UNC School of Medicine - Tarhealer Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC)

 - Class of 1988

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UNC School of Medicine - Tarhealer Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1988 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1988 volume:

Ml m THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL THE COLLECTION OF NORTH CAROLINIAN A ENDOWED BY JOHN SPRUNT HILL CLASS OF 1889 C378 UZml2 1988 c . 2 UNO Schooi of Medicine The Tarhealer 1988 Volume Two 408 404 402 2 NORTH CAROLINA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN ' S ORDER FORM All orders should be written m the Metric System and include date time and physician ' s signature Start each set of orders m a new oiock NOTE Another brand of drug identical m form and content may be dispensed unless indicated ORDER AND PHYSICIAN ' S SIGNATURE dv 5oe 3 or sfr-q.e 0- ae C;-c DATE AND T ME ! PATIENTS NAME ROOM NO ] August 18, 1984 Class of 1988 1 . Admit to University of North Carolina School of Medicine Class of 1988 Attending: Stuart Bondurant, MD 2. Dx : Medical Ignorance 3. Condition: suntanned, well rested, apprehensive, naive 4. Vitals: evaluate retention of irrelevant minutiae q2-4 weeks x 2 v ears , 1. then check compulsiveness and resident-relations q 6— 1 2 weeks x 1 ye ar f DATE AND T PATIENTS NAME ROOM NO. then evaluate H.O. potential ql month x 10 months. 5. Activity: brick-beach suntanning, basketball, water skiing, crossword puzzles, scut, complaining about scut. 2 . OATE A PI ACC O P 1 UHH vLMOO Ul r I aOO 1 3 . DATE AND TIME j PATIENT ' S NAME ROOM NO. 6. Nursing: TLC prn 7. Diet: Linda ' s. Troll ' s. Crook ' s Corner; Osier and Grapevine with c autio n 8. Allereies: exams. pimping. lone rounds. Grapevine food 9. Meds: EtOH l-6oz. do q weekend prn ASA and Maalox do 12 hrs. d each EtOH use 4 . Valium 5mg IV q exam DATE AND TIME | PATIENT ' S NAME ROOM NO. 10 Labs: hepatitis and LSV titers, LFT ' s, monospot and hCG when ind icate d 11 Diagnostics: Psych consult (Dr. Bakewell has already seen patient ), brain scan, liver bx 12 . Call attending for: poor performance, failure to thrive, failure to match, board scores 380. If LSV titer 1:400, contact Dr. Scatl iff. i 5 . Hsr 01 -06-086000 Rev. 5 70 INSTRUCTIONS i ' nc , r t ' r r defcve using Cetacn ccrrc e’e: sec - cns z 1 - seco no sneei imprint reverse side ot eacn dne avac ' 0 3!l‘0 0 comoietea Pharmacy ' ’eQU ' SitiO ' i and ?o r w 7 ' to onarmacy 3 DATELINE: 4 YEARS IN HISTORY Indira Ghandi assassinated Kirsten teaches seventh graders about atherosclerosis Jesse Helms defeats Jim Hunt in most expensive senate race in US history “I Linda’s closes AUGUST, 1984 1985 Methyl Isocyanate leak in Bhopol, India kills thousands Paul McCartney Lookalike winner 4 First Year begins Easter Bunny visits FIRST YEAR ENDS SECOND YEAR BEGINS Second Year begins — life in 105 Berry hill l Mikhail Gorbachev succeeds Chernenko I AH Robbins sets aside $61 5m. for Dalcon Shield suits Last summer vacation — ever 5 Transition Course Dean Dome opens 1 Carolina 95 3 Duke 92 Steve Hale ’91 scores 29 (Sorry, Ron) IUD sales halted HIV isolated Chernoble I 1986 SECOND YEAR ENDS Famous athlete is guest lecturer Mahrad Lookalike Contest winner Space Shuttle Challenger explodes on ascent Third Year: alternative careers are considered Statue of Liberty centennial I Voyager flies around the world without refueling THIRD YEAR BEGINS 1987 Journal Club Ivan Boesky arrested for insider trading The Big Move: onto the wards Marsden considers Ophthalmology Jim and Tammy, etc. I Acting Internships FOURTH YEAR BEGINS Innocents Abroad: clerkships in England . . . i. Commencement Electives in California Residency Interviews I . . . and Scotland Stock Market crashes Match Day, Skit Night 9 11 CLASS OF 1988 Michelle Bleynat Robert Berry Betsy Blair and Daniel Roc Bauman Trent Blackman Mary Aitken 12 Zeda Amaya Darren Biehler Elizabeth Adams I Amanda Adler Rodney Allen Cecelia Bishop Steve Bickston Jerry Joines 13 Stephanie Carmichael Len Bowes Blair Butler Tim Hoelscher Maura Campbell He’s the best physician who knows the worthlessness of most medicines. — Franklin ' ih w , tv V 4 « t i v •. mi Brent Burkholder, Julia Cavender, Gretchen 14 Jon and Amy Brisley Shelley Cabbell Craig Charles Debra Coles Lisa Cooper Pete Kristi Dalldorf, Andy Mousmoules Keith Davis Jack Coleman Denise Elaine Crute Ty Bell 16 Paul Margie Eason rtaha Elkordy Hassam like Friday mmm. s ■ ' %■ Jonathan Covey Gaelyn Garrett Lori Davis 17 Jeannie Giacchino Steve Keram Emily Halpern Sylvia John Hendrix Frenesa Hall Kirsten Gross Hunter Cheryl Hoover indy Gregg Andy Gross Everette Nancy Hambric David Barbara Habel; left — Before The Match right — After The Match In what may be called the natural method of teaching the student begins with the patient, continues with the patient, and ends his studies with the patient, using books and lectures as tools, as means to and end. — Sir William Osier 19 Dan Holschneider David Sally Ingram Mark Hoyle Jim, Rosemary, Sarah Jimmy Irion Mark Horn tennis Allison Jacokes Nat Johnson ' avid Mary Anne Johnson on Diana Jones Mike Johnson Gilliam Johnston 21 David Toni Long 22 Stuart Levin Emily Kim Steve King Hal Martin Ca ndace King Jane Laco ara Christopher Lee Asha Kallianpur oby, April, Clayton, Alexander Lindsay Rayman Lee Suzanne Kirby Julie Peek litsu Kuno John Perry Bill McMahon r fr tj i i 23 James Mock Althea McPhail Anne McDonagh Yvette Miller Joshua, Miyako, Kai McDavid (and Friend) It is far better to cure at the begin- ning then at the end. — Persius I l 24 Pam Love Thad McDonald Rick Julie Peek Tom, Melinda, Emily Privette Scott Petty Friends Andy Neish Mahrad Paymani Margie Davis Gail Quackenbush 26 ck Kristina Padgett Kathy Phillips I Jackie Redd Todd Overcash The physician cannot prescribe by letter — he must feel the pulse. — Seneca . I ; larlie Parke . Beverly, Leigh Pellom ( Friends) 27 Jeff Lisa Roller Ron Adele Richmond Norma Safransky Theresa Rupp Thomas 28 Deepak Sawhney Dbby Silver Chuck Sharon Scheil iristine Ritchie A. Glenn Richmond Kyle Rhodes 29 Dan Stackhouse Anne C. Ford, Mary Skrzynski, Molly Froelich, Rose Sladek ' l Mr m I 1 I 1 Daryl Lawson Rose Sladek George Saunders Jeff Stoltz 30 e Karen Seaton m Sockwell, Elizabeth Murphy ( Friend), Spyro Vulgaropulis, hua, Miyako, Kai McDavid Bret Janet Stolp Dan Smith and Karen Hoffman 31 Brian Sumner Roger Tart Gowrie Ventimiglia Doug Smith Bob McCullen Mark Sturdivant Mark Hoyle i Ed, Barbara, Keenan Whitesides Phil Thwing 32 Kassell Sykes John Symanski ' e Thomas neh, Bettie, Nicole, Megan Toma David Tyson Treva Watkins t Beth Watson Spyro Jan Vulgaropulis 33 Jean Zula Mark Marion Wilson Variability is the law of life, and as no two faces are the same, so no two bodies are alike, and no two individuals react alike and behave alike under the abnormal conditions we know as disease. — Osier 34 Carl Winfield m wm In teaching the medical student the primary requisite is to keep him awake. — Chevalier Jackson Hippocrates The doctor must have at his hand a ready wit as dourness is repulsive to both the healthy and the sick. v k k ii, L i 38 -I i sdom is the principle thing; therefore get wisdom, and with all they getting, get understanding. Proverbs 4:7 39 40 41 AT THE SCUT HOUSE 42 43 44 MARCH 23, 1988 L 8, 1988 Lord, I thank you for today. It is an exciting day, for today, somehow, I wil “become” a physician. When this day is done, I’ll be a doctor. A doctor - someone to whom people come for help, for comfort — someone who ma ' be responsible for whether they live or die. Lord, I’m not sure . . . Lord, I thank you for yesterday. Thank you for the call so clear and th( vision so bright to serve my fellow man through medicine. Remind me of thi purpose daily. I’m thankful for the strength and the discipline to persevere through many long nights of study and work. And for the ability and privilege to learn of the miraculous human body, I’m grateful. Thank you for the sup port of my family and friends who, in may ways, have worked harder anc sacrificed more than I have. I have not done it alone. And finally, I’m thankful for those who have gone before — the man pioneers of medicine, our professors, our teachers — who through the years have toiled and laid such a rich foundation on which to build. Such £ heritage strengthens and challenges me to be nothing less than a com passionate and competent physician. Lord, I pray for tomorrow. I pray for the patients I will care for, that man will be cured and that all will be comforted. May you ease their suffering Guard my family in the hours that I’m gone and may they share in the visior of my calling. Give them assurance of my love. Grant our profession insigh into the many problems we face so that every man and woman, boy and gir in all the world may have the care they need. And give us the wisdom tc conquer the diseases for which we presently have no cure — cancer, AIDS heart disease, Parkinson’s, arthritis, multiple sclerosis, and so many more — so that the pain of the world may be diminished. And for our world, I pra for peace. Please lord, give us peace. And lastly Lord, I pray for myself. Make me strong, yet a servant. May I be conscientious, knowledgeable, and up-to-date while, at the same time compassionate, concerned, and genuine. Keep my motives pure. And if ever become too busy to care, take away the urgent things and replace them with the important things. And when I become a patient Lord, give me courage and someone who cares. May I be the kind of doctor I want to have. Lord, I know I don’t become a physician in a day. The job demands a more worthy and prepared servant. Instead, may I take this day to rest and cele- brate in the process of becoming. I have learned much. I have much tc learn. I have loved much. I have much to love. I have grown much. I have much to grow. Yesterday, I studied and served. Tomorrow, I will do the same. Only the responsibility will be greater. Lord, may I be worthy of the responsibility. Lord, may I be worthy to be a physician. Bobby Silver ... If the title “Heroes of Medicine sounds to people in the class like iomething Dr. Thomas might say to you in surgery just before quizzing you n who discovered the thyroid gland or who first successfully treated hyper- )arathyroidism in the Southern Hemisphere during a fiscal crisis, well that’s luite reasonable because it is those kinds of people, the discovers of dis- ease, that we see as the heroes of medicine as we enter medical school. This, however, began to change as we progressed through the second ' ear of our training and we began to meet the great clinicians here in Chapel Hill. Doctors like Jim Bryan, William Blythe, and Hank Lesesne. These were )eople we could and still can emulate; these are real heroic figures. I think he most moving experience during my first two years of school here was one day in a class about how to deal with terminal illness. Dr. Bryan was discussing the case of a woman who had planned to come talk to our group ibout her terminal illness but had died the evening before. When a student isked how he really felt about his patient’s death, this man who had had lundreds of patients in similar circumstances in over 25 years of practicing medicine, was on the verge of tears and had to leave the room. Right then I ealized that clinicians like that, people with that much compassion and em- )athy for their patients, they were the heroes of medicine. But my impression of the heroes of medicine began to change as the third . ' ear of medical training began . . . This was due to some people we all met during the clinical years of medical school, the patients themselves. Pa- ients like ... These kinds of stories are fairly common in the hospital and really amaze me. They’re also fairly humbling as well. I think it’s of utmost importance that ye always keep in mind that whether we work 50 or 1 00 hours a week, that ve will never be the true heroes of medicine, for that role rightfully belongs o the patients themselves, whom it is our privilege to serve. Pete Dallort In considering what to say to you today, I first thought I would like to some important medical axioms to take with you, like: All laboratory data indicated are abnormal, or doctors deserve the lab data they order; and considering the cause of any illness in your patient, first think drugs, other things ... . . . Now these are some of my heroes, my four B’s: Brannon taught hard work and service; my Mom how to laugh; Burkitt urges me to use my common sense and treat the whole person in my care; Brand reminds me tc touch, be vulnerable, and to learn from pain; and Brittingham demonstrated how to know the joy of medicine — to actually love my patients . . . Soon you will be medical doctors — you, too have heroes, to learn from, to model yourselves after. I hope my heroes have stimulated you to review your past and push on in the service of mankind you have been called to and prepared for. I do have one more hero, my wife, who earned a PHT degree when I graduated from med school — that’s a Putting Hubby Through degree. Many of you graduates have spouses that need congratulations, too — they deserve PHTs or PWTs also. In closing, I want to recall for you a practice performed in desert areas long ago. After a long trip on dirty roads as you entered a home, a servant would come out and take a basin of water and a towel and wash your feet. It was a lowly job but necessary. It would be unheard of for the master of the house to do it. As you enter the next stage of your profession, you have a decision to ponder: Am I to be a master for my patients, or a servant — even to the point of “washing their feet”? I believe that if you choose to be a mas- ter, you will find frustration. But if you choose to be a servant, you will come to know the true joy of medicine. I would like now to present this basin and towel to you, the class of 1988. As you take this, may you all remember that in the coming years, you can cure sometimes, relieve often, but comfort always. Dr. Henry Lesesne DISCHARGE SUMMARY The North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill. N.C 27514 CLASS OF 1988 Unit 05-08-88-1 Date of Admission: 8-14-84 Attending: Stuart B ondurant, MD Date of Discharge: 5-8-88 ADMISSION DIAGNOSIS: Medical Ignorance DISCHARGE DIAGNOSIS: Medical Ignorance, Chronic Debt History and Physical : The class was admitted with 162 members from 20 states and 4 foreign countries. Previous occupations included preacher, surveyor, nurse, teacher, carpenter and hippy. There was a large number of direct admits. Prior to admission, the class carried a diagnosis of medical ignorance and multiple personalities. Physical exam was remarkable for a variation in height from 4 ' 10” to 6 ' 4 . Weight ranged from 90 to 210 lbs. On mental status exam, the class was intermittently alert and oriented. The attention span was 50 minutes. The fund of knowledge was abysmal. There were delusions of grandeur. Medical School Course, Basic Sciences : The class was placed on an experimental protocol and started well with no failures in Cell Biology. Large doses of Biochemistry, Anatomy, and Pathology resulted in several adverse reactions. After two intense years of study, the degree of ignorance was only minimally lessened. A Neurologic systems consult was obtained at the end of the second year proved to be worthless. Mental status exam at this time now showed the attentions span to be 10 minutes. Based on the improving fund of knowledge, it was decided to transfer the class to the hospital. Third Year : After hours of useless and unfounded worry about schedules, the class was placed in various locations around the state. Chronic disorientation and anxiey during the first rotations almost proved fatal, but dedication and intestinal fortitude resulted in upgrading the class ' prognosis to excellent. Mental status exam now showed the class to have a 36 hour, non-stop attention span and delusions of grandeur in more than 20 students who wanted to become surgeons. Fourth Year : Career choices were made and the class scattered to the four corners of the earth including Scotalnd, India, Belize, Africa and Fuquay-Varina. Increasing knowledge and responsi- bility encouraged self-confidence. A brief setback was suffered during the residency application and interview process, including acute delusions of grandeur, but large doses of AI ' s soon cured any preoccupation with matters other than sleep and food. Physical exam showed the height as on admisssion, but the class mean weight was increasing. Mental status exam now revealed the class to be A 0 x 3 with appropriate perspective. The final disposition of the class is left to the astrologers and random number generators at the NRMP. Disposition : Transfer to residency appointments when available for further work-up and treatment of medical ignorance. Follow-up : 5th year reunion and every 5 years thereafter. DISCHARGE MEDICATIONS: Caffeine, 1 gulp q 5 min. prn Ranitidine, 50 mg bid Minoxidil, topical to scalp cc: Dr. Stuart Bondurant Various lending institutions Director of Alumni Contributions American Express Gold CArd Dictated by DM, AI for Stuart Bondurant, MD ACTIVITIES Student Officers 1987-1988 Whitehead Council President: Vice President: Secretary: Treasurer: Stan Watson Mary Francis Casey Catherine Gordon Rob Noecker Class Presidents: Class of ’88 Class of 89 Class of ’90 Class of ' 91 Pete Dalldorf Sarah Klemmer, Shannon Carson Karen Popovich , Steve Parker Barry Kitch, Margaret Woodbury Whitehead Representatives Class of ’88 Class of ’89 Class of ’90 Class of ’91 Craig Charles Bob Noel, Trudy Shahady Lori Wecker Todd Tanner Admissions Committee Representatives Class of ' 88 Class of ' 89 Class of ’90 Class of ’91 Jane Laco, Deepak Sawhney Lisa Richardson, Adam Wilson Barry DeGregorio Jobe G. Metts, III, Bobby Vogler American Medical Association Student Section President: Co-Vice Presidents: Dean Porter Rob Noecker, Michelle Cherry American Medical Student Association President: Vice President: Secretary: Fund Raisers: King: Betsy Brown Gene Radford Nancy Stoudt, Brian Brost Craig Wierum, Lorrie Basnight Jim McCarthy Student National Medical Association Co-Presidents: Vanessa Fenner, Albertina Smith Christian Medical Society Co-Presidents: Stuart Cooper, Joy Wilson, Sissel Topple CROP Lunch Coordinators: Bill Bradford, Betsy Brown ACTIVITIES Family Practice Interest Group Coordinators: Andrew Lim, Steve Parker, Edwin Scott FAX Student Research Journal Coordinators: Bob Cook, Sarah Klemmer, Marsden McGuire Geriaction Coordinators: Richard Daw, Bill deAraujo, John Wood International Health Forum Coordinators: Kim Fox, Gary Gartner, Nancy Stoudt Physicians for Social Responsibility Coordinator: Rob Berkenblit Student Health Action Committee Coordinators: Brad Brechtelsbauer, Ginny White, Todd Cowdery Students Teaching Early Prevention Coordinators: John Barkley, Kelly Victory Women in Medicine Coordinators: Teresa Anderson, Catherine Gordon Educational Policy Committee, Student Representatives Merle Miller Eugene Radford Richard Daw Kirsten Gross Laura Huber Nutter Ed Wrenn Committee to Evaluate Fourth Year Curriculum, Student Representatives Lisa Cooper Robert Ehinger Patricia Gerr James Mock Student Faculty Advisory Committee, Student Representatives Karen Beliles Molly Froelich Robert Hart Merle Miller Richard Padgett Jennifer Ringstad Sissel Topple Ben Sutker Laurel Leslie James Mock Art Payne Sam Sockwell Virginia White Raynor Casey Subcommittee to Evaluate Medical Students, Student Representative Chuck Scheil Academic Assistance, Student Representatives Beverly Lessesne Mary Skrzynski PEARLS DAY Janet Fischer, M.D. We tend to lose sight of the importance of individual medical care. BE THE PATIENT’S ADVO- CATE. Consider the patient before recommending re- search protocol. Roy C. Orlando, M.D. Think, “Father — Mother — Sister — Brother”. “Father — Mother — Sister — Brother” is a self- test to remind us that caring for the patient requires caring about the patient. We are after all, but a single human family. Fred Sparling, M.D. Don’t be afraid to take diagnostic and therapeutic risks, but try to protect patients from un- necessary risks. Use your common sense as well as your awesome fund of knowl- edge. Henry Lesesne, M.D DRAGOON DISEASE. Cor stipation can cause mood an personality changes in the e derly (or anybody). So, re member the DRAGOON - the meanest animal in tb world — he has a Dragon’ head on one end, and Dragon’s head on the othe . . . that is what makes him sc o-o mean! Fortunately Dragoon Disease can b treated — enemas, then Ion term fiber and water. Robert Croom, M.D. Pearl for practicing, living, and lov ing in these troubled times You cannot help every patier you will encounter. You cai do only what you can do, am sometimes you cannot d that. Do not dwell on failure c in self recrimination. You mus remember your mistakes am those of others to avoid re peating them in the future Minimize what you leave t chance. You do not have t: run Chi Square on commoi sense. You can never hav too many eagles. 52 aul Biggers, M.D. The most nportant common retro- ochlear problem is acoustic euroma. This tumor is said to xist in 3% of the population hen autopsied specimens re studied carefully. Early etection is important in order ) preserve critical neurologi- al function. “Unilateral loss in earing and tinnitus should ng our diagnostic bell.” ames Bryan, M.D. How to urvive as a clinician? Take are of yourself so you can are for your patients. Have a ack door to the clinic. Have a sanctuary” in time or place ' ithout a beeper. Keep your atients moving. Be able to all for help. Enlist the family, urse and patient in the care, ay particular attention to the ubjective, and give relief, eep medications simple, eneric and remember, your ovenant is with the patient, ight, fight, fight. Robert Berger, M.D. The next time you see an athlete, musician, or ballerina do something requiring super- human contortions of their musculoskeletal system, re- member that they are able to do these things because they most likely have collagen vascular disease: Ehlers- Danlos or Marfan’s Syn- dromes. Jeffry J. Andresen, M.D. Reading to one another can unite us in unfettered reverie. The intimacy of shared im- aginative freedom transforms in valuable ways our senses of worth, of safety, and of being understood. Don’t im- poverish your life by failing to have someone you hold dear read to you. Sweet dreams! 53 William Blythe, M.D. Something that we are not aware of or that we tend to forget is that patients answer the questions that they think that we ask them and not the ones that we think that we ask them. Shelley Earp, M.D. What non-disease in its mildest forms effect 27% of our hos- pitalized patients? 11% of our admissions have the full blown syndrome? And in some large studies of ICU pa- tients 70% of those with the most severe form of this pre- valent nonentity — die. It’s name after the place we see it the most, the surgical inten- sive care unit, The Sic U Thyroid syndrome. The pa- tient is euthyroid clinically but this TFT’s look distinctly hypo- thyroid. Use Earp Dis- criminate Analysis. THINK TSH ... It will be normal in Sic U Thyroid Syndrome. Fred Dalldorf, M.D. An eco- nomical pearl. In these days of cost containment we should all be looking for economies in diagnostic medicine. We diag- nose various liver ailments in my clinic on the 11th floor without the need of elaborate, expensive laboratory tests recommended to you by many hepatologists such as Dr. Lesesne. The Dalldorf Liver Tests: normal liver — resilient texture; hepatitis — soft and mushy texture; fatty liver — yellow, greasy, and stiff; cir- rhosis — no amount of pres- sure will fracture it. Mark Williams, M.D. People become increasingly unique and differentiated with the passage of time. Physicians must be aware of this and pro- vide more individualized care to older people . . . Re- member the three rope trick. Steven Burnham, M.D Omission of a rectal exam fc the daughter of a doctc caused prolongation of th hospital course when she ha salmonella. Cutting corner for “special” people results i inferior care. Newton D. Fischer, M.D. am supposed to share wit you a bit of information whic will endure. What about vignette on endurance itself The endurance of a commf ment to serve society throug medicine. I suggest that if doctor in the ardor of yout takes on the yoke of leadin others from suffering, h should plan to endure Ion enough to see the missio well on its way. Enduranc could also mean practicin ' medicine long enough to fee natural about it ... in this stat we can identify the probler and work out a logical solutio — not indulge in juggling c conflicting bits of data or sue cumb to impersonal triage. 54 FEBRUARY 12, 1988 iarold C. Pillsbury, M.D. BREAT LIES IN MEDICINE. Statement: “JUST’’ a) a little shot b) a little while c) a little pain. ' ranslation: This will be a lot Yorse than I’m letting on. Statement: Our experience ith your problem has been . . . ' ranslation: I’m not sure you ill do very well with this: a) disease b) procedure c) treatment Itatement: We use a multi- lisciplinary approach, ' ranslation: None of us has a olution to your problem so e ll all share the blame for ne result. itatement: I’ll call you with ne results. ranslation: Don’t call me, I’ll all you. itatement: Consistent with, ut not diagnostic of . . . ranslation: I don’t know ' hat’s going on, just pay the ill. itatement: When I was a . . . a) medical student b) resident c) fellow ranslation: YOU’RE BOUT TO GET SCREWED! James Scatliff, M.D. T-, AND t 2 mri weighted images. In general, when a spin echo technique is used and gray scale assigned to perceived proton energies, T-i weighted images bring out anatomy; T 2 pathology. In T-i weighted im- ages, H 2 0 (i.e. CSF) is black and so is fat and bone marrow in T 2 weighted images, be- cause of increased water con- tent, infarcts, tumors, in- flammation and stuffy turbin- ates are white. Under invest- igation is the possibility that MRI radio waves stimulate en- largement of the anterior lobe of the pituitary. Watson A. Bowes, Jr., M.D. The most important days of our lives — days 1 7 to 56 after conception — are the days during which every major organ system is developed and is vulnerable to damage. During this time the symptoms of pregnancy are non- specific, and the physical find- ings are obscure. “He’s like a kid again — Mrs. Irene Scatliff 55 SKIT So You Wanna Go To Med School? 56 M. C NIGHT MS I 57 58 MS Si Program r ' ou’d Better Watch Out, MS Ms Are Stalking the Wards” Dr. Larry Teaches Danyl and Daryll Physical Diagnosis The Amazing Goz sponsored by Freddy’s Organs The News-Medical School Update Emily Patella on Genital Heart Disease I Just Hate It When That Happens “The Boards Walk” THE BOARDS WALK THE BOARD WALKERS Dean Sorrow said the choice was up to me This big test will decide residency I better do the boards walk, oh the agony In a desk in the library is where I ' ll be THE FLEXERS Dean McCartney said the choice was up to me I almost failed the Med CAT, Those boards really scare me Will I match my first choice, oh they ' ll love me So it looks like I got a month totally free CHORUS Doin’ the boards walk Orthopedics Review histology Top residency Doin’ the boards walk I’m out in the sun I ' m having lots of fun I’m off to Boca Raton Pass the Coppertone FLEX IT! My Oklahoma Notes don ' t even have a key, I ' m plugging away, I’ll match ophthalmology I’m doing the boards walk, a study spree But my future is safe, I guess we ' ll see. In the month of May maybe I ' ll review Or maybe catch up on the soaps and Mr. Donahue I ' m going to FLEX it, worries are few Oh my test will come one day, in a year or two. 59 ONE FLEW INTO THE CUCKOO’S NEST Hey, cut that out . . . What’s up, baby? This boy needs help! Just one more stick . . . MS III Oh, Vanna! 60 STAR TREK X: HE VOYAGE OF THE UNO SPECIALIZE 61 62 63 Kaiser-Permanente Excellence in Teaching. “Arrested” at a cancer fund raiser. Not only is there an art in knowing a thing, but also a certain art in teaching it. — Cicero-Delegibus 64 $kM)d FACULTY AWARDS Battle Distinguished Excellence in Teaching 1986-87 Frederic B. Askin, M.D. Professor of Pathology Best Clinical Clerkship 1986-87 Department of Medicine David A. Ontjes, M.D. Eunice Bernhard Distinguished Professor of Medicine and Chair CCB Excellence in Teaching 1986-87 James A. Bryan II, M.D. Professor of Medicine and Social and Administrative Medicine Distinguished Faculty Award 1987-88 Floyd W. Denny, Jr., M.D. Professor of Pediatrics Professor of Medicine Distinguished Service Awards 1987-88 John W. Foust, M.D. John K. Spitznagel, M.D. Mr. 1. B. Julian Earl Carwile LeRoy, M.D. Robert Zeppa, M.D. Henry C. Fordham Award 1987-88 Peter Freebeck, M.D., Resident in Medicine -reshman Basic Science Teaching Award 1986-87 Gerry S. Oxford, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physiology ■ -reshmgn Basic Science Course Award 1986-87 Department of Physiology Edward R. Perl, M.D., Chair Professor of Physiology Sarah Graham Kenan Professor vaiser-Permanente Excellence in Teaching 1986-87 H. Shelton Earp III, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine Outstanding Intern 1986-87 Peter C. Freebeck, M.D., Resident in Medicine Jonathan S. Serody, M.D., Resident in Medicine ’rofessor Award 1987-88 Henry R. Lesesne, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine iophomore Basic Science Teaching Award 1986-87 Frederic B. Askin, M.D. Professor of Pathology ophomore Basic Science Course Award 1986-87 Endocrine System H. Shelton Earp 111, M.D. Associate Professor of Medicine and Pharmacology Battle Distinguished Excellence in Teaching MSII Basic Science Distinguished Faculty fhitehead Lecturer 1986-87 William N. Herbert, M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics Gynecology No bubble is so irridescent, or floats longer than that blown by the successful teacher. — Osier MSII Basic Sciences 85-86 (Reading the Journal of Amyloidosis.) Intern and Fordham Awards 66 In Memory 67 Alverson, L K Atstupenas, E A Austin, P E Ayscue. L H Barnhardt, V J Centers. J 8. Churchill. C Carver. D D Clayborn. V.C Cogburn. W.E. Collender. D J Conrad. E.J Goodwin II, J S Frohbose, F A Fullwood. P A Forster. C J Gandhi, B R Gifford. A L Gamble. F I Helton. J L Hildebrand. S W Hebert. M E Hobgood, C D Holfman. J D Holland. G T Most. R E Munday, T L Murphy. G F Nguyen, DX Noel Jr R F Novek. S.J Parker, M L. Payne. L.Z Payne. T A Pet ers. R A;! r r JBHKBHnr. ' n mo Jf ; w K? jrjSk • j ill. tv v - Stroup. T S Sykes. L.C. Tardif. C P Terry, R C Thompson. R O Trask. TW van Houten. J P Walden T P Walsh. J J Westfall, L. rn Bullock. C Burns. D A Caceres. V M jopsis. P.N. Covington. D.S Davenport. W C. David G l Elgin. RG Ellen. R.L English 8 M Filhpo, D C McLeod. M M Michael. J 8 K Moore D H Randolph. G O Richardson. L.C. Richardson, M J Rmgstad. J.l RoOmson. K S The Third Year Medicine Pediatrics Psychiatry Obstetrics Gynecology Surgery 69 MS III They Let These People Touch Patients? C’mere, sweetheart 70 71 Anderson. L R Anderson, Balister N S Amaya M I Cavallo, M J Chapman. S J bauer Deese. M Cummings C Davison. R J Freund. D M Garside Jr. W B Gartner, G S Hudgens. S S Class o ! Hubbert L.K Landes. D A Kverneland Jr. K Lalor. A W Topple. S.K Townsend III. M f. Traynor, A M Treece, P C Vernon, M S Wagner. D i Wood, T A 1 Yandie D F 72 Pardue A. A White. K.E. White. V K Wierum. C. Williams. J.T. Wilson. J.L Shah. A J. Wilson. P.A Wood. J H Smith. S.V Smith, J S. 73 SRO in 105 Berryhill “What? No break?! I want my 10 minute break!” A Three Part Essay On Language I. Introduction Berryhill Hall at 7:59 had the usual pre-class white noise, while caffeine slow clawed its way into 160 sleep deprived mind. At 8 o ' clock sharp, the pathologi entered the lecture hall, strode boldly up to the podium, adjusted his glasses ar stared at us with such contempt it made our barely circulating blood pause ar turn a degree colder. “Let us begin” he said. “You’re an unseemly looking grou but let ' s see if we can learn something anyway . . .” he looked distastefully fro above his neat bow tie and white lab coat, down his long thin nose through h round John Lennon glasses, at my beard, long hair and tie-dyed shirt. “The top today is caaaancer he said, pausing on the word cancer to show proper respe for so holy a topic. “A fourth of you will die of it, and its nice to know how you’i ' going to go, so pay attention.” He seemed to enjoy that last thought just a littli May I have the first slide please” he said and a picture of jumbled cells lif people packed into a VW bug flashed onto the screen. As if pointing out the ve: culmination of a life’s work, he made a sublime sweep of his arm at the tf brightly colored image and announced “This lesion, ladies and gentlemen, incompatible with the condition known as life. Notice the epithelium — breai taking, isn’t it? What do you call this type of cancer? This example is compatib with a diagnosis of moderately well differentiated adenocarcinoma of the pro: tate.” A few guys shifted nervously from side to side in their chairs. Once glance genitalward for a moment. “Notice the mitotic figure, the cytoplasmic bridge and the anaplastic, dysplastic and morphologic changes, all typical of this di: ease. The basement membrane is here . . He clicked the slide changer ar continued on his journey down the glands of the prostate to show the inner se rets of the cellular basis of death itself. “This is the artwork of God!”, he began tj warm up, “and if you’ve got to die, you might as well have a beautiful lesion . . Ah, a religious man, I thought. Eventually lecture ended and it was time for me 1 go to work at the Health Sciences Library. My job involved helping people in th computer lab. [ II. The Meaning of Words “Ready to get out of here Traveller?” I asked my computer hacking friend as relieved him at the desk. “It’s all yours and I don’t envy you a bit, pal ” h chuckled. Some guy with a turban on tried to grab him, but Traveller just pointe 74 “Oink and Boink in the front row’’ — N. Fischer finger right between my eyes, at some point far back in my brain, and said 3 ete there can help you with all your questions.” I saw him smile gleefully to mself on the way out. I knew it was going to be a tough day for me; it already oked like the United Nations, and there probably was not going to be anyone I uld even speak to without a Berlitz dictionary. I sat down and started to catch ) on a little reading, expecting to hear any minute a “why this thing NO ' ORK?!” Things were going pretty well when I saw a user come in. The user jnt over to initial the sign-in sheet and her long blond hair framed her well ?veloped upper anatomy. She looked up smiling with large full lips and asked, )o you think you could help me with some applications today? “That depends i your software preference” I answered, thinking that I would probably be able help her with whatever software she had, but not wanting to seem overly ithusiastic. “I’m using Turbolaser today on the printer, and last time I was here, was spontaneously changing fonts on me. Do you know anything about that?” ' eah, Turbolaser is a little bit outdated as far as they go, but I might be able to me up with a few commands that might help. For example, you might try re- itializing the printer before you enter the print sequence , I feinted with rapid ind gestures, while I really had no idea what she was talking about. Maybe I uld suggest a different word processor.” “No, it’s a little slow for some of my dustrial uses, but I like the way it formats and it’s good with little things like paginating, and that means a lot! she parried with another of those big smiles, ' eah, it’s user friendly, too. Let’s take a look . . .’ Conclusion n the way home, I passed some of kids playing in a parking lot. “Yay, yi, Yay !!” le screamed like a banshee while his friend answered “Yi, yi, yi, yll”. Another y danced, jumping up and down and spinning around in insane circles “Say ieese a little girl said, as she pointed the make believe lens of a plastic camera me. “Queso I asserted, flashing her my best ear-to-ear grin while she took my cture. The little boy looked up and smiled just enough to show me the space Jtween his teeth while he rocked side to side, the went back to his fantastic linning. I walked home thinking we had understood each other. — John Krege CLASS 75 76 Halloween brought Droogs, Smurfs, a Viking, several babies, a cow, the stock market crash, a very tall radio, a clothesline, a bag lady and an attending cave couple but a box of vodka-flavored electric Jello lit the night to take the Best Costume prize. 77 78 Student National Medical Association members Leslie Cohen and John Atkins talk with the Zollicoffer lecturer. ACTIVITIES Outside class, second year students participated in activities chosen from the alphabet soup notices appearing each morning on the board including AMSA, SHAC, SNMA, CROP, CMS, WIM, FPIG and IHF. Student Research Day winners Herb Whinna and Steve Somkuti 79 “Remember, the bell is a concept, the whistle is a fact!” “The Mechanisms Exam is only 100 pages, you ' ll have plenty of time” FACULTY Totally Tubular Goz 80 The Year’s Finest Moments Best Question from a Professor: “And what do you worry about, a rogue elepha in your bedroom?” — Dr. N. Fischer Best Question from a Student: “What’s the difference between a baby stimulating the breast and the husband doing it?” — C. Bright (answer: “intensity, frequency and perserverance” — Dr. S. Toverud) Most Frequent Quote: “You can observe a lot by just looking — Yogi Berra Most Common Analogy: “The horse is out of the barn” (maybe he went Down the Garden Path from first year) Most Entertaining Lecture: “Intestinal Gas” by Dr. D. Powell Best Note Service: Edwin Scott for Dr. Powell’s lecture Wernicke-Bassford Award for Most Rapid Speech Dr. T. Taft Best Use of Adjectives: Dr. Reddick for “raisinoid” and “nippilar” Say What? Award: “Some of these children hurt animals — like pullir the wings off dachsunds” — Dr. W. Bakewell Honors Student Performance: Anna Bettendorf for having her baby on the dc of the Repro final tell meets Hall to demonstrate electromyography — “This long eedle won’t hurt a bit” HIGHLIGHTS 81 82 83 84 85 86 Caviness. P A. Farmer. M F J poian. R.l Beddingfield 111. F.C Lucas. M.J. Marousis. C.G 87 M ' 7 88 89 Those Loveable Labs . . . 90 On Completion of First Year Yesterday I made time to recall all those times wasted, trying to think of something to do. Wistfully gazing at novels half-opened, letters half-written, note service due. Summer came with a vengence of grammar-school games, foreign faces and names — albeit tan, as a rule. And mere days whipped that arrogant boast into fear — ‘‘Yes, I am in First Year of Medical School!” Colored pens by the hundreds, textbooks by the score, with financial aid spent, we requested some more. Lectures lapsed into days of far too much to know. Classmates caught up on shut-eye or just didn’t show. Adaptation emerged to the ‘‘study-all” plan when finally a way to keep up became clear. And while quickly it came, just a quickly it passed as prospects of midterms and finals drew near. Fun became but a memory often recalled of the places and friends we once enjoyed. “Tests must come all at once” professors insisted with consecutive weeks and weekends destroyed. And just as the memory of test-taking fades, “We’ll remind you again with the posting of grades”. P = MD was the second-year ' s cry. So we made no more effort than to just get by. But time passes quickly . . . unless you’re in class — or in lab — or shouldering a backpack of lead. Aspirations of Flonors dwindled from Micro to perhaps Immunology or Intro to Med. Now today, I make time to forget all that as I follow the sun on this island and baste, making perfectly sure I make the best use of the summer that is, I’m told, my last one to waste. Amy DeStefano 91 Gunners unite! 92 nu I’m glad I’m giving them more than one quiz! Another question? 93 94 CO l- 2 (O 95 96 97 98 99 CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES FROM THE FACULTY OF LABORATORY MEDICINE FRIENDS of the 1988 TARHEALER Dr. Thomas F. Boat Watson A. Bowes, MD Robert C. Cefalo, MD Wallace A. Clyde, Jr., MD William Easterling, MD John B. Graham, MD Herbert A. Harned, MD Dr. and Mrs. John Herion Dr. David Klapper Henry and Jean Lesesne Ed Norfleet, MD Dr. W.S. Pollitzer Program on Aging H.R. Roberts, MD James H. Scatliff, MD Colin G. Thomas, MD James R. Turner Dr. Robert Utiger Bradford B. Walters, MD 100 Elizabeth Craver Adams Obstetrics-Gynecology Jackson Memorial Hospital Miami, Florida Amanda Ingham Adler Primary Care Medicine Univ. of Washington Affiliated Hospital Seattle, Washington Mary Elizabeth Aiken Pediatrics Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland Rodney Holt Allen Obstetrics-Gynecology Walter Reed Hospital Washington, D C. Zeda Glass Amaya Pediatrics Loma Linda Univ. Medical Center Loma Linda, California Roc Winston Bauman General Surgery Univ. of Kentucky Chandler Med. Center Lexington, Kentucky Joseph Taylor Bell, II Family Practice Casper Family Practice Center Casper, Wyoming Stephen Joseph Bickston Internal Medicine Barnes Hospital St. Louis, Missouri Darren Foster Biehler Anesthesiology PGYI Spartanburg Regional Med. Center Spartanburg, South Carolina PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Cecelia Kay Bishop Emergency Medicine Truman Medical Center Kansas City, Missouri Cameron Trent Blackman Urology St. Louis University Hospital St. Louis, Missouri Elizabeth Ivey Blair Pediatrics North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Michelle Louise Bleynat Otolaryngology PGYI Univ. of Missouri Hospital Columbia, Missouri PGYII Univ. of Missouri Hospital Columbia, Missouri Watson Allen Bowes, III Transitional Riverside Hospital Newport News, Virginia Jon Philip Brisley Ophthalmology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Brenton Thomas Burkholder Family Practice Mountain Area Health Education Center Asheville, North Carolina James Blair Butler Diagnostic Radiology Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee Shelley Marie Cabbell Internal Medicine Sinai Hospital of Baltimore Baltimore, Maryland Jeffrey Paul Campbell Otolaryngology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Maura Lynne Campbell Obstetrics-Gynecology Eastern Virginia Graduate School of Medicine Norfolk, Virginia Stephanie Calloway-Carmichael Residency deferred James Craig Charles Internal Medicine Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Elaine Myers Coats Pediatrics Pitt County Memorial Hospital Greenville, North Carolina Susan Ray Cohen Pediatrics North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Jack Martin Cole Internal Medicine Indiana Univ. Medical Center Indianapolis, Indiana Debra Lynn Coles Internal Medicine Charlotte Memorial Hospital Charlotte, North Carolian Lisa Angeline Cooper Internal Medicine Univ. of Maryland Hospital Baltimore, Maryland Jonathan Baldridge Covey Psychiatry Univ. of Colorado School of Medicine Denver, Colorado SENIOR INDEX f DILATE THE PUPIL LOOK AT THE FUNDUS 1988 TARHEALER John B. Graham, MD George Johnson, Jr., MD William W. McLeandon, MD D.W. Powell, MD Colin G. Thomas, MD V 102 Denise Elaine Crute Residency deferred Anne Regina Cunanan Residency deferred Peter Gilbert Dalldorf Orthopedic Surgery PGYI Indiana Univ. Medical Center Indianapolis, Indiana PGYII Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York Keith Alan Davis Ophthalmology PGYI Lloyd Noland Hospital Fairfield, Alabama PGYII Greater Baltimore Medical Center Baltimore, Maryland Lori Lynne Davis Psychiatry Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Majorie Faith Davis Diagnostic Radiology PGYI Univ. Health Center of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PGYII Univ. Health Center of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Margie Beazley Eason Family Medicine North Carolina Baptist Hospital Winston-Salem, North Carolina Paul Richard Eason Internal Medicine North Carolina Baptist Hospital Winston-Salem, North Carolina Maha Abul Elkordy Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Jack Michael Friday Diagnostic Radiology PGYI Univ. of Florida Medical Center Gainesville, Florida PGYII Tulane University School of Medicine New Orleans, Louisana Mary Elizabeth Froelich Pediatrics North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina C. Gaelyn Garrett Residency deferred Jeanme Lorraine Giacchino Neurology PGYI Mercy Hospital and Medical Center San Diego, California PGYII Univ. of California Medical Center San Diego, California Cynthia Marie Gregg Otolaryngology PGYI Roanoke Memorial Hospitals Roanoke, Virginia PGYII Univ. of Michigan Hospitals . Ann Arbor, Michigan Andrew Harry Gross Preliminary Medicine Bershire Medical Center Pittsfield, Massachusetts Kirsten Marie Goss Emergency Medicine Charlotte Memorial Hospital Charlotte, North Carolina David Christopher Habel Medicine — Pediatrics Duke Univ. Medical Center Durham, North Carolina Frenesa Kaye Hall Residency deferred James Richard Hallman General Surgery Richland Memorial Hospital Columbia, South Carolina Emily Alyssa Halpern Psychiatry PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute Los Angeles, California Everette Bernard Hambric Psychiatry North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina John David Hendrix, Jr. Residency deferred Sylvia Sutton Hendrix Radiation Oncology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII Univ. of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia David William Herion Internal Medicine Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama David Curtis Hillsgrove Orthopedic Surgery Univ. of California Medical Center Los Angeles, California Daniel Phillipp Holschneider Residency deffered Mark Horn Diagnostic Radiology Medical College of Virginia Richmond, Virginia SENIOR INDEX Hunter Ashley Hoover Otolaryngology PGYI Eastern Virginia Graduate School of Medicine Norfolk, Virginia PGYII Medical University of South Carolina Charleston, South Carolina Michael Donald Johnson Otolaryngology PGYI St. Francis Hospital Hartford, Connecticut PGYII Univ. of Connecticut Health Science Center Hartford, Connecticuf Stephen Curtis King Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Suzanne Lee Kirby Residency deferred Robert Mark Hoyle General Surgery Univ. of Texas Southwestern Medical School Dallas, Texas James Gilliam Johnston, II Family Practice Maine Dartmouth Family Practice Center Augusta, Maine Hannah Rachel Krigman Anatomic Pathology Barnes Hospital St. Louis, Missouri David Lawrence Ingram Anesthesiology PGYI Franklin Square Hospital Baltimore, Maryland PGYII George Washington Univ. Hospital Washington, D C. Sally Sockwell Ingram Radiation Oncology PGYI Franklin Square Hospital Baltimore, Maryland PGYII George Washington Univ. Hospital Washington, D.C. James Carney Irion Family Practice North Carolina Baptist Hospital Winston-Salem, North Carolina Allison Lewis Jacokes Obstetrics-Gynecology Loma Linda Univ. Medical Center Loma Linda, California Nathaniel Johnson, III Obstetrics-Gynecology Emory Univ. School of Medicine Atlanta, Georgia Carlton David Johnson Primary Care Medicine Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York Jerry Dale Joines Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Jonathan Laird Jones Emergency Medicine Pitt County Memorial Hospital Greenville, North Carolina Asha Rosalind Kallianpur Internal Medicine Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee Steven Keram Psychiatry PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII VCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute Los Angeles. California Emily Eun-me Kim Psychiatry PGYI Cambridge Hospital Cambridge, Massachusetts PGYII UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute Los Angeles, California Candace Williamson King Preliminary Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Ritsu Kuno Primary Care Medicine Medical College of Virginia Richmond, Virginia Jane Marsh Laco Pediatrics Univ. of Minnesota Hospitals Minneapolis, Minnesota Michael Edward Lee Primary Care Medicine Univ. of California Medical Center Los Angeles, California Rayman Wei-min Lee Preliminary Surgery Baylor College of Medicine Houston, Texas Sara Heath Lee Obstetrics-Gynecology Medical Univ. of South Carolina Charleston, South Carolina Beverly Joyce Lessane Internal Medicine Medical College of Georgia Augusta, Georgia Stuart Jeffrey Levin Internal Medicine Univ. of Alabama Birmingham, Alabama SENIOR INDEX r BEST WISHES ! to the TARHEALER from the UNC MEDICAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION UNC School of Medicine circa 1940 The Medical Alumni Association . . .“helping the UNC School of Medicine achieve its greatest potential and develop a strong Medical Alumni Association” since 1936. 105 With Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1 988 from the Division of Orthopedics J ( Special Wishes for a Special Graduating Class — Frederic and Joanna Dalldorf v A 106 With each new patient . . . FTD-TPUP First, Think Drugs Then, Pick Up the Phone (i.e., get all info from old chart, personal physician, etc.) — HRL Diana Bell demonstrates OSCE technique for mom Elizabeth Bell. 107 ■ BEST WISHES FROM THE MEDICAL FOUNDATION OF NORTH CAROLINA, INC. ’ SPECIAL PATRONS The 1988 TARHEALER would like to thank its special patrons. 108 Thomas Fowler Lindsay Psychiatry Pitt County Memorial Hospital Greenville, North Carolina Toni Moody Long Pediatrics Thomas Jefferson Univ. Hospital Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pamela Denise Love Obstetrics-Gynecology Vanderbilt Univ. Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee Harold Luther Martin, Jr. Internal Medicine Univ. of Washington Affiliated Hospital Seattle, Washington David Alan May Diagnostic Radiology PGYI Malden Hospital Malden, Massachusetts PGYII Medical Center Hospital of Vermont Burlington, Vermont Bobby Kenneth McCullen, Jr. Ophthalmology PGYI Baptist Medical Center Birmingham, Alabama PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina | Joshua Dent McDavid Psychiatry Univ. Health Center of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Anne Mary McDonagh Residency deferred Thaddeus Leverne McDonald, III Obstetrics-Gynecology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Marsden Hamilton McGuire Psychiatry The Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Maryland William Stephen McMahon, Jr. Pediatrics Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Althea Hill McPhail Pathology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Yvette Marie Miller Residency deferred James Nelson Mock Urology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Catherine Laura Munson Psychiatry Einstein Montefiore Affilated Hospital Bronx, New York Elizabeth Ann Murphy Psychiatry PGYI Framingham Union Hospital Framingham, Massachusetts PGYII Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Philip Joseph Nahser, Jr. Internal Medicine Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Andrew Scott Neish Pathology Brigham Women ' s Hospital Boston, Massachusetts William Todd Overcash General Surgery Jacksonville Health Education Program Jacksonville, Florida Richard Cameron Padgett Internal Medicine Univ. of Iowa Hospitals Clinics Iowa City, Iowa Charles Edward Parke Diagnostic Radiology Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Mahrad Paymam Diagnostic Radiology PGYI Univ. Health Center of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania PGYII Univ Health Center of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Julie Thomas Peek Pediatrics Univ. of Alabama Hopsital Birmingham, Alabama Richard Maurice Peek, Jr. Internal Medicine Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama Gary Lee Pellom Anesthesiology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII Duke Univ. Medical Center Durham, North Carolina John Ethwell Ramsey Perry, III Primary Care Medicine Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York Scott Miller Petty Diagnostic Radiology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina SENIOR INDEX Katheryn Elizabeth Phillips Anesthesiology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Melinda Hill Privette Residency deferred Gail Elizabeth Quackenbush Diagnostic Radiology PGYI Framingham Union Hospital Framingham, Massachusetts PGYII The New York Hospital New York, New York Jacquelyn Lorraine Redd Preliminary Medicine Univ. of Maryland Hospital Bailtimore, Maryland Herman Kyle Rhodes Obstetrics-Gynecology New Hanover Memorial Hospital Wilmington, North Carolina Glenn Hickman Richmond, Jr. Psychiatry Univ. of California (Irvine) Medical Center Orange, California Ronald David Richmond Family Practice Akron General Medical Center Akron, Ohio Christine Seel Ritchie Primary Care Medicine Univ. of Alabama Hospital Birmingham, Alabama David Wintner Roberson Residency deferred Jeffery Earl Roller Emergency Medicine Pitt County Memorial Hospital Greenville, North Carolina Theresa Anne Rupp Family Practice Univ. of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia Norma Frances Safransky Psychiatry North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina George Herbert Sumner Sanders Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Deepak Sawhney General Surgery Univ. of Texas Medical School Houston, Texas Charles David Scheil Diagnostic Radiology Univ. of Florida Medical Center Gainesville, Florida Karen Gipson Seaton Diagnostic Radiology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina John Robert Silver Otolaryngology Medical College of Georgia Augusta, Georgia Mary Claire Skrzynski Orthopedic Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin Madison, Wisconsin Rosemarie Sladek Pediatrics Children ' s Hopsital — Oakland Oakland, California Daniel Ray Smith Internal Medicine Medical College of Virginia Richmond, Virginia Douglas Graham Smith Psychiatry Univ. of Florida Medical Center Gainesville, Florida Samuel Thomas Sockwell Internal Medicine New England Medical Center Hospital Boston, Massachusetts Daniel Jay Stackhouse Diagnostic Radiology Univ. of Maryland Hospital Baltimore, Maryland Emmett Fitzgerald Steward Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Bryant Walter Stolp Anesthesiology PGYI Duke Univ. Medical Center Durham, North Carolina GYII Duke Univ. Medical Center Durham, North Carolina Jeffrey Whitcomb Stolz Pediatrics Children’s Hospital of Boston Boston, Massachusetts Mark Cooper Sturdivant Preliminary Surgery Univ. of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia SENIOR INDEX Brian Montgomery Sumner Internal Medicine Univ. of Minnesota Hospitals Minneapolis, Minnesota Kassell Eugene Sykes, Jr. Preliminary Surgery North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina John David Symanski Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Roger Pope Tart Diagnostic Radiology Univ. of Florida Medical Center Gainesville, Florida David Timothy Thomas Internal Medicine Univ. of Florida Medical Center Gainesville, Florida Phillip Tolleson Thwing Family Practice David Grant U.S. Air Force Medical Center Fairfield, California Sameh Kamal Toma Obstetrics-Gynecology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Gowrie Ananaraja Ventimiglia Family Practice Duke Univ. Medical Center Durham, North Carolina Spyro Peter Vulgaropulos Obstetrics-Gynecology North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Treva Baufort Watkins Internal Medicine North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Stanley Rudolph Watson Family Practice North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Edward William Whitesides Urology PGYI North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina PGYII North Carolina Memorial Hospital Chapel Hill, North Carolina Elliott Fennell Williams Internal Medicine Univ. of Virginia Hospital Charlottesville, Virginia John Douglas Wilson Diagnostic Radiology Univ. of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Little Rock, Arkansas Mark Edward Wilson Internal Medicine Emory Univ. School of Medicine Atlanta, Georgia Albert Carl Winfield, II Family Practice Naval Hospital Charleston, South Carolina Jean Presnal Zula Residency deferred SENIOR INDEX The Tarhealer Staff Co-Editors Hannah Krigman and David May MS IV Treva Watkins MS III Lisa Koehler MS II Cathy Cooper Trey Entwistle, Gary Loden, Brad Brechtelsbauer MS 1 Karla Hauersperger Amy DeStefano, Barry Inabanet, Sue Weeks, Barry Kitsch PHOTOGRAPHERS: MS IV David May, Treva Watkins, Hunter Hoover, Rose Sladek, Kirsten Gross, Rayman Lee, Pete Dalldorf, Dr. Barry Corke and many members of the fourth year class. MS 1,11,111 Lisa Koehler, Cathy Cooper, Gary Loden, Brad Brechtelsbauer, Dominic Jaeger, Craig Wierum, Mark Vernon, Gary Gartner, Elizabeth Bell, Karla Hauersperger, Barry Inabanet, Sue Weeks, Barry Kitsch, Ed Wrenn Administrative Advisor: Dean James Turner Faculty Advisor: Dr. Thomas Bouldin Special thanks to Joni Porter in the NCMH Public Affairs Office and the Medical Alumni Association for their assistance and the donation of photographs by Dan Crawford. Our deepest appreciation goes to Betty Lloyd and the photographers and staff in Medical Illustrations for their support, advice and time. The Tarhealer 88 thanks our Patrons, Friends and other supporters. The front and back cover pictures show aerial views of the medical center complex soon after NCMH opened in the 1950’s and recently after the Anderson Pavillion was completed 112 UNIVERSITY OF N.C. AT CHAPEL HILL 000 8458955 This book is due on the last date stamped below unless recalled sooner. It may be renewed only once and must be brought to the North Carolina Collection for renewal. ) V ” : flpB 1 1 1 Its 1 r ■ ygjag


Suggestions in the UNC School of Medicine - Tarhealer Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) collection:

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1987

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1988, pg 83

UNC School of Medicine - Tarhealer Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 35

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