University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)

 - Class of 1941

Page 1 of 132

 

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1941 volume:

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' Egger-mg' 5 wsvviif Q. sI PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF THE ' o MEDICAL SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA ,PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA Y, A WINTER ON THE QUAD gif. is A W? A A JAMES E. ECKENHOFF Editor-in-Chief HENRY M. SUCKLE DAVID W. COMPTON ELWOOD L. FOLTZ Associate Editor Photography Editor Art Work MANRICO A. TRONCELLITI Business Manager FCLLGWING . .. . . . the modern trend in yearbooks and believing in the Chinese proverb, One picture is worth ten thousand words, we have endeavored to recapture our days in medical school with a maximum of photographs and a minimum of printing. We have presented as nearly as possible a pictorial review of four years in medical school. lt is our hope that it will appeal to student, teacher and layman alike. lf you find our bcok interesting and if it recalls memories to you-we have succeeded. PY P4-.Q-4 Y X 59 g .Q 5 MALONEY CLINIC We ss OUR DEDICATION S FRESHMEN we marveled on Wednesday nights at the unaccustomed silence of the usually noisy Juniors. As Sophomores we heard much of Thursday morning syphilis clinics, and when the year ended we wondered how we could survive this much famed course. As Juniors, the Thursday morning clinics came-and so did we-with big blue books written by the performer. We sat nervously on the edge of our seats for two hours less one smoke. We followed discussions ever so closely-we had to. We learned much from and admired greatly the master of ceremonies. As Seniors we have heard of uncalled-for awkward treatment of syphilis by some practicing physiciansg we occasionally diagnose a case of syphilis because we take nothing for grantedg and above all we realize that we are acutely aware of syphilis and its sequels. Thus we are certain we have been taught by a great teacher, a fine showman, and a second to none personality. To Dr. John H. Stokes we are proud to dedicate this l94l Scope. PROVOST'S TOWER JOHN H. STGKES, A.B., M.D. Born in Munich, Germany. A.B., Michigan, 1908, M.D., 1912. Instructor in Anatomy, Michigan, 1913, Resident in Dermatology and Syphilology, Michigan, 1914, Instructor in Dermatology and Syphilology, Illinois, 1915-16, Assistant Professor of Dermatology and Syphilology, Minnesota, 1916-19, Associate Professor, 1919-21, Professor, 1921-24, Chief of Section of Dermatology and Syphilology, Mayo Foundation, 1916-24, Professor of Cutaneous Medicine and Syphilology, School of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, 1924-date. Chairman of the Committee on Research in Syphilis, 1928, United States Public Health Service representative on the committee of experts on Syphilis, League of Nations Health Organization, 1928-35, Special Consultant, United States Public Health Service, Consultant in Venerology, Pennsylvania State Department of Health, 1937-, Director, Institute for Control of Syphilis, Pennsylvania, Chairman, Pennsylvania State Venereal Disease Control Commission, 1939-, Member National Research Council, Subcommittee on Venereal Diseases, Advisory Committee to the Surgeon General, United States Public Health Service, Cited Meritorious Service Medal, State of Pennsylvania, 1939. Member of: The American Dermatological Association lPresident, 19371, The American Academy of Dermatology, The American Medical Association, The Society for Investigative Dermatology 1President, 19391, The American Social Hygiene Association, The Philadelphia Dermatological Society, The College of Physicians, Philadelphia, Corresponding member of the British, French, Danish, Vienna, London lhon.l, and Argentine Dermatological Societies, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, Alpha Omega Alpha, Alpha Kappa Kappa. Author of: Modern Clinical Syphilology, The Fundamentals of Medical Dermatology, and The Third Great Plague. ive A X Q.-Zixk A Q-. Q X X X XX V ,X - , MV! Q LV 1 - 2 V f Z 1 7 ' 5, ,LV - 1.56,-,, ? Z '74 A' lf? ' M f 1 if fl f X ., 4? 4,7 I , 41 f ff' , M Q 9 ff 14, , Z yv ' fy? 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' x. 5 V Q, Q X '15, fm- 5 ,X X A V I 1 1 1 x 'xx - :9 N , ' 4 X 5 wg' 3 h !ii ' jx SQ' lx ' 1 6 ' R K , R ,N . I Q , . X F, x - H J U X x ,, ,, .. A STUDY ot the number ot students enrolled during the post one hundred yeors in the School ot Medicine ot the University ot Pennsylvonio tond their geogrophic distributionl, reveols certoin interesting tocts. It must be borne in mind in such o survey, thot the length ot the medicol course wos chonged trom two yeors to three in l876, ond to tour yeors in l893. It is olso necessory to remember thot in l9l6, o limit ot l00 wos set on the size ot the entering closs. The lorgest number ot students ever in the School ot one time wos in l896-7, when 920 were enrolled. The lorgest First Yeor Closs wos thot which entered in the toll ot l895. This closs numbered 333. ln possing, it might be odded thot only obout one-holt ot these students groduoted tour yeors loter, l-lowever, some ot those who toiled either groduoted here or elsewhere, one, two or more yeors loter, tor o student who toiled wos ollowed to repeot his yecir os otten os he wished, ond those who were dropped could guite eosily goin odmittonce to onother school. The smollest number ot students in the School BACHMAN- I think however, one sho ld A DEAN From the 1908 Scope ot one time wos during the school yeor l9l3-l4, when 266 were enrolled. This drop in the number ot students from 920 to 266 wos not peculior to our School. In l90S, there were 26,l47 students en- rolled in the lvledicol Schools ot the United Stotes, ond in l920, only l3,798. From T840 to lS90, the number ot students in the School did not vory much except during the period ot the Civil Wor. Just betore the Civil Wor, the enrollment in the School hod risen to S28 lt hod numbered between 400 ond 500 from l840 to l860. During the session l862-63, the number tell to 3l9. This wos due to the toct thot procticolly every southern student lett the School. The decreose soon wos mode up, not by the return ot the southerners, but by increosed enroll- ment ot students from the northern stotes. Probobly the moving ot the University from. Ninth ond Chestnut Streets, ond the erection in H373 ot lvledicol l-loll in West Philodelphio, now the home ot the Whorton School, ond known os Logon l-loll, together with the completion ot the University l-lospitol oppeoled strongly to those wishing to study Medicine. The new lvledicol l-loll wos modestly described in in both cheeksnn U accept that fYPe of evidence with his tongue well out Eight LOCKS BACK By DR. WILLIAM PEPPER WILLIAM PEPPER AB., MD., hon. Sc.D. A.B., University of Pennsylvania, 1894, M.D., 1897, hon.Sc.D., 1932. Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology, University of Pennsylvania, 1908-18, Dean, School of Medicine, 1912 to date. Trustee of The Philadelphia Free Library, Member of The American Medical Association lCouncil on medical education and hospitals, 1917-271. Member of Association of Medical Colleges lpresident, 19201. Member of Philadelphia College of Physicians. the University catalogue as the most complete building devoted to medical science in the U. S. ln the session 1876-77, there were 467 students in the School. ln 1877, the course was lengthened to three years and although there were then three classes instead ot two, the longer time needed to obtain a medical degree deterred many trom en- tering our School. The number ot students then ran between 200 and 400 until the big jump which began in 1890, reaching, as has been mentioned, 920 in the session 1896-7. The increase in the length at the course from three to tour years in 1893, seemed to have only a temporary intluence on the size ot the entering class. Since there were tour instead ot three classes in the School at a time when so many wanted to study lvledicine, this large number ot students resulted. With so many to be taught, very little laboratory work was then possible. All students, ot course, dissected and worked in the Chemistry Laboratory, but there was not the room nor equipment tor any real laboratory work in Physiology, Bacteriology or Pharmacology. Gradually this peak load dropped to the 266 in 1913. The number then began to increase again, and as our methods ot teaching improved through more individual instruction, it became necessary to limit the size ot our classes. First, in 1916, a limit at one hundred was set tor the First Year Class. This number was gradu- ally increased to the present time, when 120 are admitted. ln the early days, Medical Schools boasted about the large number ot students enrolled, but this has all changed. For the tirst hundred years, students paid each Protessor individually tor a ticket ot admission to his lectures, and as many students did not care to BEERMAN- Don't say as one of my friends did.-'A blood Wassermann should be taken on every single pregnant woman.' Nine fourth years, one-half the subject matter being covered each year. Attendance at these lectures was excellent because there were no textbooks of Surgery for students available. The above picture was taken in the North Amphitheatre of Logan Hall. State admitted to the First Year Class. Before the Civil War, tram 25 to 30 students were in attendance tram Tennesseeg but since that time, we have had but about one-halt dozen in any one year. From South Carolina there were as many as 20 students during some years, but there have been only about three or tour since the War. Mississippi sent as many as 25 at one time, but has not been very well represented since the War The enrollment trom the northern states was not attected as much by the War as might have been expected. The high water mark was in l897, in which year over S60 Pennsylvanians were matriculated. Before the Civil War, there were in our School more students tram south ot the Mason and Dixon line than there were tram the north. STRECKER- One thing alone prevents a man from looking at himself--the necessity of bolstering his EGO. Eleven ., ., A f. .F nk of -'S s . Q . ' mwxiwmxxxx ii X C N T599 ssc.. Q ss K R m ww WZ A i X 'QWPIDYW T - - 5 5 Frm 'IW WHS SCUPC THE PATHOLOGY LABORATORY The new building for the Laboratories of Physiology, Pathology, and Pharma- cclcgy is unequaled in America or Europe. These laboratories are equipped with Twelve From thc 1919 Scope From the 1912 Scope DYER- For the professor to fool the student is 'f OK b the most approved apparatus. From the University of Pennsylvania Illustrated. FRANCIS C. GRANT From the 1919 Scope-- Grant is an amateur pugilist of ability, but the cham- pionship he holds lies' in another field: he is the best sleeper during lectures of any we can boast, and that's saying a whole lot. He plays no favorites, but picks out a prominent front seat, and then saws wood class after class. CHARLES C. WOLFERTH From the 1912 Scope- ln football, Wol- ferth is known wherever the game is played. He was recognized as one of Pennsylvania's best linemen, was mentioned for All-Americdn honors, and has been chosen as a member of the coaching staff for the 1912 team. According to the Junior story of this Scope he is now in the backfield. compliments dolly. QUIB , ecause the student returns the From the V1 O. fr ir ci st st from the 1908 SCOPE THE PHYSIOLOGY LABORATORY The University of Pennsylvania was one of the first of the great medical schools to establish special laboratories for the instruction of students. From time to time its facilities have been increased to keep pace with the demands of modern science. From the University of Pennsylvania Illustrated. West Virginia by l3. ln the days betore a limit was set on the size ot our classes, We had auite a number ot students trom South and Central America, but with the increase in the number ot applicants who are citizens ot the United States, the number ot toreign students admitted has decreased. l do not teel that We can properly teach more students than We now admit, I think a wide geographical distribution ot students is a good thing tor our School. Most students return to their homes to practice. We do not want to become too provincial an institution. The selection ot the First Year Class in these days is a ditticult task. In l9l2, I tirst admitted a class. Only 6l aualitied students applied, and all were admitted. Now trom twelve to thirteen hundred students apply each year. The Students Army Training Corps in l9l9-The first and sccond year classes were Company lO and the third and fourth year classes were Company ll. From :he 1919 Scope Are we going to see this again? Nuytd? W il ,kit I - .I ..5..n..I l I 'A- I BGCK ONE 0 FACULTY EDICAL Students at Pennsylvania are proud of their faculty. They feel that no finer or more universally respected faculty exists in the country today. This view applies not alone to professors, but to associates, assistants, and instructors as well. A relatively greater part of a student's time is spent with the latter group in practical application of medical principles, thus it is a natural consequence that we enlarge the section to include more of them. We regret our inability to include all of the more than five hundred members of the faculty. Of necessity, we have included only those actively engaged in teaching the class as a whole. Other factors beyond our control have further reduced the number whose pictures we had hoped to present. FACULTY FACULTY WILLIAM H. F. ADDISON Prcfessor of I-listologx and Enfhrxoiogx B.A., Toronto, '02, M.B., '05, M.D., 'I7. Assistant in Biology, Toronto, 'OZ-'04, Demonstrator of Histology and Embryology, Pennsylvania, '05- 'l2, Assistant Professor, 'l2-'l9, Professor, 'I9-. J. HAROLD AUSTIN Professor of Research Medicine B.S., Pennsylvania, '05, M.D., '08. Associate in Research Medicine, Pennsylvania, 'll-'l4, Associate in Medicine, 'l2-'17, Assistant Rocke- feller Institute, 'I9-'20, Associate, '20-'2l, Professor of Research Medicine, Pennsylvania, '22-. HENRY C. BAZETT Professor of Physiology B.A., Oxford, M.B., B.Ch., 'I I, Rad- cliffe Traveling Fellow, 'I2-'l4, M.A., 'I3, M.D., 'l9, L.R.C.P., 'll Demonstrator of Physiol09Yr St. Thomas Hospital, 'l0-'llg Fellow, Magdalen, Oxford, 'l2-'20, demon- strator of pathology, 'I3-'l5, Chris- topher Welch lecturer of Clinical Physiology, 'l2-'2l, Professor of Physiology, Pennsylvania, '2l-. WILLIAMS B. CADWALADER Professor of Neurology Princeton, '98, M.D., Pennsylvania, '02. Assistant in Neurology, Penn- sylvania, '02-'2I, Associate in Neurology and Neuropathology and later Assistant Professor of Neu- rology, 'ZI-'29, Professor of Neu- rology, '29-. FERGUSON- The Trendelenberg operation is the qntemort FRANCIS HEED ADLER Professor of Ophthalmology A.B., Pennsylvania, 'l6, A.M., '18, M.D., 'I9. Instructor in Physiology, Pennsylvania, '22-'32, Instructor in Ophthalmology, '24-'36, Associate in Physiology, '32-'36, Professor of Ophthalmology, '36-. CARL BACHMAN Professor of Obstetrics A.B., Pennsylvania, 'l7, M.D., '23, Fellow and Instructor in Obstetrics, Pennsylvania, '25-'29, Visiting Pro- fessor of Obstetrics and Gyneco- lo!-JY, Chula-longkorn University, Siam, '29-'32, Research Fellow in Biochemistry, Rockefeller Founda- tion, Leipzig, '32-'33, Research Fellow in Biochemistry, McGill, '33- '35g Assistant Professor of Obstet- rics, Pennsylvania, '35-'38, Profes- sor, '38-. OSCAR V. BATSON Professor of Anatomy, Graduate School of Medicine. Associate in Otolaryngology A.B., Missouri, 'l6, A.M., 'l8, M.D., St. Louis, '20. Instructor of Anat- omy, Wisconsin, '20-'2l, Assistant Professor of Anatomy, Cincinnati, '2l-'24, Associate Professor, '24- '27, Professor, '27-'28, Professor of Anatomy, Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '28-, In- structor of Otolaryngology, '36-'40, Associate, '40-. EDWARD H. CAMPBELL Professor of Clinical OtolaryngOlOQY Pennsylvania, 'l5, M.D., 'I9. In- structor in Otolaryngology, Penn- sylvania, '24-'29, Associate, '29- '3'5, Assistant Professor, '35-'39, Professor of Clinical Otolaryng0I- ogy! D em removal of a pulmonary thrombus. Sixteen A.B Ass cial oml An: tan Ani Pen A.B sylv ped Geo I M.D str clog Ass Arn of Coll fess ven '39- Pro D.DI Ass Pen Ma' fess '37- ELIOT R. CLARK Professor of Anatomy A.B., Yale, '03, M.D., Hopkins, '07. Assistant in Anatomy, Hopkins, '07-08, Instructor, '08-'lI, Asso- ciate, 'II-'I4, Professor of Anat- omy, Missouri, 'I4-'22, Professor of Anatomy, Georgia, '22-'26, Assis- tant Dean, '23-'25, Professor of Anatomy and Head of Department, Pennsylvania, '26-. A. BRUCE GILL Professor of Orthopedic Surgery A.B., Muskingum, '96, M.D., Penn- sylvania, '05. Professor of Ortho- pedic Surgery, Pennsylvania, '20-. ARTHUR P. HITCHENS George S. Pepper Professor of Public Health and Preventive Medicine M.D., Medico-Chirurgical, '98, In- structor of Pathology and Bacteri- ology, Medico-Chirurgical, '00-'0I, Assistant Professor of Bacteriology, Ar'my Medical School, '20-'25, Chief of Division, '35-'39, Lieutenant Colonel, Medical Corps, '37-, Pro- fessor of Public Health and Pre- ygegtive Medicine, Pennsylvania, ROBERT H. IVY Professor of Maxillo-Facial Surgery D.D.S., Pennsylvania, '02, M.D., '07, Assistant Instructor in Surgery, Pennsylvania, 'I0-'l5, Chief of Maxillo-Facial Surgery, '2l-, Pro- ge-ssor of Maxillo-Facial Surgery, FACULTY ELDRIDGE L. ELIASON John Rhea Barton Professor of Surgery A.B., Yale, '0l, M.D., Pennsylvania, '05, Sc.D., Washington, '24, As- sistant Instructor in Surgery, Penn- sylvania, '07-'l6, Instructor, 'I6- 'l9, Associate, 'I9-'23, Assistant Professor, '24-'25, Professor of Clinical Surgery, '26-'35, Professor of Surgery, '36-. FRANCIS C. GRANT Professor of Neurological Surgery A.B., Harvard, 'I4, M.D., Pennsyl- vania, 'l9. Instructor in Surgery, Pennsylvania, '23-'25, Associate, '26-'28, Assistant Professor of Neurological Surgery, '28-'37, Pro- fessor, '37-. Professor of Clinical Neurosurgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '35-. KARL M. HOUSER Professor of Otolaryngology Ph.B., Franklin C1 Marshall, 'l5, hon.Sc.D., '37, M.D., Pennsylvania, '2l, M.S., '26. Associate in Oto- laryngology, Pennsylvania, '24-'35, Assistant Professor, '35-'40, Pro- fessor, '40-. MERKEL H. JACOBS Professor of General Physiology A.B., Pennsylvania, '05, Ph.D., '08. Instructor in Zoology, Pennsylvania, '09-'l3, Assistant Professor, 'I3- '23, Professor of General Physiol- ogy, '23--. Director of Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, '26-'37, ELIASON- Carcinoma of the stomach is a silent thief in the night. Seventeen F A C U L T Y RICHARD A. KERN Prof-:ssor of Clinical Medela: A.B., Pennsylvania, 'l0, M.D., 'l4. Instructor in Medicine, Pennsyl- vania, 'l6-'2l, Associate in Medi- cine, School of Medicine and Grad- uate School of Medicine, '2l-'28, Assistant Professor, School of Medi- cine, '28-'34, Professor of Clinical Medicine, '34-. F. H. LEWY Visiting Professor of Neiiroplwysialogy M.D., Berlin, '08. Instructor in Physiology, University of Breslau, '09-'l0, Director of Labor, 'IZ- 'l4, Head of Department of Neu- rology, Berlin, 'I9-'3l, Clinic Pro- fessor of Neurology, '23, Director of Neurological Institute, '3l-'33, Visiting Professor of Neurophysiol- ogy, Pennsylvania, '34-. BALDUIN LUCKE Professor of Pathology M.D., Medico-Chirurgical, 'l2, Dr. P.H., Pennsylvania, 'l6. Assistant Instructor of Pathology, Pennsyl- vania, 'I4-'I9, Instructor, 'I9-'20, Assistant Professor, '20-'27, Asso- ciate Professor, '27-'32, Professor, '32 T. GRIER MILLER Professor of Clinical Medicine A.B., North Carolina, '06, M.D., Pennsylvania, 'll. Associate in Medicine, Pennsylvania, 'l6-'28, Assistant Professor, '28-'34, Pro- fessor of Clinical Medicine, '34-. Director Kinsey-Thomas Founda- tion, '37-. ELIASON- Don't let all your reading go until the Eighteen EDWARD B. KRUMBHAAR Professor of Pathology A.B., Harvard, '04, M.D., Penngyl- vania, '08, Ph.D., 'l6. Instructor in Medicine, Pennsylvania, 'l2-'l5, Associate, 'IS-'l6, Assistant Pro- fessor, '16-'20, Associate Profes- sor of Pathology, Graduate School of Medicine, '20-'27, Professor of Pathology, School of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine, '27-. Editor, American .lournal of Medical Sciences, '25-. ESMOND R. LONG Professor of Pathology A.B., Chicago, 'I l, Ph.D., 'l9, M.D., Rush, '26. Trudeau Fellow, Saranac Laboratory, 'I7-'l8, '20. Assistant in Pathology, Chicago, 'll-'l3, ln- structor in Pathology, 'I9-'2l, As- sistant Professor, '2l-'23, Associate Professor, '23-'28, Professor, '28- '32, Professor of Pathology, Penn- sylvania, '32--. Director of Phipps Institute, '35--. MORTON MCCUTCHEON Professor of Pathology A.B., Pennsylvania, 'l0, M.D., 'l7. Instructor in Pathology, Pennsyl- vania, 'I9-'26, Assistant Professor, '26-'34, Associate Professor, '34- '40, Professor, '40-. STUART MUDD Professor of Bacteriology B.S., Princeton, 'l6, A.M., Wash- ington tSt. Louisl, 'l8, M.D., Har- vard, '20. Research Fellow, HOF- vard, '20-'23, Associate Rocke- feller lnstitute, '23-'25, Assistant Professor of Experimental Path- ology, Pennsylvania, '25-'3l, AS' sociate Professor of Bacteriol09Y, '3l-'34, Professor, '34-. daffodils are bloomin' in the Botanical Gardens. CHARLES C. NORRIS Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology M.D., Pennsylvania, '98, Instructor in Clinical Gynecology, Pennsyl- vania, '02-'ll, Assistant in Gynec- ological Pathology, '07-'2l, ln- structor in Gynecology, 'II-'2I, Assistant Professor, '22-'27, Profes- sor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, '27 O. H. PERRY PEPPER Professor of Medicine B.S., Pennsylvania, '05, M.D., '08. Assistant Professor of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '20-'28, Professor of Clinical Medicine, '28-'34, Pro- fessor of Medicine, '34-. Assistant Chief of Medical Clinics, '28-'37, Chief, '37-. Member of the Na- tional Board of Medical Examiners. I. S. RAVDIN George Leib Harrison Professor of Surgery B.S., Indiana, 'l6, M.D., Pennsyl- vania, 'l8. Instructor in Surgery, Pennsylvania, 'I8-'25, Associate in Surgery, '25-'27, Assistant Profes- sor of Research Surgery, '27-'29, J. William White Professor of Surgery, '29-'36, Harrison Professor of Surgery, '36-. HARRY P. SCHENCK , Professor of Otolaryngology B.S., Haverford, 'l8, M.D., Penn- sylvania, '23. Assistant Instructor in Otolaryngology, Pennsylvania, '26-'29, Instructor, '29-'34, Fellow in Research Allergy, '28, Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology, '34- '35, Associate Professor, '35-'39, Professor, '39-. FACULTY EUGENE P. PENDERGRASS Professor of Radiology North Carolina, 'l6, M.D., Penn- sylvania, 'I8. Assistant Professor of Radiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '28-'37, Professor, '37-. Professor of Radiology, School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '36-. ALEXANDER RANDALL Professor of Urology A.B., St. Johns, '02, M.D., Hopkins, '07, Assistant Instructor in Sur- gery, Pennsylvania, 'I2-'l5, Assis- tant Instructor in Genito-Urinary Diseases, 'l5-'2l, Associate in Genito-Urinary Surgery, '22-'23, Assistant Professor of Surgery in charge of Urology, '23-'26, Asso- ciate Professor, '26-'29, Professor of Urology, '29-. ALFRED N. RICHARDS Professor of Pharmacology Vice-President in charge of Medical Affairs A.B., Yale, '97, A.M. ,'99, Ph.D., Columbia, '0l, hon.Sc.D., Pennsyl- vania, '25, hon.M.D., '32, hon.Sc.D., Western Reserve, '3l, hon.Sc.D., Yale, '33, hon.LL.D., Edinburgh, '35. Assistant in Physiological Chemistry, Columbia, '98-'02, Tu- tor, '02-'O4, Instructor in Pharma- cology, '04-'08, Professor of Phar- macology, Northwestern, '08-'l0, Professor of Pharmacology, Penn- sylvania, 'IO-. Vice-President in charge of Medical Affairs, '39-. CARL F. SCHMIDT Professor of Pharmacology A.B., Lebanon Valley, 'l4, M.D., Pennsylvania, 'l8. Instructor in Pharmacology, Pennsylvania, 'l9- '22, Associate in Pharmacology, Peking Union Medical College, China, '22-'24, Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, Pennsylvania, '24-'29, Associate Professor, '29- '3l, Professor, '3l-. PEPPER- All I can tell you is the way I see it, then you can read your books. If you really want to have some fun read two books, and then you won't know anything. Nineteen FACULTY TRUMAN G. SCH NABEL Professor of Clinical Medicine A.B., Lehigh, '07, M.D., Pennsyl- vania, 'II. Instructor in Medicine, Pennsylvania, 'I4-'2l, Associate, '21-'29, Assistant Professor, '29- '34, Associate Professor, '34-'40, Professor of Clinical Medicine, '40-. ISAAC STARR, JR. Milton Bixler l-lartzell Research Professor of Therapeutics B.S., Princeton, 'I6, M.D., Pennsyl- vania, '20. Instructor in Pharma- cology, Pennsylvania, '22-'28, As- sistant Professor of Clinical Phar- macology, and Associate in Medi- cine, '28-'33, Hartzell Professor of Research Therapeutics, '33-. JOSEPH STOKES William H. Bennett Professor of Pediatrics A.B., Haverford, 'I6, M.D., Penn- sylvania, '20. Instructor in Pedi- atrics, Pennsylvania, '24-'28, Asso- ciate in Pediatrics and Acting Chairman of the Department, '28- '3I, Assistant Professor, '3I-'36, Associate Professor, '36-'39, Ben- nett Professor of Pediatrics, '39-. GABRIEL TUCKER Professor of Brancholagy and Esophagalogy M.D., Jefferson, '05. Associate in Bronchoscopy and Esophagoscopy, Pennsylvania, '28-'29, Assistant Professor, '29-'32, Clinical Pro- fessor, '32-'34, Professor of Clin- ical Bronchology and Esophagol- ogy, '34-'40, Professor, '40-. T. F. McNAlR SCOTT Research Professor of Pediatrics B.A., Cambridge, '23, M.A., '28, M.D., '38, Medical Registrar, St, Georges' Hospital, London, '28-'29, Research Fellow in Medicine, Har- vard, '30-'3I, Instructor in Pedi- atrics, Hopkins, '3I-'34, Assistant in Pediatrics, Rockefeller Institute Hospital, '34-'38, Professor of Pediatrics, Temple, '38, Research Professor of Pediatrics, Pennsyl- vania, '39-. ' JOHN H. STOKES Professor of Cutaneous Medicine and Syphilology A.B., Michigan, '08, M.D., 'I2. In- structor in Anatomy, Michigan, 'I3, Instructor in Dermatology and Syphilology, 'I4, Instructor in Der- matology and Syphilology, Illinois, 'IS-'16, Assistant Professor of Der- matology and Syphilology, Minne- sota, 'I6-'I9, Associate Professor, 'I9-'21, Professor, '21-'24, Profes- sor of Cutaneous Medicine and Syphilology, School of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '24-. EDWARD A. sTREcKER Professor of Psychiatry A.B., LaSalle, '07, A.M., 'llg M.D., Jefferson, 'llg Sc.D., St. Josephs, '33, Professor of Psychiatry and Chairman of the Department, Pennsylvania, '3I- . PHILIP F. WILLIAMS Professor of Clinical Obstetrics ancl Gynecology B.Ph., Lafayette, '05, M.D., Penn- sylvania, '09. Instructor in Obstet- rics, Pennsylvania, 'I4-'2I, '22-'27, Associate in Obstetrics, '27-'30, Assistant Professor, '30-'40, Pr0- fessor of Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, '40--. STOKES- Maybe a 'Touch of Syph' is a good th' I' I - . . . the doctors, then they can learn to take Igcgir songetliimesil t brings thf fGm v 'n 'ouch wth Twenty e a t emse ves properly. D. WRIGHT WILSON Benjamin Rush Professor of Physiological Chemistry B.S., Grinnell, 'l0, M.S., Illinois, 'l2, Ph.D., Yale, 'l4. Assistant and Associate in Physiological Chem- istry, Hopkins, 'l4-'l7, Associate Professor, 'I7-'22, Benjamin Rush Professor of Physiological Chem- istry, Pennsylvania, '22-. CHARLES C. WOLFERTH Professor of Clinical Medicine A.B., Princeton, '08, M.D., Penn- sylvania, 'l2. Associate in Medi- cine, Pennsylvania, '20-'27, Assis- tant Professor, '27-'34, Professor of Clinical Medicine, '34-. EARL D. BOND I Professor of Psychiatry A.B., Harvard, '00, M.D., '08. In- structor in Neuropathology, Har- vard, 'l2-'l3, Professor in Psychia- try, Graduate School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, '20-. Professor of Psychiatry, Pennsylvania, '30-. Medical Director The Institute for Mental Hygiene, '30-. OTTO MEYERHOF Research Professor. of Physiological Chemistry M.D., Heidelberg, '09, LL.D., '27. Assistant Professor of Physiology, Kiel, 'l3, Associate Professor, 'I8, Professor of Physiolo9Yf Heidel- berg, '29, Director of the Institute of Physiology, Kaiser Wilhelm ln- stitute, '29, Research Professor of Physiological Chemistry, Pennsyl- vania, '40-. Awarded Nobel Prize, '22. HERBERT FOX Professor of Comparative Pathology M.D., Pennsylvania, '0l. Lecturer in Medicine, Pennsylvania, '22-'26, Professor of Comparative Path- ology, '27-. Director of The Wil- Iiam Pepper Clinical Laboratory, '28 MILTON I. ROSE Professor of Public Health Administration Ph.B., Yale, '23, Ph.D., '27, M.D., '35. Assistant in Physiology, Yale, '26-'27, Instructor in Physiology, California, '27-'29, Assistant Pro- fessor, '29-'30, Research Fellow, Yale, '30-'32, Assistant Director of Public Health Curricula, California, '36-'39, Professor of Public Health Administration, Pennsylvania, '39-. FACULTY GEORGE WILSON Professor of Clinical Neurology M.D., Pennsylvania, 'll. Instructor in Neurology, Pennsylvania, 'I4-'l9, Assistant Instructor in Medicine, 'I4-'2l, Instructor in Neurology and Neuropathology, 'I9-'23, ln- structor in Medicine, '2l-'27, Asso- ciate in Neurology and Neuro- pathology, '23-'26, Assistant Pro- fessor of Neurology, '26-'29, Pro- fessor of Clinical Neurology, '29-. HORATIO C. WOOD, JR. Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics M.D., Pennsylvania, '96, hon.Ph.M., Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, '35. Demonstrator of Pharmacody- namics, Pennsylvania, '98-'07, As- sociate Professor, '07-'l0, Profes- sor of Pharmacology and Thera- peutics, Medico-Chirurgical, 'IO- 'l7, Professor of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Pennsylvania, 'I7-. Professor of Pharmacy, Philadel- phia College of Pharmacy, 20-. Division Committee U. S., Phar- macopeia, 'IO-. RUDOLF HOBER Visiting Professor of Physiology M.D., Erlangen, Germany, '96. Assistant in Physiology, Zurick, '97, Professor of Physiology, Kiel, '09, Director of the Physiological Insti- tute, 'l5, Visiting Professor of Physiology, Pennsylvania, '34-. HENRY F. SMYTH Professor in Industrial Hygiene M.D., Pennsylvania, '93. Instructor in Hygiene, Pennsylvania, 'l6-'l8, Instructor in Bacteriology, '2l-'22, Assisitant Professor of Hygiene, 'I9-'40. Acting Director of Hy- giene Laboratories, 'I8-'39, Pro- fessor of Industrial Hygiene, '39-. WILLIAM C. STADIE A Professor of Research Medicine B.S., New York, '07, M.D., Colum- bia, 'l6. Associate, Rockefeller Institute Hospital, 'I8-'22, Assis- tant Professor of Medicine, Yale, '22-'23, Assistant Professor of Re- search Medicine, Pennsylvania, '24-'25, Associate Professor, '26- '40, Professor, '40-. FRED D. WEIDMAN Professor of Dermatological Research M.D., Pennsylvania, '08, Assistant Demonstrator of Pathology, Penn- sylvania, '09-'I I, Assistant Instruc- tor, 'll-'l3, Instructor, 'l3-'l7, Assistant Director of Dermatologi- cal Research, 'I7-'23, Professor, '23- s The Jimmy Bandage-use nine safety pins, no more-no less. Twenty one Q qw 'i rgwqx , Q. L X Q ww Q SRX XXq55NSXX x XX X fi NX w X X my fs X X ' -. . :qi-f15XvX , - x -il X x 4 1 c N 3 X., If xmas is 5 . N. SY W Ak . 1 ,S V Q gk .XQ wx Q X X k X X Al wry , .x.xx . , , X MN ig ' 4 2 . , nk ' ,j 5 It bw 'x SWKW xg: N ,W QQ? X5 A . xg E . K X v 'Wu 4 Q f, ff I I I I I I e-- L. I PQ I I E 3, I II I I I I I I I, I I f 7 I .-'g I II I I I I I I I FACULTY ALFRED N. RICHARDS WILLIAM PEPPER EDWARD s. THORPE, JR A,B.,AM.,PhD.,SctD.,M.D.,LL,D. AB., MD., SCD., ' B-5-f MD-1 Vice-President in Charge of DGOV1 Asslsloml IO The Deon Medical Affairs ADMINISTRATIVE FACULTY Twenty-six The members of the Fourth Year Class arid the Editorial Board of the Scope wish to thahls the faculty for their fihe cooperatioh arid vvillihahess to help ih publishing this I94I Scope. ELSOM- Chronic ulcerative colitis is first on my list of things not to have. FACULTY A MEDICAL CLINIC WITH DR. O. H. PERRY PEPPER GRANT- Then reaching into the lapel of your coat, you produce o pin.' Twenty-seven .9-Aqnnrgfrkf BOCJK TWO ' 4th YEAR REAT were our expectations as we entered upon the fourth year. Multitudinous lectures were a thing of the past. We were at last to work on the wards, and in the delivery and operating rooms. No longer did we arrive at nine in the morning and leave at five in the afternoon. Maybe we would work all night, or then again we might have to meet a surgeon at seven in the morning. By the end of the year, three things were well burned into our minds: we were no longer our own mastersp we would probably study for the remainder of our livesg and we would never know everything in medicine. n ,H Thirty .THE SCOPE.. EDWARD A. AGNEW Reading Pennsylvania MUHLENBERQ COLLEGE, Bs. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Deaver Surgical Society Reading Hospital Reading, Pa. t 'I ,f ,, ELEANOR M. ANTHONY Philadelphia Pennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. VVomen's Medical Society I-louse ot Delegates, UMA. Jersey City Medical Center Jersey City, N. J. mf BRUCE ygs, ,AMBLER Abington Pennsylvamg HAvERFoRp coueae, es. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, Pa. K W!LLIAM,AriATLEE Lancaster V Pennsylvania YALE UNIVERSITY, AB. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 'Tb' if35IIIeR.,.:l.ffii.i-JJUN Moak wwe? A JAMES D. BAR ER Linton North Dakota univizizsitv ot Noiatn DAKOTA, Ae., Bs Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Milwaukee County General Hospital, Milwaukee, Wis. IvaafV98wV,YgQJ,v f JESSE R. BA ENFELD, JR. Kansas City i Missouri UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity ff JOHN W. B RN JART Washington ' Pennsylvania WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity I-lirst Obstetrical Society 'Z St. Francis Hospital Z 5 Pittsburgh, Pa. 2, :qc 1 fs! JOHN4AS:B3ELLIS Kennett Square Pennsylvania TRINITY coLLEaE, Bs. York Hospital Pepper Medical Society York, Pa. University Hospital W Philadelphia Pa M 3' OAAL wi' New WILLIS L. BENNETT Pittsburgh y Pennsylvania DARTMOUTI-I causes, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity I-louse ot Delegates, UMA. Agnew Surgical Society Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Bmw! ,pf IIQA STOKES- A system of treatment endin ' g with A h ' ' - - safely down to ground with a heavy mga' Elizslenamine is left hanging in th CAMILLO de BERARDINIS Philadelphia Pennsylvania uiviveiasitv or PENNsvLvANiA, AB. I-louse ot Delegates, UMA Alpha Omega Alpha University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 10 hill: as e air. Bring it Beflilf LEI P Pier F BQHQOI UNII De Philadi PE leoveni STANI Nu I Agr Philade I R, Stilt Lal UNIVERSI' Pl U. S. Hospii IAMES GeIIl'Sbt UAW Phi it Desi ,LQ P .THE SCOPE .. K PAUL BU URA ,ft Bethlehem Pe sylvfania f I LEHIGH UNlVERSlTY,f'A.B. jf Phi Beta Pi Fr Qni y Piersol Anatom!5l Soci ty f St. Luke's Hospital Bethlehem, Pa. -i N PAUIJWIQXURIQE Bangor l Maine UNIVERSITY OF MAINE A.B. Phi Chi Fraternity Deaver Surgical Society Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. eq! PETER S OMBS Leavenwort Kansas STANFORD UNIVERSITY, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 454433, 1 W ROY A. DARKE Salt Lake City Utah UNIVERSITY or UTAH, Bs., Ms. Phi Chi Fraternity U. S. Public Health Service Hospital, New York, N. Y. mist? tnpiv JAMES joicicso ,Jim Gettysburg Pe nsylvania DAVIDSON cg EGE, Bs Phi Rho S' m Fraternity Deave Surgical ociety ankenau Hospi I Philadelphia, Pa. H63 f weft HALSEYAQQG. BULLEN VVIIIIG IDICUIWSPX New Ygrlq DAR4flOUTl'l COLLEGE, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Kings County Hospital Brooklyn, N, Y, JACK E. COLE Matamoras Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA STATE coLLEoE, Bs Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity l-lirst Obstetrical Society Wilkes-Barre -General Hospital Wilkes-Barre, P . fn UQ SHAW DAVID WXTICOMPTON Vashon Xwashington UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON, B.S. Phi Chi Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Photography Editor, The Scope King County Hospital Seattle, Wash. J. f FREDERICJN. DASCH Forty Fort Pennsylvania Uuivsizsitv or PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Piersol Anatomical Society I-louse of Delegates, U.lvl.A. Wilkes-Barre General Hospital Wilkes-Barre, Pa. i961-PZULLQIA. FREDERICK A. DRY Kutztown Pennsylvania MUHLENBERG coueaia, es. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Deaver Surgical Society Allentown General Hospital Allentown, Pa. lf yf.'-'J'x,'l,:Uj Em-QAM! S ' ever accept the patient's statement that nothing I l is to be seen, look for yourself. Thirty-one THE SCOPE. I L WILLIA . DYSON Hazleton nnsylyania PRINCETON uNiyERsiTY, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Alpha Omega Alphfl University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Bfki SYLVAN H. EISMAN Philadelphia Pennsylyania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. uses-Hola. HORACE . ESHBACH Upper Darb A ennsylyania ursiiyerasiry or PENnsYLyANiA, AB. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Piersol Anatomical Society Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg, Pa. lnaqux will i+6Pf ' JANE D. DLEY ' Altoona P nnsylyania MOUNT I-IOLYOKE COLLEGE, AB. Womens 'Medical Society Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pa. JAMES E. ECKENHOFF Philadelphia Pennsylyariig UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, BS, Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Editor, The Scope Good Samaritan Hospital Lexington, Ky. mei -Piall... AMPA l.a51gl-Tfjo' ALFRED M. ELL, JR. Camden W Jersey uNiyEi2siTY or NoRTH cARoLiNA, Bs. Theta Kappa Psi Fraternity Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. AMBROSE C. ESTES Columbia Missouri UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI, A.B., B.S. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Indiana University Medical Center Indianapolis, Ind. ISRAEL Fl TONE Philadelphia Pennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Phi Lambda Kappa Fraternity Mt. Sinai Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ti-X IW Pl C ELWOOD L. FOLTZ FRANKLIN W. OVNCANNON Sunbury Pennsylvania Emporia KGW505 BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY, B.S. Alliha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity I-louse ot Delegates, U.M.A. St. Luke's Hospital BethIehem l QWWN STOKES A history of infection in Syphilis is full of pitfalls and gaps. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society St. Luke's Hospital Kansas City, Mo. Brun' UNI' pi DC Cano vvAf Alph I-I B. New ' UNIVER Phi Phila W Pliilaa UNIVER THI pltllag PRIL AIDIIO P Hou .THE SCOPE.. E+. JAMES H. FRENCH Brundldge Alabama UNIVERSITY or ALABAMA, A.B. Piersol Anatomical Society ' Atlantic City Hospital Atlantic City, N. J. 4zbw,tie.c DONALD L. GAMBLE I Canonshurg Pennsylvania WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON ' COLLEGE Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Hirst Obstetrical Society U. S. Naval Hospital g 1 5? A Pwml Qmw'cCWAF IRVING A. GLASS New Yam New York UNIVERSITY or PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. rifle, WILLIA . GRAY Philadelphi I ennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Memorial Hospital Wilmington, Del. 1961 iw. - 52,59 THOMAS ER, III Philadelphi Pennsylvania PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, A.B. AIDIIO Ivlu Pi Omega Fraternity Pepper Medical Society House at Delegates, U.IVl.A. Alpha Omega Alpha University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. .H QM yeast' 07? 0 IVA O T I JAMES F. LBALLY Philadelphia Pe nsylvania st. JOSEPI-I'S coLLEaE, Bs. Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. .MILES D. GARBER, JR. Carlisle Pennsylvania DICKINSON caLLEaE, Bs. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Hirst Obstetrical Society Harrisburg Hospital Harrisburg, Pa. rwtigiwmw r.. JOHN S. RDON, JR. Milwauke VVisconsin UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, B.S. NU Sigma Nu Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society I-louse at Delegates, U.IVI.A. Alpha Omega Alpha University of Chicago Clinics Chicago, lll lv, egcceh.. Rav J. Susss, JR. Eutaw I Alabama ' UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA, A.B. Phi Chi Fraternity Charity Hospital New Orleans, La. CARLOS M. GUTIERREZ San Jose Costa Rica UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Na Sigma Nu.Fraternity ' Bryn Mawr Hospital Bryn Mawr, Pa. 5 Iffflbw STOKES- Accept no positive test without one r6Def5fl0'1-H Thirty-three Thirty-four .THE SCOPE.. MORTON M. HALPERN Wildwood New lersel' PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE, BS. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity . Kings County Hospital New York, N. Y. fill- cMeG.lPlu.,F.lL. I P311 GEORGE J. HARRISON . l-loulton M2115 UNIVERSITY OF MAINE, AB. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Piersol -Anatomical Society Chestnut Hill Hospital Chestnut Hill, Pa. ll WSIITA. X13 7 X DOROTHY XBXQ-IOLMES Washingtonff District ot Columbia UNIVERSITY or MONTANA, AE. NEW YoPi4 UNIVERSITY, Ms., Ph.D. Women's 'Medical Society I-louse ot Delegates, U.lVI.A. Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore, Md. Ww'P.'PC, IRWNG IMBER Reading Pennsylyania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Reading Hospital Reading, Pa. ll-MIL Lash, FRANCIS JACOBS West Chester Pennsylyania TX-fx'-s'Nsfh PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, AB. Pepper Medical Society Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. IGM V'P2ftQlr'm STOKES- Remember that the Wassermann test is not infallible. f' . f HAROLDfff. HANNO Q Philadelphia Ql3ennsylVania UNIVERSITY or PENNSYLVANIA, AB, Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha Graduate Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. 196 I - flwfm. its fl CHARLES HQEFMAN, JR. Lancaster Pennsylvania FRANKLIN ANE5 MARSHALL COLLEGE B.S. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity I-lirst Obstetrical Society Lancaster General Hospital Lancaster, Pa. NU- WILLIAM L. HOON Prospect Pennsylvania VVEstiViiNstEP COLLEGE, Es. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity I-lirst Obstetrical Society Allegheny General Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. X0 1 A ,,W,,,.i43.ri.. JOHN W. ISGREEN Salt Lake City Utah UNIVERSITY OF UTAH Phi Chi Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Howes Mgfvillb ML W JESSE J. JENKINS, JR. Farmington West Virgittifl WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY, AB. Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraterniti' - Pepper Medical Society ' Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. WN if Rl Phill Pi All Phill UNIV Ali Wll Nas VA Vd Di Prai UNI' W . T'PlEI SCICDIJE ROBERT H. JOHNSTON Philadelphia Pennsylvania PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, A.B. Alphallvlu Pi Omega Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha Germantown Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Www n JOHN JQ YCE, in Philadelphi ennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. r , I i JPPJ-?I9f5' WILLIAM G. KENNON, JR. Nashville Tennessee VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY, AB. Phi Chi Fraternity Deaver Surgical Society Vanderbilt University Hospital Nashville, Tenn. DONALD R. KINDSCHI Prairie du Sac Wisconsin uNivERsirY or vviscousirv, Bs. Phi Chi Fraternity Wisconsin 'General Hospital Madison, Wis. f ROBERT I . i.EviN Philadelphi e P nnsylvania PENNsvLvANiA STATE coi.LEaE, es. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Mt. Sinai Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ' diff? RUSSELL . JOHNSTON Selinsgrove Pennsylvania PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. l IP T ia,Q'l L.1,, . f GEORGE . ELLAS Povveri Wes Virginia WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY, AB., B.S. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Ohio Valley General Hospital Wheeling, W. V. SAMUEL N. KEY, JR. ,Austin Texas UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Robert Packer Hospital Sayre, Pa. .i 1... fr, 4 9139 HARRY M. KLINGER Mt, Carmel Junction, l Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE, I3.S. I-louse at Delegates, UMA, I-lirst Obstetrical Society Geisinger Memorial Hospital Danville, Pa. lllll' os, i..v.rr..,, time JAMES G. LOGUE, JR. South Williamsport, Pennsylvania BUCKNELL univeresirv, es. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Germantown Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. , fi ' 7 I J I 2.72 is I STOKES- Never too old for Iues' .THE SCOPE THOMAS XWELL, AJR. Philadelphi E ennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. I-louse of Delegates, UMA. Detroit Receiving Hospital Detroit, Mich. f PAUL D. M EHEE, JR. Mgbile Alabama UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. pei Q Mil? .ID Li iftb -f - if JAMES E. I ILLAN Butler K ye nsylyania GROVE ci Y COLLEGE, es. Allegheny General Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. haf, ORDEN . ILLER Springs I 'Pennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity York Hospital York, Pa. 17 THEODORE . ORGAN Pittsburgh Pe sylyania WASI-HNGTON0 AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE, es., Ms. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Allegheny General Hospital ' Pittsburgh, Pa. il JOHN L. Mc ENAHAN IVIT. Airy - lp P nsylyania YALE U ERSITY, A.B. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. ' we le. THOMAS J. GURL, JR. lVlinersvilIe Pe sylvania AMI-I ST COLLEGE, A.B. Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Pepper lvleclical Society Graduate Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. .L I. fljkefoefyvvjr- ' I WILLIAMS MEYER New York 1 - New York COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, A.B. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Yonkers General Hospital New York, N. Y. RICHARD E. MILLER Tamaaua Pennsylvania URSINUS COLLEGE, BS. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. I ll - ER3QrLaejy'V THOMAS A. MORRIS, JR. I-lamlet North Carolina WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, BS. Phi Chi Fraternity Episcopal Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Wbftgqcli llm- STOKES- Few experiences are more shocking than to find one has negligenfly permitted the transmission of syphilis to an innocent unfortunate by a blood transfusion Thirty-eight THE SCOPE. fl FRANKLIN . URPHY Kansas City Missouri UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, AB. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Alpha Omega Alpha University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN W. NICHOLSON, III Philadelphia Pennsylvania PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, AB. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pennsylvania Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. IIQJ57 llffl . llliji flwils, tiff ' GRAHAM owENs Kansas City Missouri NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY, B.S. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. MICHAEL A. PETTI Brockton Massachusetts DARTMOUTI-I corrrar, AB. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Piersol Anatomical Society I-louse at Delegates, U.M.A, Tillakeside Hospital I Ckayeland, Ohio lloriiwggwr THEODORE S. POULSEN Salt Lake City Utah UNIVERSITY OF UTAI-I, AB. Phi Chi Fraternity Pacific General Hospital San Francisco, Cal. STOKES- A mason jar is an institution in itself. JAMES QZMURPHY Curwensyi e nnsylvania WGS ALLEGHENY COLLEGE, B.S. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Philadelphia General Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. I HENRY arisen 5' Greensburg Pe sylvania I PUC UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. E I Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity I A Pepper Medical Society Mercy Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. STANLEY A. PAINE N Dexter Maine corev correct, AB. Phi Chi Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Alpha Omega Alpha University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. i Q rg' I J l SQ. ,i , . S. STURGIS, I RMAN , Narberth P nnsylvania iifxyritrorap corrrar, Bs. Nu Sigma Nu Fraternity Reading Hospital , Reading, Pa. ff! JZ EDWIN A. RASBERRY, JR. Snow I-lill North Carolina UNIVERSITY or NORTH CAROLINA, AB. Phi Chi Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society University Hospital Philadelphia .Pa. J.. , ifistr I I .THE SCOPE.. !7 PHILI ,RETTEW West Che ter! Pennsylvania ALBRIGHT COLLEGE, Bs. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity Reading Hospital Reading, Pa. fi-U WW SAMUEL . ROBINSON Paoli ennsylvania PRIN ton urviveiasitv, AB. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity ' Pepper Medical Society l-loose of Delegates, UMA. Graduate Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. U flu-gl ' RICHARD W. ROOKER Niagara Falls New York pfxrativiootn coiieae, Ae. Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Agnew Surgical Society Buffalo General Hospital Buffalo, N. Y. lvw5sjl2Q9f IW, CHARLES SACKETT Philaclelphia ennsylvania univerasitv or PENNsYLvANiA, AB Episcopal Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. fIi!VIe4F'!g KENNET . SCHAEFER Oaklyn ' New Jersey RUTGERS uiviveiasitv, Bs. Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Pepper Medical Society I-louse of Delegates, LJIVIA. Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. FRANK H. IDGLEY, JR. Lincoln LJ ive ity, Pennsylvania Peirvcetorv urviveesitv, AB. AIDha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Union Memorial Hospital Baltimore, Md. PETER P. RODMAN Riverton New Jersey I-IAVERFORD coiieae, es. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity I-louse of Delegates, IJJVIA. University Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Wim, iii CURTIS C. RUFF Slippery Rock Pennsylvania eraove city coiieae, Bs. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity Flirst Obstetrical Society Western Pennsylvania Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. JosEP y .SARNER Philaclelp a Pennsylvania UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Jewish Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. JOSEPH . SCHEIN Newark ew Jersey PRINCETON Uiviveizsitv, AB. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity Newark City Hospital Newark, N. J. STOKES- The index of suspicion makes the diagnosis of syphi Forty L. . THE SCOPE . KENNETH M. SCOTT ROBERT M. SHELLY Tlllloc Tsinan, Shantung China Philadelphia Pennsylvania llclofs DAVIDSON COLLEGE, AB. UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. llllllllll Alpha MU Pi Omega Fraternity Abington Memorial Hospital Alllli Presbyterian Hospital Alifllonf PG- F Philxphia, Pa. fx ia Q fiwfltl' E we ful 'PT I Sw' f L I ILI IRVIN ,SILBER BENJAMII? . SMITH 'QSM New Brunswick New Jersey Trenton ' ew Jersey DA, BUCKNELL COLLEGE, B.S. UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANlA,A.B, Al h Metropolitan Hospital Phi Beta Pi Fraterhity Dy New York, N. Y. Piersol Anatomical Society f I Mercer Hospital Mass' Trenton, N. J. JP WILLIAM c. STAlNBACK,JR. WINTON EINFIELD I I-Ienderson North Carolina Philadelp ' ennsylvania l Soul WAKE FOREST COLLEGE, B.S. UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, A.B. lllxll U. S. Naval Hospital Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity F Q Eloise County Hospital , Eloise, Mich. 6anungcG'r S HAROLD STEVENS ROBERT L. TRICKER Philadelphia Pennsylvania Asheville ,O h Carolina TGV PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE, BS. U-NIVERSITY NORTH CAROLINA, I FRAI UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, BS. I ASME' PHD' Th t K P ' Fraternit I-IoUse ot Delegates, lJ.lVl,A. G O GDDO Sl , Y . , , Charity Hospital University Hospital I , P Ann Arbor, Mich. 5 New Orleans, La. l 961- WQJQN ?C. Fwy N HENRY M. SUCKLE MERRILL A. SWINEY, lll Coatesville Pennsylvania Bayonne lXew Jersey Pr UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB, ST. PETERS COLLEGE, BS. I Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity I-Iirst Obstetrical Society I-louse ot Delegates, U.M.A. Phi Delta Epsilon Fraternity I Alpha Omega Alpha Associate Editor, The Scope QSM NJQQQWDA St. Mark's Hospital Hoboken? N. J. lql'l YlXw-avfix y STOKES-LESSglcrexeednzignpcularg talk eye to eye and man to man, but preserve dignity aghfgvimtn K-YCWVJS A . THE SCOPE . or TIMOTHY R I LBOT,JR. ARCHlEE.TATE Bala-Cynw I P nnsylvania Erie Pennsylvania I ALLEQHENY coLLEaE, AB. Plersol Anatomical Society UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pepper Medlcal Society Mercy Hospital Pennsylvania Hospital Pittsburgh, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa. gag gy 1 if I Qfwea f-Qs A of A .. - GY I ftfialfrdqlilt PHILIP P. THOMPSON, JR. MANRICO RONCELLITI South Portland Maine Ardmore Pennsylvania DARTMOUTI-I COLLEGE, AB. VILL OVA COLL GE, l3.S. Alpha Kappa Kappa Fraternity Busi ss Manager, T Scope AQVIGW SUVQICOI SOCISTY iladelphia General Hospital Massachusetts General Hospital Phll0'5lelPhiUf P0- Boston, ass. 1 ramah meh- waaa.+aa. ' 1 Q' ftfkgf I 1 . EDWAR . TYSON ROGER . WATSON Southamp n Pennsylvania Havertord Pennsylvania uNlvERslt OINVIRGINIA, Bs. pARtlvioutH COLLEGE, Ap. Phi' Chi Fraternity Chester County Hospital Piersol Anatomical Society West Chester, Pa. Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. . ' JOHN . WENGER BENIAH . HITMAN , Terre I-lil I Pennsylvania Washingto R! FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL COLLEGE, District Ol Columbia BRS- UNIVERSITY or PENNSYLVANIA, AB. Phi Rho Sigma Fraternity I U y Phi Beta Pi Fraternity l-lirst Obstetrlcal Society F't ld M Hosp't I Philadelphia General Hospital I Zgem ercy I G Philadelphia, Pa. fjliarbf' Pa, Qglgg fnjt JoHN. ISE MARK. . LCOTT Princeton Ne Jersey Bethleh Pen lvania LEI-IIGI-I UNIVERSITY, C B. Phi Beta Pi Fraternity PRINCET N UNIVERSITY, A.B. Alpha Mu Pi Omega Fraternity Pepper Medical Society Piersol Anatomical Society Presbyterian Hospital University Hospital ga Phalaaalphia, Pq, Philadelphia, Pa. 'f,!,,,j!,p, ly, px Intl a-- , VX, gtk, QSMJL vt' A A STOKES- The syphilis of tomorrow is the ineffectively treated syphilis of today. Forty-one Forty-two THE SCCPE. N ,i JOSEPI-ET WYCHE Hallsboro ,f!NEth Carolino WAKE FISREST COLUEGE, B.S. Phi Chi Fraternity U. S. Naval Hospital K Ng X IRVING L IDMAN Camden X YW Jersey UNIVERSITY AENNSY yANiA, AE. Phi Del a Epsilon Fraternity Alpha Omega Alpha Cooper Hospital Camden, N. J. JAMES F. YOUNGKIN Easton Pennsylvania LAFAYETTE COLLEGE, Es. Presbyterian Hospital Philadelphia, Pa. Ti' C GENEVRA C. ZIEGLER State College Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE, B.S. Women's Medical Society Alpha Omega Alpha Geisinger Memorial Hospital Danville, Pa. N61- ,,iW,t-ill DAVID AON Philadelphyfxinnsylyania yiLLAN VA coEE oE, Es. Garfield Memorial Hospital Washington, D. C. STOKES- There are instances in which one positive Wassermann test will convict a laborer over his OWI1 denldl, 'No will make a case against a banker or a railroad president, but three, successive positives will scarcely convince the medical adviser of the guilt of a clergyman. A MEDICAL STUDENTS DREAM iff NFA .S 2 5 .151 1. L , Sw E,f':',5JQpJ,J- fx ,l - fl ansxgfb I.. Upper: Center: The faculty thinks up a good one for the exam. Urological O. P. D.- You ought to have that taken Applied Therapeutics-A gentle emetic. off-it's unhealthy. Wednesday morning medical seminar. Receiving Ward. Lower: The results of syphilis. Why doesn't someone do Cl feCl'0l? Forty-three FCJURTH YEAR EpTcMBriR 21, liiif A rustic 5XN'flTl tixer Xlleodldttd Ayemp trlcc ieyliyrs gflaiing in tr particularly lGUll forest i'vl.,-ttirnien ct Cars ll, Stl and 57 vihistled cllllelll to themselves there vxerv tiuiiikeniiigs of lllc lll llTG SltOlDS Ol Messrs Dolbex and Evasion, and a broad, benevolent smile ii, the yiigmj +01 gf thgt great leveller, lvliss L1IJllGQhGV For ive hed arrived, tra-la, for the final rcund, some still ivan from the trials cf summer obstetrics ivihere, it was rurhofefl, one of cur more distinguished members had delivered, un- gicteql the enlv two anencephalics that had graced the as e , ' i , - HUP in seven xearsf, some from camps, some with the suave, sleek expression that can be acauired only by six weeks ot Tl-lE CLlNlC, some brcnzea by the sun of Newport or Wild- iiecd Crest, and a select fevv who had merely hibernated in the cool recesses of Smoky Joe's Veterans we were- almost-eecapable at last of carrying a stethescope dovvn a hospital vtard v.ith an expression approaching nonchalance. We iiere handed schedules, published in three dimensions. An early report, plausible but unconfirmed, held that this year tlqgy ltgd been printed in Chinese, and not a few anxious evenings were spent plotting the course of lndividual 84, Section C, Subsection lll, Sauad 2 safely in and out of all ports of call And not for several days did we fully under- stand the meaning of that most musical term Clinical Clerk, a rhyme with ierk, and by definition an indeter- minate combination of disciple, orderly, scribe, scapegoat and animated retractor Many and diversified were the problems of this unhappy fellow, Were ite through, really through, buying books? Would there always be an England? Were vve to use a second-hand scrub-suit or, iiith the abiect humility of Lazarus imploring a crumb, venture begging a fresh one from a distracted head nurse? Was the sheepshank or clovehitch more desirable in lashing do-tin a catheter? What was at the movies? What ivas cne to do when the mere sight of a Wassermann needle left the patient with every vein flat as a duck's instep? All these auestrons arose and many more, but perhaps more rumors viere brought torth, more frantic telephone calls made, more fancy bred about that magic word internship than any other. The Deans list ixas posted, and we meditated, for a time, on the ivhale of a difference just a feiv percents make, but at least this august roster indicated what choice vve might exercise, and iihen the smoke had cleared most of us vvere the proud possessors of dollar-a-year positions in accredited hospitals Despite on inexorable alphabet that severed cher- ished bonds, dividing us into three eaual groups of surgeons, internists and pedio-pelvic specialists there were the more or less cohesive force of touch football in the Quadrangle and the haunting harmonies of Tate, Talbot, Watson and Troncelliti iivith Joy ce running the bassesl and a few didgettg lectures to maintain some semblance of class unity. lnto the Surgical Trimester nent onevthird of us, wondering. Space prevents the mention of every light in this galaxy of experience, but v.e did learn about tumahs, BRMN tumahs , vie v-.ere taught to get in and get out with the sly savoir-faire of a chicken thief in the dead of nighty tt vias pointed cut that 2-methyl-l-4-naphthaauinone is cheap and potent. We learned that one does not ivrite for one Forty-four Q 42 X 4 P 2 is x u to the Fundus A Phn9de'PhiU DDWUQEY A St. Christopher's Pediatrician i i Fixed f-11.1 W Z . 1 , ' CWQM N0PPil1Q by His' Own I Q He - Camera A I f SMG! V r rg . ,Q-F - i.. Ni: N i . ff 9,-Q. my in L fi .-N5 i 1 5 I Pi - ,fymz St- RQMW X ff? Ims-Men V G.H.Q. at P.G.H. r R ' 21 A f 'eg I , ,ggi . X xxi! 'X x .' Q V 5 sr r Q , km X '-an ,. i -is .Lil t 4 ' '. ld o ' 1 i V 7 47 On the Rim Can You Imagine That-Write The Whole Damn Thing Over! ' Ladies of the Library ii i' 1,4 E I' ' x ' . e so . --lu .rv ri Observation Squad The Pharynx' Was,Cleahed in ihe Usiial Fashion a I 'Mrs. iBrody's Baby, ug' i f .I4 4' , 5 4 K l ' B'-:!oE'31Ef?Exgna'Fb2:5f 'Y Not We May Have Beeanilusi' a Bifi Haoly, Doctor W Z A I 4Entoui'ageV , A . ' ' ' . AnY of You Ever.Hear of HilliS? . ' i I I' 1' h In I h . A . G'e95Y5Ch9e5Y4-B V ', V ff' h fl 'QQA 'iDon'tiCoax a Child to Eat h i bf, l , I5 V V Vu, -V , Y ,,f- . . .. V. . Y - - v ,f, .-- .-, :,,-.1 .g.,g.g.'g.i.'-17. .7 V-. - - -V ,,,-, 445-,',-g,:.---.:,,,--,-,,:r- .3 ,,- -,iy ' - g ..- p,,g,-'.f.g. . r-, ', -...u..2,.-. ---f.v--.-V- -.------nwx-.--- --- -x--- Qt-L.,,,,, .,,, --,.-.,.,.4-....:..u4.-444-.4.u14.44..c4,e..-.-f---4.11- -.- - --- - wk- -- -- 1-I , 5' I' -U '-' ' V ' ' has .QF leg Now Wh0fiSXf5eFii75tXThXin9 X XWmWfXY9lfWPeiit??'rXXXX X ie'1'hXLdakSXLikdXhXM0l'l0CYteu ' J .Q px, I-, L Il . I, 5. 'J - ,-1 N NN ie ii. , ,X sf 'H '?'e.M 5m ,W fx ' . WW? I gif 1 ' W v ' ,W We XF X ' A , :W K' - ' Never Too Busy toX Talk toXfhe Boys WX Resting on One of Three Discarded X ' ffWhat- Have We Here? Q ' Chairs--Thoughtfulness of H.U.P. - A pl -Q A I XX W ll f 'Y I XT' Eff ig The Reward of HIS Tolls IIBY the Aufhqnfy invested In M And So Into the World We Came 3' . uf Xxx , v 'lx' -Q Y '1 X X M e . . , O! . ' , ' 5 1 1 W 4. . X ff . ft' . x -- A . vs w VI n . A . . ,. X. X r 1 ' 5325? H ,,,. 1 A - X X- X X rn 2 X le .K I xk,,r . , rg? ,ix ' W, V 7 Q , A ' ,. . K.,-,, xx '. : K 'X W 1 f . Fifi X W , e eee, W We e W W W W W W , r PX . K 'K ekex X r ' X ,X Q. - . K K Q ff X . W W . K E W hr . , I it il- . . - . i b ' X I ' I r ' h ' . I, V '- , . U .X I BOOK' THREE ' 3'rd YEAR ITH a feeling that we didn't seem quite ready to enter upon clinical medicine, we began the third year. We were comforted with lecture after lecture, course after course, O.P.D. after O.P.D., not to mention always another book to buy, or always another exam to take. Basic clinical medicine was dealt out in large quantities, not particularly unpleasant, but just a bit big because a day is limited to twenty-four hours. How we found enough time to study this overwhelming amount of material is not quite clear, but we did, and by June there was a considerable quantity of new facts stored within our brains. ' xxx -vw w Q Q- X 5 . Tk S X x 1.-X.-2 x X - INS ' AWQXTE NX ' ' Xaims wg -X.: T THIRD YEAR f c x Upper Group Front Row: E. S. Bills, E. C. Curtis, J. S. Fager, W W. Dickinson, E. M. Carpenter, R. A. Brunner, A K. Bush. Second Row: W. H. Fairweather, J. H. Drew, W. T Foulk, Jr., A. R. Errion, R. W. Crossen, J. F Bacon. Third Row: G. N. Aldredge, Jr., E. R. Bahnson, Q. J Florence, R. G. Fisher, H. N. Cole, J. F. Carty, Jr. R. B. Eisenberg. Fourth Row: S. l. Dodd, W. P. Freeborn, H. B Adams, Jr., P. G. Eglick. Not in Picture: G. M. Austin, Jr., E. S. Baum, W. T. Bowers, F. S. Brown, J. S. Campbell, T. S Collings, J. W. Fidler, Jr., S. N. Finkelstein. THE CLASS CF Lower Group Front Row: J. O. Lafferty, R. W. Hyatt, J. H. Kam- holz, J. D. Hardy, W. B. Kiesewetter, S. A. Kirk- patrick, J. P. Hardy. Second Row: K. H. Huebner, P. N. Horvath, D. B. Freshwater, G. J. Gislason, L. A. Kremer, W. M' Harris, Jr., R. C. Helm. . Third Row: N. A. Hetzler H. Z. Fretz J. G. Kit- chen, ll, E. C. Jameson: Jr., A. M. lams, W- G' Kauder. Fourth Row: R. E. Lace, W. S. Jacob, S. O. Krasnoff- Not in Picture: W. T. Gallaher, L. G0dffeYf J' A. Guthrie, M. L. Hayward, A. J. Hessen, R- L' Hottenstein, J. W. Irwin, H. U. Kremer, J- P' Leidy. RAVDIN- A DOUGH? withvcancer should come for a big operation on a little cancer, not a littlc operation on a big cancer. Fifty-two NINETEEN FCRTY-TWO Upper Group Front Row: H. H. Pennes, G. B. Patrick, Jr., J. S. McConnell, P. F. Pappenheimer, L. Rogers, Jr. Second Row: T. E. Park, T. V. Magruder, Jr., W. L Nielsen, T. L. Lockridge, H. H. MacGilpin, Jr. J. C. Lilly, C. S. Neer, ll. Third Row: L. Oettinger, Jr., A. L. Myers, R. L Mayock, G. B. Milburn, M. H. Long, Jr., D. E Medaris. Fourth Row: W. C. Long, Jr., R. A. Loeb. Not in Picture: W. D. Loose, J. C. Lungren, E. S McCabe, J. H. McDonough, G. S. Maxwell, W. B Owen, J. G. Perlingiero, F. M. Ramsey, Jr., L. S Reed, H. C. Reider, F. H. Rittenhouse. I Lower Group Front Row: D. l. Thompson, A. G. Singer, Jr., G. J. Treires, J. M. Straughan, J. L. Steigerwalt, M. F. Townsend, E. C. Viner. Second Row: M. C. Warfel, R. M. Whitrock, G. W. Yarnall, F. G. Weisbrod, J. Walker, Jr., E. D. Wildman, A. Ulin, M. C. Williams. Third Row: S. Wright, G. W. Soffe, G. J. Wright, Jr., H. T. Simmonds, F. H. Weiss, J. N. Seitchik, L. T. Veach. Not in Picture: R. F. Rosin, F. C. Schaeffer, L. Sing- master, F. H. Thomas, C. H. Thompson, Jr., J. W. Trenton, R. C. Walden, S. H. Williams, Jr., W. W. Wilson, J. H. E. Woltz, A. J. Zujko. STRECKER- The only human who absolutely faces reality is the idiot. Fifty-three THIRD YEAR HE long gray rows of the medical ampliillqefllfe loflk down on an historic Qfldiron of AllOD0flWi Whefe The 9'GnlS,Ol old have fought outltheir days againSt The OVGVDOWQVHTQ forces of disease. Past achievement is dimmed, however, when our modern marvels take the field. Seldom has Penn sent such a mighty array against the foe. Rare is our line, which will not yield an inch. But it is of the backfield that we SIHQ of the peerless, death-destroying Four Horsemen of Hip- pocrates. Of perennial, All-American Perry Pepper, cal3T0lV1 and quarterback, the driving spirit of the team. None shall forget his insouciant manner, his soaring punts into The SUV1 out of the shadows of uremia, his keen diagnosis of the de- layed-back play where the streptococcus hits the kidney. Cf Miller, the stone-crushing fullback, who goes the length of the intestine for a first down every time. Of flashy wing- back Kern, making tackles all over the field, typhoid and schistosome, alike. Of Wolferth and his fighting heart-the greater the pressure, the harder he plays. Of brilliant reserve Fitz-Hugh, rushed in at a hemolytic crisis to check a splenic charge. Of Manager Rose of the endocrine squad, and his mutineering glands. Our first real contact with live patients was experienced in the Medical ORD,--a veritable laboratory of psychopathol- ogy, where our expected neuroblastomas and rhabdomyomas turned out to be cantankerous neurotics, hell-bent for renew- ing that phenobarb prescription, the universal solvent -of Weltschmerz. However, this ORD. gave us an 'instructive kaleidoscopic view of our future office practice. ln addition, we were privileged to spend a few days amid the seething activity of the drug store. We met that gracious, volatile, hyperkinetic queen of apothecaries, Miss Russel, who kept us out of her busy way by assigning us hundreds of pills to count, and put us to tasting syrups, elixirs, decoctums, pilulae, and misturce. During our entire stay in the drug store we saw not a single ham sandwich dispensed. Then we visited Phipps lnstitute, which drains an area of caseaticn and contagion. lts sidewalks and steps are the repository of innumercble positive sputa. Despite the fact that it occasionally boxed us up in a small room with some disheveled disperser of Koch's lethal rod, or crowded us in the laboratory of effervescent brilliant Max Lurie, we think it a most enlightening experience, especially at a digtgnge, Dr. Long was ever cordial, efficient, and omniscient, and those large stout matrons cruising about like pocket bgjfje- ships in their long blue coats always intrigued us. The songs of surgery were rendered with their sanguinary sweetness. We give all praise to the soloists. Dr. Eliason delivered his famous opothegms on fractures, recalled several interesting cases lremember the comminuted fracture of the fibula that he saw at 3 A. M. Oct, 9, l9l l l, and showed many X-Ray pictures, some of which had accidentally fallen into a pot of of black paint. ' HADDEN-Neurologists theme son - E L Dr, Ravdin pondered moodily over pancreatic problems made an impassioned plea for water balance, and then lapsed into speechless wonder at the incredlble spectacle of the sun setting on intestinal obstructions. Dr. Ferguson impatiently stepped to the rostrum at 815 A. M., fidgeted in annoyance until 9:00, when he unloosed a torrent of words that inundated the class. lt was a benign flood and we liked it, especially as it cleansed us of the onus of having to read his subject in the surgery book. Gur most practical hour, however, was the one in which 0 phantom lecturer failed to appear, and the class adjourned to the P.G.H. football field, where halfback Schaefer sustained a fractured phalanx. - Fergy was also the captain of the ORD.--and a right good captain too. His dominance of the surgical sector was one of blood and iron. Glimpsed at the far end of a long corridor of cubicles, he burst suddenly into a small chamber 'of benches, whirled about in a vortex of antisepsis, scissors, and tape, then shot off down the hall again froom still spinning? by some vector of centrifugal force. ' All viable patients were reassured by genial Dr. Kaplan and his 9 fninei inch needle, then sped by happy Charlotte on their mutilated way. Gentlemen, Jimmy was our only guide as we groped for prostates in the darkness of cramped recesses and urological ignorance. Miss Chambers hovered over all, a cheerful Lady Macbeth. The series of lectures in Gyn were Taylor-made, carefully organized, fluently delivered, and well received by an inter- ested class. We found Dr .Taylor dignified but affable, although thoroughly confused by the typically bizarre sense of humor of our class. His lectures were concise and illuminat- ing, although not pedantic-and we learned about women from him. The course in Otolaryngology will be remembered for Dr. Schenck's earnest presentation and for the unique subject manner of the guest lecturers. One of these latter otolaryn- gological visiting firemen devoted an entire hour solely to a tiny recess formed by the outer tympanic membrane. ln his enthusiastic preoccupation herepresented this microscopic niche as the throbbing epi-center cf all physiological activity. But our usual early afternoon post-obsorptive state, the drawn shades, and the high CO2 tension of the overheated arf1Dl1l' theatre left us still unmoved by this tempest in a teacuD, and to this day we remain unilluminated on that and manY other obscurities of otolaryngological lore. Our first experience in the Oto ORD. left us tremulous and with certain dark misgivings. After a brief talk by one of the of the staff on the vagaries of the recurrent laryngeal nerve, the patients were let in-or rather unleashed. For, llOVl'TQ been given the signal, they tore through the doorwaY, Wllocped Tl1V0UQh the first rooms, and crashed down UPON the first chairs they could pre-empt. This unexpected, UN- 9 VEVY ittle Nerve Cell Has a Function All Its Own. Fifty-four 4 i i l . i B., 4. fl l i i .,r. i r 4 l l , 'Seated C x l For W5 l:0l' Wg l . lj j - Q j . ,sl 'i A X . xi 5 X f fffmw i . One DOY 0' fhe O'9Un ' D This Patient is a f- What Was it You Heard, Doctor? For We're to Put on GelatinsBoots, Today, Today,D1yj ' I r Gloves, Doctor? Why? You Look So Sad, Doctor For We're to Put on Ge!atin',Boats, Today. I , ' tD.t 1' . , . :annul i ' D h ' Al has Doctor7' ' wimr Happened frhen? H054 You Dress This Man, Professor? D D Iodine, Metap en, or co , .' . 1 ll I . nf 1 Hg. - 5 -4Qf3.g 51. YM .44 . Familia, picfme H I 'QNow We Just Peel This Away h D . , sh C9hfemP'0fh0 S SN ie 7 'R -. 1 . , K ' v v QW sh U Ms Q if ss-1'5 t Just Make a Diagnosis and so I smd' Inf Not Your wwe' lm wait for the Post.. Not Your Mnstress, What the , h 'This Orgyhef Hute Hell Am l7 ' ' h M ' 4 42: 0' .X . R- is X X 'S ? X h'fYeuh? h ,Effleu'ragefPetrissuge-HeiidthesdbyinV f1, A s Vhhh he Qhpdhic ihh thegpit V . 5 , . , N .,,. 4. 'M' Q.u.-..2..' ...far .4'1n..Q+ff-3 - - 1-f ii :1.- H: -:uf - - ix- -1 -, -- .- 5 l Bed Fest F ' l ' l' - 'Exhibit B We Hove the Little Fellow 'Safely Engaged M-vii ,xw,w,., ,him slfjwwad jfflu f?2'Wffgvifwu.f,iu,fs E li 1 da, vutw We Do Not Carry Scooters or Coffee Frosteds g i - ge Hom 00 E995 'S Ther? A Yfh '9 Hefe- ! I Wh . f , F r ' - D bt ' Approach to the Anthony Turbinotes 0 Con Forget Your l-lelp,4Gentle , - ,0f0l0 Y 90l09'5t' N0 ou Ladies? ' 3 ' U ' Q Z X X If gf , 4, S nw Ski-Boll and Friend Let's See What Happens , Take itfasy, Doc, Huh? , l'09ing Colonel Hitchens T' Look Ye'Well n Squinf 1 . To Copyond Recopy D A We Look at Shadows Q A ' 'l'l1ei,'Chin Sags ond lthe Recti Relax V 742 as Q? I W4 l xi' to Scnje digquieting rumors, wos designed for the Senior Closs, in some other school, in some other subject. RADIOLOGY We walk one lost time in the sun, We bid torewell to light, For ten has come on Wednesdoy morn- We enter room ot night. There shodows donce upon the woll ln block ond white confusion, While groping students twist ond store At optical illusions. Vogue X-Roys blurred ond dreory dork, Moke one unending streom Ot tleshless honds ond temur legs To haunt the grimy screen. Tense hyperthyroids burn their lights, . Push wearily their pen, But woggish wostrels joke ond iibe, And curse the bones ot men. Good stopping ploce, the teocher says, We give o toint hooroy. The lights come on, we oll owoke, And stogger out to doy. This Year, tor the tirst time, the much-molignect lectures in Hygiene were replaced by o revomped ond ouspiciously named Public l-leolth and Preventive Medicine course. Most of us were owore ot the ropid odvonces ond increosing im- portance ot this subject, ond looked torword to our lectures with pleosont expectation. The tirst representative of the new deportment wos Dr. Milton Rose, whom we shall remember for his lucid presenta- tion ot the alphabetical complexities ot P.l-lA., M. 8 Cl-l., VAS., CD., etc, etc., tor his repeoted enunciotions ot thot legislative porogon, Title 6 of the S.S.S. , ond tor his ener- getic pomphleteering ot the closs, terminoting his series ot lectures with the distribution ot deoth certiticotes. lt was not until our contoct with Lt. Col. l-litchens, how- ever, that a complete reolization ot the cosmic extent ond 9XDClr1Sive domain of the Public l-leolth movement come to us. We were iolted into a rude Sanitory Awakening, then imme- diately put out to seo. Setting his beorings tor the Neorlfost, our Coptoin stepped to the bridge, delivered himself ot severol dork imprecotions 0Qoinst row milk ond compus contogion, ond had oll tood handlers summorily thrown in irons. THIRD Y-EAR We touched tirst ot primitive Calcutta, where we tound the SSWUQG SYSTGVU OClGQuote tor only the most rudimentory neec's, Schmutzdecke otten reoching o depth Qt Seven fgef olmost eguoling the Americon record set in Lecture Room Bl. Such o situation we tcund intoleroble, so by rgpjd flight Cf ideos, we were tronsported to Bagdod. l-lere in cn inspiro- tionol mood, our leoder conceived thot mechonicol wonder, the l-litchens Fly Trop, thus ending in one moster stroke the teortul rovoges mode by the insect oeriol populotion upon the Great Unwoshedf' We DOUSGG in goy Singopore tor three doys, thus enabling our gollant commonder to orbitrote o border incident which md dGV9lODed over o disputed possoge in the lotest edition ot his Tuberculous l-littite Food l-londlers ot the Chong Dynasty. Evoding orrest ot the customs os o typhoid corrier, our peripotetic prophyloctorion next set soil through B coli- intected woters tor the Philippines, where wos concocted a lethiterous tly poper dip, whose chiet ingredient wos row milk. But here, os the golden sun sinks westword into the seo, we must leove our islond Porodise. There remains but one lost glimpse ot the tiny rice tields, the jungles of polms tringing the coost, ond in the distonce we heor students' voices tointly chonting Ploudite, omici, comoedio tinito est. Exams? Who cares about exams? 11- Sixty-one i n 8 i 1 gg'1l lvi A f '11 '1 i. i, I s If YE 1 ll EP I i PM l li Iii y V! llf iii i l, ll i :Q lil l rl all -It 11 lil i My tl N V l l f 4 I f M I fi lf? liz li? :ig i lm NNN Q 2 BOOK FOUR 0 2nd YEAR HE normal supposedly mastered, we turned to study the abnormal, classi- fied under this or that ology. Daily we spent hours looking down a microscope barrel. Once weekly we were granted the privilege of officially carrying a stethoscope in our pockets. We despaired of confusing Neurology, marveled at fascinating Pharmacology, and hastened our coronary sclerosis with the climb to Clinical Microscopy. By the end of the year we were wailing long and loud in chorus with the Juniors because of too frequent exams. 1-ul SECOND YEAR W Upper Group Front Row: P. D. Cronem-iller, M. O. Colwell, Jr. E. L. Crain, Jr., J. T. Anderson, A. S. Conston D. L. Crowell, S. Chandler, Jr. Second Row: W. F. Beyer, B. L. Coppo-lo, J. W Cook, J. H. Bailey, Jr., R. B. Chodos, L. T. Barnes Third Row: J. L. Dean, C. C. Dahlberg, J. T. Brooks G. H. Amsterdam, H. L. Allen, B. L.- Bonucci K. P. Bachman. Back Row: O. E. Baum, W. J. Atkinson, Jr., H. S Belmont. Not in picture: M. C. Anderson, E. R. Breitwieser, R. J. Coe, K. W. Evans, F. C. Frank. SCHMIDT- Alcohol never made a man do an th' I THE CLASS CF Lower Group J Front Row: P. G. Hepfer, G. B. Hobach, F. R. Downey, K. P. Lambert, J. P. Hobach, E. H. Kennerdell. Second Row: S. B. Kephart, J. R. Farish, R. H. Demaree, A. G. Green, A. T. Giordano, C- H' Golding, Jr. Third Row: B. z. Hibbard, L. v. Keller, P- H- Kandra, V. P. Graham, R. Jones, Jr. Back Row: W. S. Kerr, Jr., R. B. Hunter, E- J' Dunning, W. H. Eyster, Jr. Not in picture: C. B. Holman, L. Jaffe, T- A' Koerner. . ,, Y 'UQ belief! it merely makes him less ashamed of having done it worse. Sixty-four A i f NINETEEN FCRTY-THREE Upper Group Front Row: WXF. McGuire, K. Manrodt, Jr., A. P. Miller, F. K. Mears, Jr., H. T. Lavely, Jr., E. F. Maguire, A. A. Nagle. Second Row: R. T. Myers, J. A. Brady, J. H. Moyer W. W. McCune, M. W. Looloion, R. V. Lewis Back Row: G. E. Murphy, D. B. Miller, J. L MCGUIIN, G. E. Miller, Jr., J. W. Martin, Jr. Not in picture: F. W. Langner, E. S. Linson, W. E. Lowe. Lower Group Row W E Torrey Jr F W Shaffer Front : . . , ., . . , S. H. Lorber, J. H. Powell, L. L. Malamut, B H. Pastor, I. H. Rapp. Second Row: R. T. Wallach, L. Taylor, J. Sinnott, Jr T S Stashak, R. A. Rupp, H. H. Stone. Third Row:. R. F. sfeanke, H. P. weaver, R. w Tilney, Jr., A. H. Silvers, J. I. Wendell, Jr., J. F. Rorke, A. B. Shaul, Jr. Storrs C Van Deusen M G Fourth Row: M. S. , . , . Netsky, J. W. Parks, J. E. Snyder, B. Winter Fifth Row: J. Specter, N. P. Salner, M. L. Zarfos J. R. Wilton, C. J. Lambertsen. Back Row: E. B. Polin, H. M. Nadal. Not in picture: I. B. Wexler. WALKER-- A good set of bowels is worth more than a good set of brains-Josh Billings. Sixty-five If? 'U 'QA 7? QF D-4- .1 V ,H ,H 'e , D uk Z rs., I, , 54 EUR S sus Wa 1 Rubor, Tumor, 'DoIor, Calor,-Stupor When, Miss Young, is the Next Doctor, Who Was This Von Recklinghausen? iL , 4 ' A b Unknown? . if 2: Q, ji! 7477, .4 f,f, , I ff, , 1 W0 ' v 4 I 'n I ! Ll i QQ, Ni . ' H Padrink Was a 56 Year Old-4- il Where is Our Thrill Doubter? s - ll' S Knit One- What About Brucellosis? - Voss Ist de Diagnosis? Purl Two- Blitzen and Friend i h I- ll 1' 1' You May Have Heard the Story About the- el - 3 1 V A , I e. ' ,A V ,, 5 if 4 ' . ' . X - 1 Q' 1 1 xx H ex ix Q Fx' K X Q i 2: . 4 x wx - 9 aj Q e Q if x , X d z 5 e r r r , do . 1 - 'I , , Jays? .vfffq Q A Y r or r e 1313 r , f ,F ' ll , ix . .ex XX V. lx.-,v xfXXSS V ' ' . ' AIl You Need is Time, Tapping a Glomerulus Bend Dawn, Chddren Warmth, and a Cam - Q .- A fortable Seat ' be R3 is figzs-Y :sg Q' , ,W15f: 6 New ee x K' X r 1 , I I . X ee . ,ed x F . N . ix ii f me Q . N. I . ll f g g w It 'SKNAN' N, X A ..., A My V as ffl? F . 4, 9 E 'QNx 5 Cat Napping Osler-Argyria , Sfengle-4Cadutery' The Miracle Contractility A ew F Q.. fu' 7: 5 Q- Q N run xxx Guardian of the Temple Sophomore Saphlshcates 4 Around it Goes: And Whqf if Means, Nobody Knows li 6, as we M!! Af 0 f ' Q J 4 X My f Xfwf fvcgif X A f f ' W, ,, M!! ff ' J , , 1 wks. A , , ,I ,J V, ..1.., f .m,,, , f., M,5:.i,,5- ,, D Tf'e'Y.:':,i:1,?:z'::t:: !,,i1..'1:t:'e f 'i 'e 'i SW - fi im : h 2 T, LL I P . ' . V I 'E se, I Ae X - X X sf--I . 2 gl: , 'I , , v f u x 1 r , lim V The Frozen Steppes of Blockley Leeuwenhoek's Stepchildren Are Sophomore's Tools 5 , T 1 '----:M J 'D 5 s L . E f 1 5 I www T Q n I . V ,W XM, 9 T ., ...., .,AA . f . f 5 f my 495 r.1,-, F Q , 5Pring ond High Testosterone Titre NOW B0Y5 u Such' Jeuy ---------:--N -'---1----.'.'.---1......,.--.4.Y.-,.-..,.....-,V,....-, - -..-...-1 1 - , K n s BOOK FIVE 9 1st YEAR N INDESCRIBABLE feeling was in possession of us as we entered upon that course that more than anything else signifies Medical School- Gross Anatomy. We knew that at last we were embryonic doctors of medicine. To understand the abnormal, we had to know the normal, so for eight months we explored the human body, its gross, microscopic, Gnd chemical structure, and then its marvelous physiological function. We quickly found out that we would have to work to survive, so work we did. This was proved by the fact that most of us survived. I, V , ,f 4, v Xmas MX. E. 5? w . 4 .,. ., .,,. , C f'Xx 6 ff 4 f 51:55. TQ 'G ' ,X ,,, wx +w,w'kN QI' '-rr - 1+-XXXX I I Mbit 232 3, Ziff- ,nX.-XX. - - X II! 5, Xffu ' X X X X X Y QSXRAY ' it KX Q 5-qv X my bfi B TXXXXS .ilnnq VXJXXQ - X EX. WAX X.,4:XX A X XX,.X4X-efuX.XX,X -X - XXX Xp XX X M R X Wk SCX! Q' 'f X' X QX. X XXX' X XXX , XA :X X, Xw, ff' J r SJ P , 3, X Q X .I . 3 . i , i + s X 9 + s J XX. 7531-eili X Qi , fi ?i'!10b5Xge'f ffifxu iXX . .- X- X-, BX .X N X Q qnxnxyx' m ffl 'xy A L' mx sein... 0 u,,:1,.',. V ll X x .X , -'J 3 5 .. 1 s- vv X 1, ,Ja 'J-X ..., . X ,, wif S. .sw S' ,jgzk If X. 0. X M XYNX 912 4455.4 fi A XXX XX Xfw, ,Q Xu: ?mffIHzRDsQsXf:b: X 0 3141:-s1.u X7-fx'-f X -5' A X X . ., -- iw: XXX XA' 4 ,,XXfsXXN.:Xr' HX-vm: xx XX,. X X X 'nf i. QXRSXRX ig XXX 3 .xy f X X X Nix? : NK W0 OD sw. XXX .xx kK 'Q4, 5213 H 5, ,gx Q X Hx X X hw E ' ,-- v. .. q. k l , . I, X Q . . gr 4' 35 J 1 --' X' A... -3 .5fv'i1'l, S Q . - L.. 5 . A f 'F' A .N f ... ' 'H-'F , . ix P ' y Y ' Q V: X' . fm..-+ r X M sx . ,,,.5 -. .. las-- Q, ,. - . ii s ml X' Q.: A X . l if . . l Q l S l ls. . 1 1. ii X i 5 is It ii . .f L. Qs 1 - - A 2 3 N i f f . , Upper Group Front Row: S. Brenner, S. W. Cohen, J. F. Bucher, W. C. Adamson, B. l. Diamond, R. A. Buyers C. W. Daniel, Jr. Second Row: A. M. Bongiovanni, J. H. Deatsch E. W. Bixby, Jr., P. L. DeLong, E. O. Coates, Jr., A. R. Cantlin. Third Row: P. H. Bishop, Jr., J. T. Byrne, S. O Black, Jr., S. F. Barber, G. M. Brown, J. F. Bryant R. L. Chasse. Fourth Row: F. C. Coleman, E. R. Brubaker H. G. Butler, J. S. Burkle, M. S. Bacastow S. Davis, ll. Back Row: R. E. Booth. . Not in picture: C. G. Bratenahl D. B. Coursin. I THE CLASS CF Lower Group Front Row: M. B. Guthrie, H. N. Douds, E. J. Fitzmaurice, Jr., C. W. lobst, M. B. Hall, W. A. Griffith, H. E. Gomez. Second Row: H. T. Hetzel, lll, H. H. Fertig, E. J. Hornick, Jr., R. A. Fawcett, H. J. Fryer, Jr., J. E. Fisher, J. G. Hunter. Third Row: J. H. Gile, N. B. Hein, F. G. Harrison, Jr., A. E. Aey, C. M. Guest, N. Doscher. Fourth Row: F. P. Fensel, F. L. Fuller, Ill, R. E. Forster, lll, B. M. Garfinkle, Jr., F. B. Frisch, R. T. James, Jr., W. H. Eastment. Back Row: S. Friedman, W. C. John, F. Ireland. Not in picture: R. E. Harford, D. T. Jennings. BAZETT- Oxygen lack not only stops the machinery, but wrecks it.-Haldane. Seventy-four f , 95 -'if . 5 it 2 gl O M 2 L .3 1 i 1 s ' ,F 5 ff .A JM . If I ,. . Lg r - .gh f- . 1 'H-3 y ,, . y , ,AA?E Z P i, , , M X' 1 g V s NINETEEN FCRTY-FOUR Upper Group Front Row: C. S. Kambe, V. D. Maguire, P. T. Makler, H. S. Medoff, E. J. Platz, A. l. Murphy, Jr., J. J. R. Reid, L. B. Panzer. Second Row: J. W. Manning, lll, F. J. Phillips, Jr. J. G. Kehler, Jr., R. K. Maxon, C. P. Neumann C. C. Mackinney, C. H. Kurtz. Third Row: E. D. Longaker, R. V. Lynch, Jr. H. H. Rawnsley, R. J. Henry, R. C. Prall F. Mick, Jr. Fourth Row: F. J. McDermott, H. W. McCurdy B. Roberts, C. S. Martin, T. J. Nauss. Back Row: P. Parker, W. A. MacNamara, W. J. A MacMurtrie, Jr., J. Kanevsky, T. S. Royster, Jr. R. L., Pipes. Lower Group Front Row: B. A. Teah, E. E. Steinhardt, N. J. Williamson, B. H. Waksman, H. Salis, E. Torgan, J. A. Wolford. Second Row: J. P. Walsh, W. N. Sterrett, P. O. Sather, T. G. Schnabel, Jr., J. C. Todd, L. B. Shaffer. Third Row: A. Wight, W. Weiss, Jr., J. A. L. Thomas, G. S. Watson, R. W. Viehe, Jr., F. W. Spicer, Jr., J. C. Winter. Fourth Row: G. R. Wade, R. H. Witmer, J. W. Watson, W. M. Simons, W. F. Scarpitti, L. B. Thrush. Back Row: J. M. Waldron, D. B. Thornton, B. W. Wing. Not in picture: J. M. Whittock. GOLDSCHMIDT- Reiteration and reiteration witheut irritation is good pedagogy. Seventy-five ,J ' mfs: lm LA 3 nf .Zi 6 .. B' in NOT to BUVY Caesaff But fo Bmlse Him V Observatory I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls NM MWFKSKQKSW 1 A 'W W f ' I wwe ffl 1 ' 'Q .. Q- ...of Angel of the Second Floor Back I Still Say lt's Robbery T he Ovum, Doctor, is an Egg !.W s - t A iw sg You Can Raise and Lower the Bulb Indefinitely . 1 Haldane's Folly and Other Machines x dl . ,, If 4 1 1 ,Wm i lm, F I F Li A 5 I-' K 5 .fr Pl . I w 134' I LJ ' .b XI s lx' V 'V O- r, 1 1 W1 L LI 0. I I fi ,5' X H V 'S 4 'M wiif Y Iglxvl fi i ia X was X- XX K X -im WX, QE, N ,X . Z www 'hw X X -:qw l N fa X Q5 - , qi, gf w K S XX X x Q? .xs ' X -K 3 X XX. ,X X X 9915? XX . F' 'H 1 X 11? 9 N x X K t 1 BI 'Ill , 5XX.XXX,N-AXXXXX 'I X g u XX N Xx-x X r 1- . K .QQ f 5 ' k . 4 ' N XXX x X N x xx ' A i X 5 L ' :N x X X P s , N123 .5 X X X X 3 2 X , - 4 S- Ti cw i NX X Gray Days x X XX! I ' 'f EB ' g lrv. . 3, A ,,,,,X,, 5 X7 -,.v.:, :X Q1 352' ss 'RX X X e wx X 75, ' M , ' ' 1,5 A X . wg . 'N M 2 ' SX X W. . 'Q V Q . 7 Q q,.,,1:, fa Q? , Q-,..::.:v. 1 A - N f :zu s.. f fx 4 ,, X 1' .wiv 1 .: .X W , ,X,. , , , X .r L EE, wg. 5 A 2:-, - ' X 'f ,. ' ,M ' ff' Cai ' ' 5213 Q 4655 QA U Yr 41? V' ' ' Tw! :::Xsm:.+ :X:x 1: - 2 -1 yws , -gk, , wc. f Q y,, W -A - .X .5 X , ' , Xi Q 0 0 f gg 7 14 0 ,gg N VX , Q? I Q if 42 Q 3 0' , Y gg, X mg X wx, 3 rf . f Q X ., ,kn, : M I 5 x S Q X is 'f X Bi V ,Q 5 S af Q 8 ,S-s P X, X- X .ef ,-2 1: 47:1-if f ff 'fx X . -4 X- s , 9 X N , 4 rn 7 3 ' 1 if ' .,.XX..:, an tX.v L Q , yy ff 1' X. emi ff,r1,X ,, f.c ,Ir . 9 X ' Jggw. f,,f ,A ig we . 'x ,W Q3 f ,V a 2 Bottle Babies N - 1 X5 f ig, Q wx Q , xw X .try ,LL , X f . 3 . I X -'pi X Q X1 1 Ti i Q1 I. Pyrex Jungle 1 ,XZ 4,- Xi N M r gg .. has .- .,. n Pursuit of pH' ' V'Q 'td o, Warm Egisrence But Womanfs Work is Never Done i H1 if 712 Whatever Happened' fo Thdt Old Burhb 'Calorimeter? d Drabkin Recclculated H I ef '4 A ...W X -QA If. 45.4 I 45, , .l,r I , u . e + e Jfhe Juice f0 -If ' I wh 1- 'f ls Howya- Fixed For COL Buddy? Add OngJig3grlf.mon,, Bloody Hotboxf. Thats 0 I ........... ..-.,- -.... ..- 4 M H NXEXNX ,la in-c 2 s X ,f I X ,, N ' ' ' 'Wi'-fc- X if x I A Xmibgd X ii rlgwsg X BOOK SIX ' ORGANIZATIONS HE actual number of hours spent in school forms only a part of a medical student's day. How the remaining hours are used is partly governed by membership in societies and fraternities. Through these agencies, the student becomes better acquainted with the faculty and with his fellow medicosg he is given the opportunity of hearing prominent men of other medical schoolsg and he is able to have more and better social activities. The formation this year of the inter-fraternity council has done much to further unity among the fraternities. XX I X Q X x W fx M 'Z ,km Q 1 4,4 1 my W 7 ffV' W' sr as N 5' sl' IE ' .ulr-41 f ,, - . X l!sNl ' I 4 Q, . A lv.-.., ri- 3. , 1 , A . WN I' 1 1 I Q 1' 1 l 1 . -5- n N X ... -W. 5, 'S X f X sk, , xv 'f um. - Q 4353?- tr 'SHS 2 fu, wg 15 xi ae? S X 'A ss'-' 7 Niigx' x , M x , x www e:Qs1-mgbwimv X X x fb X ' Q5 Vg Q. 5554 Qi 4. fm: , , I X .mv xwxx X .2 xv Q25 22-3f2NfR? 53 fX2'S-' Am b wx -,Q xx Q V X' .. , --1.50.1 N kwgxwxfkgxx. ,A .X gg ,,. ff' 3 5 1 gi :gif ,M f gig Y f - lftxix K a x .X X X N Q ,Q.,yxwy-S . ,xv xxgi - ' f 5X,:iw3WFQi'f:T Q x .V QX' f xb2.S5f 5: X X mvff Y xg W5-V.--sg, x Q X Y X r QM.. A 1 l XO l ZMQQ' 1x . V V U -, ,wsu-D Q I A 1 v . ge if K fi ' e. W? ' f . s Q o 'STX if ff' N . QNX xi 1 5 - 1 s Quik! .ln Inq ' if 11 . 2' ' - ui W .3 al' 0 -wus. V Eff.-', ' ALM .S uf' Aix, . , ff. -A 1' K, , gif: i O a - .- 'fr-W., 'f n .52 7 'D gg? if i x. tt' 1 First Row: J. S. Gordon, Jr., C. T. deBerardinis, I. Zeidman, W. L. Dyson, P. W. Burke, R. H. Johnston. F. D. Murphy, G. C. Ziegler, H. A. Hanno, H. K. Marcy, Jr. Not in picture: J. W. lsgreen, R. E.. Miller, G. J. Owens Second Row: S. A. Paine, T. Gucker, III, J. R. Battenfeld, Jr., H. M. Suckle. PATRON FRANCIS C, WOQD, MD. OFFICERS FRANKLIN D. MURPHY .................... President IRVING ZEIDMAN .................... Vice-President GENEVRA C. ZlEGl.ER .... Secretory-Treasurer N Tl-lE summer ot l902, o smoll group ot students orgonized o medicol honor society ot the University ot Illinois College ot Medicine, This society vvos nomed Alpho Gmego Alpho ond vvos designed to recognize scholorship omong medicol students. The yeor following, o chopter ot Alpho Omego Alpha vvos instolled ot the University ot Pennsylvonio. Groduolly the society hos exponded until novv there ore torty-tvvo chopters, representing the highest ronking institutions in Conodo ond the United Stotes. The oims of the society ore the promotion ot scholorship ond reseorch in medicol schools, the encourogement ot high stondords ot chorocter ond conduct omong medicol students ond groduotes, ond the recognition ot high ottoinment in medicol sciences. The society sponsors yeorly on open lecture ot which prominent medicol men ore speokers. This yeor the lecture wos given by Dr, Richord F. Loeb. A plon tor o toculty-odvisory system vvos olso orgonized fOr the purpose ot tostering closer ond friendlier relotionships betWSGVl the medicol toculty ond students. The ideo vvos most tovorobly received. HITCHENS- My fly ff9DIfnVGf1fi0n has been adopted as standard by the U. S. Department of Indian Affairs. Eighty-four First Row: J. L. McCIenahan, T. R. Talbot, Jr., J. J. Jenkins, Jr., F. Jacobs, J. E. Cole, G. J. Wright, Jr., H. E. Ober. V'h,J.,M.C.W fI,G.E.M h Second Row: J. S. Wise, J. R. Battenfeld Jr le e r ar e urp Y Wade, G. S. Watson, J. H. Gile, J. W. Watson, R. W. , -, K. F. Schaefer, S' th R .F. w. s' ,J., J. c. T dd' ii,H. ' T. J. McGurI, Jr., F. D. Murphy, W. A. Atlee, B. Ambler. lx ow plcer r 0 ' Wltmer J' H Third Row: W. W. Wilson, H. Z. Fretz, J. Walker, Jr., J. G Kitchen, ll, J. L. Steigerwalt, L. Singmaster, R. E. Lace. Fourth Row: A. I. Murphy, W. W. McCune, F. K. Mears, Jr., J. L. Mc'Gahn, L. T. Veach, J. C. Lungren, T. E. Park. Fifth Row: J. H. Powell, F. W. Shaffer, D. B. Coursin, G. R. . L. DeLong. Not in picture: T. Gucker, Ill R. H. Johnston Deatsch, R. A. Fawcett, L. B. Thrush, C. P. Neumdnn, Pl , , S. N. Key, Jr., S. W. Robinson, G. M. Austin, C. B. Holman, D. B. Miller, B. Z. Hibbard, J. I. Wendell, Jr., J. Sinnott, Jr., F. R. Downey, C. J. Lambertsen, R. T. Myers. WILLIAM PEPPER MEDICAL SCCIETY HE William Pepper Medical Society, founded in l886, was named for Dr. William Pepper, father of the Dean, and of our present patron, Dr. O. H. Perry Pepper. . PATRON At each monthly meeting, a senior presents a case report, O. H. PERRY PEPPER, MD. and another senior gives a prepared differential diagnosis. A dis- cussion follows, ending with the true diagnosis. At the completion of the discussion, a guest speaker is introduced. This year, the society has heard Drs. Joseph Stokes, Thomas Cook, D. deRivas, OFFICERS Edwgrd Streckerl cmd Russell Richclrdson. FRANCIS JACOBS ............. ......... P resident JESSE J. JENKINS ........ ........ V ice-President Since l938, the society has sponsored an Annual Honor Lecture, A . ...'s. Secretory H ROLD N. COLE ............... the speaker being a member of the faculty who has recently com- GEORGE J. WRIGHT, JR. pleted an outstanding piece of research work. A plague, bearing JOHN SINNOTTI JR' the names of the speakers, is kept in the Medical School Library. So far, the list includes Dr. W. O. Abbott, Dr. E. M. Landis, Dr. J. S. Lockwood, and Dr. W. C. Stadie. STRECKER- The patient had been returning to the doctor' and each time got 0 prescription' Finally he said, 'What does this t.i.d. mean? 'TII I die? ........Treasurer .........Librarian Eighty-five t Row P P mpson J J Gordon, Jr., D. W. Third Row: J. Wi. Cook, D. B. Miller, R. B. Hunter, . Compton Dr E L Eliason H G Bullen S Wright, P. Maier, Holman, E. A. Rasberry, Jr. Second Row E L Crain Jr R W Rooker T V. Magruder, Jr., Not in picture: J. J. Manning, S. A. Paine, J. D. Burg M H Long F W Foncannon P S Combs, W. L. Bennett. J. F. Bocon,. W. F. Beyer, O. Colwell, Jr., J. I. Wendell Jr., J. R. Wilton, J. R. Farish. D HAYES AGNEW SOCIETY I-IE D. I-Ioyes Agnew Society wos orgonized in i888 by o group ot undergroduotes interested in turthering their knowledge ot surgery. The group preyoiled upon Dr. Agnew, then lote in lite, to accept the position ot potron ot thersociety. Since its tounding, the society hos been octive except tor one period ot seyerol yeors. - Monthly 'meetings ore held ot which surgicol cose histories ore discussed ond prominent members ot the tciculty ore invited to speok. A glonce ot the eorly roll books reveols the nomes ot such men os Geisinger, Poncoost, ond Wills. Dr. E. l.. Elioson, o member during his period ot undergrciduote work, is now the potron ot the society. ELIASON Cathartics in acute abdomens kill more people than gun powder-except eye,-y twenty C B Fri First Row: D. L. Gamble, H. M. Klinger, J. E. Mal C, M , GY, . Third Row: A. A. N I , N. J. W'II' H, N, D d Elogmvn gf-, Cfge, J- H- Wenger, W. L. Hoon, C. c. P. Lambert, A. R. grfon, A. B. SlhaI:iITsJII, J. G. Keliarflf, U I ' ' ' G' er' I- W. C. John, W. C. Adamson, M. O. Calwell Jr. Sec-:and Rox. Kfpncjrdeua JAWS Trentork S. I. Dodd, R. W. Not in Picture: J. W. Barnhart E S Baum 'W T Bowers yatt, . . ou , r., . . winey, . P. M'II , L. V. F, H, R' I1 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Keller, P. D. Cmnemmerl W. F. Beyer. I ef J. F. B:ltLe2rlomjsetC.wJinrxiers, T. S. Stashak, H. H. Stone, BARTON COOKE HIRST OBSTETRICAL SOCIETY HE Borton Cooke Hirst Obstetricol Society wos founded Jonuory Zl, IS94, ond vvos nomed for its first potron, Dr. Borton Cooke Hirst, who wos then Professor of Obstetrics. Dr. Hirst continued os potron until his deoth in l935. Since then his ploce hos been token by his son, John Cooke Hirst, ll. Regular meetings ore held eoch month. Speokers hove been outstanding men in the field of Obstetrics, Gynecology, ond Pediotrics. The members hove hod the opportunity of toking port in the meetings by presenting popers ond coses. ln oddition to the scientific ospect of the meetings, the Society offords o fine opportunity for sociol contoct with fellow students, members of the foculty, ond prominent doctors in the vorious fields of medicine. PATRON JOHN COOKE HIRST, ll, MD. OFFICERS JACK E. COLE .................................. President CHARLES M, HoPFMAN, JR., vice-President STEPHEN l. DODD .......................... Secretory ROBERT W. HYATT ...... MURPHY.- All Qu hqye to know to understand obstetrics is right from left, how to count to I00, Y II and which way the hands of the clock turn. ..........Treosurer Eighty-seven if - 71 5 2 . if, 0 F' t R : D. B. Freshwater, F. A. Dry, G. J. Massey Van Deusen, I. H. Rapp, F. S. Brown. 'IDL J.ovM. Deaver, J. A. Dickson, F. C. Lorish, M. H. Long. Third Row: R. A- R'-IPP, A- M- lams. l'l- l-- Allen. J- W- PGFICS- Second Row: K. P. Lambert, B. L. Coppolo, J. H. Moyer, Not in picture: E. A. Agnew, P. W. Burke, W. G. Kennon. JOHN B. DEAVER SURGICAL SOCIETY PATRON J. MONTGOMERY DEAVER, MD. OFFICERS JAMES A. DICKSON .......................... President MARTIN I-l, LONG, JR. .......... Vice-President DONALD B. FRESHWATER .............. Secretory GORDON J . MASS EY ........................ Treosu rer N I897 o group of students founded the John B. Deover Society with Dr. Deover os their potron. As on odyisor of young men, Dr. Deover vvos unsurpassed. I-lis compelling power of speech, his wisdom ond his wit coused him to be loved' by oll. Dr. Deover rorely missed o meeting until his deoth in l932. l-lis ploce os potron wos logicolly filled by Dr. George R Muller, ci former student ond ossociote of Dr. Deoyer, ond the first president of the society. Dr. Muller performed his duties os potron in o vvoy thot hos left the undergroduotes deeply indebted to him. Dr, Muller resigned in I94O, ond it was fitting that his ploce be token by Dr. J. Montgomery Deoyer, son of the first potron. Dr. Deover hos been yery octiye in the society ond hos secured os speokers mony locol leoders in medicine ond surgery. As undergroduotes we feel thot the Deoyer Society hos served os o most yoluoble port of our medicol educotion, ond hos mode oyoiloble to us mony opportunities which would otherwise hove been impossible. I PENDERGRASS-fTo embarrased seniorl What's the matter? Didn't you come to any of my lectures last year? SENIOR- Sure, but you shouIdn't have turned the lights off. Eighty-eight ' First Row: A. G. Green, R. G. Fisher, H. W. Eshbach, Dr. Fourth Row: J. H. French, P. H. Bishop,.W. M. Simons, C. H. W. H. Addison, E. B. Tyson, J. M. Straughan, P. Budura. Thompson, F. M' k, J , C, H, K t S B K h Second Row: K. Manrodt, -lf-, J- F- ROYICG, N- A- Hefller, J. F. Not in Picture: J. IT. Byrrhe, R. L. Lghfisse, R.. Clildssen F.- Cdffy, R- A- Brunner, B- E- Smith, E- M- Cafpenfef, W- A- W. Dasch, J. S. Fager, J. E. Fisher, G. J. Harrison, 'Jr., Griffith. R. L. Hottenstein, J. G. Hunter, C. S. Kambe, T. A. Koerner, Third Row: H. E. Gomez, C. W. lobst, J. T. Brooks, W. E. H. T. Lavely, Jr., R. L. Mayock, H. W. McCurdy, R. K. Torrey, Jr., R. Jones, E. J. Platz, E. J. Fitzmaurice, Jr. Moxon, M. A. Petti, P. O. Sather, W. F. Scarpitti, A. E. Tate, M. W. Wolcott. GEORGE A. PIERSOL ANATOMICAL SOCIETY I-IE George A. Piersol Anotomicol Society, nomed for its first honored potron, wos founded on Morch 3, IQO9 by eleven members of 'the first yeor closs in medicine. Dr. Piersol Wos potron until I924, when he wos succeeded by Dr. A. R C. AShUVST. Since l932, the Society hos enjoyed, the guidonce ond pcitronoge of Dr. Williom I-I. F. Addison. Since its orgonizotion, the Society hos offered much stimulus to its members by mecins of numerous guest speokers, student popers, ond Senior cose reports. Meetings ore customorily held once eoch month during the school yeor. Twice eoch yeor the Society bonguets ot o hotel or club. The mid-yeor bonciuet is mode possible through the kind generosity of Dr. Addison. The spring bcinguet brings the yeor's octiyities to o close. The Society tokes this opportunity to eXpreSS ITS Qffltitvde to oll who hoye porticipoted in the yeor's octivities. f ' ' that the alcohol concentration in OU ll HITCFHENS-- The unfortunate part o It I5 sufficient to sterilize the glGSS- PATRON WILLIAM I-l. F. ADDISON, M.D. OFFICERS I-IORACE W. ESI-IBACI-I .................. President EDWARD B. TYSON ................ Vice-President ALFRED G. GREEN .......................... Secretory JOSEPI-I M, STRAUGI-IAN .............. Treosurer ROBERT G. FISHER, Corresponding Secretory r cocktails is not Eighty-nine First Row: E. M. Anthony, T. Gucker, J. S. Gordon, M. A. Petti C. T. deBerardinis, H. Stevens, D. M. B. Holmes. Second Row: J. E. Snyder, J. M. Straughan, R. L. Mayock W. J. Atkinson, M. A. Swiney, T. Maxwell, F. C. Lorish Not in picture: E. L. Foltz, P. P. Rodman, H. M. Klinger, MacMurtrie, R. Jones. UNDERGRADUATE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION PATRON ISIDOR S. RAVDIN, MD, OFFICERS MICHAEL A. PETTI .......................... President JOI-IN S. GORDON, JR ,............ Vice-President EDWARD R. BAI-INSON .................... Secretary JAMES G. KITCHEN, ll .................... Treasurer T Tl-IE suggestion ot Dr. John G. Clark, the Undergraduate Medical Association was tounded in l907-V908 tor the purpose ot stimulating student research, ot promoting a spirit ot medical traternalism among undergraduates, and to function as an organi- zation through which the student body could act as a unit. The membership is made up ot the entire student body ot the medical school. The controlling body, known as the l-louse ot Delegates, consists ot two representatives from each medical society, the president ot each class, and all students who have presented papers on lJ.M.A. Day. The association holds several open meetings each year, at which prominent men are invited to speak. lt conducts U.M.A. Day in April ot each year. Ot recent years it has investigated the matter ot student ethics and student health. It has been instru- mental in the creation ot the Medical lntertraternity Council, and in conjunction with Alpha Omega Alpha has instituted a tacultv adviser system. Speakers at lJ.M.A. Day this year were Dr. John I-l. Stokes, Dr. C. P. Rhoads, and Dr, A. B, I-lastings. STRECKER- Any man over 60 who doesn't take a little drink of whiskey is as big a fool as a man under 60 who does. I Ninety , K. F. Schaefer, W. L. Bennett, F. W. Dasch, J. P. Hardy T. V. Magruder, J. S. McConnell, E. R. Bahnson, J. G , Kitchen, J. S. Campbell, M. G. Netsky, E. H. Kennerdell . C. J. Lambertsen, J. S. Fager, S. W. Robinson, W. J -..-if l First Row: Mary Hall, Jane Findley, Eleanor Anthony, Dorothy Anne Wight, Edith Torgan, l'l0lI11eS, GBHGVW Zle9le 1 -lennneffe MCC-Unnelll MOFQGYBT Not in picture: Pauline Pappenheimer Josephine Perlingiero Storrs. Ll R dl F 5 h ff ' . ' Row Lillian Panzer Anne Cantlin Ruth Steinke Ellachs, Esancesapfaeifk, l.laTlElari1rlWh'l14llalhAnders0nl Kclherme Second : , , , Elizabeth Linson, Virginia Graham, Edna Ruth Breitwieser, WOMEN'S MEDICAL SOCIETY LL women students in the Medical School are members of the rWomen's Medical Society, founded in l9l9. Graduates may become associate members, The local alumni maintain a loyal and helpful attitude toward the society. The active and associate mem- bers meet socially at the first meeting of the year. Frequent meetings are addressed by members of the medical faculty. Activities of the society include an open' meeting in the spring at which an outstanding medical woman speaks, an afternoon and evening in the spring as guests of Drs. Rae and Lucke: and par- ticipation in the U.M.A. Day activities. Dr. Maude Abbott gave the address at the l94O open meeting, and Dr. Sara M. Jordan gave the l94l address. Beginning with this year, this address will PATRON TRuMAN o. scHNABEL, Mo. OFFICERS DOROTHY HOLMES ................... JEANNETTE McCONNELL ..... .........President .Vice-President be ............ .......... T l'eOSUl'el' S' . MARY l-IALL .............. ....... S t Members of the society suffered great loss in the death of we my their patron, Dr, David Reisman. They are fortunate in having Dr. Truman G. Schnabel, who was a very close friend of Dr. Reisman, as his successor. I1 f kidney disease. If you don't ask too PEPPER- Next hour we will take up the arterial p use If many questions, we can probably get away with lf. Ninety-one st Row S W Robinson F R Downey P P Rodm Neumdnn T Gucker T R Talbot A G Smger J G Logue ond Rw K H H bner J G K he J Jo J W Nicholson K M Scott R H Johnston E L Foltz P N Horvath Thur Row F W Shaffer W W McCune J Sinnott J Walker R V Lewis V P Maguire urth Row: R. A. yers D. .Co 'n A. H. Siv D. T. Jennings F. G. Harrison C. C. Mockinney C. P. Fif Row E D Lcngaker R H Witmer A I Mur hy R E Booth C W Daniel R E Forster T G Schnabel B Roberts F K Mears P Parker S Davis N in picture H B Adams W A Atlee G M Austin F Barber J A Guthrie M L Haywar F Jacobs W S Kerr W M Lutz J L McCIenahan F H Ridgley L. Singmaster J. L. Steigerwalt L. Taylor R. W. Tilney J. A. L. Thomas R. C Waldon W. W Wilson FRATERS IN FACULTATE ALPHA MU Pl OMEGA ALPHA CHAPTER-Established l89l. Founded in l89l at the University of Pennsylvania. Eleven Chapters OFFICERS W. OSLER ABBOTT, M.D. ............................ Graduate President THOMAS GUCKER Ill ............... ........ U ndergraduate President TIMOTHY R. TALBOTT, JR. .............. Corresponding Secretary FRANCIS JACOBS ....................... ............ R ecording Secretary ARTHUR G. SINGER, JR. ........ .................... T reasurer F. ROBERT DOWNEY ................... ........ ........ W a rden LPHA MU Pl OMEGA celebrates this year its fiftieth anniver- sary, having been organized in lB9l at the University of Pennsylvania. Its founders were motivated by the desire to satisfy a need of a closer bond of association . . . not only with their fellows, the undergraduates, but also with the older members of the profession and recent graduates, in a fraternity so organized that they would find more ample opportunity to become familiar with professional manners and customs, and with professional ethics. The first annual meeting was held on April 28, l89l at the University Club, at which time the Grand Chapter was also estab- lished. Officers of the Grand Chapter are elected from the eleven active chapters now existing The Alpha Chapter has continued in the tradition of its founders, and numbers among its membership many of the names which have figured prominently in medical achievements in Philadel- phia. STRECKER- Sex is an interesting and nqfurql Ninety-two W. Osler Abbott, M.D. Francis H. Adler, M.D. J. Harold Austin, M.D. James A. Babbitt, M.D. Carl Bachman, MD. Henry P. Brown, Jr., MD. Charles W. Burr, M.D. Edward H. Campbell, M.D. George M. Coates, M.D. George S. deRenyi, M.D. William C. Ely, M.D. William E. Ehrich, M.D. L. Kraeer Ferguson, M.D. Wilfred E. Ery, M.D. George D. Gammon, M.D. George L. Hoffman, M.D. Robert H. Ivy, M.D. Frederick H. Krauss, M.D. Edward B. Krumbhaar, MD Francis D. W. Lulqens, M.D. Richard L. Masland, MD Daniel J. McCarthy, M.D. Grayson P. McCouch, MD Morton McCutcheon, MD. Edward E. McLaughlin, MD. E. Leroy Mercer, M.D. Douglas P. Murphy, M.D. D. Sargeant Pepper, M.D. William Pepper, M.D. Harold F. Robertson, M.D. John P. Scott, 'M.D. Alfred Stengel, Jr., M.D. William P. Stewart, M.D. Joseph Stokes, Jr., M.D. L. James Talbot, M.D. Edward S. Thorpe, Jr., M.D. Robert G. Torrey, M.D. ide Horatio C. Wood, Jr., M.D. Harold A. Zintel, MD. thing to talk about. easedl First Row: J. S. Gordon, T. J. Morgan, S. N. Key, H. G. Bullen F. D. Murphy, J. J. Manning, G. J. Owens. Second Row: J. M. Whittock, B. Ambler, P. D. McGehee, G. J. Wright, R. M. Johnston, H. K. Marcy, G. N. Aldredge Third Row: E. L. Crain, J. T. Anderson, M. C. Wlarfel E. S. McCabe, H. N. Cole, W. C. Long, J. R. Farish. Fourth Row: W. J. Atkinson, R. B. Hunter, D. B. Miller J. W. Cook, J. L. Dean, G. E. Murphy, W. E. Lowe. Fifth Row: R. C. Prall, G. R. Wade, R. W. Viehe, W. J. A 'MacMurtrie, F. W. Spicer, C. M. Guest, Sixth Row: B. Z. Hibbard, J. H. Deatsch, R. A. Fawcett P. L. DeLong, W. N. Sterrett. Not in picture: W. L. Bennett, J. R. Battenfeld, P. S. Combs, W. L. Dyson, F. W. Foncannon, C. M. Gutierrez, H. E. Ober, S. S. Poorman, H. Z. Fretz, J. C. Lungren, F. M. Ramsey H. C. Reider, C. B. Holman, J. I. Wendell, J. R. Wilton F. P. Fensel, N. B. Hein. I I I NU SIGMA NU LAMBDA CHAPTER-Established 1896. Founded in i882 at the University of Michigan. Forty Chapters. FRATERS IN FACULTATE Kenneth E Appel, MD. OFFICERS Paul A, Bishop, JMD. , i is Q IQ T Rcben B4 Brown! MD. WiLLlS l-, BENNPTNT ......................... ..... ....... P resident Chmles C Cmppiel MID HAL,EY G. BULLQ ........... ......... i ce- .esaen Leon H. Collins, Jr., MD. GECRGE J. WRIGHT .............. .......... S ecretary FVOVJIK A- CV0lQ, MD- FRANKLIN D, MURPHY ........ .......... T reosurer Richard P. Custer, MD Joseph C. Donnelly, MD. Kendall A, Elsom, MD. Elmer V. Eyman, MD, Richard W. Garlichs, MD. John C. Gittings, MD. ' U SIGMA NU was tounded on March 2, l882, at the University ot Michigan by six iunior medical students ot that school, Arthur P, Hitchens, MD, Calvin F, Kay, M D. Thomas C. Kelly, MD. Louis B. LaPlace, MD. Esmond R. Long, MD T, Grier Miller, MD. John M. Mitchell, MD. Stuart Mudd, MD, Thomas M. McMillan, MD, Jesse T. Nicholson, MD. Joseph T. Nlcholson, MD. John P, North, MD Harry P. Schenck, MD. John F. Stoutter, MD. Enoelbrekt A. Swenson, PhD. idward G. Torrance, MD. Joseph B, Vancer Veer, MD. Philip Williams, MD, Francis C. Wood, MD. Valentine W, M. Wright, MD. HADDEN among whom was Will Mayo. These men wished to establish some sort ot medical traternity that would be interested in scholarship, in the development ot better teaching, and generally in the raising ot medical education to a higher level. Today there are torty chapters ot the fraternity in the United STGTGS ond in CGUOCJU- On March lil, IQSQ6, a group ot ten students and two taculty members were installed at Pennsylvania as Lambda Chapter. The tirst house was at 36th and Locust Streets. The present house at 3904 Spruce Street was obtained as a selt owned house in l922, through ettorts ot a strong Alumni Association. The present undeVQVOdUOl9 VTJGUJIUGVSIJJD I5 Jlcm 'POTW WKIPIV scattered states. To date, 496 Pennsylvania students have become members ot Nu SIQPJU NU- II Disease never reads the textbooks. Ninety-thre C First Row: P. P. Thompson, Jr., J. J. Jenkins, Jr., J. E. Cole, H. M. Klinger, K. F. Schaefer, T. J. McGurI, Jr., J. E. Maley R. W. Rooker, D. L. Gamble. Second Row: W. T. Bowers, E. S. Baum, G. J. Treires G. B. Milburn, W. H. Fairweather, J. J. Glslason G. B. Patrick, Jr., T. E. Park. Third Row: J. W. Trenton H. H. MacGil in Jr. F. H. Ritten- I p I I house, L. T. Veach, L. A. Kremer, R. E. Lace. ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA MU CHAPTER-Established in 1901. Founded in 1888 at the Dartmouth Medical Fourth Row: W. F. Beyer, E. H. Kennerdell, J. L. McGahn J. W. Fidler, Jr., M. O. Colwell, C. J. Lambertsen. Fifth Row: E. E. Steinhardt, H. T. Hetzel, lll., W. C. John R. V. Lynch, Jr., J. C. Todd, J. G. Kehler, Jr. Sixth Row: V. P. Maguire, J. H. Gile, J. J. R. Reid H. N. Douds, W. C. Adamson, N. J. Williamson. Seventh Row: B. W. Wing, W. H. Eastment, L. B. Thrush J. W. Watson. , School. Forty-nine Chapters. OFFICERS FRATERS IN FACULTATE .................... .............. P l'eSlC.el'1l' I-lgfvey Borflel -llc, THOMAS J. MQGURL, JR ,.......... ............ V ice-President Oscar V. Batson, MD. GEORGE J. TREIRES ................. ............................ T reasurer Charles A, Behney, MD. F F . Francis J. Braceland, MD. RANK H, RITTENHOUSE ....... ............. R ecord ng Secretary Winter L CONSS MD EDGAR S. BAUM ................... ......... C orrespondlng Secretary pw' Dumkel ' ' LPHA KAPPA KAPPA was incorporated in 1888 as the Society ot Asclepiades, Other chapters rapidly sprang up in medical schools throughout the country until there are now torty-nine chap- ters including two in the Dominion ot Canada. Alpha Kappa Kappa has a strong national organization, its bonds constantly strengthened by yearly visits trom the national otticers and by bi-annual national conventions, The traternity publication, The Centaur, stimulates interest by its scholastic, social, and traternal articles, Charles E Eisenhower, MD. David L. Farley, MD. James A. Flaherty, MD, Herbert Fox, MD. Nathaniel Gildersleeve, MD, John E. Grittiths, MD. Frederic H. Leavitt, MD, Robert C. Lotgren, MD. Balduin Lucke, MD. Theodore E Orr, MD. Duane G, Sannenborn, MD. Edward A. Streclcer, MD. John H. Stokes, MD. F, William Sunderman, MD, Frederick D. Weidman, MD Charles C. Wolterth, MD. In September 1923, Mu Chapter tormed an Alumni Association, the members ot which take an active interest in the undergraduate chapter proceedings as well as in the national fraternal organization. LEVIN SYNDROME-Can't get up in the morn' t' d ll Ninety-four 'UQ' 'fe 0 day, Gnd can't go to bed at night. ,gin I nb' ttf llll lid ll' All Fun First Row: F. A. Dry, G. J. Massey, J. H. Wenger, C, C, Ruff J. A. Dickson, F. C. Lorish, C. M. Hoffman. I Second Row: W. T. Foulk, A. R. Errion, M. A. Swiney, Ill, H Murh M D Garber H T Simmonds J. . p y, . . , . . I , i u Third Row: B. L. Coppolo, P. D. Cronemiller, C, Von Deusen A. B. Shaul, R. A. Rupp, I. H. Rapp, FRATERS IN FACULTATE Earl D. Bond, M D Gecroe W Chamberlin, M o Alexancer G Fewell, M D. l-lenry U Hopkins, M D Robert A Kimbrough, Jr., M D Curt W. Lundauist, M D Joseph McFarland, M D Georae ri Meeker, Ph o Joseph V, Missett, Jr M D Herrv E Morton, SQD Walter R Peterson, M D. Arthur vv. Phillips, M p Donald M Pillsbury! M D Harold G Scheie, M D ELIASON- Give me Fourth Row: M S Bacastow A P M11 ' ' 1 r . I . Fifth VR Kellzr, Lambert, A. A. Nhgele, L Allen' ow: . . ' J, - N-I. F. Bucher. omni C' Winter' E' R' Brubaker' ot in picture: E. A. Agnew, W. L. H F H. J. Fryer, J. A. weiferri, A. E. Aey. Con' ' C' Coleman' S I Dodd PHI RHO SIGMA LAMBDA PHI CHAPTER-Established I906. Founded in I890 at Northwestern University. Forty Chapters. OFFICERS JAMES A. DICKSON ............................. ............... P resldent CUPTIS C. RUEE ................. .......... V lce-Preslaent I-IENRY T. SIMMDNDS ......... ............... S ecretarv STEPHEN C. DDDD ........ .... T reasurer I-ll RHD SIGMA was founded by a group of freshmen at North- western Medical School in an attempt to secure social contact vvith the faculty, a privilege previously denied them. Friendship, good fellowship, and ability were the basic fundamentals of the fraternity Dr. Joseph McFarland installed the Lambda Chapter at the University of Pennsylvania in IQO6. When the Medica-Chirurgical bi d the Phi College and the University of Pennsylvania com ine, Chapter of the former united vvith the Lambda Chapter. The olicy of the fraternity was changed in D was placed on the professional aspect of medicine, though the necessity of social life vvas IDZU Emphasis not overlooked. the intern I can depend ong you can have the brighl b0Y'H Ninety-five E. R. Bahnson, S. A. Kirkpatrick. First row: E. B. Tyson, R. J. Grubbs, P. W. Burke, E. J. Dun- ning, S. A. Paine, J. S. Fager, W. G. Kennon, P. Maier, D. W. Compton. Second Row: R. A. Darke, J. O. Lafferty, J. H. Woltz A. M. lams, L. Rogers, M. H. Long, J. M. Straughan J. D. Hardy, E. A. Rasberry. Third Row: D. I. Thompson, R. L. Hottenstein, D. B. Fresh- water, F. S. Brown, N. A. Hetzler, R. L. Mayock, W. S. Jacob, G. S. Maxwell, J. P. Leidy, T. L. Lockridge, W. M. Harris C. S. Neer, W. T. Gallagher. Fifth Row: J. F. Rorke, R. Jones, R. T. Myers, K. Manrodt C. H. Golding, W. H. Eyster, P. G. Hepfer, C. C. Dahlberg Sixth Row: C. G. Bratenahl, R. J. Henry, P. O. Sather J. W. Parks, J. T. Brooks, J. T. Byrne, R. L. Pipes. Seventh Row: T. S. Royster, F. J. McDermott, J. G. Hunter M. B. Guthrie, R. L. Chasse, S. O. Black, G. M. Brown Not in picture: J. P. Hardy, W. L. Nielsen, F. J. Phillips I Fourth Row: J. H. Powell, J. H. Drew, T. V. Magruder, PHI CHI UPSILON Pl CHAPTER-Established in I908. Founded in I889 at the University of Vermont. Sixty-seven Chapters. OFFICERS STANLEY A. PAINE ........................... .......... P residing Senior JQSEPI-I S. EAGEP ................. .......... P residing Junior E. JACKSON DUNNIIXEG ........ .................. S ecretary PAUL W. BURKE ............... .... .............. .................. T r e asurer N IQUS, the Phi Chi Medical Society, tounded at the University ot Vermont in ISS9, and the Phi Chi Medical Fraternity, tounded at the University ot Louisville in ISQ4, combined, thus torming a traternity vvith twenty-six active chapters. ln IQOS, the Upsilon Pi chapter vvas chartered in the University ot Pennsylvania and novv stands twenty-tirst in order ot a total ot sixty-seven chapters. With tvventy thousand active and alumnae members in the United States and Canada, Phi Chi has the largest membership ot any medical traternity. The Upsilon Pi chapter is located at Soll Locust Street and serves as a meeting place tor alumni and triends tram other chapters vvhen they visit Philadelphia as graduate students, or vvhen merely meeting atter a tootball game. Thus we promote the spirit ot unity in the Medical Protession throughout the country. FRATERS IN FACULTATE lv'v'illiam P. belk, MD. David A Cooper, MD. James E. Cottrell, MD. William B. I-larer, MD. Julian Johnson, MD. Richard A. Kern, M D. Thcmas l-I. Llewellyn, M D. Franklin L. Payne, MD. Eugene P Pendergrass, M D lsidar S. Pavdn, M D Gabriel Tucker, MD E Arthur VX hitnei, M D. WOLFERTH- A man of 56 should have a good myocardium, I hope. Ninety-six First Row: H. U. Kremer, I. G. Manstein, J. N. S 't h'k, S d R - - - I. Finestone, S. Finkelstein, A. Ulin, E. C. Viner. el C I efliinj. I-Ieiselr-i, Iliegiiciriiohidi Weiss' J- Specter' E. B. Palm' Not in picture: J. Kanevsky, I. B. Wexler. PHI LAMBDA KAPPA ALPHA CHAPTER-Established I909. Founded in I907 at the University of FRATERS IN FACULTATE Chicago. Seventeen Chapters. Herman Beerman, M.D. Adolph Creskott, MD. Joseph Edeiken, M.D. Philip J. Hodes, M.D. David N. Husik, M.D. S. Leon Israel, MD. Louis Kaplan, M.D. David N. Kremer, MD. George E. Lieberman, M.D. Louis M, Lieberman, MD. Frank E. Leivy, M.D. Gottlieb Leventhal, MD, Matthew Molitch, MD. Joseph A. Ritter, MD. l. Edward Rubin, M.D. Louis Segal, MD Benjamin H. Shuster, MD Bertram Shatter, M.D. Leon Schwartz, MD. David Turnott, MD. Julius Winston, MD. George L. Weinstein, MD RANDALL- God deliver me fr0m The mlm OFFICERS ISRAEL EINESTONE ............................... .......... S uperior JOSEPH N. SEITCHIK ................ .......... C hancellor ISADGRE G. MANSTEIN .......... ............. S cribe HOWARD U. KREMER ......... ........ T reasurer N l909, a group ot ten men from the University ot Pennsylvania organized a Hebrew Fraternity called Aleph Yodh Heh. Numerous other chapters were organized at various schools during the sub- sequent years until l922, when Aleph Yodh Heh amalgamated itself with a new group from the Illinois Medical School called Phi Lambda Kappa. Dr. W. l. Gash ot Philadelphia was elected the tirst Grand Superior. Today Phi Lambda Kappa boasts ot seventeen active under- graduate chapters and seventeen active alumni groups. Dr. Barnett Greenhouse ot New Haven, Connecticut is the Grand Superior for the present year. who has had A case. Ninety-seven First Row: M. M. Halpern, F. G. Weisbrod, I. lmber, S. H. Eisman, R. F. Rosin, H. A. Hanna, M. P. Margolies. Second Row: I. Zeidman, W. Steinfeld, J. B. Sarner, I. A. Glass, J. T. Schein, A. L. Myers, P. G. Eglick. Fourth Row: H. Salis, B. H. Pastor, S. Brenner, R. B Chodos L. L. Malamut. Not in picture: H. M. Suckle, J. H. Komholz, D. L Crowell G. H. Amsterdam, N. P. Salner, P. T. Mokler, B. M Gar Third Row: R. B. Eisenberg, W. G. Kauder, A. S. Conston, finkle, S. Friedman, H. S. Belmont, O. E. Baum. S. O. Krasnoff, S. H. Lorber, R. J. Coe. PHI DELTA EPSILON KAPPA Pl CHAPTER -- Established l9l5. Founded in I9I3 at Cornell Univer- sity. Fifty-three Chapters. OFFICERS SYLVAN I-I EISMAIXI ....................... ................. C onsul ROBERT F, ROSIN .................. ....... V acefConsuI FERDINAND G. WEISBROD ....... ................................ S cribe IRVING IMBER ......................... ............................ C hdncellor LEDNARD I.. MALAMUT ....... ........ C orresponding Secretory HI DELTA ERSILDINI wos tounded ot Cornell Medicol College in ICJO4, ond within the next three yeors wos represented in three other medicol schools in New York City. In l9l8, this troter- nity omolgomoted with Rhi Delto Sigmo, thus creoting o lorge ond intluentiol medicol Iroternity, with eoch combining group being strong in o ditterent section ot the country. In oddition to titty-three octiye undergroduote chopters, there cire seventeen groduote clubs situoted in Icirge medicol centers, This enobles groduote members to mointoin their troternol contocts while procticing medicine. Koppo Ri Chopter vvos tormed in l9l6 by the omolgomotion ot chopters existing ot the University ot Rennsylvonio ond ot the Medico-Chirurgicol College. The present membership is thirty- seven with other octiye members on the toculty. FRATERS IN FACULTATE Ernest A. Brov, MD. Bernord I Comroe, MD. Julius I-I. Comroe, MD. Nothon Einhorn, MD. I-lorry Fields, M.D. Jocob K. Jotte, MD. Abrohom M. Ornsteen, MD Rudolph I.. Roddy, MD. Irwin Stein, MD. PHILLIP WILLIAMS- The way to live to be 90 is to get some chronic disease and then take care of it. Ninety-eight First Row: A. C. Estes, M. W. Wolcott, F. W. Dqsch M. A. Petti, P. Budura, T. A. Koerner, J. E. Eckenhoff, Second Row: G. M. Kellas, E. M. Carpenter, R. A. Brunner, G. J. Harrison, B. E. Smith, P. L. Rettew, H. W. Eshbach Third Row: W. E. Torrey, J. F. Carty, Jr., R. W. Crossen C. H. Thompson, F. H. Weiss, A. K. Bush, R. C. Helm I Fourth Row: E. J. Platz, H. E. Gomez, R. G. Fisher, A. G. .Green, J. E. Fisher, E. J. Fitzmaurice, W. A. Griffith. Fifth Row: C. W. lobst, P. H. Bishop, F. Mick, R. K. Moxon S. B. Kephart, C. H. Kurtz. Not in picture: W. J. Meyer, O. E. Miller, J. W. Irwin, B. L. Whitman, H. P. Weaver. PHI BETA Pl ALPHA SIGMA CHAPTER-Established I9I9. Founded in 1890 at the University FRATERS IN FACUL-I-ATE of Pittsburgh. Forty Chapters. William H. F. Addison, M.D. :f.r.ftse.2amD Rgymomj W' Bfusfll MICHAEL A. PETTI ............................. .................... P resident Eliot R. Clark, M.D. AMBROSE C. ESTES ......... . .......... Vice-President -'OPP D- Cofblff 'Mill PAUL BUDURA .................... ............... T reasurer Edwmd T' Cfosmf MP- tHEopoRE A. Koeiznriz ........ ........................... s watery Lerleen C. Hatch, M.D. John D. Helm, M.D. William A. Jeffers, M.D. Paul N. Jepson, M.D. James H. Jones, Ph.D. Clarence S. Livingood, M.D. Paul A. Loefflad, M.D. Thomas E. Machella, M.D. Bartgis McGlone, Ph.D. P. Starr Pelouze, 'M.D. Carl F, Schmidt, M.D. Benjamin F. Souders, M.D. Lloyd W. Stevens, M.D. Henry A. Spangler, M.D. Lloyd L. Thompson, M.D. Boy G. Williams, M.D. D. Wright Wilson, Ph.D. Charles J. Zinn, M.D. HE Phi Beta Pi fraternity was established in lB9l because of the existing undemocratic activities of local fraternities at the University of Pittsburgh. The purpose was to provide full democratic opportunities for the open discussion of non-technical problems relating to medicine. The fraternity has consistently concerned itself with promoting discussion of medical economics, medical ethics, and political activities involving physicians. The first medical lectureship was established by Phi Beta Pi. At present there are twelve of these lectureships conducted by individual chapters. On March tenth of this year, Phi Beta Pi celebrated its Golden Anniversary. ABBOTT- Anyone that disregards the P0 I'mutu0I mafhi himself in a bad way. nes in making a diagnosis, may find Ninety-nine l One Hundred DR. COMRCE SAYS . . T lS a pleasure to present here a few of the remarks which l have passed on to some of you in' our elective group during the fourth year. For the past several years, this course has been called, The Practice of Medicine in the Office- and' l-lame. l would like to thank the seniors for their excellent attendance in the elective subjects in general, and to express to you the sincere thanks of those of us who are privileged to present such material to you. For many years, due to the keen foresight of our beloved teacher and friend, the late Dr. Alfred Stengel, members of the faculty have been given the privilege of presenting to seniors any material which in their opinion might be of some benefit. This practice has been continued by my chief, your distinguished professor of Medicine, Dr. O. l-l. Perry Pepper, through his efforts many additional elective courses have been offered to your class. Such classes may be limited to a few students if desired, especially in those instances in which special attention is given to certain aspects of physical diagnosis or to research problems, or an unlimited number if this proves feasible for the particular subject matter under consideration. It has been Dr. Pepper's desire to offer an elective course in each of the special fields of medicine. l have had several definite reasons for presenting my own small contribution, The Practice of Medicine in the Office and l-lame. ln the beginning of any practice of medicine, one is surprised by the types of cases that he sees. l-le does not encounter each month instances of l-lodgkin's Disease, leukemia, bronchogenic carcinoma, polycythemia, chronic ulcerative colitis, intermittent hydrarthrosis, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, rabies, subacute bacterial endocarditis, periarteritis nodosa, hydatid cyst of the lung, pancreatic calculi, l-land-Schuller-Christian syndrome, Simmond's disease, glanders, psittacosis and o variety of other disorders which may occupy much space in your lecture notes and a good bit of your time in clinics. lnstead, you will meet many diseases which either you did not see as students or which were considered too trivial to be discussed in the clinic. Among these may be mentioned meosles whooping cou h ' ' ' ff - , , f , , Q , ocute sinusitis grippe Sim I t - ,f , DG ocute cistro- enteri is, cicute bronlchitis, pciinful flot feet, chronic low bock stroin conjungtjvitis mumps, ocute tonsi itis ond o host of others. Unfortunotely os on fnterne in most hospitols, you do not come into contoct with mony of these conditions bec lu if ,c - - - . , , I ouset ey domnoiseo Ctxegr recguire hosfpitplizotion, the, result is thot the diseoses which moy co p percen o your generol roctic 'Il ti , ' 5 per cent of your medicol lectures ond clinllcs. Ygs Vlllt is Cpxeifenstflllplidelihijtthcdd must be oble to recognize l-lodgkin's Diseose leukemio subocute boct r' I li corditis, etc., but the fcict remoins thot most young physlcions obtoin muizhoofefhelr knowledge obout common diseoses from their ex erien ' . . d f ' their Own Dcmemg' D ce on rom mistokes mode in of diggoglgglfgglgligugvsblfgh IS vfegf little stressed ot some medicol schools is thot u . s o s u ent, in generol, you hove very little ideo of which vegetobles contoin 20 per cent corbohydrotes, how mony colories ore present in Q bottle of coco-colo or in on eight ounce gloss of milk. As on interne this situotion is further oggrovoted by the foct thot the dietition does oll the work for you, it tokes only twenty seconds of your time to write on o slip PEC. 60-80-140 Without knowing onything thereofter of the octuol food the pbtient receives. ln office proctice, it is sometimes-we might soy-inconvenient to employ o dietition-ot leost in the beginning of one's proctice. Furthermore, when ci diobetic potient is diognosed in the office, it is not the best of proctice to soy, Oh, eot onything you wont for supper tonight, l'll send you o diet list in the morning , ofter which you consult some text-book, or leof through Eli l.iIly's well prepored diet sheets to select thot one most closely opprooching the potient's needs. Although this moy be neces- sory in mony instonces, it might be emborrossing to hove o potient osk you, Whot is the coloric volue of on oronge? Whot is the percentoge of corbohydrote in it? ls there ony sugcir in on egg? l-low mony colories does o smoll dish of spinoch supply? l-low much iron is there in milk? -l feel thot it is of some importonce thot eoch generol proctitioner know ot leost the fundomentols of dietetics ond hove some knowledge of the use of diets thot mciy be necessory in colitis, ocute febrile diseoses, diobetes, obesity, etc., insteod of honding out to the potient o form printed by some drug compony. This usuolly does not inspire greot confidence in the potient. As on interne, l might suggest thot duty to your potients usuolly comes before your own pleosure lolthough the lotter is certoinly not to be neglectedl. l recoll very well on instonce in which Dr. T. ond l were ploying tennis during the second yeor of our interneship. Dr. T. wos colled by o nurse who stoted thot the mother of one of the potients in word B wished to see him os soon os possible. We finished our gome, ond when Dr. T. leisurely strolled into the word, obout on hour ond o holf loter, he wos told thot the mother hod not been oble to woit. Thot evening ot dinner, Dr. D., the second interne on word B, told him thot is wos o shome he couldn't chome in thot ofternoon os the potient's mother hod brought with her o hondsome gift for him, which she took home ogoin when the interne couldn't spore the time to come in from the courts for o few minutes. H ln this connection l well remember the odvice our own Dr. Kern gove to o groduoting closs of nurses some lO or l2 yeors ogo. lt concerned moinly the cinswering of telephones When the mother of o child colls you, or the nurse on ' . . D - 1 D I ' the word, ond osks how Betty is doing lofter her opcrcition, dont mcrey soy in o sing-song voice, She's just the some, ond!! hong up the phone,'or dont oct lj th orent hos bothered you by tokino o minute of your disgusted ecouse e p J . I precious Pl time Although this is merely onother oppendectomy to you, o surgicdl o erotion is o mdtter of life or deoth to the porents-ci little DOW Wlllfill YOU wi D . 1- m A ' h h ldren of our own, ond they come to opero io . Soolkdlscovel when you Ove C I- Y ' d before our own child or Be kind ond considerote to relotives ond frien S, even , Y . wife re uires on o erotion. lt doesnt cost you onything, ond it will greotly improve Q D the morole ond tend to lessen the concern of the porents. DurinQ YOur interneshlD if YOU GV9 in dOUl3lf donll mlfe Chcngesfhci. Zomefipe ' t erior. l frequently recoll o co-e w o ie wit ln or D655 me Vespomlblllly -on O O SUD ' tt m ted to stop The bleedinQ in lO hours following o tonsillectomy, when on interne o G D , . d her tonsillor fosso ot niQht with o QUUZG 590999 Scwmled WM Comme on One Hundred One adrenalin, Yes, she died within i5 or 20 minutes trom acute cocaine poisoning. No, tortunately, l was not the interne. I l u l have also seen an intusion ot 300 cc. ot a concentrated solution ot boric acid t' t' eins b mistake lthe interne thought that he was using physio- run into a pa ien s v y logical salinel, ln this case, although the patient had a rocky course, he recovered. ' ' ' l i a ln another instance, one ot our students precipitated an acute g aucoma n patient with hypertensive cardio-vascular-renal disease by instilling several drops A ' t the e es in order to obtain a better view ot the tundus. This ot homatropine in o y necessitated an emergency trephining, which was followed by an iridectomy with partial loss ot vision. Another incident which l well remember lsome years betore the days ot sulta- l A t tindin a clinical clerk testing a Romberg sign on a pneumonia thiazoel, was o g U u D patient, who had a temperature ot l03 degrees. Yes, the patient died that night. ' ' ' t nces During my two years ot medical residency, many untortunate circums a were called to my attention. ln one instance, a culture was taken trom the throat t t' t 'th the same swab that had been used several hours before in the o a pa ien wi a throat ot another patient later tound to have active diphtheria. The orderly admitted ' ' b h d that by mistake, he had not taken the tirst culture tube to the laboratory, ut a placed it back in the ice box. The second patient, l am glad to say, did not develop d' hth 'a. lDon't forget that there are two hs in that word. While we're on the ip eri subject, the word data is plural, so that one says the data are. l might also add that ' ' ll ll ' h the tirst syllable is pronounced day. Thanks to Dr. J. l-larold Austin tor t is as well as tor a multitude ot suggestions given me over a period ot years in his attempt to improve my very poor medical writingl. , 4 l might suggest, as l have already to many ot you, that you keep a treatment book. Yes, as Dr. Pepper rightly begs, please diagnose the condition tirst, but also know a tew suggestions as to therapy. lt is amazing how ditticult it is to tind little slips ot paper which contain therapeutic suggestions which you have stutted in ' l lt' uall sur risin ' your pockets or into some desk drawer several years previous y. is ea y p g how tar wrong one otten is in recalling the year that a certain article appeared in print. All ot us cannot live near a city such as Philadelphia, with its excellent library ot the College ot Physicians, so that a well kept and up to date notebook may be ot inestimable assistance in the tuture. As our late beloved Dr. Keene taught us so many times, Be prompt, be polite, be neat, be clean, be well-shaven, and well combed, be courteous-and have your shoes shined. As you look around, it is very easy to see that Dr. Keene's followers have adopted this tormula, Don't try to be spectacular, and don't come into the ward in pajamas in the morning to take blood specimens. Also, l would not advise that you employ the trick ot one ot my tellow internesfthat ot hooking your radio to the loud speaker and having it broadcast all over the hopsital at 6145 A. M4 One, two, three, tour-up on your toes, down on your heels, etc. l would like to discuss your relationship with nurses, to suggest locations tor practice, etc., but fortunately tor many ot you, the editor has limited me to 2500 words. Ohnyes, don't worry about my teeling honored by being asked to write such a dissertation, l was told very trankly by ye editor that this was to- be- used among the advertisements, and that it was the only way in which he could obtain said ads- i.e. to promise the advertisers that something ridiculous would be inserted among their pages. lEditor's note-The idea was so good that we were able to get enough ads tp till me wholetspace. when we dild1n't have room tor this articlel mig sugges, serious y, severa urther oints, DUN' YOUR Cl-llEF in the hospital. lt he asks tor thlem present aVllElYthEClailtl?dh! li case, don't hold back that one most important bit ot intormation Furthermore don't run to the X-ray department, watch the patient being tluoroscoped and then run back to the ward and write up the physical tindings from your knowledge ot the tluoroscope examination, Several years ago one ot our young physicians was ostracized tor some time when he insisted upon contradicting some ot his chiets about the results at physical tindings in the chest. Each time the young physician was correct. lpater, however, an interne pointed out a tact the young physician had cglxgvxcgygsjsiialiled to mention, that he had seen the patient tluoroscoped a day or two One Hundred Two Your chief con be ond oTTen will be oT inesTimoble oid To ou in I T 'f ' ' Y o er eo 0Vedl7O'?Ce5l Wllll lllmf DGrTor.m your work To The besT oT your obiliTy ond do hodbssuynlde cre iThgCr ybourgelflq lpporTiculorly owe o greoT debT oT groTiTude To Dr STengel To our c ie , r. . . erry Pepper, ond To my ToTher To Th k I d I ' ' possed on To me-noT only oT dicignosis ond Thercipy, buTloT Tie hc-dvnlciirge dllllliillidhlgsy I well remember The going over o clinicol clerk received Trom Dr glrenglgl Wlqgyl The clerk inTroduced his hisTory oT on I3 ' ff ' - ' ,, lIXloTe1 Dr. STengel wos olso 65 oT ThoTeTih?5i Y SGVIIIQI Tllls IS on Old mm Ol 65' , l CIQ mol IIGVE Time IO COWSICIGV YOUV IVTCOme during The TirsT severol yeors The odvisobiliTy oT eorly or loTe mcirrioge, your ex enses Tees o I membership inhmledlickgl socieijies, oTTendcince oT polsT-groduoTelossgifillbllllelscilondclmblggy Eleeffo 2I13gqSdlgn'ChOWexfeVre C2016 en .QFD WITl1h5Ome oT you in our elecTive sessions, I would our bo lin order noT T SW lblms W lltll ll mgy be Gdvlsgble IO COIW Wlllq you In y H Pg f I o resem e Too c osely The plumber who musT olwoys reTurn o is s op ornsevero exTro wrenches oT your expensel, UndoubTedly you will be Qble To cidd mony iTems To such ci lisT which I will presenT, especicilly iT your proctice includes minor surgery, obsTeTrics, ond oTher Tields, Alwoys corry wiTh you o sTeThoscope lwhich moy be cleoned ouT periodicolly-removing The flies ond Qrher debris which moy hove occumuloTed, ond which moy hcive coused some oT The roles you hove been heoringlg o hypodermic ouTTiT wiTh TobleTs oT morphine ond oTropine sulToTeg ompoules oT supronephrin lodrenolinlg one or Two TwenTy cc. ompoules oT 50 percenT glucose lTor use especiolly in severe insulin shockl' TobleTs oT niTroglycering o smoll boTTle or perles oT oromoTic spiriTs of ommoniog sevehol copsules of nembuTol or o similor preporciTiong coTTon opplicoTorsg individuolly wropped Tongue depressorsg o specimen boTTle lTor urinelg on oxoloTe or Tluoride Tube 'Tor blood specimensg prescripTion blonksg deoTh cerTiTicoTes lunnecessory of course Tor groduoTes oT our insTiTuTionIg on oToscope ond ophThoImoscopeg o meTol syringe To remove wox Trom eorsg hemosToTsg o scolpelg silk or oTher sTerile suTures ond needlesg scissorsg o probeg bond-oidsg o smoll box oT kleenexg coTTong o con oT CosTex ITo moke emergency splinTslg o smoll box oT lollypops lo very much liked Torm of Tongue depressors Tor kiddies, which will noT decreose Their Tondness Tor youlng o smoll boTTle oT oil oT cloves lfomous os o remedy Tor TooThoche unTil The denTisT is seen The Tollow- ing doylg o TloshlighTg woTerprooT odhesiveg o boTTle oT Tr. Benzoin Comp. lTo use on The skin beTore The opplicoTion oT odhesivelg o 20 cc. syringeg o Wossermonn needleg severol hypodermic needlesg severol orol ond recTol ThermomeTers,g o sproy conToining Tonnic cicid or genTion vioIeT ond silver niTroTe Tor burnsg buTesin picroTe ITor burnslg- o nosol speculumg o pyrex Tube ond o TesT Tube holder: BenedicT's soluTiong ompoules of procoineg o blood counTing ouTTiT lno---I wish I did geT o commissionlg sTerile gciuze podsg Tr. meTophen or merThioloTeg hydrogen peroxideg ci sTomoch Tubeg ompoules oT gynergen lTor relief oT migroine-These heodoches come on usuolly when The drug. sTores ore closedlg ompoules oT sodium omyTolg ompoules oT coTTine sodio-benzooTe ond oT mercupuring rubber glovesug Tinger'coTsg o Tube of K-Y jellyg ci TourniciueTg o sedimenToTion Tube wiTh 3 per cenT ciTroTe soluTiong o rozor lTo remove hoir Trom The skin-noT usuolly Tor self proTecTion. Chonge The blode oT leosT once o yeorl, IT you musT procTice in o rurol communiTy wiThouT occess To drug sTores, oddiTionol drugs musT be corried, such os sulToThiozole, cispirin, codeine sulphoTe, eTc. The druggisT is in o much beTTer posiTion To Tillfyour prescripTions properly wiTh Tresh sTock Thon you could possibly do Trom your o ice. I-lere is one Tinol word oT odvice which moy reolly prove og 'some beneflg When doubT orises in your mind concerning The proper procedure To o ow inko give cose imci ine ThoT The oTienT is o member oT your own Tomily ond mo e your f 9 . . I? . decision occordingly, iT iT is oT oll possible, r ' Sco ez The CompleoT Physicion is one In IQZQI DI' lolm SIOIQGS Wlld iid? slgclcessiclrully gone Through o severe prolonged who hos hod o mciior operoTion on H Q . . medicol illnessg mciy I wish you boTh oT Them. I will 09299 lf? DeV5e'Il'W'lll hm? mm We me much mgre Obie To dppreiioTe even Triviol I. I oc es on poins in ou T' T h h hod o similori ness. v U DG lefgllfdllfl jslwlllheb rcdlheoin oT our UniversiTY Wlll OIWGYS be only Too willincg ond hippy . - - T h ' o rs ore I? help you 'U my WUI powble' MGI I IIT you lm' l5'ERSI3E5 ?iSZSSiROI, Ili Du o success. I One Hundred Three -N K Q aw E' L SZ.: . S xl x fig? AQ, Q f Q f Q l 1 ig, MF' 4 wwf ' 1 4, 1 1 H, I Xa 1 3, ff 5 .,.. 4 Am ,,ff'gAi1u 7 A WN. xi 'f Zfxl wg ., 1 Upper Lower Kitten on the Keys Con You Beot Three of o Kind? ' T2 4 Beer, Pretzels, and Gab Gentleman Songsters Wide Open House Ho! One Hundred Six Zeke, Your Horse has Diabetes! WHEN NOTE READING THE BOOKS The l-lame al DRUCO- OPT DRUG PRODUCTS The Standard al Qaallly aaa Value d Ph ai .EMBO OPTUS S P ODUC S 5 RQ sldb CGS W DDI E3 PHILADELPHIA WHOLESALE DRUG COMPANY Philadelphia O HuddEih CBest 'wishes from the manufacturers of v BENZEDRINE INHALER 0 BENZEDRINE SOLUTION 0 BENZEDRINE SULFATE TABLETS 0 PENTNUCLEOTIDE Accepted by the Council oh Pharmacy arid Chemistry ot the American Medical Association 'A' Smith, Kline 8: French Laboratories Manufacturing Pharmacists PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA Established l84l One Hundred N QV A Y' UKOFYJ' 5e?:'Qe,'e cf Q -I '2' ' QSEZQQQPZ3 00d1 A PSI' X011 UR congratulations arrd best wishes lo the class of l94l. Your four years of patronage has loeerm deeply appreciated. May We have The pleasure of Continuing To serve you with your medical Waals? EDWARD P. DOLBEY 6' CO. 362 Woodland Avenue Philadelphia MEDICAL BOOKS DIAGNOSTIC INSTRUMENTS MICROSCOPES MICROTOMES LABORATORY APPARATUS REAGENTS IN SOLUTION GLASSWARE STAINS CHEMICALS cuuunn MEDIA dred Ten llmnlwl Scien 's Gold n Education is Proof . . . Every great advancement in science, be it medical or industrial, has benefited you. Bell fs? Howell Filmo movie cameras and projectors have been built, tested, and proved for use not only for entertainment, but also for education. You can use your Filmo in the pursuit of your hobby and, with confidence, record the technique of the research and investigation in your professional work. Yes, Filmos are truly tools of education . . . instruments of science. Filmo 16mm. Projectors ' Filmo 16mm, Cameras The finest projectors built Precisionfbuilt cameras that . . . allfgear drive . . . power take excellent movies in black' p,,,,,,-,,:,,,,. rewind . . . prefaligned, pref andfwhite or color. 5 speeds, i , Z V focused lamp . . . metered including slowfmotion . . . mag' lubrication . . . twofway azinefloading . . . interchange' ', Inl tilt . . . Safeflock Sprockf able lenses . . . turretfhead, ' .5,gQQ ets . . . many other features. mounting three lenses. Guarf Priced, now, from 5139. anteed for life. From 35115. Filmo Smm. Cameras and Projectors For those who prefer the economy of Smm. of service, are yours by right, in every 'Filmo film, Bell Ei Howell builds the best Smm. motion product. Smm. Cameras from 554950, Projectors picture equipment. Faithfulness in detail, reliability from 39950. Dealer Service and Help As your Bell E99 Howell dealer, we are eager to assist you. We have 311 tYPes of equipment in stock and will show YOU the best for Your nee S' Come in or write to . . . Williams, Brown SL Earle, IHC' Scientific Instruments and Supplies 'l d l h' 918 Chestnut Street Phi a e p 13 One Hundred Eleven Since I 876- 1 WILLIAMS' INTERN SUITS have led them all in Style and Service Send for Folder C C. D. WILLIAMS 6' COMPANY Designers and Manufacturers 246 SO. 'IITH ST. o PHILADELPHIA, PA. - Compliments of STREET, LINDER a PRCPERT IVIICRGSCGPES SCIENTIFIC GPTICAL INSTRUMENTS x I Optical Corner, 20th and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia Pennsylvania OHddTl GEORGE E. LEACH Q Wholesale Fancy Butter, Quality Eggs Q Lancaster County's l3est 0 27 Mansion Road Springfield, Pa. Phone: Swarthmore 37 Frats a Specialty, Personal Service Gtteh SL Qtten Meats ot Quality O l430 South Street Philadelphia V Phones: Klhlgsley 3l25 Klhlgsley 3l24 RACE 5l66 KELLY'S Coat, Apron and Towel Supply Linen Service Hamilton and Lancaster Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. 4 7 l3ARing 4786 J. E. LIMEBURNER CO. Guildcraft Opticians 1923 Chestnut Street JOHN PRICE 6' CO. Wholesale Grocers on the Campus 3432 Market Street Philadelphia, Pa. EVErgreen 3432 THE FAIRMOUNT LAUNDRY Harry R. Endicott, Proprietor Office: 247 S. 37th Street EVErgreen 4399 One Hundred Thirteen I INTERNE SUITS and MEDICAL STUDENTS APPAREL of STYLE QUALITY cmd SERVICE if MILITARY and NAVAL OFFICERS UNIFORMS UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA MEDICAL SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVE: THOMAS GUCKER 1941 PIERRE UNIFORMS MANUFACTURERS AND DESIGNERS. 224 226 S. Ilth St. v PHILADELPHIA PA Catalogues Sent on Request Moll Orders Filled Promptly O H d dFourteen Congratulations -And Best of Luck These Words express th Powell Dairies to you-To you men Who have just f lfill d ' ' ' ' u e your greatest ambition-The right and privilege to be called DOCTOR! e sincere feelings of the Scott- In your student days good health was imperative to success.- So it will be in the trying days of your intern- ship. Aristocrat milk was an asset to the health of you the student. Let Aristocrat help you now that you are a Doctor. For milk that is easily digested, pleasing to the palate, and chock full of health, insist upon Aristocrat Homogenized Milk. sg - r PRODUCTS SCOTT-PUWELL DAIRIES Home of Aristocrat Dairy Products One Hundred F fteen ,V W! BAUSCH 8. Loma MAY UPHTHALMUSCUPE . . . WITH ILLUMINATED MAGNIFIED DIAL . . . INCREASED RANGE OF LENS POWERS . . . One Hundred Sixteen Newest improvements in the I 94 I Bausch 8: Lomb May Ophthalmo- scope are: C11 a magnifier over the illuminated dial that gives a double-size easy-to-read image of lens numerals, fzj increased range of power, from -I-20 to -25, increasing usefulness of the instrument for work with high myopes. The features for which the B8zL May Ophthalmoscope is famous are unchanged-clear, concentrated illumination, free from shadows, filament image or corneal reflection, variable by thumb control. See this brilliant new May Ophthalmoscope at your dealer's. I ' I PROFESSIONAL coNvENrENt . .. I Designed to fit easily into a coat pocket, the new flexible top-grain leather zipper case for the Diagnostic Set pro- vides space for battery handle, May Ophthalmoscope, Arc- Vue Prism Otoscope, extra specula, extra bulb. Protection to instruments is assured byfplacing of battery handle and Specula. r it A- A' - MCINTIRE, MAGEE 81 BROWN CO. Distributors of BAUSCH 8s l0MB Products HOUSTON HALL an.-T the MEDICAL STUDENT W For your convenie nce the following servic Check Cashing Service Lost and F es are provided in Houston Hall: ound Department Reading Rooms Lounging Rooms 4 Out of Town Newspapers Meeting Rooms Tliese services are provided witliout cost to you I 0 DINING SERVICES Cafeteria Balcony Restaurant Bowl Room Soda Grille Snack Bar Quad Shop I Pleasant Surroundings Excellent Food Reasonable Prices . I THE MEDICAL SCHOOL STORE a branch of HOUSTON HALL STORE Books INSTRUMENTS SUPPLIES it UNIVERSITY OWNED Everything for tlie medical student RooM I45 UNIVERSITY OPERATED One Hundred Sevente . Oldest Medical Supply Store on Campus The Penn Store Company 3609 Woodland Avenue Philadelphia Complete l.ir1e ot Mediccil Supplies to Studerits oricl Practitioners Medical Books i Surgical Instruments Microscopes Diagnostic Sets S Photographic Supplies EVErg reen 7030 O Hundred Eighteen ali ' IIS if' A 1 4 GET ALL OF YOUR BOQKS PAT ONE PLACE Qne Bill- One Clueclc gi. 'ii 1: .i Ye: 4, P We Will Mail Books to You Anywhere ' 5 T Sobscripiioos to All Medical Joumols , 3 Rypins-Medicol Store Boords 7 A Dooley-Interns' Momuol 'f , 1 l i . I Lois of Luck-Al ond Jock Campus Booic Store 3721 SPRUCE STREET PHILADELPHIA PA Phone EVE 6870 OeHudedN etee . SHARP 8g DOHME Pharmaceuticals Mulford Biologicals Compliments of WILLIAM H. RORER,' INC. Q Pharmaceutical Chemists ' 0 Philadelphia 0 Pennsylvania FRANK L. LAGAN GEO. H. MCCONNELL PHILADELPHIA SURGICAL INSTRUMENT CU. - mstizusuroks - Hamilton Modern Medical Furniture Royal Chrome Waiting Room Suites Wappler Short Wave Diathermy WRITE US FOR LOCATION DATA AND OFFICE PLANNING SERVICE RIT. 36l3-4 l7l7 SANSOM ST. One Hundred Twenty ammo T 1 v 9, A lu -1+ 9 s 0 - 2 : MEADS : 210 919. JOHNSOR . ,, 0 Ab f!fM7fAm7? f ll M KLEXN 1001 BONDED LAUNDRY Cleaning, Tailoring Shoe Repairing l2-HOUR SERVKSE 3800 Spruce Street Collars Turned Free BAR. 545i Telephone Sl-lErwoad 4667 SHERWOOD' DISTRIBUTING CO. Beer - Ale - Porter ALL l.EADlNG BRANDS CASES - KEGS 7l8 SOUTH 52ND STREET Philadelphia, Pa. WEST END FRUIT AND PRODUCE MARKET Hotels, Restaurants and Fraternities Supplied 3528 Market Street, Philadelphia Bell-EVErgreen 0987 Keystone-WEST 2507 Now Available . . . AMERICAN MADE GOLD SEAL MICRO COVER GLASSES X,O S6 OTllUfMlRK co A Tr 3 5 CORRO5 Quality of glass equal to that formerly obtainable only from foreign sources. Available at most Philadelphia surgical and laboratory supply dealers. Write for stock sizes and current price list to: cuw-ADAMS 1 One Hundred Twenty-one SITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT Bell Telephone 8074 ypacker 8075 ZAMSKY STUDIO, Inc. Portraits of Distinction 902 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA We have completed successfully over one hundred school and college 811' nuals this year, and are adding new ,ones to our list. There must he a reason-it will pay you to investigate. C Hundred Twenty-tw '.z'1'.. swf-'ef' . .- . 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I- ,iIfqn4I4f5 974. .. ew, I 131: .- - ,f.::g:jI- - ff --e-'- -.- -1- - mf. . .:: n'2. 4I . 'H-:. 24?g -l'-1116.1-.Z x v f-, '. 'iI:i?.1 - , '. '--H... 1f1.,. 1955--, asm. -.fm 4. 1- rar -fir ' nw.-'..:. 4 .f-'15 '..:a, 11-5. -. ' a- -1 I.',. . il -5 '- ship fgfx '-35: ': P 33 -5 -' . ,fc-yi' fr'i':- .. . '. ' 1 fu- T, ' .2 ' .Lx l ' Tc?-iif:f'e.. -5,frf'i5.Q:lf-' 4521 'lik ' :L .f- f-Cn':' nail-1g2fu.,,,!,w. - 1 :fa f 4121217 1: fSm7:.'-1215142911 ., fa J. fc. : -. -'size .. ---Lzfzffmfjr QM.. 1 fi ' - . - .- N WORKING ' h h s - T -.h-1'. W'l l e C0Pe - ., rf-'.I.I -.5,:1..g5.-I- , . - ,::., 1. my-,v '4. .I-.'fl,5g:.,II1f-QQQIQIQI-Iffiiqh .fli --gf, . 12- fWW 'f'ff- f H Staff for the Past Year it has N, vm. -ga.:-. 7.9.-J' ' . '. -fi.. 'I 1 i -- . :pg2.- -my -.gig ' .s-:. .I I -.- .4 I 2.13.4-.Y-W.. 'if7zij g5 . -:Sf -1 f--1 --.21.n,.. 'W 'f . .w-r?, '- .. ' 7:-1-. 1 vi:-' Q1 . 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G? - - f-1'-1: l Q? -' - f?i?lS::fg1 21, 'L3:-iS:--2-,.rf.1:.,f--- N . 111.-J , ' ' Qf-'1' If: II51 ,LQ I ' ' 3 3-: - :Wai-'F-'S I: llzif' 7552? bl 'lfif 129-1-L' fgf:' 5 ff' QP-fl' iii 'fi:ff.:i.g'i5gi'f'ff -L1 , g'.', '3'-:IL-jg.32:5:.IvIII1'g1'.::v:1 G ' .125 T' ' . . xx 'h :-.i-2:12.-1'-Lf.:-'-.i I if- f f -if - f.-gf -- -QQ - arf. .12- 21 N iff? f?f713if3F2?i.' ie?-Z! 1:2-:r-7.:f ' N 121 'U be 'H vig. .' .uz1. 3 I . . , - .,- 4-J.-...J 'm:,'.- .f.:'. f.'-f2Ef:gsa32t-2is.I- Q U: ' if s N 0 Q 2 xh Q Ifzfl 2 Q. l-l-l ' T-ff O3 , .?ii.fQ.?? 122 . -. . 'ki-' 3 1- A : .js 13.52-if gp If 121- , NQ U 7, Q l Url 'REFER 9 . '-:Q5 241 E W 21 I 511. Q Q -4 -. S' - 2 3 4 ' .95 FH 1 ' 2 : S' VI T Iiffff Q U5 l -. 4IIl.I3I NO G rg.. 1222- Qc E it S R- 1 Ii- . Q m 5 - :J .VIJL .I . .1 4. .I E4 retiring Scope Staff will be REPEAT WITH LOTZ Engravers and Designers of Nearly lO0 Year Books Annually l 'r lr 4. One Hundred Twenty-three CLARK PRINTING HOUSE, INC. 2I3O ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. Printers 0 Publishers I HAMILTON BAZAAR TU'-L BROS- Special Prices to Fraternities HARDWARE Restaurants and Boarding Houses 3944 Market Street ' I SEAFOOD . Crab Meat the Year Round Phlladelphmr PG- 4013 Market Street EVErgreen 3944 EVErgreen 3327 ACKNONXILEDGMENT The Editorial Board vvishes to thank the members ot the Fourth Year Class and the tollovving people specitically tor their help in compiling this l94l Scope. Miss Frances Houston Dr. William Pepper John S. Gordon, Jr. Miss Delma Young Dr. Julius Comroe Franklin D, Murphy Miss Virginia MacElroy Dr. Eldridge L. Eliason Michael A. Petti A Miss Lillian Gallagher Dr. Bernard l. Comrae Philip L. Rettew Miss Edna Behr Mr. Harry Firth Paul Budura Miss Emma Troncelliti John L. McClenahan Mark W. Wolcott Miss Helen L. Paxon Thomas Gucker, lll Archie Tate Miss Ann McCarthy Harold Stevens Halsey G. Bullen Mrs. Bonnie Eckenhott Winton Steintield Timothy R. Talbot, Jr. Especially do vve wish to thank Mr. William T. Cooke, the representative ot CI k P. . , . . . . ar rinting House. Mr, Cookes suggestions, cooperation, and genuine interest in the l94l Scope have played a great part in preparing the book as you now see it. l z 1 1 1 i i N I 1 Q 2 r X l i 4 f 1 I 1 , 1 1 , 1 xxx X aww-.-N ww E x :ww Wx. x - X A CC nf- ,- ..1-svn -.--,- . r -,...-.Av--n -.. .-.,f.-., .-nr.. .. . A, x .fffffw my W .Q-ii.?NKQw. -- .. . . -A Mtv ,QMQ.frQx5xx AQ.. .::QNQX.Qx.:y...gkNRNX my i5Sg.x,x X X M X. X . . . . N- . ff':2:x..L.5'g.:' Q XX -- -N qw ,.-is .vw .KMX wx X xm . g zxvfs XS -. - -. . im.. . N xv .X K, .A .s x N-xx Q, - .. -' X s . . NX . .Y I . . VKX: --N' yi Y . .. .. .i j x. Nikki Q Q F-X55w..,xxrB.Q . ' Q X . k K Nxxxx X X X x W x -:M f ' ' ' fixxlfxi NI i f ' x1:.1 ..v my .E if ' f .r . Exp- X -' -1-5 :gc .. A N. ' s -V . .s .-T .wb kg. .. . . . X X- X-vx' x- QS' x QNX SX X XX x L X- w -N Q: - vw Qwxw-xg .X w X. iXxSN3XX.Q wx x NvQRl ww ::NQ..l-.- . x Q A .x.Nim. xXQx QX x.Qxx xx ij. 5, ,xxgxxw F-swf. 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Suggestions in the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine - Scope Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943


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