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

 - Class of 1940

Page 61 of 92

 

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 61 of 92
Page 61 of 92



University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 60
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University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 62
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Page 61 text:

LARGE ANIMAL MEDICINE A division of Veterinary Science that is of importance to all either directly or indirectly. It is through competent veterinary service that the livestock in- dustry of the nation has grown to its tremendous proportions. We now have healthier, more profitable, and better market types of animals as a result of work done by veterinarians in the fields of disease eradication, nutrition, sani- tation, and breeding. THE C0

Page 60 text:

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Page 62 text:

ANATOMY DEPARTMENT N THE last week of September, nine- teen hundred thirty-six, a group of rather dazed and expectant young people gath- ered together within those sturdy brick walls at Thirty-ninth Street and VVoodland Avenue, to be launched on that dangerous and tempest- tossed sea of the study of Veterinary medicine. Among the various subjects which tried our assorted crafts in the early years were three, all grouped under the heading of Anatomy. If the faculty sought to make us anatomy conscious they certainly succeeded for we seemed to have anatomy in one form or another for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. However, the very routine manner of embryology, histology, and gross anatomy lectures and lab, acted as a stimulus to our sense of humor as well as our cerebral cortex, through which it was necessary to hack and carve out new paths of thought and reasoning. lXIany there were who succumbed to the operation. Nevertheless it can only be with a feeling of satisfaction and pride and surely with a great deal of pleasure that we look back upon those early days. One of the most impressionable things was Dr. Lentzis practical demonstration of the arrangement of the fetal membranes by the use of a couple of pencils, a handkerchief, and a piece of chalk. In addition, whether for the purpose of keeping the students awake or merely to limber up a few muscles, the good Doctor's setting-up exercises in the pit were certainly entertaining. There wasn't one among us though, that didn't admire and envy his extensive knowledge of anatomy and his com- mand of English and vocabulary. Then came our first day in Histology Lab. Herein we were informed by Dr. llatthews that we were about to make an extended and prolonged foray upon the impenetrable for- tresses of histological sciencef' and we certainly were a little astounded by this new wonder. CDid I hear someone mention Silver-Tongue?D live heard it said, though it isn't mentioned publicly, that some among us had the course cinched, but the boy from Harvard left a few exams behind as a parting token. VVe can well remember his desire to weed out the plumbers and the paperhangers. But of all, the greatest memories come from ELIAS T. BOOTH, V.M.D. A S-91i8tll7lf Professor of Veterinary A nnlomy those many hours spent in Anatomy Lab. Of course we'll admit that the majority of them were olefactory in nature, but even these failed to keep Boyer awake Whenever the opportunity to snooze offered itself. VVho can forget the young love we saw blossom there, or shouldn't we speak of the deceased? Kava- naugh and Kerlin did some of their earliest collaborating there. It must have been the trials of those early years that brought them so close together. VVe can still hear Hughes, getting bawled out for cutting away that therei' trapezieus muscle. Ah yes! It all happened in tl1e days of the mighty Baruch-who feared no man. It was here that Karl Persichetti first learned the folly of wearing a good cravat, and any one's overalls were good material on which to test a sharp scalpel. George Fleck never received the acknowledgment from the scientific world that was his due, for the discovery of that anatomical phenomena-the rectal mouse trap. Here, too, in the second year of our struggle for scientific enlightenment the student body took to the lecture platform and Kaplan and Parker made the Keystone meeting with their work on the eye and the ear. Frank Ardito lost his steam valve accompaniment in the

Suggestions in the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) collection:

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 16

1940, pg 16

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 65

1940, pg 65

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 70

1940, pg 70

University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine - Scalpel Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 22

1940, pg 22


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