mearl A. Nebel. Otto T. Nolan, Peter C. Novick, Harry P. Oglesby, John T., II Paul. William C. Pavuk. Daniel J. Pennock. Paul C. Pepe, Peter F. Pickering. John E. Plummer, Robert A. Polin, Steven M. Pripstein, Stephen Rabada, John S. Reed. Charles R. Risko, James H. Rizen, Brian K. Rodgers, Leroy A. Rynier, Donald L. Sabatino, Peter D. Sallash. Robert J. Schwabe. Mario R. Scott. Robert M. Sherwin, Gerald P. Shubin, Charles I. Smith, Raymond L. Smith, Robert W. Speiden, Lois M. Stein, Karl N. Steinberg. Harry N. Stevens, Edward R Stoller, Gerald $. Storey. Suzann Swerdlow. Richard S. Swigar, Mary E Ufberg. Michael H. Ulanet, Seth M. Van Strien. Adrian R.. Jr. Viechnicki. Michael B. Wallace. Robert G. Walley. Robert E., Ill Wasserman, Marvin D. Weader, Joseph A. Webber. John B. Wray. Reginald P.. Jr. Youngs. John N. Zeitzer. Leon D. SOPHOMORES Allen. Robert E. Althouse, L. Bruce. Jr. Anderson. Warren T. Atlee. John L., Ill Axe. Harold Baker. Ramon D. Baldwin, David B. Baran, Ernest M. Barnhart, Barry R. Bassion, Kenneth B, Bergmann, Frederick G. Berinson. Howard Blackman. Edward L. Bloom. Edith L. Bobrove. Arthur M. Bonner. Hugh. Jr. Brady, Ronald Braman, Sidney S. Breneman. John W. Brown, Alan P. Brown, Thomas W. V. Bryant. David W. Burnham. Bentley Byler, Leonard E. 215 Chludzinski, Ronald W. Christen. Gerald E. Christensen. David W. C emens. Orne G. Cochran, W. Gerald Cohen. Joel G. Cook. Robinson. II Cox, William A. Cundey, David W. Curran. John R. DeCherney, Alan H. deQuevedo. Robert F. Dilenno. Joseph A. Drake. Milton A.. Jr. Eastburn. Lydia A. Eckhart. Kenneth L.. Jr. Evans. Palmer C. Fyler. Dennis R. Ferrazzano. John V. Fichthorn, Joseph L. Frenchman. Stuart Fried. Barbara Garcia. Raymond L. Goodman, Herbert Guenther. Donna M. Guiser. Lynn G. Habura, Daniel Haeussner. Charles F Hartzell. David L. 216 Holtzman, Jay H. Hummer. Milton T. Hurewitz, David S. Incarvito. John C. Irvin. James M. Janusz, Walter F. Jeffers. John B. Jerome, Alex W. Johnson. John W. Kaiser. Ralph H. Keller. John P. Kelly. Raymond J. Kelsey, Gerdi D. Kling. James H. Koons, Lawrence S. Kothe. William C. Landis, Ray L. Lanks. Karl W. Leary, Mary J. Leber. David C. Lorente-de la-Torre. Abdiel Mallin, William S. Master. Kenneth M. McLanahan, David J. Menkowitz, Elliot Mesete. Alfonso F. Miller, Jacqueline Moffitt. Harry J. Moore, Barry B. Moore, Mary E. Moore, William B. Mueller, Thomas E. Munson, Jeannette R. Murray. James H. Jr. Obetz, Merry L. Olack, Jerome A Orr, Fred E.. Jr Panek, Bernard S. Petit. Paul E. Pierson. Dean L. Pilarek. Valentine F. Rader. Mark D. Riley. James C. 217 Rodriguez-Velez, Gilberto Rothstein, Edward P. Rumore, Franklin A. Russell, Maria A. Shapiro. Leanard Shindler. Robert L. Shurman, Joseph Silverstein, Martin 8. Simon, David C. Smith. Earl A. Snyderman, Michael C. Sonder, Carl R. Spark. Ronald P. Spector. Jesse I. Stern, Lillian Hirsch Stoltzfus, Glenn B. Templeton, Gilbert W. Thomas. Samuel D. Toton, John F. Truex, Raymond C., Jr. Valenteen, John W. Valenti, Salvatore M. Walsh. James C. Walther. John W. Watson, Pierce E. Webster, Thomas A. Weintraub, Bernard M. Weiss, Robert Wengert, Paul A., Jr. White, Constance S. Wicks. Allan B. Widmaier, Carole F. Winkler. Louis H.. Ill Wishner. William J. Wolgemuth, J. Musser. Jr. FRESHMEN Aquilina, Charles J. Arbuckle, Robert H. Ashman, Michael S. Aurandt, Henry N. Babiarz, Mary R. Baker, Richard B., Jr. Balaban, Donald J. Bell, Alvin Bird, Gustavus C.. IV Bird. Kenneth I., Jr. Boyer, Norman H. Bradley, Joyce C. Buchanan. James R. Bunnell, William P. Burak. Carl S. Cantor, Ronald I. Castelli, Dorio Castrina, Frank P., Jr. Caswell, H. Taylor. Jr. Christie, David J. 220 Christie. Walter R. Conyers, Cary L. Criswell. Samuel W. DeRoy, Tamar A. DeSanctis. Joseph J.t Jr. Deviney. John P. Diemer. Louis M., Ill Dorwart, Bonnie B. Duffy, Francis D. Duke, Bruce E., Ill Dunbar, William H.( IV Dunn, Jerome Dunne, James H. Eck, Frederic, J. Jr. Eliason. Bert C. Filosa, Robert J. Finkelman, Linda S. Fischer, Edward C. Fisher, Richard C. Forman, Lanny P. Frailey, William W.. Jr. Garber, Alan J. Gillen, George P. Giordano, Gerald F. Goldberg. Charles E. Goljan, Edward F. Goloff, Michael H. Greenfield, Donald A. Halpern, Judith M. Hartl, Donna M. Hebard. Don W. Helffrich, Richard Hewins, Brian H. Hildreth, Barbara F. Horowitz. Harvey A. Jankowski, Dennis A. Katz. Lawrence Kean, Dennis W, Kessler, Kenneth M. Kettrick, Robert G. Kieselstein, Marshall J. Kirsch, Michael A. Kistler, Dale C. Klein, David L. Klint, James B. Knox, Douglas E. Krivenko, Charles A. Latman, Stephen F, Lawit, Alan Ledrick, James W. Lee. Joseph D. Lisella. Richard S. Lucey, Denis J. Mack, Karin F. Maish. George 0.. Jr. Manasse, Judy Wikler Maurer, Kenneth H. Mazo, Gerard N. Miller, Daniel S. Miller, Robert M. Moore. Robert C. Moran, John H. Moss. Edward 222 Negrey, John N. Nissley, J. Marlin Ohmart, David L. Osborn, Hayler L. Ossorio, Robert C. Palitz. Harvey F. Pearson, Craig B. Perry, Raymond A. Piro, Frank Piserchia, Gerald J., Jr. Polansky, John D. Pomerantz, Rachel A. Pratt, Helen M. Radcliffe, Russell V. Ramsey, William H., Ill Reichman, Lane Reish, William G. Rhode. Jeffrey C. Rick, William J. Roeder, Kathleen M. Ross. David H. Rothermel, James T. Roxby, Andrew D. Saddoris, Thomas J., Ill Schwamlein, Charles F. Scott, Richard D. Seeber, John J.t Jr. Sey, Mark J. Shanks, William G. Shmookler. Barry M. Silverstein, Marc Singer. Edward S. Slesers. Juris Smoluk, John R. Stein, Kenneth Steinhouse, Roy Stern, Mark 223 Stevenson, Roger C. Swanick, Edward J. Terzaghi. Margaret Turtzo, Douglas F. Vonderheid, Eric C. Wagner, Theodore A. Waldstein, Gail P. Weber, Karl T. Weinstein, David P. Weiss, Mark J. West, Lawrence White-Stevens, Derek T. Wilkinson, Lee S. Willihnganz, Walter D. Wilson, Arthur J. Woldow, Michael P. Wolf, Nelson M. ?? will be as my brothers . . . ations Mike Scott. Jr.. John Wysocki. Jim Kohl. Fred Bove. Steve Pol in. STUDENT AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION Since its inception in 1951, the Student AMA has served the medical student in many areas. It is Service’' which characterizes the purpose of the Temple Student Medical Society. As a result of national affiliation with almost all the other Schools of Medicine in the United States, the student body is represented in all affairs referable to students of medicine through membership in the House of Delegates. In addition. individual members benefit from the insurance programs, loan programs, scientific awards programs, summer preceptorship grants, and exchange programs abroad. Through the officers, the student body is also represented at State and County Medical Society meetings. The function of the Chapter is multiple. Through class representation and under the advi-sorship of the Dean and Ass't. Dean, programs of benefit to students and house officers at Temple University Medical Center are planned. In addition. the officers have, and will continue to serve as spokesmen for the student body. Examples of the activities of various Chapter Committees are: Mock Malpractice Trial, Symposia on Controversial Issues in Medicine. Student-Faculty Dance, Glee Club, various lectures, medical recruitment program, analysis of internships, cost of living survey, intramural and in- terscholastic sports program, medical economics, medical legislation, student directory, student publication, and day care nursery project. In addition, the Chapter implements national programs at the local level. Officers: President — John Wysocki Vice-President — Jim Kohl Secretary-Treasurer — Steve Polin Advisor — Dr. Arthur Nelson, Ass't. Dean Committee Chairmen Publications — Steve Pripstein Medical Educ. — Fred Bove Recruitment and Public Relations — John Webber Athletics — Pete Nolan Legislation — Jerry Stoller and John Jennings Class Representatives Senior — George Penn Junior — Mike Scott Soph. — Sam Thomas, Gerry Cochran Fresh. — Joe DeSanctis, John Negrey House Staff — Dr. Richard Albertson 227 Anthony Cucinotta, Richard Weiss. Stuart Sagel. ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA Alpha Omega Alpha is an international honor medical society comprised of 87 chapters. Election to this society is the highest honor which can be given to an undergraduate medical student, just as election to Phi Beta Kappa is the highest honor which can be given to a college student. There are three classes of members: 1) Undergraduate membership based entirely on scholarship, personal honesty, and potential leadership; 2) Alumni and Faculty membership granted for distinctive achievements in the art of practice of scientific medicine, and 3) Honorary membership awarded to eminent leaders in medicine and the allied sciences. Each year at Temple a small number of 3rd year students, and a somewhat larger number of 4th year students are elected to the society. In keeping with its academic tradition. AOA annually sponsors a Dean's Hour Lectureship, followed by the annual banquet, which is attended by students, faculty, and alumni members. Officers for 1964-1965 President — Richard D. Weiss Vice-President — Alfred Bove Secretary-Treasurer — John F. Huber. M.D. Advisors — Robert H. High. M.D. Alton I. Sutnick, M.D. MEMBERS Elliott Coleman Anthony J. Cucinotta Eliot Freeman William Hawke Robert P. Lonergan Stuart S. Sagel Richard D. Weiss Murray S. Abrams Steven R. Berg Charles M. Biddle Rocco F. Chirieleison Merrill A. Cohen Neil B. Edwards Washington C. Hill Bentley A. Hollander David W. Hunter Richard Lockey Charles L. Long Robert Schmutzler Marjorie E. Seybold Hano A. Siegel John J. Witowski Richard P. Bindie Alfred A. Bove Joseph F. Brazel Roberta S. Kunnes Frederick J. Meine David C. Moses Joseph A. Weader 228 STANDING: George Penn, Frank Miller. Joseph Weader, Fred Siegel. SITTING: David Hunter. Stuart Sagel. Anthony Cucino-Bove. Peter Pepe, Murray Abrams. David Moses. Fred Meine, ta. Michael Scott. John Witowski, Richard Weiss. Joseph Michaelson, William Kehrli. Samuel Spagnolo, Hano BABCOCK HONORARY SURGICAL SOCIETY Officers President — Anthony J. Cucinotta Secretary-Treasurer — R. Michael Scott Faculty Advisor — Vincent J. Lauby, M.D. The Babcock Surgical Society is the oldest undergraduate medical society in the United States which has existed uninterrupted since its inception. It was founded on October 9, 1907 to honor the late Dr. W. Wayne Babcock, Emeritus Professor of Surgery at Temple University, and in our comparatively young medical school, the Society has become a tradition which is justly cherished. The Society’s aim is the promotion of intellectual discussion of new and current practices in surgery and related fields, and at monthly meetings during the academic year senior members present papers concerning such topics. An open discussion period follows each presentation during which members and invited guests exchange ideas on the particular subject. Membership is restricted to fifty students, twenty each from the senior and junior classes, and ten from the sophomore class. New members are selected each fall on the basis of faculty recommendation, scholarship, personality, and expressed interest. In the spring, the Society holds a yearly banquet for members and alumni. A prominent member of the medical profession is invited to participate as a guest speaker, and an award is presented to the senior student who in the opinion of the membership has presented the outstanding paper of the year. 229 STANDING: Pete Winters. Marv Waserman, Larry Gross. SITTING: Bob Kish, Bob Mozzola. INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL The Interfraternity Council is composed of one representative from each medical fraternity plus a faculty advisor, Dr. John Franklin Huber. Its function is to deal with any problems which may arise within the fraternities. The council also establishes policies for rushing prospective Freshman fraternity members. This year under the able guidance of Dr. Huber, 96 Freshmen became members of the five fraternities at Temple Medical School. 230 R. Fisher. P. G. Roberts. T. Kornmesser. E. Baran. T. Wagner. R. C. Reed. D. Geha. G. Wolford. R. Marvin, W. Kerhli. RUGBY FOOTBALL CLUB The Temple Medical Ruby Football Club is now in its fourth year of Bacchanalian existence. Its portly members originally founded a sports club to provide weekly exercise, but soon came upon this hustling game, which combines an afternoon of dyspnea, muscle fatigue and hematomata with a hearty evening of recovering to song and enviable comaraderie. The 1964 Fall Season had ten newcomers on our fifteen-man team. Esprit de corps more than counterbalanced our showing of 1-4-1. Our win was a good show over the Philadelphia Club, while our most unmentionable defeats came at the hands of Jefferson and Philadelphia 1st City Troop. Our seven game schedule this spring includes Villanova and Penn among our hometown adversaries, and out-of-town Universities, Drew and Columbia. Our Club is a three year full-fledged member of the Eastern Rugby Union. It offers relaxation and enjoyment to all its members. We encourage all students to find extra-curricular activities to enjoy during their medical training, and especially we invite everyone to learn and enjoy the game Rugby as a spectator or participant. 231 STANDING: Robert Marvin. David Christianson. Abdil lorente gemuth. Leonard Christie. Lois Spieden. SITTING: Joseph del Torre. Alfred Cox. William Fitzkee. Ken German. Jack Wol Boutwell. David Simons, James Alderfer. Louis Bird. CHRISTIAN MEDICAL SOCIETY The Temple Chapter of The Christian Medical society is a branch of a recognized professional organization whose membership consists of physicians, dentists, medical and dental students who seek to present a positive witness through their professions. Members meet biweekly to find continuing strength and purpose through prayer, Bible study, and fellowship. The Christian Medical Society also ministers as a service organization aiding medical missionary endeavors around the world. During 1964 there were sixty active C.M.S. student chapters in American and Canadian medical schools. Through the society over two and a half million dollars worth of drugs were distributed overseas in the past year through the Medical Assistance Program to 241 mission hospitals and 804 out patient clinics. About eighty per cent of the Protestant medical missionaries from the English speaking world serving abroad belong to C.M.S. The society publishes a quarterly journal, a monthy newsletter, and a monthly inspirational letter. Biannually an International Convention on Missionary Medicine is sponsored in this country. In July, 1964. the First Latin America Congress on Missionary Medicine was held in Quito, Ecuador. The Christian Medical Society also cooperates and participates in the International Congress of Christian Physicians. The Temple Chapter sponsors the annual Thomas M. Durant Lecture, the purpose of which is to impress upon the medical student and physician the importance and advantages of adopting a pattern of life and ethics in one's life and medical practice that is derived not by man, but rather modeled after the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. Walter H. Judd, a medical doctor and past congressman from Minnesota, was the speaker at this year’s lecture. Other activities of the local chapter, in addition to the biweekly meetings, are a fall picnic, spring banquet, and biweekly Sunday evening clinics at one of the city’s rescue missions. City-wide functions including the CMS chapters at our sister medical colleges include a fall convention, winter retreat and banquet, and a spring picnic. 232 SEATED: Ray Perry, Bob Kish. Pat McKibben, Mario Schwabe White Stevens, Gil Rodriguez, Andy Roxby. Ray Garcia, Bob Sheldon Falkenstein. Dave Leber. Pete Pepe. John Keller. Marvin, Chuck Bury, Max Burr. Andy Anderson. Leroy Rod- STANDING: Frank Piro. Bill Frailey, Ralph Macek. Juris Sles- gers, Bob Cook, ers, Craig Pearson. Ed Fischer, Charles Schwamlem, Derek ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA President — Mario R. Schwabe Vice-Pres. — Sheldon Falkenstein Treasurer — Patrick McKibben Social Chairman — Warren Anderson Steward — David Leber Secretary — John Keller The Beta Omicron Chapter of Alpha Kappa Kappa began this year well before Rushing Season. With amazing zeal the Brothers spent valuable time out of their summer vacations to remodel the basement. Certainly the professionallooking finished product gives no hint of the sweat, the tons of dirt, the piles of 2 by 4. the sharp nails and susequent tetanus shots what were involved in getting it done. But it was finally done, and the spirit generated from it gave us enough momentum to sail through one of the Chapter’s most successful Rushing seasons. All doubts as to the success of the year ahead vanished the day we welcomed our new pledge class. Things went along pretty smoothly from then on. We enjoyed the visits of our faculty alumni for informal talks. Our Wives Club started the year with enthusiasm and a spaghetti dinner, and stayed strong throughout. The year also saw a strong basketball team, and a ping-pong tournament of no little excitement. Meetings were compulsively 60 minutes long, and always featured Brother Schwabe's inevitable exhortation for attendance at meetings, and Brother Keller’s minutes written in the style of e.e. cummings. Also memorable this year was our unanimous decision to continue with our closed Xmas Party rather than join the IFC joint affair. The success of our party proved we had been right. All in all, the year saw our Chapter at its best in providing its members with an outlet for creativity. relaxation, and excess energy. All those who put something in, got quite a lot in return. 233 STANDING: Dorian Cordes, Walt Christie. Frank Miller. Jack Moran, David Hunter. Frank Rumor. Charles Humphrey. George Maish. Walter Valentien. Jim Bunn. Dario Castelli, Mark Stein, Bill Rich. Erick Vomderhud. Joe Fickthorn. Douglas Turzo, Allan Brown, Marshall Kieselstein, Bob Kabo. Vincent Miles. Ken Masters. George Penn, Ronald Chuldzkinski. Tom Michaelson. SEATED: Jim Crooks. Charles Aquilina. Lou Winkler. Pete App, R. Kelly. M. Wasserman. J. Risko, B. Walley, J. Ferrazzano. Gary Conyers. PHI BETA PI Officers President: Marvin Wasserman Vice President: Raymond Kelly Secretary: Lou Winkler Treasurer: Jim Risko Steward: Robert Walley The Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity was founded on March 10. 1891, at the Western Pennsylvania Medical College, which is now the Medical College of The University of Pittsburgh. It became a national organization in 1898 when the Beta Chapter was organized at The University of Michigan. There are now thirty-two chapters in the United States. The Beta Eta Chapter of Phi Beta Pi was founded at Temple in 1934. The Chapter House is located at 1421 West Allegheny Avenue, where greater than one fourth of its sixty-two members live and take their meals. In addition to fulfilling such necessary functions. the Chapter holds many social gatherings throughout the year, and maintains an intramural basketball team. Thus, the Fraternity plays a key role in making its members’ years at Temple both productive and enjoyable. 234 ROW I: M. Radar, T Mueller. G. Gillan. J. Pischeria, H. Osborn, R. Moore, K. Bird. T. Wagner, D. Geha. F. Orr. ROW 2: R. Marciniak, J. Riley, P. Evans. J. Hutton. H. Fribel, T. Kornmesser, J. Wever, W. Smucthler. L. Katz. ROW 3: A Wicks. G. Bird. B. Burnam. B. Duke. G. Reish. D. Habura, J Christen. W. Moore. D. Kistler J Rothermel. ROW 4: R. Colemon, J. Polansky. R. Dequevedo. D. Hebard, T Webster. L. Koons, C. Battagua, J. Moran. M. Aponik. E. Baran. C. Burak. F. Castrina, S. Myer. PHI CHI OFFICERS Presiding Senior — Kent Garman Presiding Junior — Edward Stevens Judge Advocate — Robert Schmutzler Secretary — Raymond Truex Treasurer — Peter Nolan Phi Chi, the largest international medical fraternity, was founded at the University of Vermont in 1889. Theta Upsilon Chapter of Phi Chi was founded at Temple University School of Medicine on December 31. 1909. Because Rush Week fell before Labor Day this year, we had to pull ourselves away early from the pleasantries of summer and fortify ourselves for another year of “learning experiences” in medicine. The sophomore scrub team arrived late in August and under the alleged supervision of House Manager, John “Honeydipper Moran, made our spacious Victorian house a little more presentable for eager freshmen. Unfortunately, Rush Week arrived to find our Rush Chairman, Pete Winters, in the hospital recovering after major surgery. Bill Kehrli quickly filled in and carried through a most successful rush program which ended with 26 new pledges. Phi Chi, renowned for its infamous parties, managed as usual to throw some gassers. Bob Reed and Chet Humphreys, bar tenders and so- cial chairmen extraordinaire, saw to it that the beer flowed continuously and that the band kept the crowd in a frenzy. What better place to go for a sweat bath than the Phi Chi basement on a party night? Then there are always particular events and personalities who come to mind . . . T. Mueller and his rabbit-size guinea pig. Garth. The familiar tones of I'm Hayler Osborn, call me Oz. The brigade of three inch North Philadelphia cockroaches who invaded the third floor head and discovered P. Winters on the throne. Koons would gladly give anyone the keys to his 4-wheeled lesion. Non-colorblind members stayed away from T. Encke’s room-of-many-colors complete with cinder block bed. Occasionally one could hear Baker, you're going to a firey hell if you don’t stop that parade of painted women going into our room. When Spring finally arrived, plans were underway for the annual Phi Chi banquet and picnic. It was also time for the ruggers to take to the playing fields for another successful season. All too soon we were in the midst of finals, national boards, and graduation. Everyone was relieved and pleased to have moved another rung higher on the seemingly unending ladder of medical education. SEATED: Ray Truex. Secretary; Ed Stevens. Presiding Junior; Kent Garman, Presiding Senior; Phil Roberts. ROW I: G. Baker. P. Hunter, B. Reed. L. France. B. Kehrli, P. Winters. B. Thieler. S. Bayless. P. Tocchet. ROW 2: B. Fitzkee. R. Berish. R Fulton C. Humphrey, R. Holmes. T. Sparkman. R. Oldt. STANDING: Todd Bofl, Gerald Ciondiono, Charles Reed. Joseph DeSanatis. Walt Shaffer. Reginald Wray. Art Linjowsky, William Cox. Treasurer; Larry Jackman. Gill Templeton, Lynn Guiser, Social Chairman; Bruce Viechnicki. Raymond Boker, Bob Dietz. SEATED: Bob Plummer — House Manager; Bernard Panck. Steward; Bob Brenton. Secretary; Bob Mazzola. President; Hank Dinienzo. Vice- President; James Walsh. Dan Pa-vuk. PHI RHO SIGMA Officers President — Robert Mazzola Vice-President — Hank Dikienzo Secretary — Robert Brereton Treasurer — Bill Cox Steward — Bernard Panck House Manager — Bob Plummer Senior Warden — Gerald Stoller Phi Rho Sigma Medical Fraternity was founded in 1890, at Northwestern University. In 1914, the Fraternity became international when a chapter was installed at McGill University in Montreal. The Alpha Lambda Chapter here at Temple has been on the Medical Campus since 1932, and occupying its present house since the 1940’s. Today, one of our proudest possessions — our alumni, occupy positions of leadership in not only the sphere of medicine, but also other spheres as well. One need only think of its former U.S. Congressman from Minnesota and Delegate to the United Nations, Walter M. Judd, M.D. (of the lota chapter) to realize this. Our own Dr. Huber, Chairman of Temple’s Department of Anatomy, is also the President of Phi Rho’s Grand Chapter and our faculty advisor. Another proud possession of Alpha Lambda Chapter is the Annual John Franklin Huber Lectureship, held this year for the seventh time and always an important event in the school year. Other important events of Phi Rho Sigma during the year were the rushing dinners, during which we were entertained by two popular speakers here at Temple Medical Center — Dr. Taylor Caswell and Dr. Fred Rogers. Later in the year, other members of the hospital staff, themselves alumni, lead discussions on various subjects at the House. Numerous parties were also held at the House during the year beginning with the rushing party in September. 236 STANDING: Warren Gross. Steven Morris. Steven Latman. Murray Abrams, Robert Miller. Gerald Mazo. SEATED: Stuart Sagel, Steven Berg. Larry Gross, Richard Weiss. Hano Siegel. PHI DELTA EPSILON Officers Consul — Lawrence S. Gross Vice-Consul — Bernard M. Weintraub Treasurer — Martin Grabois Secretaries — Karl Stein, David Lowenthal Senior Senator — Richard Weiss Junior Senator — Harvey Green Since its founding in 1904, Phi Delta Epsilon has been dedicated to the highest scientific and educational standards, good fellowship, and a constant awareness of the highest medical ethics. The 1964-1965 season started out with a bang, when under the leadership of Sidney Bramen and Alan DeCherney, Sigma Chapter had one of its most successful rushing programs. Following this fine example, Dave Lowenthal. our Social Chairman, kept us busy with house parties, a buffet and cocktail party, an annual skating party and a closing picnic. Not to be denied. Athletic Chairman, Richard Swerdlow, carried us through an unparalleled basketball season and organized our first annual ping-pong tournament. Other activities through-out the year include: the Initiation Luncheon and Dance, an •‘old-timer alumni night, and the closing affair this year held at Radnor Valley Country Club. The Aaron Brown Lectureship sponsored annually by Sigma Chapter, presented the eminent cardiologist Dr. Paul Dudley White, to the entire medical school. The cocktail party and banquet, in honor of the speaker, was well attended by staff and fraternity brothers. With this full program of social and academic activities, Sigma Chapter has continued to perpetuate the high ideals of good scholarship, frater-nalism and the highest medical ethics set down by our founders. 237 STANDING: Helen Pratt. Carol Widmaier, Kathy Roeder, Gail TING: Maria Russel. Natalie Yurick. Lois Spetden. Jeanette Waldstein, Lydia Eastburn, Barbara Schwartz. Sally Reed. SIT- Munson. Mary Moore. Edith Bloom. ALPHA EPSILON IOTA Officers President: Frances Barone Vice President: Mary Moore Secretary: Edith Bloom Treasurer: Jeanette Munson The AEI house on Ontario Street is home to fourteen women medical students, and serves as meeting place for approximately fifteen other women students. AEI is the only women's sorority at Temple University and is under the sponsorship of the America Women’s Medical Association. Our local chapter aims to promote good fellowship, maintain a high order of scholastic and professional achievement and to foster a spirit of moral and social usefulness among its members. The Chapter is guided by advisor Dr. Elizabeth Lautsch and honorary advisor Dr. Esther Greisheimer. Social events of the year included an open house late in September, as well as a Christmas party during which the freshmen were formally accepted into the organization. The House has recently been renovated and this, combined with the unusual harmony which prevails, makes living there pleasant indeed - in spite of visits by that huge oil truck and that certain dry cleaner. 238 SKULL STAFF Editors — in — Chief Stuart Sagel Barbara Schwartz Literary Editor Gary Graham Jackson Photography Editor Frank Lane Business Manager Paul Menzel Circulation Editor Elliott Coleman Seniors Editor Sally Reed Organizations Editor George Penn Staff Erich Brueschke Merril Cohen Neil Edwards David Fisher Richard Fulton William Hawke Bentley Hollander David Leeber Robert Lonergan Lou Long Robert Reed Hano Siegel Thorne Sparkman Richard Weiss John Wysocki Class Historian Bob Marciniak Art Editor Steven Berg 239 ’ Whoever comes into contact with men of the first rank has an altered scale of value in life. Such intellectual contact is the most interesting event that life can offer. ” FRED B. ROGERS, M.D. During the past 4 years our class has been fortunate to have come in contact with Dr. Fred B. Rogers. Because of his keen and sincere interest in medical students, and because his generous advice has been indispensable in the preparation of this publication, we dedicate this page in our yearbook to him. At the age of 21, Dr. Rogers graduated from this school, thus becoming one of the youngest men to graduate from our medical school. After completion of his training in internal medicine and public health and a stint in the Navy during the Korean War. Dr. Rogers, at 33, became one of the youngest full professors in the history of Temple Medical School. His ability as an historian and epidemiologist were brought to our attention when he lectured in History of Medicine, and later in epidemiology. Books written by him are used in both courses. He also serves as guest lecturer at Columbia University School of Public Health. Dr. Rogers finds time to be a very active member of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia; and is a member of the American College of Physicians. The Royal Society of Health of London. Sigma Xi. Alpha Omega Alpha, and the American Federation of Clinical Research. Few of us will forget this thoughtful, intellectual, unassuming man who, from the outset, made us realize the medical heritage which we are so fortunate to inherit. 240 7 will practice medicine with conscience and dignity . . . ?? aiiclicls 244 246 251 254 257 260 STEVE. ANITA. AND DANNY BERG 261 CHARLOTTE AND HANO SIEGEL LORRAINE AND BILL HAWKE 262 263 ELAINE AND MURRAY ABRAMS 264 BOB AND ERICA KISH BOB AND SONYA. ROBERT II. JEFFREY AND LYDIA DEITZ. JOAN AND RAY HUDANICH MARSHA AND ELIOT FREEMAN BARBARA AND DAVID NEWMAN MONICA AND STEVE. AND LISA BENKO MARY ANN AND TYLER MALCOLM 265 BARBARA AND LEW SCHWARTZ 892 269 272 273 INTERNS AND RESIDENTS 274 rThese promises I make freely and upon my honor. ” edical Technologists . ADVISOR . .TEACHER ...STUDENT . . . FRIEND Miss Mary Woodworth The Medical Technology class of 1965 dedicates this edition of the Skull to Miss Mary Woodworth. A.B., M.S., M.T. (ASCP). She has shown patience, humor and ability which have benefitted all members of our class. Above all, she has been an example which we. as prospective Medical Technologists, shall strive to follow professionally, academically and personally. 281 ERNEST E. AEGERTER. A. B.. B. S., M. D„ F. C. A. P. Director of the School of Medical Technology. ADMINISTRATION MARJORIE I. ROBBINS, A. B., M. S.f MT (ASCP) Assistant Director of the School of Medical Technology. INA LEA ROE, A. B„ M. S., MT (ASCP) Teaching Supervisor 282 President: Barbara Kravitz Vice-President: Carol Swick Secretary: D. Goldstein Treasurer; E. Detzi C. Secretary S. Ha I pern CLASS OFFICERS 1961 — the beginning . . . two sciences!! new faces ... Dr. Roberts — Francis — Eng. 11 term paper . . . Sophomores . . . organic, ugh! — Miss Rumrill — Susan in the sink — Emil Fisher — cats on the bus — summertime-organic again!! August 26. 1963 — the hospital at last . . . M. Noble Bates — Saturdays and Sundays? — the embalming room, and John — dawn and carriage — our Introduction” to medical science — Merry Mary — the Assasination — Virology with Dr. Klein — caroling at Christmas, six for ten floors — our sorority dance with just us gals — who swallowed the positive serum? wedding showers — lunch time sorority meetings — term paper topics — the Dell in June . . . Seniors . . . graduation pictures and plans — money? — cake sales — senior conferences and comps — how do you tell the difference between a mono and a lymph? — Christmas on pedi ward — Histology — XX tiptoe past the waterbath — senior research papers? — the auto-analyzer — never crossing at corners — Med. School Hematology — Germantown Ave. at noon — can watching a bone marrow cause 'sympathetic' pains? . . • final comps . . . graduation . . . these and many more we will remember . . . 283 MARLENE MATTLEMAN COHEN, B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 284 EVANNE J. DETZI, B.S. Wind Gap, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 285 DIANE P. GOLDSTEIN. B.S. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 286 MARSHA B. CROPPER. B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 287 SUSAN Z. HALPERN. B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 288 MELODY R. JACOBY, B.S. Chambersburg. Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 289 BARBARA LEVIN KRAVITZ, B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 290 GAIL FRIEDMAN LUBECK, B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 291 PATRICIA A. MC CRARY, B.S. Washington, D.C. Montgomery Junior College Alpha Delta Theta 292 ALA NENKO, B.S. Trenton. New Jersey Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 293 CHRISTINE M. NITKA, B.S. Abington, Pennsylvania Gwynedd-Mercy Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 294 NANCY REYNOLDS PAGE, B.S. Burlington, Vermont University of Vermont Alpha Delta Theta 295 BONITA STOCKMAN, B.S. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 296 JANET SWARTZ, B.S. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 297 CAROL A. SWICK, B.S. Warwick, Rhode Island University of Maryland Temple University Alpha Delta Theta 298 GAIL SPIGELMAN ZUKERMAN, B.S. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Temple University 299 SKULL STAFF Melody Jacoby Trish McCrary Chris Nitka 302 ALPHA DELTA THETA Officers: C. Swick. C. Nitka, B. Rosenberg. E. Detzi. G. Lubeck. One of the objectives of any sorority or fraternity is to unite its members. Alpha Delta Theta has achieved this aim by uniting women preparing for and engaging in Medical Technology. The year 1964-1965 has placed ADT at its highest standing since its founding on Oct. 26. 1960. Never before has ADT’s membership reached the present peak of thirty-six. which consists of juniors and seniors; eligible sohphomores will be pledged in the spring. Along with this increase in membership, a new interest has been promoted in both social and professional areas. The year’s activities have been many — cake sales, mixers, a raffle, a headband sale, a hayride, and a picnic at Blue Bell. The highlights of this year included a catered initiation luncheon at Jones Hall and a Chrismas party for the TUH children's unit, at which hand puppets made by the sisters were distributed; the extras were donated to St. Chris'. In October our President and VP. Carol Swick and Chris Nitka, flew to ADT’s national convention at Ohio State University, where they learned many sorority innovations. One thing we will never forget — our closing affair — a dinner-dance. The women of Alpha Delta Theta not only try to bridge the gap between science and the arts, but also to bridge any gaps among one another. 303 Officers: F. Dubin. B. Bader. M. Walsh. B. Rosenberg. JUNIORS BEST WISHES TO THE 1965 GRADUATES OF THE SCHOOL OF MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY FROM THE MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS’ ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TEMPLE UNIVERSITY 305 man 306 I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly: To pass my life in purity and practice my profession faithfully . . . DEDICATION We feel that a friend is one who gives unselfishly of himself to others. It is for this reason that we. the Class of ’65. dedicate our yearbook to you, Miss Alice Sivak. We know you in many roles, the most familiar being that of clinical instructor. As “Probies, many will remember you as the instructor on 2B and lecturer in first class bloc. When we became Intermediates, our attention turned to second class bloc. How can we forget the morning we opened our gyne notes and you began the lecture with Increased Intracranial Pressure? Many times our classes were filled with humor, but never once did we lose respect for you. You always found the time to listen to our problems, no matter how great or insignificant. Your interests are wide and varied, and not only do they include nursing, but also bowling, the beach, our basketball team, handiwork, family and church, and your two Siamese cats, Misty and Frosty. With all of your interests you have still found time to work toward your Master's degree, as you are very much aware of the need for good student counseling. You have demonstrated your interest in others by approaching your tasks with interest, sincerity, and entirety. 310 311 DIRECTOR OF NURSES Miss Florence E. Brown As the termination of our student days approaches, we can recall many experiences and people who have greatly influenced us throughout the past three years. But there is one particular person who stands out vividly in our memories. She is the one to whom we could always approach for consultation, guidance, and most important, good sound advice. Yes, Miss Florence E. Brown will always present to us the image of capability, efficiency, wisdom, and experience. Many times, she has given us the needed insight into problems we were sure could not possibly be solved. Coming to Temple from Rochester, Minnesota, Miss Brown first held the demanding job of operating room supervisor here. Turning her talents to the administrative field in 1951, she became our Director of Nursing and has held that position ever since. All that our nursing school and hospital has been, are, and will be, is due largely to her vast interest and exceptional ability. Our class wishes to express our admiration and gratitude for the guidance and encouragement we have received. We all hope we can achieve that which Miss Brown represents, and in the coming years we will surely strive to acquire the precious qualities she possesses — those of a fine nurse. DIRECTOR OF NURSING EDUCATION Miss S. Mary T. Gruber As Director of Nursing Education, Miss Mary T. Gruber has certainly proven herself an asset to our school of nursing. Through her efforts, much has been done and is being brought about to improve our curriculum and the status of our educational program. A native Philadelphian, Miss Gruber graduated from Hahnemann Medical College and School of Nursing. Prior to her current position, she was Executive Director of the Southeastern Pennsylvania League for Nursing and Nursing Consultant to the Health and Welfare Council. A woman with a very busy schedule, Miss Gruber is currently advisor to the Pennsylvania League for SNAP. Although her working moments are filled, Miss Gruber always has time to lend a willing ear to the pleas of the student. Her advice is thoughtfully heeded and looked upon with sincere respect. In combining these many talents, only a few of which have been mentioned, we the class of 65 would like to express our gratitude to you, Miss Gruber, for your guidance and help. 313 NURSING SERVICE Day Staff Center — Miss F. Brown. L to R — Miss Diffendarfer. Miss Shogi. Miss Miller, Mrs. Mintiens, Miss Harris. Night Staff 314 Mrs. Lemon. Mrs. Space. Mrs. Escher. Mrs. Anderson. Miss Deluca. Miss Klucznick. HEAD 1st ROW: Mintiens. Fay. Pettit. Blasch, Seiling. 2nd ROW: Bishop. Ashburn, Duffield, Forde, DeYorio. Squires. 3rd ROW: Lasko. Conn. Stmich. Dietrich. Kovalesky. Taylor. 4th ROW: Snell. Schlegal. Shirk. Kann. Thomas. 5th ROW: Fudjack, Sharer. Labonoski. Terkowski. Russell. NURSES 0 IB — Mrs. Puluci 2B — Miss Stinich 3B — Miss Singer BAB. — Miss Martz WOMEN'S ORTHOPEDICS - Miss Pettit MEN'S ORTHOPEDICS - Mrs. Fay 4B — Mrs. Lasko 2MN — Miss Schellhamer 2MS - Miss Conn D.R. — Miss Snell GREATHEART - Miss Bishop 5M — Miss Ashburn WD NURSERY - Miss Fudjack PREMATURE NURSERY - Miss Berglund PRIVATE NURSERY - Miss Vanik O.R. — ’Miss Brunner 2PP - Miss Schlegal 3PP — Miss Squires 3PP — Miss DeYorio 4PP — Miss Terkowski •Miss Russell 5PP — Miss Lorenzo 6PP - Miss Schildt 7PP — Miss Labonoski 8PP — Miss Taylor •Miss Kovalesky 9PP — Miss Sharer 10PP - Mrs. Blasch ACCIDENT DISPENSARY - Mrs. Dietrich CENTRAL SUPPLY - Miss Kann PEDIATRICS - Miss Thomas 2A - Miss Shirk O.P.D. - Mrs. Seiling OBSTETRICS - 'Miss Duffield NURSERY - Mrs. Forde •Supervisors 315 MISS TERESA CONSTANCE FADA, R.N., B.S. Temple University Hospital Basic Sciences. Ear, Nose, and Throat, Gastrointestinal Disorders and Diseases. 316 Qq, Oo MISS SHIRLEY HARRIS. R.N.. B S H 3 m pton Institute i ir Fundamental of IMUrsing. N r rn i Sl- ot 7 MISS ALICE M. SIVAK, R.N., B.S. Temple University Hospital Assistant to Director in Nursing Education, Gynecology. MRS. VIOLA GEITER, R.N. Temple University Hospital Pharmacology, Endocrinology, Tuberculosis, Broncho-esophagology. MISS DORIS G. KNITTLE, R.N. Temple University Hospital Opthamology. 318 MISS MARGOT G. GRATZ, R.N., B.S. Cornell University Obstetrics. MISS LE ANN GUERRIERE, R.N., B.S. Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Obstetrics. £ % MRS. MICHELE ZITTLE, R.N. Temple University Hospital Operating Room. 319 MISS BARBARA BROWN, R.N., B.S. Pennsylvania Hospital Counselor, Co-Ordinator of Student Activities. 320 Miss D. De Sandro. Miss A. Malizia. Miss H. Kraliczek. SECRETARIES Miss H. Zawada, Mrs. F. Barth. 321 CLASS Miss Judith Johnston As “Probies” we were asked to choose two advisors to lead our class for our remaining student days. Miss Judy Johnston, one of our clinical instructors and teacher in Nursing Arts, was voted unanimously into this position. We shall never forget the many hours spent in Nursing Arts lab and the fun we had practicing on Mrs. Chase. Aside from proving her ability as a good instructor and most helpful teacher, Miss Johnston has given us the support and encouragement which was most gratefully welcomed by our class. To you. Miss Johnston, we the class of 1965 say Thank-you. 322 ADVISORS Miss Margaret Russell With another unanimous decision Miss Peggy Russell was asked and without realizing what she was getting into, accepted the position as our second class advisor. As Supervisor on 4PP, Miss Russell has gained our respect as a fine and conscientious nurse. Being a graduate of Temple, as is Miss Johnston, has enabled Miss Russell to appreciate the efforts of our class. Through taking an interest in our activities, she has given us the guidance which is needed and respected to the fullest extent. To you. Miss Russell, we the class of 1965, also say Thank-you. 323 324 eenio' any harmful drug . . . PRESIDENT: Renee Mangan VICE-PRESIDENT: Pamela Warner CLASS OFFICERS SECRETARY: Helen Rojahn 326 TREASURER: Diane Yealy CLASS HISTORY After a long summer with the great anticipation of entering nursing school, the first day finally arrived. Excited girls were arriving from near and far and the first floor of Jones Residence was filled with many trunks and suitcases. Some arrived early, others late. Hurry, scurry — where do we pay our tuition, where do we get our keys, who is our roommate, and where are our rooms? We were given a meal ticket and directions to the dining room: but OH my — how will I ever be able to find this place by myself. That night after we were unpacked we stayed awake until nearly dawn getting acquainted with our new roommates. We began wondering how we would ever be able to arise at 6 a.m. to report on duty when normally we slept until noon!! The f rst week was orientation. We met our instructors, toured the city, went to the Philadelphia Zoo, and saw the film, The Wonderful World of The Brother’s Grimm. Then it was time to settle down for studying: Chemistry, Anatomy. Pharmacology.-and Nursing Fundsr Better step on iT girls, we have to get down to the University for gym and nutrition classes. At last our uniforms arrived — bright pinks with white aprons. We couldn't wait to try them on. Bend over — al fits perfect — and just three inches above the ankles! Bright and early we nervously went to the floors for our clinical experience and listened to the night duty girl give report to the day shift. Our minds were wondering whether or not we would ever be able to do that. How do you take a blood pressured and will I ever make the corners of my bed correctly — never realizing that someday we’d be in charge of an entire floor! Dedication of Edith Bolling Jones Residence had already taken place with the ribbon cutting ceremonies. The brand new dorm was officially ours! Everyone was encouraged to join school activities and we all worked on the Homecoming Float” for Temples’ weekend, in which we took first prize in the Independent Division — rain and all. It made us believe we were a part of University Life” and that working together can bring many close friendships. The days slowly passed until the awaited day — that of capping — finally arrived. It was celebrated by a capping dance, held March 2, 1963. The following Saturday we received our caps as we solemnly recited the “Nightingale Pledge” together. lass bloc went swiftly and we waited to see who the lucky ones going on shift and night duty. mber was here again: only this time, one year and one r, as Intermediates, we entered second class bloc study. Our brains were put to use comprehending our ears where sharpened by the lectures in Otor-nd our eyes were opened wide in Opthamology. class was now separated as we entered our specialties and affiliations. 'JClamp, tie, cut” we heard the surgeon mutter under his white mask. “Keep your hands away from your face and don’t contaminate yourselves.” the graduate would yell. “Are we missing any sponges? What is the correct count? Yes, this was all common talk in the O.R. Remember the first day we had to put on a pair of sterile gloves without contaminating them and completing our first scrub alone? We no sooner got out of one white scrub dress than into another: but this time we were in the nurseries of OB. What do you do with 17 crying babies, 5 admissions in one hour and mothers.who complain that their newborn was tfx on who cried all night and kept her up? During this time the seniors were guests at th6 annual “Senior Farewell Dance” presented by our class. It was held May 9, 1964 at the Philadelphia Athletic Club. Everyone danced to the music of Joey Rich and the Rivieras” and an enjoyable evening was had by all. Meanwhile we started our affiliation of pediatrics at St. Chris’. Here for the first time we worked with girls from the different schools. In classes we learned about the fluid balance sheets and P.U.C.’s.-But as we worked on the floors we Kppt saying, “there must be an easier way to do this! Next we left the busy city life as Seniors and having to move “ALL” our belongings, went to study psychiatric nurs- 328 ing at Byberry. Just think — thirteen hundred acres of open land. 6500 patients, and 100 buildings! Eros and Thantos. id and ego, Sigmund Freud and his libido. Here we were all slightly neurotic playing pinochle, scrabble, and dancing with the psychotics. Our last affiliation was finally over and we were all back at Temple again. We worked general duty for a while and then started third class bloc. This time it was four weeks long; studying dermatology, communicable diseases and professional adjustments — where we were actually writing letters applying for jobs. It seemed so incredible that our future was so close at har Diet Therapy had us eating low Sodium diets and those diabetic diets!! —. working out the exchange list, visiting homes with the meals on wheels program, and going to the Italian market. lior Dinner Dance was held in March. Everyone had effervescent happiness, yet in our eyes there was sadness remembering how fast these past three jone. The many friends that were made would soon their separate ways, yet they would never. b e for- were held at for the first and self esteem as ced the graduating efass June arrived and our graduation Convention Hall. We wore our white time and had a certain feeling of we proudly rose when they annoi __ i of Temple University Hospital School of Nursing! Dur minds have now raced over three years of happiness. As young women and graduate nurses we shall now enter a challenging future — the one in which we Tiave set as our goal and ideal of life. As was stated by Dr. Albert Schweitzer: I don't know what your destiny will be. but the thing I do know: the only ones among you who will be really happy, are those who will have sought and found how to serve v M. Greenwald Historian. 329 DONNA LORRAINE AIELLO Kennett Square, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SNAP. CAROLE ANN BRANDENBERGER Brigantine, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SNAP. 330 DONNA MARIA BRITTINGHAM Laurel, Delaware 331 ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; SNAP. SYLVIA J. BROWN 332 ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising; Homecoming Float: SNAP. SHARON ANN BYRNE Islip, New York ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Glee Club: Homecoming Float: SNAP. CHERYL ANNE COLO VOS Mt. Pocono, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float: SNAP. 333 ROBERTA A. COVERT Groton, Connecticut ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float; SNAP; Student Council Treasurer. JEAN E. DAVIS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 334 SUZANNE M. DAVIS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club: SKULL Staff: SNAP: Student Council: Templeaire. JUDITH DEPUY Fayetteville, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club: Homecoming Float: SKULL Staff: SNAP: Templeaire. 335 LISBETH DERMODY Clarks Summit, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; Honor Board Chairman; SKULL Staff; SNAP; Student Council Vice President and President. : M. ANNIE DICKIE Bangor, Michigan ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 336 FRANCES M. DI FIERRO '•V Roseto, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Cheerleader; Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. PHYLLIS LOUISE ENGLEHART Douglassville, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 337 BARBARA ANN FELICI Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. LORRAINE M. FELLA Cheltenham, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 338 339 ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 340 ACTIVITIES: Basketball: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float: SKULL Staff: SNAP. HAZEL ALICE FRISBIE Lake Ariel, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball: Fund Raising: SKULL Staff: SNAP. BARBARA ANN FRY Brookhaven, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP; Student Council Treasurer. 341 CATHERINE GIBBONS Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff; SNAP. BARBARA ANNE GILMORE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 342 ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. BF.RYL JUDITH GOLDBERG Harrisburg, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP; Templeaire. JUDITH ANN GREENE Hatfield, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SNAP. 343 MERRILY GREENWALD Teaneck, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. SANDRA LYNN GREGOR Cheshire, Connecticut ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 344 DORIS J. HACKMAN Ephrata, Pennsylvania ACTIVITES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; SNAP. CAROL ANN HANKIN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SNAP; Tem-pleaire. 345 SHARON HARMAN BACHMAN Berwick, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; SNAP. JUDITH ANN HOLLINGER Chambersburg, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 346 FREDA JEANNE HORSEY Laurel, Delaware ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float; SNAP; Student Counci I-Secretary. MARILYN E. HUGHES Somers Point, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: SNAP; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float. 347 PENNY CAROL IRELAND Pleasantville , New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Home coming; SNAP; Student Council Sec retary. MARY ANN ISTENES Pottstown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SNAP. 348 349 ACTIVITIES: Glee Club: Fund Raising: Homecoming Dance: SKULL Staff: SNAP. WENDY EILEEN KESSLER Wanamassa, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float: SKULL Staff; SNAP; Student Council; Templeaire. MURIEL F. KILE Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising: SKULL Staff; SNAP; Student Council. 350 KATHLEEN J. KOERNIG Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club; SNAP. BONNIE JUDITH LANCER Bergenfield, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Glee Club: SNAP; Templeaire; Fund Raising. 351 SHERRY ELLEN LANHAM South Charleston, West Virginia ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SNAP. BARBARA E. LITTLER Moorestown, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 352 MARY ANN LONCZYNSKI Hazelton, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SKULL Staff: SNAP. MARY ANN LOPSONZSKI Northampton, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SNAP. 353 SHARON LOWERY Bridgeton, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SNAP. JUDITH ANN LUTZ Tamaqua, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising: SKULL Staff; SNAP. 354 ESTHER F. LYON Montoursville, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Cheerleader: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff: SNAP. CHARLOTTE C. McCARRAHER Moorestown, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Fund Raising: SKULL Staff; SNAP. 355 RITA McCRANN ASTA Oakford, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance; Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. ALICE DORA McMILLEN Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff — Co-Editor; SNAP. 356 JANICE KAY MAIN Tamaqua, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SKULL Staff: SNAP. RENEE KAREN MANCAN Chester, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Class President: Fund Raising: SNAP; Student Council. 357 ROSEMARY A. MAROLDA Yardley, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club; SNAP. JOANNE MARIE MASON Allentown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club: SNAP; Student Council. 358 GAIL ANNE MATTHEWS Levittown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float: SNAP. JANET JOAN MOLENSTRA Midland Park, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: SNAP. 359 360 ACTIVITIES: Basketball: Fund Raising: SNAP; Student Council. 361 ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club: Homecoming Float; SNAP. MARYANN PESTA Hazelton, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SNAP. BARBARA ANN POET York, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 362 363 ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff: SNAP. NANCY CATHERINE REISINC Pennsauken, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising; Homecoming Float: SNAP. SUZANNE K. RETTEW Ephrata, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Rasing; SNAP. 364 KAREN LYNNE ROHR Doylestown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Honor Board; SNAP. HELEN E. ROJAHN Dallastown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Class Secretary; Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 365 MARY JANE SAEANDRA Brockway, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. IRENE DOROTHY SCHAEFFER Hatboro, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; Student Council. 366 ROCHELLE SCHWARTZ GINSBI RG ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. LINDA SMITH Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Homecoming Float; SNAP. SALLY MAE SPRANKLE Milesburg, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SKULL Staff; SNAP. 368 BARBARA ANN STACK 369 ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club; SNAP. DONNA LEE STUARD Martinsburg, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. DELPHINE ANN SUTTON Wellsboro, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff, Co-Editor; SNAP. 370 SUSAN E. SWANNICK Montrose, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: Glee Club: SKULL Staff; SNAP. DIANA R. TANNOUS Allentown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 371 LOIS ELAINE THOMPSON Waldwick, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Capping Dance: Fund Raising: Glee Club: SKULL Staff: SNAP. GWENDOLYN R. TRACY Warren, Ohio ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SNAP Representative and Area =1:1 Secretary: SNAP State Convention Invitations Committee Chairman. 372 NANCIAN UFBERG 373 ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; Glee Club; Homecoming Float; SNAP. PAMELA L WARNER South Charleston, West Virginia ACTIVITIES: Class Vice-President; Fund Raising; Glee Club; May Queen Attendant; SNAP; Student Council. VIRGINIA MARY WEBB Folsom, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 374 BARBARA ANN WIECZOREK Summit Hill, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising: SKULL Staff; SNAP; Student Council. DIANE YVONNE YEALY Littlestown, Pennsylvania ACTIVITIES: Basketball; Class Treasurer; Capping Dance; Fund Raising; Glee Club; SKULL Staff; SNAP. 375 NETA STAHLBERGER Bridgeton, New Jersey ACTIVITIES: Fund Raising; SNAP. To The 1965 Graduates On this your graduation many will extend congratulations, as I do. You can earn these felicitations when you transfer your knowledge into action for the benefit of others. You, through nursing have the opportunity and responsibility to give an individual personal service which becomes more needed in society each day. Nurses and nursing can only be successful in remembering that each action is an art and service given to others through caring. In the years ahead don’t be afraid to be an individual who recognizes that fulfillment of goals is accomplished by keeping faith with yourself and others. It is my sincere wish that you continue to grow and in so doing gain personal contentment and satisfaction. Miss Florence Brown You. our new nurses, have the huge responsibility for helping to better nursing for generations to come. Your accuracy and perceptiveness in nursing situations with the well individual as well as to those committed to your care is essential. Nursing is a demanding field. Give of yourself to help obtain a climate conducive to good patient care by knowing nursing, satisfying nursing and continuing to grow in nursing. You, the Class of '65, have much to offer to your community through the future service you will render. 376 S. Mary T. Gruber fidence all personal matters committed to my keeping and all family affairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my profession . . . CAPPING Our big day — March 9. 1963! The excitement of wearing our entire uniform, after struggling to pin them correctly, will always be remembered. The long awaited hour finally arrived and we entered the Dental Pharmacy Auditorium where the eyes of many proud people followed us. Nervous, but proud we walked to the stage to receive our cap. the walk seeming like a mile. Miss Florence Brown placed a cap. the symbol of our ever demanding profession on our head, we proudly took our seats. This was an honor we earned. Now we felt we were on our way to success in our chosen profession. Let us Recall: 378 September 5. 1962 379 OPERATING ROOM With many fears and nervous butterflies” our class made its way to our first affiliation, the operating room. Our fears were soon disolved as we quickly became accustomed to the pattern of circulation and the feeling of becoming part of a great team. I believe each and everyone of us now looks back on those days of many circulations and scrubs as a very worth while learning experience. The Wonderful World of the Brothers' Grimm 380 381 OBSTETRICS As intermediates we enter obstetrics with anticipation and the curiosity of the newborn. Birth, a word used everyday was to be presented to us in its fullest color. Working with the new mother and small baby was not only a pleasure but a rewarding experience. The delivery room, all white and quiet, would suddenly turn into a world of interns, nurses, and delivering mothers. Night duty would be filled with the sound of crying babies, hungry for that 2 A.M. bottle. This is a field separated from any other in medicine. Here a mother willingly comes into the hospital and leaves loving the experience she has encountered. Anatomy. Chemistry, and Micro Lab 382 Bedbaths, Books, and Breastbinders 383 Of our student days the affiliation most remembered and cherished in our hearts will be those at S.C.H.C. Each day presented a new challenge by introducing us to patients ranging from the newborn to the adolescent. The small helpless newborn in an isolette fighting for life was the drama of the premature nursery. The infants and toddlers with IV's and croupettes were seen by all on the second floor. The curious school child full of questions and fears would tire our days on third floor. For many, this was a time of tears. There is no greater sadness than the death of a child,” and No greater joy than a healthy child.” This affiliation fulfilled in us a feeling of deep satisfaction which we will remember and carry with us throughout our everyday lives. SAINT CHRISTOPHER'S Miss Crumley. Miss Charlton. Mrs. McMullen u. Sociology — Folkways and Mores” 384 ::::: M• i’Vwvw The weekends off in Class Bloc 385 PHILADELPHIA STATE HOSPITAL Byberry Will we ever forget those three months at PSH? So much to remember — the girls, weekends, patients, bumpy bus rides. “Please do not knock” signs, picnic, the minstrel show, tons of keys, and never walking on the grass — except that last day! Such was an experience from which we benefited greatly — but would have never believed if we had not gone through it! “Saturday Night at the Movies’’ 386 Three hours for two bedbaths. 387 STUDENT COUNCIL A group on which many decisions fall. Yes, at every meeting there were discussions involving both, the usual and unusual that happen in a large dorm, but with the initiative of Lizbeth Dermody and under the supervision of Miss Florence Brown and Miss Barbara Brown. Student Council was able to fulfill its obligation to both students and school. We hope our successors are able to carry on; to function in this form of democracy with much pride and fewer problems. PRESIDENT, Lizbeth Dermody; VICE PRESIDENT, Agnes Weath-erby; SECRETARY. Jean Horsey; TREASURER. Barb Fry. Pinks, Aprons, Bibs, and Caps - March 9, 1963. 388 Follow the Gleam SENIOR MEMBERS S. Davis L. Dermody 8. Fry J. Horsey I. Schaeffer S. Sprankle P. Stepsus G. Tracy B. Wieczorek 389 T H E S K U L L EDITOR. Delphine Sutton; CoEDITOR. Alice McM.llen; LAYOUT. Frances DiPierro; PHO TOGRAPHY, Annie Dickie; ART, Mary Jane Salandra; ART, Helen Roian; BUSINESS. Barb Fry. “Disaster Drill” — Temple Hospital. 390 YEARBOOK STAFF The success of every yearbook depends upon the efficiency of its staff. Many problems, large and small, are encountered daily as they rush to meet the next deadline but nothing can compare with the thrill of having completed it and knowing it was well worth while. D. Sutton M. Kile A. McMillen W. Kessler F. DiPierro B. Littler A. Dickie J. Lutz M. Salandra J. Main B. Fry C. Rabenold D. 8rittmgham H. Rojan S. Davis 1. Schaeffer J. Depuy S. Seltzer L. Dermody S. Sprankle P. Englehart B. Stack E. Flagge D. Stuard J. Fresoli S. Swannick H. Frisbie D. Tannous K. Gibbons L. Thompson B. Goldberg V. Webb M. Greenwald B. Wieczorek C. Hankin J. Hollinger B. Jones D. Yealy Responsibility — Shift and Night Duty. 391 BASKETBALL Hope for a successful season always soars high as our feminine hoop squad travels each year to Bala Cynwood Junior High School. Meeting the opponent was always a frightening thought but with those kind, reassuring words from coach” they always managed to pull through. Remembering all the tiring practices and aches and pains they suffered. the squad faithfully attempts to notch up the score as the cheering crowd boosts them on to VICTORY. Operating room — Don't walk between the green.” 392 CHEER LEADERS “Heave ho . . “Here we go.' Falling right behind the team you’ll always find these peppy rooters leading the crowd in cheering. This year, we are extra proud to display them because they are wearing new uniforms brought by the Alumnae Association. However, new or old their spirit remains and at every game, above all roars, we hear a — “We're from Temple and we couldn't be prouder!” 393 GLEE CLUB What could be a better way to express one’s emotion than by singing? The chorus, under the direction of Mr. William Smith, expells some of this emotion by working hard to present three concerts a year. At Christmas time, we carol through the hospital halls and at capping we solemnly sing “The Nightingale Pledge. Spring is joyfully welcomed with a “Springtime Serenade.” This activity provides a good way of relaxing after a hard day's work. Miss Sivaks' “Little Angels” 394 dent , . . . . With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care. CAPPING DANCE After six months of struggling through classes and limited social life, we couldn’t believe we were about to attend a formal dance —. On March 2. 1963. we made our entrance through flowers arranged resembling our nurses cap. with the words. “A Step Toward the Future. Music was provided by The Blockbusters. Our class queen was Pamela Warmer who looked very charming. As we closed our eyes that night we realized that nursing wasn’t all work and no play. Incident slips and evaluations 396 LOVE OF A STUDENT NURSE The love of a student nurse is filled with fear It's loving a man who isn't near. It's waiting for mail — a word from him. An empty mailbox; a day that’s dim. It’s holding his picture, it's seeing his face. Wishing you could leave this desolate place. It's a dream-filled night, and little sleep. An ache in your heart that’s ever so deep. Alone during the week, and hoping he's true. It’s marking the days off the calendar above. Waiting for the vacation when you'll see your love. It’s hearing a song you’ve both listened to. The words bring back memories — you feel blue. It's planned ideas that haunt you at night, Hoping he loves you with all his might. Wondering what he’s doing each minute of the day. Wishing you were always in his arms to stay. It’s writing a letter, saying all's well. Hope that he cannot tell, How anxious you are to hold him tight, Hearing the words, “everything is all right.’’ You’re home at last getting ready for your date, Your hands start to tremble — you cannot wait. It’s the look in his eyes when you open the door Somehow you know it was worth waiting for. Now it must end — this time with him. Your eyes start to water — tears come to the brim. The time must come and you must part. You’re back in school, but he’s still in your heart. Bus rides to the basketball games 397 398 One A.M. in the courtyard HOUSEMOTHERS Ever present to lend a helping hand are the housemothers of Jones Residence. Their assistance with many small problems is known by every girl. We never would have been able to accomplish all our money-making projects had it not been for their willing assistance. We take this opportunity to say “Thank You. “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof 399 SENIOR FAREWELL DANCE I'll be home for Christmas, If only in my dreams.” 400 ♦ Last year, as intermediates, we followed tradition and presented the senior class with a semi-formal dance, which was, without surprise, a delightful success. There always seemed to be enough energy to initiate one more twist when “Joey Rich and the Riveras” broke into a lively chandelier-shaking tune. It was felt by all that the evening was a perfect way to bid our 1964 Seniors a fond farewell. Socializing in the cafeteria. 401 A THE TEMPLEAIRE To put together a dorm newspaper requires many long hours of planning and collecting material. It sometimes seems like a thankless job. To the many girls involved in this activity we wish to express our thanks and appreciation. Turkey £ la king” at St. Christophers' 402 UNDER- CLASSES For the freshman the first year is a broad and new experience. There are happy, sad. good, and discouraging times. Medicine is a world of its own and as seniors, we can honestly say it is as rewarding and worthwhile as any in existence. To the intermediates, whose student days are half over, some of the greatest experiences are yet to come. Affiliations are a tremendous experience. And when your days are completed you will be assured that nursing is truly a profession dedicated to the welfare of others. PUC’s, fluid balance sheets, feedings, and croup tents 403 404 Long days at the Shore 405 The long halls of Byberry 406 That 5:30 A.M. knock 407 “The three goals of orientation” 408 Keep off the grass” and don’t walk on the paths 409 Calling for reservations at Jones Hall 410 Two stripes on our caps 411 Money, money, money! 412 Yearbook deadlines. 413 The Senior dinner dance. 414 Graduation breakfast. 415 A day in White 416 Lines of a Pattern Midst the lines in a pattern of a life, A girl crossed unawares a line and greeted with shy boldness and eager bewilderment A new pattern, strange, compelling, to be explored . . . experienced. There is warmth, reached for, quietly intense, necessary, binding in the anticipation of the Tomorrow. Warmth known in laughing gladness, in achievement shared, in unspoken lines called friendship. Authority from other patterns, white uniformed, speaks knowledge, wisdom, and challenge, and lives entering with quiet assuredness a strong line Into the new pattern. And midst the new pattern a girl faces fellow man — familiar line. but new pattern writes his name patient . . . And his pattern, shadowed. A girl knows lines of fear written with courage, of peace written with hope, of hope written with God, and from the new pattern she constructs lines saying, I care. Shadowed pattern breaks with light exultant. Somewhere, midst the lines in a pattern of a life. A girl crossed unawares a line . . . She is a woman. and it is written with a line called Nurse. 417 — Judith M. Prentice PATRONS Dr. George J. Andros Mr. and Mrs. Howard N. Baier Dr. Howard W. Baker Dr. John B. Bartram Dr. M. Noble Bates Dr. Clayton T. Beecham Mr. and Mrs. Frank Berish Dr. Gustavus C. Bird Dr. John V. Blady Dr. George I. Blumstein Dr. Bert R. Boone Dr. S. Philip Bralow Mr. and Mrs. Emil Brown Dr. Robert M. Bucher Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bufalino Mrs. Eleanor Q. Bun Frances A. Burmans Dr. W. Emory Burnett Dr. L. E. Burney Mr. and Mrs. James D. Byrne Dr. W. Y. Chey Dr. Robert V. Cohen Dr. K. B. Conger Dr. Felix M. Cortes Dr. Domenico Cucinotta Dr. and Mrs. Michael J. Daly Dr. Julio C. Davila Dr. H. James Day Dr. Russell Ramon deAlvarez Dr. Dominic A. DeLaurentis Dr. Angelo M. DiGeorge Dr. James B. Donaldson Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Draganosky Dr. Thomas M. Durant Dr. John P. Emich Dr. Matthew S. Ersner Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Finestone Dr. Daniel S. Fleisher Mr. and Mrs. Vincent D. Fresoli Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Foster Dr. Joseph M. Garfunkel Dr. Thomas W. Georges. Jr. Margaret B. Gilmore Dr. Sherman F. Gilpin. Jr. Dr. I. W. Ginsburg Dr. Leonard I. Goldman Dr. Sidney Goldsmith Dr. James M. Graham Dr. R. K. Greenbank Dr. Robert H. Hamilton. Jr. Dr. A. Victor Hanson. Jr. Dr. Concetta D. Harakal Hess A. Harmon Dr. T. Terry Hayashi Dr. Robert H. High Dr. and Mrs. L.K. Hoberman Dr. Francis H. Hoffman Mr. and Mrs. Harold H. Holmes Dr. John Franklin Huber Mr. and Mrs. Leonard G. Humphrey Mr. and Mrs. John Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm G. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Johnsgard Dr. Lester Karafin Dr. Richard A. Kern Dr. Norman Kendall Dr. Richard Kendall Mr. and Mrs. H. Kessler Dr. J. A. Kirkpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Kish Dr. Morton Klein Dr. Frank A. Krusen Dr. John W. Lachman Dr. Octavus P. Large Dr. Vincent W. Lauby Dr. Norman Learner Dr. Walter J. Levinsky Dr. Lawrence E. Lundy Dr. Roger W. Sevy Dr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Lockey Mr. and Mrs. Thaddeus Loncgynski Anna Lopsozski Dr. Stanley H. Lorber Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mangan Dr. Francis R. Manlove Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Marolda Mrs. Barbara M. Menzel Dr. Timothy F. Moran Dr. Frederick Murtagh, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Stewart McCracken Dr. Lowrain E. McCrea Dr. Michael T. McDonough Mr. and Mrs. H. G. McDowell Dr. Charles M. Norris Dr. Alois Nowotny Dr. Trevelyan E. Palmer Dr. Charles A. Papacostas Dr. Augustin R. Peale Dr. Lorenzo Rodriguez-Peralta Dr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Pieringer Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Pifer Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W. R. Rabenold Mr. and Mrs. John A. Reed Mr. and Mrs. George Reising Dr. Fred B. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Rohr Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Romatowski Dr. Bernard J. Ronis Dr. Max Lee Roms Dr. George P. Rosemond Dr. Margaret W. Russell Dr. Louis A. Soloff Dr. Bernard Sandler Dr. Felice Santore Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Schmutzler Dr. Carson D. Schneck Mrs. Wilbert J. Schneider Dr. Harold Schulman Dr. Gerald D. Shockman Dr. Earle H. Spaulding Mr. and Mrs. John Squires Dr. Herbert M. Stauffer Dr. William A. Steiger Mr. and Mrs. Albert I. Stenes Dr. William S. Frankl Dr. Alton I. Sutnick Dr. Robert Tipon Dr. Jospeh U. Toglia Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Uawhe Drs. Harry and Helen Wagenheim Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Weinberger Dr. and Mrs. Henry J. Whalen Mr. and Mrs. John Wieczarch Dr. Lewis R. Wolf Mr. and Mrs. George Yealy Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Zatuchni Dr. Leonard Zubryzki Remember . . . MILES W BLUE CROSS and BLUE SHIELD Partners in Health THE HOSPITAL . . . THE DOCTORS . . . BLUE CROSS . . . BLUE SHIELD . . . RESTAURANT 3545 N. Broad St. BROAD ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. LI 8-7157 EST. 1918 3312 N. Broad St. t... t1.1...JiSt ABOVE THE BROAD OlNEY SUBWAY ENTRANCE Philo. 40, Pa. VISIT OUR SHOPS AT 5606 AND 5620 NORTH BROAD STREET FOR A COMPLETE SELECTION OF THE FINEST IN UNIFORMS (FREE ALTERATIONS). MATERNITY WEAR, SPORTSWEAR, LINGERIE, HOSIERY, BRAS AND GIRDLES. WM. H. BATTERSBY’S SON’S CORP. Join your Funeral Directors Nurses Alumnae Assoc, of TUH Broad and Westmoreland Sts. You need it. It needs you. Philo., Pa. (MED C NAE DOCTOR) M.D.—proudest degree any man or woman can earn, for it unmistakably bespeaks dedication to principles mankind holds in highest esteem: learning, truth, compassion, selflessness. Proud to stand with you is Wyeth, who pledges: therapeutic agents of merit, and full information about them; continued research and development of new, useful pharmaceuticals; alert, trained representatives to service your needs. Philadelphia, Pa. And for Anything Under the Sun . . . Compliments of KEESAL’S PHARMACY Dedicated to the continued advancement THE of health through drug research GERNGROSS McNEIL LABORATORIES, INC. CORPORATION Fort Washington, Pa. pharmaceutical manufacturers McNEIL Mechanical Contractors Plumbing — Industrial Piping — Heating 1313 Sellers St. Phila. 24, Pa. A noble past...an inspiring future The story of Temple University is one of determination and sacrifice . . . the story 9 of a sympathetic clergyman struggling and finally succeeding in founding a University where all deserving young men and women could obtain a college education. TEMPLE UNIVERSITY CONGRATULATIONS ON ACHIEVING YOUR M.D. We are indeed happy and proud that you are about to become fellow members of a most exclusive organization. Our ranks are small but our opportunities are great. Our medical school now has an outstanding teaching staff, curriculum, and student body. And the single most important source of energy for sustaining that fine edge of excellence is that group of M.D.'s who appreciate the distinction of being Temple University School of Medicine alumni. THE MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF TEMPLE UNIVERSITY GENERAL INTERNSHIPS The Washington Hospital Washington, Pennsylvania A.M.A. approved internship (general rotating) organized as a year of teaching experience, both clinical and didactic. Weekly seminars plus regular Departmental and Staff meetings. Approved second-year internship available for interns desiring additional hospital experience in preparation for general practice. COMPLIMENTS OF PAT’S BARBER SHOP BA 5-9196 Over 1 2,000 admissions — 2,000 births per year 1 8 % Charity Load Large Out-Patient Load Attractive working conditions and policies. New facilities now opening providing 160 additional beds. Neuropsychiatric Unit, Intensive Care Unit, and other expanded facilities. Adequate remuneration; furnished, air-conditioned rooms for single interns; furnished apartments for married interns. For more information, write the Chairman of the Intern Program. Personal visits to the hospital are welcomed. Compliments of GORDON DAVIS LINEN SUPPLY CO. Surveying village health needs, an SK F Foreign Fellow examines a child in Kurali, near New Delhi, India. INDIA... TANGANYIKA... IRAN... GUATEMALA... At hospitals and medical outposts a long way from the classroom, medical students learn to cope with unfamiliar diseases; help to provide much-needed medical services to people in underdeveloped areas of the world; and contribute to international understanding and good will. This unusual opportunity to work and study in foreign countries is offered to students through the Foreign Fellowships Program of Smith Kline French Laboratories. Administered by the Association of American Medical Colleges, the program has enabled 123 students to work in 40 different countries during the past four years. Junior and senior medical students are eligible to apply for Fellowships, which provide for an average of 12 weeks' work abroad to be completed before internship. Students who are interested in Fellowships should apply through the deans of their schools. Smith Kline French Laboratories THE CONEMAUGH VALLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL JOHNSTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA A fully accredited short-term general community hospital of 449 beds and 40 bassinets. The hospital is located in an industrial community of over 65,000 and serves as a medical center for a population of some 350,000 persons. Situated 70 miles east of Pittsburgh ond 120 miles west of Harrisburg it is in the heart of beautiful mountain and farming country. EDUCATION PROGRAM A twelve month rotational program beginning July 1 provides diversity of experience. The intern spends two months in pediatrics, two months in obstetrics-gynecology, four months in medicine (including psychiatry) and four months in surgery (including duty in the emergency room); laboratory, anesthesiology and radiology experience is integrated into the total program. CONFERENCES Didactic instruction is provided by regularly scheduled conferences in Clinical Pathology, General Staff, Medicine, Obstotrics-Gynccology, Pediotrics, Radiology and Surgery. In oddition, a Graduate Education Institute is conducted by prominent men in the fiold of medicine from University faculties. CLINICAL MATERIAL Over 16,000 inpatient odmissions yearly. All outpatient services including clinic visits, emergency room, ond outpatient diagnostic services number over 64,000 visits per year. Clinics included are: Arthritis Children's Cardiac General Practice Gynecology Medical Neurological FACILITIES Obstetrical Orthopedic Pediatric Surgical Tuberculosis Tumor The monthly stipond for interns is $300 plus maintenance and uniforms. Living quarters for sinale interns are provided at the hospital as well as bachelor opartmonts. Apartments are provided married house staff members. APPROVED RESIDENCIES Anesthesiology, Pathology and Surgical Residency appointments are made from the Intern Staff at Memorial Hospital and other approved hospitals. INVITATION Medical students are invited to visit the hospital to discuss internship and residency training programs with the Superintendent, the Director of Medical Education. Resident and Intern Staff and Active Staff members. ORTHO PHARMACEUTICAL CORPORATION ■ RARITAN, NEW JERSEY For a complete choice of medically accepted products for planned conception control THE ALTOONA HOSPITAL Altoona, Pennsylvania A progressive hospital located in a progressive community with beautiful surroundings OFFERING Rotating Internships and Residencies WA 7-6166 SAM EINHEBER SONS Other Store 3540 Germantown Ave. Philadelphia 40, Po. BA 8-1200 NATIONAL FLOOR COVERING CO., INC. 6341 hlorth Broad Street Philadelphia 41, Pa. PARK LANE UNIFORM CO. 3547 N. Broad St. Roosevelt Moll, Northeast Cottmon and Roosevelt Blvd. 1 159 Old York Rood, Abington, Pa. For Best Value In INTERN SUITS HENRY SAUR CO., INC. Made to YOUR Measurements Stop in, or Write us for Surgical Belts — Corsets Samples and Prices Trusses — Elastic Hosiery Braces C. D. WILLIAMS COMPANY Doctor's prescriptions filled Designers and Manufacturers 5 1 5 North 8th Street Since 1 876 MArket 7-3400 246 So. 1 1th St. Philo. 7, Pa. Phone Walnut 3-3323 Compliments of MUCHNICK’S SACRED HEART Delicatessen Sandwich Shop 1338 W. Venogo St. HOSPITAL Philadelphia 40, Penna. A 500 Bed General Hospital in Allentown, Penna. OFFERING Ten Rotating Internships Approved Residencies in Surgery, Pathology, Radiology, Obstetrics and Gynecology HOSPITAL CLOTHING CO. UNIFORM CENTER 1107 Walnut St. Philadelphia, Pa. ZAMSKY STUDIOS 1007 Market Street Philadelphia 7, Pa. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS Negatives of Portraits appearing in this Annual are kept on file. Photographs may be ordered. 1 BARBARA SCHWARTZ STUART SAGEL We have come from diverse places, convening for a single purpose. As individuals, we are all mentally different, just as our faces are different. We have not only been spectators of life, but participators as well. We have lived and felt and experienced life, and found out what life means. We have mixed with all kinds of people. New friendships have been established, new ideas have enriched our fertile minds, and great aspirations have fired our intrepid hearts. The talent we have acquired has required long patience. We have witnessed dramatic transformations going on around us - new research buildings, new dormitories, new wards, new slums. Temple University Medical Center has taken many giant steps forward during this period. But another metamorphosis has taken place in the last four years, a more subtle one. We have changed. We have matured, grown, learned, and are now ready to face the challange of the future. The years will pass, and the mind’s eye will dim, and all that will remain is a bittersweet memory of an end and a beginning. Our story is complete, our tale must be told. In nostalgic snapshots the 1965 SKULL has attempted to recapture these moments. A.u'ttv a FRANK LANE GARY JACKSON I. CAVLOftO
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