University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA)

 - Class of 1949

Page 1 of 126

 

University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 126 of the 1949 volume:

QAM! J Jam MD 'ff . ,- v.-.,-1,-A Q BIQPSW I9 4 9 STUDENT FINDUHL HRROLD YRRBRO, Edl+or X4 or TEW S Dg gff' 2 f xqb mf X 3 5.-N, -E if 1 . vw , 1 1 J - .1-. ,. : V- H3312 IC I QE Q 2f2f.,1'ZiaL, ww A f L 'Q oepnarmsnrqfmfolclns Z? Q? E if G 5- 4- f I 1- Im 1 .mia L il f JJ: 1f f'5 fff15,1mef.: 1 : . v: 4, ku' I -A-GM:r, v , E, .V .4 f . Aff .W-5' - 1 , wg- A. fikggffxrfw . Qf fl k i -24' 'W Fw Mi, Wi? wl4fff.j:5'Lw.:i1:3.,. vgjfggiwgj 354 . AL.-,ay Mgt awwwy' V ., ' .A'1,+:., ,Kb .g - MHEQQA , -W ',.x1'f.,'52v-' f - A fiiwf f M, f A X, 3... NJ, 1 , , E QW Q ...N 4 1 . . W n's:...w1 4- 15 ,ffm F' E WX Vk'1W xa5bmWg,J'fs?m 322'-., 3' WW fl' Fuzz . 1 I-Eff,-A W 5155?-' L A -N 'wg ? z1Qg5? .U-gp-. . 0 Q . . A ,. W ...Q L' .310 Q , AM... 2 Af 5 . Ng wig W M ,sw- . .Wh 6 Q 4' 4-1 ' 2 if '21, .N . 5 Y-Mwxmv 'wiv 'ww we . ..,...x,.w.. 1 , Y ? 'nl W' 1 m Q, lg... A. sw. 92' :Z?u Q HW. ,. ,. M.,- f Q 9 an oi 50 . ,M S X g.gflELgg'??E2Sq,p 35. ? wa m'L .Mwsxw luwfd Q wi as ms N as N' X ,Q f ' ,111 H ,tx255,f3f., f Wie, 5 3133315 1 wu- Q C - yea f , ' in ff ' x we X. f X x bg H - 1. . . , . 310 4 .5 f.. .V f , , 5 W M 5 . ,Q 0 any M' ' ,O R . ' f2J f'f Wi 4 ,gif t 13,1 . Q U ff 1 . Q 5 : . Qgggxg. A ,. V ,xr f 'afggi' ...yy gQi,g'jWgi.,w 'f'fL-idmj.-'W .. 5 S im-mm-1 r M fS,.sQ'?Qw, if 'EMT W - 'i2i,'Gf 2'LP'gf ? W 5... .1 W., v N., J . 1 K, W. 1. gk I H I J2,,,,w,, M ,WM . 4 . ,X r 1 .. X Qc 4 fz '70 DEDICATION To THE man who on February 1, 1949, took unto himself the taslc ol oiling the cogs of the machinery ol the Medical School VERNON W. LIPPARD, M. D. this volume is respectfully dedicated. May we pledge our support in the realization of future brilliance of this, our school, and may nothing come between us but the warm bond of mutual friendship. l-llS is the history ol another year of vvorlc-worlq tempered with vital diversion as practiced by the faculty and students ofthe University of Virginia Schools ol Medicine and Nursing. A record of both dili- gence and dalliance is preserved, with an emphasis on the latter. Since one picture is worth a thousand words, it has been the policy this year, much to the embarrassment of the bank account, to have a predominance of pictures included. We hope this change will be agreeable to our readers. Chief Compiainf: The patient hears voices speaking words which he knowsnof howto inierpref. FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATICN THE FACULTY COLGATE WHITEHEAD DARDEN, JR., A.B., M.A., LL.B., LL.D. President of the University VERNON W. LIPPARD, M.D. Dean of the Department of Medicine HARVEY ERNEST JORDAN, M.A., Ph.D., Sc.D. Retiring Dean of the Department of Medicine HENRY BEARDEN MULHOLLAND, M.D. Assistant Dean of the Department of Medicine HARVEY ERNEST JORDAN, M.A., Ph.D., Sc.D., Professor of Anatomy and Director of Anatomical Laboratories. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY, B.A., M.D., Professor of Clinical Pathology and Director of the Clinical Laboratories. EDWIN PARTRIDGE LEHMAN, B.A., M.D., Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. SYDNEY WILLIAM BRITTON, B.S., M.D., C.M., Professor of Physiology. ALFRED CHANUTIN, Ph.B., Ph.D., Professor of Biochemistry. CARL CASKEY SPEIDEL, Ph.B., Ph.D., Sc.D., Professor of Anatomy. CARLISLE SANFORD LENTZ, B.A., M.D., Professor of Hospital Administration. JAMES ROBERT CASH, M.A., M.D., Walter Reed Professor of Pathology. ROBERT VIVIAN FUNSTEN, M.D., Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. DUDLEY CROFFORD SMITH, B.S., M.D., Professor of Dermatology and Syphilology. FLETCHER DRUMMOND WOODWARD, M.D., Professor of Otolaryngology. VINCENT WILLIAM ARCHER, B.S., M.D., Professor of Roentgenology. HENRY BEARDEN MULHOLLAND, M.D., Professor of Practice of Medicine. JAMES EDWIN WOOD, JR., B.S., M.D., Professor of Practice of Medicine. CHARLES BRUCE MORTON, II, B.S., M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. GEORGE McLEAN LAWSON, M.D., Dr.P.H., Professor of Preventive Medicine and Bacteriology. JAMES ERNEST KINDRED, M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Anatomy. ANDREW DEJARNETTE HART, M.D., Professor of Clinical Medicine and Director of the Student Health Service. DAVID COLE WILSON, B.A., M.D., Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology. WILLIAM GAYLE CRUTCHFIELD, B.A., M.D., Professor of Neurological Surgery. SAMUEL ALEXANDER VEST, JR., B.A., M.D., Professor of Urology. WILLIAM WIRT WADDELL, JR., B.S., M.D., Professor of Pediatrics. EDWIN WEISMAN BURTON, B.A., M.D., Professor of Ophthalmology. OSCAR SWINEFORD, JR., B.S., M.D., Professor of Practice of Medicine. CHALMERS LAUGHLIN GEMMILL, B.S., M.D., Professor of Pharmacology. STAIGE DAVIS BLACKFORD, B.S., M.D., Professor of Practice of Medicine. EVERETT CATO DRASH, B.A., M.D., Clinical Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. EDWARD LYMAN COREY, B.A., Ph.D., Professor of Physiology. JOHN McINTIRE NOKES, M.D., Clinical Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. FRANK BUCHANAN STAFFORD, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine. GEORGE COOPER, JR., B.A., M.D., Associate Professor of Roentgenology. STEPHAN LUDEWIG, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Biochemistry. CHARLES JAMES FRANKEL, B.S., M.D., M.S., Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. WILLIAM HENRY PARKER, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. MCLEMORE BIRDSONG, M.D., Associate Professor of Pediatrics. FRANK JOSEPH CURRAN, A.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry fin charge of Child Psychiatryj. WALTER OSCAR KLINGMAN, A.B., M.D., Associate Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry fin charge of Neurologyj. FRANCIS WILSON REGNIER, M.D., Lt.CoI.CMCJ USA Associate Professor of Military Science. JUAN DE DIOS MARTINEZ-GALINDO, B.A., M.D. Associate Professor of Neuro-Surgery. BYRD STUART LEAVELL, B.S., M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine. WILLIAM ROBERTS SANDUSKY, B.A., M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. WILLIAM NORMAN THORNTON, JR., B.S., M.D. Associate Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology. HUGH WARREN, M.D., Associate Professor of Urology. SAMUEL DOSWALD STURKIE, M.D., Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine fpart timeJ CUTHBERT TUNSTALL, M.D., Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology. WILEY ROY MASON, JR., M.D., Assistant Professor of Anatomy. MARION LAWRENCE WHITE, JR., M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery and Gynecofogy. CHARLES GRANDISON PEARSON, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine. CHARLTON GILMORE HOLLAND, JR., M.D., Assistant Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry. ERLAND CHENEY GJESSING, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biochemistry. GLASSELL SLAUGHTER FITZ-HUGH, M.D., Assistant Professor of Otolaryngology, FRANCIS DUNNINGTON SMITH, B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor of Clinical Pathology. YIN-TANG HSU, M.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology. DANIEL THOMAS WATTS, B.S., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Pharmacology, HERBERT DALE HEBEL, B.A., M.D., Assistant Professor of Roentgenology. ELTON MEREDITH ALRICH, B.S., M.D., Assistant Professor of Surgery and Gynecology, 1 EDWIN PARTRIDGE LEHMAN HENRY BEARDEN MULHOLLAND Professor of Surgery ond Gynecology Professor of the Procfice ol Medicine DAVID COLE WILSON Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology O70 DUDLEY CROFFORD SMITH Professor or' Dermatology and Syphilology SAMUEL ALEXANDER VEST, JR. GEORGE MCLEAN LAWSON Professor of Urology Professor of Preventive Medicine ond Bacteriology ANDREW DEJARNETTE HART Professor of Clinical Medicine and FLETCHER DRUMMOND WOODWARD Director ofthe Student Health Service Professor of Otolaryngology 080 t SYDNEY WILLIAM BRITTON WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY Professor of Physiology Professor of Clinical Pathology and Director of the Clinical Laboratories CHALMERS LAUGHLIN GEMMILL VINCENT WILLIAM ARCHER Professor of Pharmacology Professor of Roentgenology 099 ALFRED CHANUTIN BYRD STUART LEAVELL Professor of Biochemistry Associate Professor of Medicine EDWIN WEISMAN BURTON WILLIAM WIRT WADDELL, JR Professor of Opfhclmology Professor of Pediatrics 0100 VISITING PRGFESSORS TI-IE students and house staff have been fortunate enough to have an excellent program of speakers for the Monday night Iecture series. These men and women have been secured through the diligence oI Dr. WiIey Roy Mason, and are a credit to his eI'Iorts. Among the more outstanding speakers were Dr. Theodore Woodward, of the University of Mary- Iand, who spoke on The CIinicaI Uses of ChIoromycetin, Dr. I'Ians Selye, from the University of Mont- real, speaking on The General Adaptation Syndrome and Diseases of Adaptation, Recent Develop- ments in DigitaIis Therapy, by Dr. I-Iarry Gold, of the Cornell University Medical Center, Dr. James I.. Gamble, I-Iarvard University, speaking on IiIectroIytes,', Dr. Stewart G. Wolf, Irom CorneII University, spoke on Pain Mechanisms, Dr. Edmund Spaeth, from the University of Pennsylvania Graduate SchooI of Medicine, spoke on I9athoIogicaI Qcculomotor I2eIIexes, and Dr. I-Ielen I3.Iaussig, of Johns I-Iopkinsl speaking on, 'Congenital Cardiac MaIIormations. Qther speakers of note included Dr. I-Iomer W, Smith, Dr. I2usseII I'Iaden, and Dr. I'Iarry Alexander. As We vvent to press, Dr. Charles Best was speaking on The Pancreas, Guardian of the Liver, and a taIk by Dr. John Coffey on Clinical and Roentgen Features of Poisoning Due to Excess Vitamin Concentrates was projected. ,wga .L ,...-M . 1 HE gulf between the faculty, house staff and students was considerably narrowed during the past year by a series of affairs at which all these elements were represented. The brash third year class led the way with a little get-together at Farmington, and was followed by the fourth year class and house staff. Surprise gave way to delight and appreciation when it was discovered that professors and students could mix and discuss many matters to the mutual benefit of all individuals concerned. O'lQ0 GRAND OLD MAN THE tlwirty-First of January saw tlwe end of more than forty years' service to tlwe University and time Medical School of our beloved dean, Dr. l-larvey E. Jordan. We of the Class of 1949 have lcnown lwim a mere fraction of tlwat time, but in four short years lwe has gained our great respect, our fondest admiration and our deepest affection. His door was open to us before we became students of medicine, was open to us as students of medicine, and we Feel tlwat the door of his heart will always be open to us. The lwiglwest words of praise could be but a tolcen of how we Feel toward our dean. Suffice it to say he is a Friend in the time of need, a counselor in tlwe Face of adversity, and last, but certainly not least . , . a grand old man. 0130 Sir, the University and your students will truly miss you . . . An era passes- Our deepest appreciation and admiration. There is no end to time, Neither is there to a great teacher. Your graciousness and charm, sir, are highly refreshing. You have our highest respect. 0140 Systems Review: The dief is ample, varied, consisting mainly of food for fhoughf. THE CCURSES ' y I T r 1 aaaa a e Q ea eeee aeaa e a f f .:V, Q ,.A-vi V , L. w x ,Xa xxx ANATOMY l-IE stench ol the cadaver, a greasy, dog-eared GRAVE, and dirty, once white, lab coats marlc the basic training course ot the embryo doctor. Though the days are long and the nights even longer, anatomy is a must-to be learned so well, and then so soon forgotten, A few, though, may refresh their memories in the fourth year with surgical anatomy where, should the First year student happen in, he would be amazed at the rapidity with which those cadavers melt away. Kg 2 H e XGNX CNS A . BICDCHEMISTRY fx Q- 3 X? ix Nxxxx Im it Q, x as iii , .rl f I f a r iii MAJ IT WAS with fear and trepidation that we entered the sanctum of the biochemists in the southeast basement of the Medical School for such had been the lame that it had spread before. Get by Chan and the rest is easy sailing are almost the First words the neophyte hears upon entering the School ol Medicine. Such is not always the case, lor, because oi, or in spite of the cajoling, one does learn biochemistry-and learn it well. 0170 at ,s 'ig Q s ai,-.sz is fa 2 H M M ,J E its . sig of N seg A lga' ' '5 f - in 5111 PHYSIOLOGY DERHAPS one of the more diversified courses in the school is physiology-so fre- quently called Brittonology. Despite the title, the course ollers biographical sketches of Cannon and Sherrington, mystery and metaphysics, a giant centrifuge, excursions up the Jungfrou, philosophy and altruism-and, oh yes, if you please, physiology, to be sure-of the mammalian body, that isl mf fm ,A J it .vans Q. ,W .QQ Mille H if ,V 1 ,I W 5 V E E, is 55556: A el- W--v N , F - During his First weel4 on medicine, the student undergoes a strange metamorphosis while in a state oi suspended animation as iar as mentation is con- cerned. During this week he is transiormecl into a creature oi strange and varied parts and his future success as a practitioner depends on whether he is able flaterj to fuse the parts into a functioning whole. What are these parts which represent our student on the ward'?U l-le is a cleric of the old school who scratches out pages and pages oi longhand negative Findings or history. l-le is a vampire who talces the patient's blood for reasons unl4nown to the patient, doubted by the student and sometimes not too clearly under- stood by the Assistant Resident. l'le is also an MEDICINE AND SURGERY l'lE student who completes his second year ieels that he is a bit of a success and loolcs forward to worlc on the wards as an opportunity to apply the principles of medicine to real live patients. Ah! Little does he lcnow what is in store for him. accomplished laboratory technician and analyst whose ability to turn out volumi- nous and reliable worlc is limited only by his lacl4 of a third hand, the absence in North 3 Lab. oi the necessary chemicals, and the inviting proximity of the yawning laboratory sinlc. li, in addition to these, the student can keep his sense oi humor and his ability to thinlc, if he can stand up under the physical strain, and if he can still pass his course vvorlc, he may some day be a doctor. The Department of Surgery demands all ol the varied talents implied in the loregoing analysis ancl, in addition, requires that the student develop a vivid pictorial imagination and great powers ol concentration. Here the student must be able to loolc over Cand to overloolcl the Hderrieren ol the nurse standing in front of him and to see in Resident can countermand orders writ- ten by the intern. propelled by coffee and coca-cola, and guided by his sense of diplomatro- pism, the student passes through the stages ol confusion, infusion and fusion to emerge with that suffix, M.D.i' his mind's eye the events talcing place upon the anatomy of the unseen patient. And if he doesn't even get into the operating room he must talce com- fort in the lcnovvledge that his white count and urinalysis guided the hand of the surgeon even though they may not have gotten on the chart until a day later. On either service, the student must be a dip- lomat and master of protocol. The chain of com- mand must be observed in all cases, but this is not always a handicap lor, after all, the Assistant . l A .. Ml! H--IQ OPD HE several hundred patients who crowd into the outpatient department ol the University of Virginia Hospital every day come because they are ill and wish to be cured. The titty third and fourth year stu- dents vvho straggle into the same clinics every day come because they are engaged in the understandably difficult taslc of trans- lating memorized textbook material into living, suffering, often complaining, human beings in need of help. To the student, the OPD patient repre- sents his First contact with the human interest cross-vvorcl puzzle, whose complaints and physical Findings must be put together to form the logical story learned in the texts. To the patient, the students are just more of those vvhite-jaclmetecl inquisitors who will eventually resolve their aches and pains. And to the house staff, the students repre- sent the expediters who clear away the debris and present a diagnosis already made. THE THERAPEU TIC VALUE OF STUDY IN THE OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES OF MEDICAL STUDENTS The medical student is peculrarly prone to develop a number ol syndromes which partake of the nature ol occupational diseases. These states have in common the element ol fear or anxiety but the symptomatic manifestations vary with the Uyearn ol the student. In the First year, one sees early an epidemic ol osteophobia which is fatal in about one per cent ol all cases. Reckless indulgence in study lor about ten days results in a clearing ol symptoms and complete recovery in most cases. Then in the second semester there is pandemic subacute or acute chanutino- phobia vvhich has been known to produce a case fatality rate ol three per cent or more. I-Iere again prolonged and intensive study therapy is responsible lor dissipation ol symptoms. The second year is marked by mixed phobia reactions and panic states in which cashophobia may be prominent. Treat ment is as mentioned above. The third year ushers in a state of ambivalence in which the student is torn between his desire to placate the doctors who vvrite orders on his charts and those who have announced a little quiz next week. This situation is peculiar in that study in the traditional therapeutic measure cannot - be applied because ol the students inability to tear himself away from the ward. gf ln the fourth year, vve see the therapeutic paradox in which study is applied and ordinary doses cause exacerbations of the student's symptoms. In this year his Iear is that he isn't getting enough out of lile Cmght Intel and the very thought ol study causes an acute reaction which can be controlled only by the free use ol radical Cethyl radical, that ish treatment frequent- ly applied. an l,a.,sa:. TC ga. fx YJ . .. . ...J Socicl Hisiory: The pofie-nfs perseverance of worlc is equalled only by his cleferminofion of play. SOCIAL HISTOR , 1 3 v .. , Q.: AE: . .UQ I ., :.:. f rf? K L' ' A fl 'vi 5375 X --r- r 1-2:61 ,:r X M r A. M 0 ea l I ti 2 53 9 ' 59? iff e - y 1.e 1 - 594 . -e 1 ' e 'QV ' H' sr l f f 32' + G, Cie -if rf Wm , f fe, 4 Tx 2 .-we Z? - N W f- 7 we 552525253 fi f l gfwp rPfW,,rf U Q! iH ,f A 55,5 4 K K ,L , , zr, r ,..,..,.:,.i r .f r X -- r 5 r Q L.eA rf wx r L ef ee Q l ' ., ,, Y, Q -v Amslnrz, LAI, , f-:..-e u r an N bam. la Q J ,mv Q' an Jf f Q . g li ., .:j!. 1 u , , is 5 wg: fu. Him, H, a.,,,m a , -wa ' yu xc M 5 ini-3 f 2- ,:a. M Q i f' 'QI -2- .a:s J 5 95 5 4 In .m ss, .... ...,. : . ess Q i :-f 'tim ' APA-Qi ,.'. js' ax 5+-1 A 5.3. V , ,i-1, ,mga f:':k'Ql Sli Q? Q53 v5?R ' ,. Q ...Q 'Wagtzm Qi gs 'mf 'an Lx ,..:i' Wk-I f ,X we ,gm QM :wg eww M , VE, fa is -,... :-::-.. - 3 . s mms 1.57:-: '-' : , , gm H ., mf 4 Q R F 3 - 1 ..,.: 4 s 5 .... ala ., .. LY, I Y! , -A z -fs H WELS? swims .F A 11 . Wm M 55 Wnsgwg ,E 5 E m SWING YOUR PARTNER EVERY once in a vvhile the med students tire of the relatively small confines of the fraternity houses and retire to the Wide open spaces of a local ball room for a real party-though it is called a dance. Cnce sponsored by the individual fraternities, the dances are now conceived and borne by the Medical lnlraternity Council atdivided-and lesser-expense. The laclc of privacy is no deterring factor in the release of inhibitions. The joy juice Flovvs by the galloni the band makes its noise to add to the bedlam already present, and various voices are raised in none too tuneful song. Some people even dance-and by 'l :OO a.m. everyone is tired enough to go home-or be carried home. Lilce magic the maddening crowd melts and the hall is quiet. M '1 ' wwf K . - 'X . s 'fl' -mw- ' a mn, E is nf WM REVERSE PRCDCEDURE GMES a time when even the most helpless of dovvn-trodden animals stumbles upon the opportunity to re taliate. So it is that once yearly the humble,unrecognized nurses-students, that is-of Mclfim, led by the student government, display a daring shift of authority to stage the Christmas dance Since the field is open, it's a good time to become acquainted with that 4 intern, externhor even a plain old medical student-who is much too pre occupied with medicine for his ovvn good. Cfxnd itis a good idea to pin him dovvn early, before he has time to arrange to be Hon call that nightl Any method may be used to convey the invitation-from a death notice or standing-order sheet to the Hlcnoclc em-dovvn, drag-em-in technique. We even heard rumors that a really determined individual resorted to sodium amytal The air fairly vibrates for vveelts in advance with tallc of ingenious decoration, mouth-watering refreshments, and heavenly music Cfhen, just in time, someone formulates some sensible plans that can be carried outl The most recent chapter unfolded on December 4, 1948, in the central parlor of fVlcKim Hall. Under the able hands of Bryant and her crew the building donned a festive air and extended a vvelcome invitation to unlaxation. CSuch remarkable improvement vvas effected in morale and physical vvell being that vve suggest close follovv-up treatmentj i x:.mL.-a.a-w-we , Q- f QMWA--V ,. t ww .wg E. sew -a ww Us . ff we u V' g A B, F . .. .. 'R' sis - eff ':f:RfEfi5i5F:-: , if? Q 45 X mv,-se -r A 5 ' E:E A ,sly E 15 W Q u::2-'11:::'-:-:-'...- Q L Q A, ...... Q WE um V' ,, Lys, A ..4 V, :V 4 . A imww' .1 -'-'-' 2 .. , , wigs --SZ? 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X, ' 'T 'ii' fe k 5350 V rv, GMU, Q' 'lf , - M. NN, V Y 1m M, M f . ay, U-.4 in , ' 21369 M- Vu. my 'N ,Q X , 533 Nw an. ,. 1 ,V 2 44 ' .Q Q X 53 H H -, vu.. .xl ASN, XV 1 4 ,,,M,.-.- ..... ,un ..,.,., V. - ,, -3925-, . 4 ,Q 9 .V 4 , 1 u ' ,L W ' V ,.. Z a - , ag :.,. A M ,P is ff, Q I ?,4 .1 -:3 3 1. ' ' . if if lp :A A iff' KU Loalr, Mom, no legs! C42 Ar it. C2j Tripod to the rescue. KEJ Facies. GJ Sweet and lovely. f6I Lounge Lizards. N Illl ZIIIE Ill Ill gffi C72 Chipper Chick. C101 Hacker hacking. GD Harry S. and cabinet. I7 72 Big Al and friend. KOQ Old block with chip. U22 Santa visits MOST of the girls in McKim. U39 . . . and naturally there is a picture ofthe editor's roommate. C22 Trio an ws KU Toppin's tops. H32 Suspended animation. w nm mn ms was zu, mn nm ms mmm ms ss u em ,na ss,m ,., :mmm 'Hn-A K ss , as a U xx x H Q. x 1 a vi fa mf 1 E ss WWW H mam 1 V an mfs B an -W EW Q M Q Ms an M KN -1 Bmw gf-saggy ' swung-max Him .Q-X.. J QFQQSEM, mn amiga is se .wg V,-my mmmm an C42 Ann and her odonis. 052 Pig Party 529 The W ee'f - 559 Pyramid Club. 0350 E R ma H ws ms ax a mmm rs a e,J5A KX n A 3: A nm ss A ss w w a w wa n 5, s as sf H5 ,.,. .. J,,.,, 0 him-. E. W.2 z-1 xw U J X X Q Q zu A is mmw m.w 'HW S .. T an K my ygy H sy J? A W n -X ss a Q as use l R E L nm E, 312 Ev sm was fp 1 ., W D1 U F n as X 3 M ., E L A Q w Q. H 1 UWM M- -WZQ .ww - '4 E 5 I N 3 Q , -1 ,.g E W ' W ,...::: EE , .1 H N : y A ,i. 11 , .N ':':,:::.:.:2'Q .. W .4 'M .4 -W : , v .vm F ., ::::'.:. : , , U - W r - W v , YN ,1 , . , ., , I W. M M :X N ' .1' : ' Q ' M 2 G Y A ' W ' E 5 m 'Mm , my ,X VV'- ,ff NQ. f Ahgzi' Rs f-S d'N my I www-urn --wuxv - maui-4-A wamauw 22 6 544:55 K-fm-4533+ ,M ,R T' .2 E: mn an ,Zh A Q4 if Physical Examinafion: Fairly well-nourished buf noi yef fully developed. ln no acute disfress-ap- pears overworked, but with curious air of elaiion. Cursory exam reveals process of degeneration, oufsfripping repair in some areas. infra-bursar infections of gold are recommended. PERSONS AND PLACES mm nfs Q -' . U N M! :eg-H' , 35 1 YQYQE 2 ,fs -:B ' ew, 1 ' Y: X . 'f f , 'Q T w -. ' i M Qs - ' Q KR Jeff' is 5 Q 9' X ' . 5 ' . qw sie A . :EEZ 1 , . F we ..:,, Qzuh H 3 limi. ...,....:. , z , S, ' :.,- .. .3 ,zuz an : . vga-vffv ' M 5,51 is ..,, ay., - 1 . W' '7?1iii ., sn -. .eff fjuizg Ki' A I - as 5--. -i - Q ,..:5:.,:, 35:-fi' fe.. V sa... K - 1 V m wnw .:.:.. L ...:. K Vim W H5 jggiglg iiegg siigiffs lege ff l:Z2. SZ,mee. fgwgis-,I News H S Exam JT, W We ewhihvvsis Vaweeeswew .H ,spaw- me Sf' Fx Q ,K - , ,, -as Q - if e ' si. A ' ,' 'ii' x.f?.vB1Ti'15P 5 'Q In ' . - R-2 . '-' I ' 9. ts-3135 fr .- N.. ' V-.fa .. ' ,p A K F x ' Gif' 6' -M. gb ' ,Q . 1 sw fx . D Q K LK 5 fr Q lvl .,, K. Y. 4-r . 4 +4L. .1 X W V yy bl Y - 5. ,. . y, A -I X ' I 2 f. 51? 5?-'S ' N .V Qr '-P' fr. '-F' 5' ' 'rv , , -,Pia lx, M -' 4 ' . ty .1421 'rg -3 9,1 Y ' U wwf Q ., V 7 1. ' ah?--3 ,, xi .3 ' 1- 1 -Ye 1 Qgfxx-n:,m?us,pa,5Q,q:41, .Q that Q ,I y 'S Va.. s . THE GRGUNDS ElVlORlES of the quiet Cllghlly and beauty of the grounds wnll linger long with the graduates Its gracefully terraced lawn, classncally columned buildings, and nts distinguished air of tradition blend to form the embodiment of the spirit that IStl16 Unlverslty ofV1rglnla J D400 -' F' ss ws A gm fx um .Wi ss ,J 1 . ,H Q, , Q-:SN A my dagvm I 3.5588 f Q w myfv 7, wx ,Z xA'wY4. -Q' ml wx! Huw! X me ha, M Q ,W 31 A- B 3,1 SXSW? , 5 as fm? E HY-NNE W. Mxgfww- ss 55 3. gs Q R ' - mmvfm Q naw mam! Eff E a as M H ss my 5 w Gif mmoff W B wa E ss ss my B, 'HFQSQ mf fm as N sp my In ,mw'm -.,- mu s H Wm K H 1 , 1 .9212 5 an N .f, 53,1-fkf 2' W ,. A ug 3-B 'av , M ..' PM' at h Wxmnma was m as muh E was xm 5 ,w 43 A Dex, QW ms 'iw a an va :W X 4 fa'-Qi! .Q .X S .Live-f.,,, ,X H W x x , . 2 A,. Aw ffwf wk- x,. ,- H mam Mk x 1 fa 38.1 as K ,. 1 A R' V Ni wail' B S Q F.. V :':4':': ':: .... I . Q .aqqmw igmgwm E-gp g' E Ev :WH ,ww ss 1- 52 Q f ' 2 Jygyygg ym,W:v .... 5 Sig .135 2 mggm Q Q FE :E 555 Q: an Us Q i if FWEQE wma ,f :Wigs MQW EniQ:Ek. W '?3Ey'gQ5?Q BX- rm 91 NESS H - W HWE55 .gg M m , Hawaii? ssygiwiipgq W, K... .QSQEX V Q 13532 'Si V H Q wgxm nw B Si E K Xi B 5 M Q 5 fwgggg M. 1, W L' - W ,Q U E wg- ,Q mfr... F E QA lf, gs. u ' M5235 -W :,: - lamm .Y ..-aw H v M w w ga H Q51 WW. M. 'ww I WELA mf? 5.255 if is www 1 ,wwfw Yi Q' as 92 1 W, 31:-:iii w?.WX HH ms gy., W E H We WE ? Qg,L5 aww H wg m E? T35 mf! Q-. i EWS' Qs- ox 133, wg W Mwgw T5 95 B 4 n wg: .... , X8 igffxlif K M Swag 'w5i,m,g ss EWQWEQ JE jf-wma ' 2 :gg ri?i2'gi?g51 K 1 fiiiw EM mg ., ,Q sf an .. iw W .www www A .3 5553 1 gg: gf' W' 1 gf.: M B W W X-53935255 g m mms in H my 'V' QV. was - K , w gm , Wx. gZ..wH rims . vfih!-SS V gifs! E uf E W .1 1 5 W M I 5 Q b Q Q .. ... .Q A .HQQQLQK Ssgoig f ' if EQ .F W, uf . mf Mgguliyf AW., .ggssxy jf W LM smfqi Qi? ,sw vm .wM'mW,xag pf? ' .Wvyah .lg . .E ww, . ,. . ,ef m - 4i.mgam 1 + , W 2 f M m H - W . . . M V W W M fb.. .. , 1 1 A L if - 5 , , ' M M... .. i f ., ' WEJQIFQ ' , J gy.. ,H F.. . QM ,. ... .V V . U -f : V ,. ,l m . - ,G ,V A , -. . . - - Wy Q Q . - A i f -1 fy qw.. N. , . . E w H f ,1 . ' f'5..gi if Zjfiygg , A Wf?'7 ..' ' ' ,grim k M 'fQx17T?:f Q. ,.. 'SSM if . Mmwf . lk. w.5kgL . A isgg U v fm M. W ' F ff .1 F Q ' wwwf w. gt 2 1 . . Fw I - -1555, ,Q , :.. .:. Z g X gi 1 ' a . KW? mm M Amman! E xv A N -my 55 'Y was g'iQPQf?N1' Li? 5 :' f , anew 5 3 fi if , 'Wi 'ly . 'K I . V 5. .. M. S X J 5 - My :QL x. 52 X. ,- .... .w-,.L . :' taxi , r I 1, E 4 NM. 5 - .5 nf- W ...W wh .dw ?S'1.M X Y Y it --: ::. : : .. .. B.. M-. -,- -'--- ...-... :-: .-. --:-'- ' :- .1 -:-. .1':':'..: 5 EfQZQ1f:'f53.':Qfr:' 2 f a 2, -QL Q M f xx .,,, ,, wx I, WJ:.4f,m.,xx . W. wma K M 5. mu ,LMA ,, ,vw -Y 44' .mfw ,J an 1 JI '3 wa sm as mfg W 4 W -E 25 ' K nf mi mx N NSO Q 'll-llf uninitiated NSC means little, but in actuality the NSG-Nursing School Office, but few people call it more than the NSC-is an integral and quite vital part of the hospital and, of course, the Nursing School. The responsibility for the efficient management of the NSG rests on the shoulders of Miss Roy Beazley, the Director of the School of Nursing andthe Nursing Service. She has two Assistant Directors responsible to her and a Night Supervisor. Miss Beazley must see to it that both the Nursing School and the Nursing Service are run smoothly and efficiently. She must keep a tab on the graduate nurses as well as the student nurses. All applications for entrance into the Nursing School pass through her hands as well as applica- tions for graduate positions. As a teacher she must handle the student nurses' records and teach two classes in Professional Adjustment. ln the capacity of a presiding officer she oversees various committee meetings and prepares reports to the various state and national nurses associations. Her final duty to each student nurse is to obtain the pins and diplomas that are the symbol of three years of worl4. Thinlc not, though, that Miss Beazley's duties end here for they dont The taslc of running the Nursing ,-vi School is a never ending one that poses new problems each day. , CTT , CAPPING AS THE appearance ol a rainbow after a sudden thunder shower gives promise of a brighter day, so the presentation of a starched white cap, First symbol of accom- plishment, provides confidence and a clearer view ol paths ahead. It is difficult to express the heart-felt excitement and self satisfaction we lcnew as our caps rode majestically on our heads. Qur sincere thanlcs to those who preceded us for their undying interest in our triumphant experience and-to those who shall follow- HGood luclc' and 'Awalk tall. I. I I W , W M .,. ... gg' w .1 an-N X' Ag i I. . 3 SS I . 'Sz MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MISS MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS .ki-Q . -I JI- ,. .II ' n,.5.C'Ig fi--,T 'T -gem-EMM ,2Tf. Q xx, QPF, ,,.,. I. I-W5 IQ , . II- -III: . R - ' 7 QI N? Lil ' . A A af - -A -F x A .. . U., ,QC . Af. 3 M .- . I. ,, I. hw L- ' - W. W ' FF - - R -Www-lfgg .f - - .. - wwf-4 . Q-.Q5E W. .-- 5.5?9'-QSLM. t :fg--rI.'-IgL-j- - ' H .r . .. 'K 'ff ' --Ig - Effhi-Fi? QI' . 'II 9 Zvflffi: gl, 'I IR: I I - ,,. .4 .- T L.. . .. ,sg . - M .V .. . nm-I -993 1 . w.,... .. S I ,,. F 5, W -II -. W .- 1 -I M, , J,,.,...Jz ,. M , 13252 . .,:'.':., QQQCQW . I -51373-Z L-IMS: Q Ll H. , . f- I - - A-:M . 1' Mfm- . gwsv'-H II Y . Itfff s ,V Q, 5. I :I-5 ,, A . . I . I .Rr I B' W 7 ff -M 1 . , T .I M ' - N. ff - I - - lgqsg I . ARS, YM 1 , Jaw? Z-,.M K q:jfFEL NfL,li.5y I -' A , ' Awg. If faux. W.. . iw .H M x 1 I . . E .M H .. .. A 4 1 .4.1.,, Y , W - 1' 'W H :I- wifl - ' 1 .-.in f Ii I A-1-'iififf Jazz. gfgimg, SM MW. KWXVMIM -Ii,g7mgQ,w f5i:,!5XT.- . .R gf' Q W as '-IV Q ' I A 'QU' - - M wa --2.515 xffxagxi .pure N J Y-1 HH- W I- i M - I 1-:IT 4 v E .K ' E : -If ' 1' .Tiff .T M - L If- f lr W ., . ,252 ' 5 gk-Y . 3 f A . 'iwiggg wg' . I,-W I ' .3351 If N1 . I 2 - . . my . V ,.,,...,.,.,., M . .. W .. .. . 3 1 - f. H ew -fi' . .. S5 - M 1 I I F I . .1 L Q W I 1 . 1 -- ' .. . . ... fi .--- . . .,..- - I W 2 Y . ...,..,.,' . , E ,I-Ib M wg . 1 1 A -I . 31.5311 . D -:Ear KI f' -. I - ..., .mgfiag muy: ' . f ,Q . E' A 'F ' 'F' -, ig Z2 1541 , '7 ix M Lg xx-',Qg152Is'w3-i WSQEPIE Egg L, mg' - S 9 55. . ,. Q ,IJ 'W S m 335' gujmlk I .5 . HIT: : I M I . . 1 -' ' ' Q. . BSREFQI .iw :gg 'w..'Y I, .gg Wu. 7: DIRECTOR OF NURSES MISS ROY C. BEAZLEY ASSISTANT DIRECTORS OF NURSES PAULINE HUNT MISS MARY JANE MORRIS ISABEL HALL MISS ELLEN STOUT INSTRUCTORS DORIS BINKLEY MISS ALICE DARNER MARY DQLACEY MISS ANN POLLOK MISS MARGARET SANNER SUPERVISORS JULIETE BELEW MISS JEAN KIRK CARMEN BOUCHARD MISS LINDA KITE CLARA BRYANT MISS MARY L. LYBROOK LOUISE BRYANT MRS. FRANCES MEARS LOUISE CAMPBELL MISS LOUISE REA CATHERINE CALDWELL MISS JEWELL REAVES MARGARET HOLBROOK MRS. DORIS SWAIM M. SUE HORNBARGER MISS LENORA WALKER MISS MARY FRANCES WALKER . HEAD NURSES COLLEEN AGEE ELEANOR ALDERSON SARAH AVERY SALLIE BABER JEAN BARNETT OLENA BROOKS ANNA BUCHANAN LYDA BUMSTED ANNA BURTIN BETTY BUSH NAOMI COFFMAN ELEANOR COVINGTON JULIA DAVIS LUCY DUKE F. ELIZABETH DUNLAP FRANCES FARROW COURTNEY FLIPPO JEAN GLASS CAROLYN GREENE HASELTINE HALL ASHBY HANNAH ELLA V. HARDING FRANCES HARRIS LEVATO JACOBS MARTHA KLINE LOUISE KUHN MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS ANN LOVING DOROTHY LUCAS EDITH MAHANES MARY MAUPIN CONSTANCE MAWYER MILDRED MAWYER ELSIE MICHAEL RUTH MITCHELL BELLE MOORE EMILY MOORE MARGARET MUNDY JEANETTE NORVELLE LESSIE OWEN LAURA PIERCE LELIA PRILLAMAN ANITA PUGH MARGARET RUSSO ISABELLE SHANKEL HELEN SMITH MARY LOU SPRENGEL VIRGINIA SWISHER MARY LOUISE STANLEY NELL VASS DOROTHY WATSON GENEVIEVE WHITMORE ANNE WILSON MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MISS MRS. MRS. MRS. MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MISS MRS. MRS. MRS. MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MRS. MISS MRS. My -2 wi? .K- GENERAL DUTY VIRGINIA AMISS EVA SUE AMOS HELEN BASON EDITH BEAZLIE NANNIE BOZE SUE E. BRYANT GENNIE BURTON MARY BUSH HELEN CHEAPE HAZEL CLARKE PETTIS COLEMAN MATTIE COLLIER PHYLLIS CONLEY JANET COWGER VIRGINIA COX DOROTHY CRUSE R MARGARET CRUTCHFIELD ANN DAWSON FRANCES DENNEN MARJORIE DREWERY VIRGINIA EDWARDS MARGARET FLANNAGAN LOUISE FLYNN BARBARA FORD VIRGINIA FULCHER JEAN GILBERT CYNTHIA GRAVES BERNICE GREGORY JUNE HAMPTON HELEN HARPER KATE HARRIS ANN HARRIS SHIRLEY HARNER MARYBELLE HAYES MARY E. HIESTAND ELEANOR HURDLE ,ELLEN HURT HILDA INSKEEP BOBBIE JESSEE MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MRS. MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MISS MRS. MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MISS MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MISS MRS. MRS. MRS. MRS. MISS MISS MISS MISS MRS. MISS MARGARET JORDAN FELIA KARAMARGIN MAXINE KECK JEAN KING AUDREY LITTLE JOANN LOWDEN JANET LUMSDEN BARBARA McDANIEL EVA SUE MCCARTHEY PATRICIA MCOUIDE AZALEE MARSHALL ARNETTE MEONI JANE MORRIS DORA MULLINS EVELYN NASH LUCILLE PAINTER RUBY PAYNE BETTY PERROW GLORIA RIVERS NANCY ROBINSON VIRGINIA ROTHGEB PAGE SAUNDERS JEAN SAWYER MARGUERITE SHIFLER BETTY JEAN SHORT VIRGINIA SIMMONS JACOUELINE SOMMER DORIS SPRADLIN MARIANNE STURM LOTTIE TATE FRANCES THAGGARD AGNES TURNER PEGGY TURNER OPAL WAGES ROSALIE WALKER GLORIA WALLNAU KATHERINE WHITE MERLYN WILLIAMS MARTHA WISECARVER MILDRED JONES MRS. HELEN WINCHESTER SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS I GOLDIE ALLEN MISS KATHRYN HOLSCLAW EVELYN BROWN MRS. JOSEPH MARSHALL JEAN FOSTER MRS. DOROTHY ODENHALL MARTHA HEAD MRS. BARBARA THOMAS MRS. ARLENE WOLFE SRS F I 1 1 1 an wa was ww WJNQRQ V M Www-,N mg , X awww M wa' v. ff :wa x gum New ' 14664-,Y HM - -. Huggy , 1 s A 9-9 www ,ax w ' wr M mx w Bi E W Q YL 2 5 I. if sa 'Si 2 if E sn K. H E Q r B 5 wr 1 2? I 4 Q .1 SHH!! TECHNICIANS AT WCRK F THERE were some way blood could be tal4en dovvn to the lab by 9:30 a.m., hall the gripes ol students on vvards would disappear, Undoubtedly, the lab technicians would appreciate the change too, imagine hovv appetizing the sight of a gallon of blood must be so early in the morningl The technicians talcing training and Working under Dr. Bray's supervision form a very integral part of the diagnostic and therapeutic machinery here at the University oi Virginia Hospital. Their tasks are many and varied, frequently monotonous and routine, yet they contribute, in no small measure, to the successful results achieved. CLINICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIANS I I fy.. .. I A - W -f, W-I I W :R vw- Aw., ,T w :WEEE f T. I ,WV M 'iyi Ei: A T1 A' : 7g3HI Igf' M 7 ,. T ' 7 1' ' 7 M . M7 w,1 N L A .. IM fi W FEM , vllwjv Is:- 2,-I 3? 'SBI-L? hjgj .1 ' , I II 52233 .E TI QQ, -EEE a I A A I ,LE .IE A . L L BI I qw . I H1 Nw U ,IL -E , EAWWR2. 1-I-f'iWC'f'K I. fgjw '- - RW A-Iz I' ifsw is-1 is: B Tiff? f -'BY R 1- g-Rggf. - .II-. T. QI. A I : --ki- I .. ., Q ,:..,, ,iw ,jg , . I A - . E U-I I -.B ,I .I ,I-,LL . W - . S 52 I A . - A I TT'2L: B m A-I4-I I I KN . 1 .jg ESB-,I ' A N -It - QL If . 4 BI . , FRONT ROW: BETTY MOTLEY, ALICE HANNAH, ANNA DANDRIDGE, JOY AUSTIN, MEDA OVERMANI BETTIE WOODWARD, HAZEL HARRIS, ETHEL HALSEY SECOND ROW: SARA JEAN DEJESUS, KATHLEEN REVIS, MABEL BAILEY, ANNE S. ADAMS, VIRGINIA BINNS, ANNE S. ADAMS JOY AUSTIN VIRGINIA BINNS ANNA DANDRIDGE SARA JEAN DeJESUS WANDA ARCHER FERNE BROADDUS DORIS CHAMBERS CATHERINE NOBLE, CARLOTTA RAGLAND, GLORIA MANNING THIRD ROW: AURELIA JEWELL, FERNE BROADDUS, WANDA ARCHER, BETTY GALL, DORIS CHAMBERS, HELEN SLEDGE, FRANCES HUGHES, BETTY DUNCAN, GEORGE ETTA STACEY SENIOR TECHNICIANS ETHEL HALSEY ALICE LAWLER ALICE HANNAH VIRGINIA NIIRMAN HAZEL HARRIS BETTY MOTLEY ETHEL HUBBARD CATHERINE NOBLE STUDENT TECHNICIANS BETTY DUNCAN AURELIA JEWELL BETTY GALL GLORIA MANNING FRANCES HUGHES CARLOTTA RAGLAND MEDA OVERMAN NANCY PEARSALL , BLANCHE REITZ KATHLEEN REVIS BETTIE WOODWARD HELEN SLEDGE SHIRLEY SPENCER GEORGE ETTA STACEY BB RQ E?'QN'R W R sam S Sm is mn - 'E ii-.EE S WQ,iRif E .,. 3? SM TT T 'I!iILf'f5.i:E FL if HPV. L ME Em E -RMS.. B .. DERGEER S-SEGA-R-WMWRPFI -Q.-IX. ,SBS RMB HQIEHS' E REBS. Y-Ss 5-E-. E SLE- .S MS. B S 5'v:f2m Ts-If-5:1-is . . ,XJ . SEWER Ewa af.-I E 5 .AR ,.I. EW 1. B A RIEIRBE RR. BRE R . ,LL . 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E-Iww, HOUSE STAFF FIRST ROW: CLARKSON MEREDITH, HENRY MAYO, WALTER BECKER, CAREY STONE, JAMES GILLIAM, JAMES MOSS SECOND ROW: CHARLES CRADDOCK, RICHARD GRISE, NAT ADAMSON, WALTER FITZGERALD, FRANK BEAZLIE, DORN PITTMAN THIRD ROW: HARRY I-IYER, SHANNON ALLEN, CLAIBORNE FITCHETT, BOB BOYD, PHILIP WILHITE, DORRIS CUNNINGHAM, GEORGE EPPS FOURTH ROW: NAT EWELL, ED CI-IITWOOD, WALLY NUNLEY, GLENN HALL, WILLIAM MATRE, DEXTER WITHERINGTON, SAMUEL HAY FIFTH ROW: KATHLEEN CAWTHON, ROY THAGGARD, PHIL BASS R RR S..m--.E.. REHSYHE, ,EERE R BER:-ESSSAR Q KRW .IW R MEDICINE X-RAY H. CLARKSON MEREDITH. JR. SAMUEL HAY GEORGE I-A ERP5 JOHN CRAIG JAMES M. MOSS RANDOLPH BRADSHAW CAREY STONE DORN G- PIITMAN JA Q. EART-y Roy F- THAGGARD , DORRIS CUNNINGHAM C. V. CIMMINO WILLIAM MSEILWAINE WILLIAM P. BASS D at S MYERS H. HICKS CLIFFORD GADDY FRED V- VANCE WALLACE C4 NUNLEY ROBERT C. THOMPSON PHILIP A. WILHITE, JR. ROBERT H. COPPER LUCMS GAGE ROBERT F. TILLEY C. JACK YOUNG CHARLES G. CRADDOCK NATHANIEL EWELL WALTER G FITZGERALD STUART C- SMITH WILLIAM G. MATRE KATHLEEN CAWTHON EYE GLENN C' HALL TAYLOR MARRDW PARKER H, LEE GEORGE S. HANKINS GENERAL SURGERY T N at PROBERT RICHARDS HENRY WISE MAYO, JR. GEORGE ROBINSON 325225 GEELAQQS DIMOCK BUXTON WALTER F. BECKER CHARLES M:KAY RICHARD F GRISE JAMES GOLDEN LAVERNE MOORE DOUGLAS POWERS NATHANIEL E. ADAMSON, JR. DEXTER WITHERINGTON y JOHN C. HAWK, JR. PAUL CHODOSH THOR,-ggi? ELJEEGER NELSON M, SMITH FRANK T. BUCHANAN M. SHANNON ALLEN, JR. DON A. GADDIS JOHN P. CARTER TRUETT BENNETT J S RODEN OBSTETRISWGHT J BROWN ROBERT S. BOYD EDWARD M. CHITWOOD ' ' THOMAS G BELL ' EDWARD R. HIPP EARL WILRISON ' CLAIBORNE FITCHETT JOHN C. WILKINSON RICHARD RILEY , ORTHOPEDICS GEORGE PSIMAS WILLIAM DUNCKEL WILLIAM G. MITCHELL RICHARD L. DESAUSSURE GEORGE C. MANNING AQMISTEAD pAGE BOOKER W. DAVID DQNALD ROBERT E. BALSLEY JOE E. MITCHELL EAR, NOSE AND THROAT UROLOGY JOHN C. RISHER FRANCIS W. REGNIER J. S. GILLIAM, JR. W. A. COUNCILL, JR. CARY N. MOON, JR. SARAH ROBERTS WILLIAM AINSWORTH FRANK BEAZLIE VERWORKED medical students loolc forward eagerly, if somewhat hopelessly, to the time when they can worlc on patients with a minimum of de- tails and a maximum of intelligent thought -their internships. However, when they become interns and residents, the young doctors soon Find themselves wishing they were back in their carefree med school days. Graduate training here is much like the same training elsewhere. l-lours are long, pay is negligible and worl4 is hard, details tend to lose themselves by sheer force of numbers. OF course, the only consolation is the wonderful expe- rience gained. Many technical proce- dures are learned and many long nights lived through, while the members of the resident staff mold themselves into com- petent and capable doctors. Wmwmp, claim if HARD WORK, LOW PAY 1 -. LET'S EAT UNLESS you are fortunate enough to get an externship you vvon't have the question- able pleasure ol eating in the hospital dining hall. The statl and nurses must, hovv- ever, subsist here. The wait is long, the lines crowcled, and the quest often fruitless. But they clo have steal: on Thursdays! Q. .. l ,, , ' 1 I 1 y 'nl at as if i t , 5545 'X H W ff W sl Elf Q 1 g et l Qifftatasssfail as 5022. A DAY IN A NURSES LIFE l-l, Tl-IE DAY of a nursel She comes on brightC'?D and early CD to face her patients with a hopeful look, and gets in return a glare at being so rudely awakened. The patient manages to reach a swallow of ice water, just at the time the nurse takes his tempera- ture. Undaunted, she continues her duties-baths, back rubs, beds, beds, beds-and finally has time to chart her morning tasks, just as the doctors are making rounds and are in possession of those fought-over documents. Then . . . the day really begins. People roll in on stretchers, in wheelchairs and even are forcibly carried in. Usually they come in groups of three or four. The nurse's job is to make sure these new patients feel at home and are comfortable, if possible. The afternoon wears on into evening and again it is back rubs and beds, beds, beds. A few dozen medications, a report to the relief nurse-and oh, my goodnessl ls it 7:00 p.m. already? 'i ' 'wfnaajx wgrwiw' .ix in , . - W 3 Q W ,. as he Eta 5 S2 axs f'?'txsFLQSFS VL ks 5 lstwfif E it M e i aft , Mfg' a is H w.f ,Z msg E . E' H . E ,Haggis E I Ss MEDICAL SCHOOL OFFICERS fleff fo RightJ Lee Kassel ........ Vice-Presidenf AI Armstrong . . . . . Historian Bill Lawton ....... . . Presidenf P. T. Craddock ........ Secretary Paul Wornom . SfudenfffouncilRepreseniofive MEDICAL INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL fLeff fo Righij Nibs Fite, N E N, Clair Liebrand, N E N, Jess Reed, sb X, Charles Crowder, fb X, Frank Bilisoly, 111 B TI, John Catlett, fl! B H, Adolphe Ehrenworth, KID A K, Lee Kassel, 119 A K NURSES STUDENT GOVERNMENT fLeff fo Rightj FRONT: Velma Houchens, Betty Mann, Betty Parker, Dorothy Beadles BACK: Betsy Pharr, Peggy Simpson, Mae Dickerson, Doris Bell Og f P ffggu byrdr ffbl h Glo CDRGANIZATIGNS ,gg gb AJ AXQ Nw 0 fx N ' :LZ Q 4 'gf if J ff wwf' Q Qgw- fx A! f F',Sk' 9 w g 1 ' Q3 3 ,.E, ,fi F Q m Q. wg WRC, K Q 'Vg M 9 S f g ., 1 - QQ 6 as iw Q ff' Q U D oc. ALPHA OMEGA ALPHA WIL.LIAM U. CAWTHON ............,,... . . . Presidenf HARVEY SMALLWOOD , JOHN C.ROURKE . , . DONALD L. WEEKS FRANK TATE SHANNON ALLEN, B.A., M.D. WILLIAM EUGENE APPERSON, M.D. HARRY LEE ARCHER, B.S., M.D. VINCENT WILLIAM ARCHER, B.S., M.D. McLEMORE BIRDSONG, M.D. STAIGE DAVIS BLACKFORD, B.S., M.D. ARMISTEAD PAGE BOOKER, B.S., M.D. ROBERT STEWART BOYD, B.A., M.D. RANDOLPH BRADSHAW, M.D. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY, B.A., M.D. EDWIN WEISMAN BURTON, B.A., M.D. JAMES ROBERT CASH, M.A., M.D. ALFRED CHANUTIN, PH.B., PH.D. PAUL CHODOSH, M.D, GEORGE COOPER, JR., B.A., M.D. ANDREW JACKSON CRUTCHFIELD, B.S., M.D. WILLIAM GAYLE CRUTCHFIELD, B.A., M.D. DORRIS ALVIN CUNNINGHAM, B.S., M.D W. DAVID DONALD, B.A., M.D. EVERT CATO DRASH, B.A., M.D. JULIAN OUAYLE EARLY, MD. ROBERT VIVIAN FUNSTEN, MD. GLENN C. HALL, JR., MD. ANDREW DeJARNETTE HART, M.D. JOHN CHRISMAN HAWK, JR., B.S., B.A., M.D. SAMUEL HUTSON HAY, B.S., M.D. HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGES, M.D. MYERS HAMPTON HICKS, B.S., M.D. 4 . . Vice-President . Secretory-Treasurer MARTIN STERNSTEIN A. WALTER HOOVER LEON E. KASSEL JAMES L. DEADWYLER GRADUATE MEMBERS HARVEY ERNEST JORDAN, M.A., PH.D. JAMES ERNEST KINDRED, M.A., PH.D. GEORGE MCLEAN LAWSON, M.D., DR.P.H. BYRD STUART LEAVELL, B.S., M.D. EDWIN PARTRIDGE LEHMAN, B.S., M.D. CARLISLE SANFORD LENTZ, B.S., M.D. WILEY ROY MASON, M.D. HENRY WISE MAYO, JR., B.A., M.D. HENRY CLARKSON MEREDITH, JR., M.D. JOE E. MITCHELL, B.S., M.D. CHARLES BRUCE MORTON, II, B.S.., M.D. HENRY BEARDEN MULHOLLAND, M.D. JOHN MCINTIRE NOKES, M.D. WILLIAM HENRY PARKER, M.D. RANDOLPH P. PILLOW, M.D. HERBERT ROWLAND PEARSALL, B.S., M.D. GEORGE ROBINSON, B.A., M.D. DUDLEY CROFFORD SMITH, B.S., M.D. NELSON MONTGOMERY SMITH, M.D. STUART SMITH, B.S., M.D. CARL CASKEY SPEIDEL, PH.B,, PH.D. OSCAR SWINEFORD, JR., B.S., MD. ROBERT CLELL THOMPSON, B.S., MD, WILLIAM NORMAN THORNTON, JR., B.S., M D SAMUEL ALEXANDER VEST, JR., B.A., M.D. WILLIAM WIRT WADDELL, JR., B.S., M.D. DAVID COLE WILSON, B.A., M.D. JAMES EDWIN WOOD, JR., B.S., M.D. FLETCHER DRUMMOND WOODWARD, M.D. NIBS FITE FRANK HOBBS GEORGE BUCKMASTER JIM CAUSEY KEN EPPEL FRANK GRIFFIN BILL CAVE DICK FLYNN RED HANBURY HARRY LEE ARCHER VINCENT W. ARCHER JAMES R. CASH ALFRED CHANUTIN NAT ADAMSON PAGE BOOKER JOHN COLEMAN NU SIGMA NU FIRST ROW: BILL CREDLE, JOHN CRAIG, FRED VANCE, VINCENT ARCHER, BYRD LEAVELL, JAMES CASH, GAYLE CRUTCHFIELD, ALFRED CHANUTIN, CARL C. SPEIDEL, WILFORD COUNCILL, JOHN COLEMAN SECOND ROW: LARRY GILLIAM, FRANK HOBBS, FRANK RICHMOND, GEORGE TROXEL, CLAIR LIEBRAND, JACK VIVIAN, GEORGE BUCKMASTER, BUCKY HENRY THIRD ROW: JASON McCLELLAN, RED HANBURY, FRANK GRIFFIN, HUNTER MONTGOMERY, KEN EPPLE, FOX THORNTON, CHIC HENSEL FOURTH ROW: JOHN HARLAN, PRESTON JONES, JOE SMITH, JAMES McNEIL, BOB HUTT, DICK FLYNN, BILL CAVE, NELSON RICHARDS STUDENT MEMBERS CLAIR LIEBRAND FRANK RICHMOND JACK COLSTON CHIC HENSEL CHRIS MITCHELL JOHN HARLAN BOB HUTT PRESTON JONES GEORGE COOPER, JR. W. GAYLE CRUTCHFIELD CHALMERS GEMMILL BYRD S. LEAVELL STAFF MEMBERS BUZ COUNCILL BILL CREDLE Fourth Year JOHN RUSSELL GEORGE TROXEI. Third Year LARRY GILLIAM Second Year HUNTER MONTGOMERY HENRY TANNER First Year JAMES MCNEIL NELSON RICHARDS JOE SMITH FACULTY BRUCE MORTON ARTHUR M. SMITH CARL C. SPEIDEL WILLIAM NORMAN JOHN CRAIG BILL MATRE FRED VANCE THORNTON JACK VIVIAN HAROLD YARBRO BUCKY HENRY DAVE STRIDER FOX THORNTON JASON MCCLELLAN CARTER SINCLAIR WILLIAM W, WADDELL FLETCHER WOODWARD RANDOLPH LEIGH, JR. WILLIAM E. BRAY, JR, R. VINCENT CROWDER PHI BETA PI STUDENT MEMBERS Fourth Year E. RUSSELL BEBEAU 511,214-y WILLIAM R. BROOKS IVAN H. BUSH JOHN B. CATLETT CHRIS COLON-BETANCES P. T. CRADDOCK FRED S. CRUSER RATCLIFFE C. BARNES FRANK N. BILISOLY LEWIS BOOKER WALLACE A. COBURN FRANK S. BLANTON, JR. OUINTON O. CARR BEN L. CRITZER NICHOLAS DAVIES MACLEMORE BIRDSONG WILLIAM E. BRAY EDWARD L. COREY ED CHITWOOD CHARLES CROCKETT BILL DUNCKEL JAMES A. DELOZIER CLAUDE R. GARFIELD WALTER B. GARLAND, JR. WARREN C. GREGORY THOMAS M. HALL SETH HOBART JOHN B. GORMAN ROBERT T. HELMEN HERBERT C. JONES, JR. MEADE C. EDMUNDS, JR. KENNETH S. HELENBOLT LOUIS R. HUNDLEY HOLCOMBE H. HURT, JR. THOMAS A. COOK, JR Third Year GUY F. HOLLIFIELD J. MORRISON HUTCHES SAMUEL E. MILLER ROBERT E. MITCHELL WILLIAM H. ROMM ROY P. SANDRIDGE, JR. Second Year JOSEPH H. MAGEE WILLIAM H. PIFER ROBERT B. SANFORD First Year ROBERT C. JONES ARTURO T. MACHIN JOHN G. MURRAY JAMES L. ODOM FACULTY MEMBERS MARION HUMPHRIES HARVEY E. JORDAN JAMES E. KINDRED WALTER O. KLINGMAN KARL F. MENK WILLIAM H. PARKER STAFF MEMBERS HARRY HYER C. TAYLOR MARROW HENRY W. MAYO CHARLES E. McKAY JOE MITCHELL WALLACE C. NUNLEY C. FRANKLIN TATE ELMER O. SMITH, JR. RUSSELL SMITH FRANK E. TAYLOR CHARLES W. WAGNER JAMES M. WOLCOTT PAUL H. WORNOM WILLIAM H. SIPE RICHARD N. TAYLOR WILLIAM T. TUCKER THOMAS M. WRIGHT JAMES W. RANSONE G. FLETCHER RIEMAN MARION MOORE SHERMAN, JR. ROBERT B. WEBB, JR. H. ROWLAND PEARSALL RANDOLPH PILLOW DUDLEY C. SMITH GLENN H. RICHMOND GORDON THOMAS JOHN C. WILKINSON FIRST ROW: JOE MITCHELL, GLENN RICHMOND, RANDY PILLOW, GORDON THOMAS, McLEMORE BIRDSONG, JOHN CATLETT, HARVEY E. JORDAN, JAMES E. KINDRED, WILLIAM E. BRAY, EDWARD L. COREY, WALTER O. KLINGMAN SECOND ROW: RUSSELL BROOKS, VINCENT CROWDER, RUSSELL BEBEAU, CHRIS COLONABETANCES, GUY HOLLIFIELD, SETH HOBART, JIMMY WOLCOTT, IVAN BUSH, SAM MILLER, CLAUDE GARFIELD, FRANK TATE THIRD ROW: PAUL WORNOM, JIM DeLOZIER, BOB MITCHELL, WARREN GREGORY, FRANK E. TAYLOR, FRANK BILISOLY, THOMAS WRIGHT, CHARLES WAGNER, JOHN GORMAN, J. MORRISON HUTCHESON, FRED CRUSER FOURTH ROW: P. T. CRADDOCK, JOHN MURRAY, R. C. BARNES, JED WILSON, LEWIS BOOKER, BILL PIFER, BILL SIPE, BILL TUCKER, BOB SANFORD, JOE MAGEE FIFTH ROW: MEADE EDMUNDS, ART MACHIN, BOB JONES, JIM ODOM, KEN HELENBOLT, NICK DAVIES, FLETCHER RIEMAN, CHUCK HUNT, OUINTIN CARR SIXTH ROW: BEN CRITZER, FRANK BLANTON, LOUIS HUNDLEY, DICK GARLAND, THOMAS HALL, BOB WEBB, JACK RANSONE, WALLY COBURN, ROY SANDRIDGE FIRST ROW: JOHN ROGNESS, ED HIPP, AL ARMSTRONG, BILL SNOOK, DON FERGUSON, JOHN ROURKE, DOUG THOMPSON, CHARLIE LUPTON, JOHNNY TENNANT, JACK JAMES, SCOTT GILMER, ERNIE DIXON, DOUG POWERS SECOND ROW: JIM HENNEY, DON PIERCE, ED MEARS, DICK RANKIN, BOB CALDWELL, WALTER McCOOK, CAM CANTRILL, FRANK BARRETT, LUNDIE BARLOW, FRANCIS SULLIVAN, JESS REED, AL RIGSBEE THIRD ROW: HARVEY SMALLWOOD, BOB SUNDRE, BILL DAVIS, RAY BROWN, JOHN BUCHANAN, BOYD HORSLEY, CHARLES CROWDER, AUSTIN HYDE, CLARENCE TROWER, PAUL MARSH, GEORGE HERRING, HARRY TAYLOR FOURTH ROW: JIM DEADWYLER, HARRY WALKER, BILL SHANKEL, BILL WHARTON, PHIL SPAETH, MOFFETT WALKER, AL JEFFRIES, JIMMY JOHN, TONY GRIECO, ED SAWADA, ED STOLL, EVAN ASHBY FIFTH ROW: GENE HEATWOLE, BILL WHITMORE, JOHN OSBORNE, JACK DREWRY, JOHN STIREWALT, BILL McGUIRE, CHARLIE DONEGAN, JIMMY STONE, HARRY ROBINSON, CARL STARK SIXTH ROW: ASHBY WOODS, CHARLIE SPENCER, WATTS LIPSCOMB, ADNA WILDE, MILT BROCKMEYER, AL BIGGS, HUGH RULE, ALLAN L. ARMSTRONG LUNDIE W. BARLOW FRANCIS E. BARRETT JAMES C. DEADWYLER DONALD H. FERGUSON ROBERT CALDWELL J. CAMPBELL CANTRILL FLOYD W. CARNEAL EVAN ASHBY RAY BROWN JOHN BUCHANAN CHARLES CROWDER WILLIAM DAVIS MIKE DERIAN AL BIGGS MILTON BROCKMEYER JESS CUMBIA JACK DREWRY WILLIAM R, DANDRIDGE VERNON W. LIPPARD BILL AINSWORTH BOB BALSLEY PHIL BASS RANDOLPH BRADSHAW BOB COFFER ERNEST DIXON WALTER FITZGERALD CLARK JAMES E. HENNEY THOMAS A. KIRK DAVID C. LUCAS WALTER R. McCOOK DONALD R. PIERCE GEORGE HERRING PAUL R. MARSH CHARLES DONEGAN ANTHONY GRIECO BOYD HORSLEY AUSTIN HYDE PERRY HYDE BILL HALL, III GENE HEATWOLE WATTS LIPSCOMB JOHN OSBORNE POLE, CHARLIE WICKE, BILL HALL STUDENT MEMBERS Fourth Year ALBERT V. RIGSBEE JOHN A. ROGNESS JOHN C. ROURKE HARVEY D. SMALLWOOD WILLIAM M. SNOOK Third Year EDWARD J. MEARS RICHARD RANKIN Second Year JIMMY JOHN BILL McGUIRE HARRY ROBINSON WILLIAM SHANKEL PHIL SPAETH First Year CLARK POLE HUGH RULE CHARLES SPENCER CHARLES WICKE FRANCIS S. SULLIVAN ROBERT L. SUNDRE HARRY B. TAYLOR DOUGLAS J. THOMPSON HARRY G. WALKER JESS F. REED CLARENCE B. TROWER CARL STARK JOHN STIREWALT ED STOLL JAMES STONE MOFFETT WALKER WILLIAM WHARTON ROBERT WHITMORE ADNA WILDE ASHBY WOODS CAMDEN NUCKOLS WILLIAM SANDUSKY FACULTY MEMBERS JACK MAI-IOOD JUAN MARTINEZ STAFF MEMBERS SCOTT GILMER CARY MOON RICHARD GRISE . JAMES Moss JOHN HAWK MYERS HICKS EDWARD HIPP CHARLES LUPTON WILLIAM MCILWAINE PHI CHI DOUGLAS POWERS RICHARD RILEY CAREY STONE NANT JOHN TEN ROBERT YOE WILLIAM U. CAWTHON CAMPBELL HARRIS, JR. E GLENN UPDIK CLIFFORD H. FOX JAMES M. LEE RANDOLPH CATLIN MIKE FITE STAIGE BLACKFORD THOMAS EDWARDS SLALIGHTER FITZ-HUGH THOMAS BELL CALCONON CLUB STUDENT MEMBERS Fourlh Year BRIDGER P. LITTLE, JR. JOHN D. VARNER HENRY H. WILSON, JR DAVID A. MULLON DONALD L. WEEKS Third Year I JR. WILLIAM G. WYSOR, JR. JAMES B. WOOD Second Year JAMES D. MASON CHARLES I-I. SACKETT, JR. HARRY R. YATES, JR. Firsf Year PAGE MAUCK ROBERT McCONNELL ARMISTEAD WILLIAMS FACULTY MEMBERS ROBERT FLINSTEN FRANK STAFFORD DAVID C. WILSON HENRY MULHOLLAND OSCAR SWINEFORD J. EDWIN WOOD CHARLES PEARSON LARRY WHITE STAFF MEMBERS CLAIBORNE FITCHETT JAMES TWYMAN FIRST ROW: CLAIBORNE FITCHETT, TOM KING, LARRY WHITE, HENRY MLILHOLLAND, J. EDWIN WOOD, STAIGE BLACKFORD, ROBERT FUNSTEN SECOND ROW: CAMPBELL HARRIS, HENRY WILSON, DAVID MULLON, GLENN HALL, B. P. LITTLE, JAMES MASON, CHARLES SACKETT THIRD ROW: ARMISTEAD WILLIAMS, GLENN UPDIKE, JR., WILLIAM WYSOR, JR., DONALD WEEKS, HARRY YATES, JAMES LEE, ROBERT McCONNELL FOURTH ROW: PAGE MALJCK, JR., CHARLIE LEYS, MIKE FITE, RANDOLPH CATLIN -ni Qgel Q . 1 X. sm, PHI LAMBDA KAPPA FIRST ROW: MARV THALENBERG, MARTY STERNSTEIN, LEE KASSEL, BOB GOULD, AL OFFEN SECOND ROW: JOE SEDWITZ, NED EBIN, HARRY FERTIG, BOB ROWAN, JOE SCHWARTZ THIRD ROW: BOB HARRIS, IRA CANTVIN, AL STRAUSS, ADOLPHE EHRENWORTH, SY BRENNER, BERNIE OSEROFF FOURTH ROW: HARVEY BREIT, KEN BERGER, LEE LIEBERMAN, MARTY FISCHER, HARRY GOLDMAN ROBERT E. GOULD LEON E. KASSEL LEONID EBIN HARRISON FERTIG HARVEY BREIT SEYMOUR BRENNER IRA CANTIN KENNETH BERGER HAROLD GOLDMAN LEONARD GOLD FIFTH ROW: BOB KAPLAN, LEN GOLD, ED PELTZ STUDENT MEMBERS Fourth Year EUGENE S. MENDELSOHN J. ALLAN OFFEN Third Year ROBERT J, FRANK ROBERT L. ROWAN ' Second Year ADOLPHE EHRENWORTH ROBERT HARRIS First Year WILLIAM GREENSPON MARTIN P. FISCHER ROBERT KAPLAN FRED WASSERMANN HOUSE STAFF PAUL L. CHODOSH MARTIN H. STERNSTEIN MARVIN M, THALENBERG JOSEPH SCHWARTZ BERNARD OSEROFF JOSEPH SEDWITZ ALBERT STRAUSS HARVEY KARKUS LIONEL LIEBERMAN EDGAR PELTZ mmf Q as BIOPSY HAROLD R,YARBRO . . . . Ediior-in-Chief EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF ALLAN L' ARMSTRONG Managing Edna' JAMES E, HENNEY ...,..,...... Buxinesx Manager LEE KASSEL ' ' ' AHISIUHI Managing Edna' DONALD R. PIERCE . . . . Assisianf Rusiness Manager JEAN KING . . ..,,... Ediior, Nursing School FRANK TATE --'- I I I Cnculafion Manage, JEAN KINSEY . ...... Managing Edilor, Nursing School WARREN ELLIQTT I I I I I I I Adverrising Manager MARTIN STERNSTEIN . . . ,..... ..... T rearurer HELEN BASON . . . . . . Business Manager, Nursing SchooI FRANK TATE BILL SHANKEL MARV THAI-ENBERG PATSY MORRIS ..,... Circulahon Manager, Nursing School ART STAFF CIRCULATION STAFF LQUISE FLYNN BILL SHANKEL GIG' MCKNIGHT NELSON RICHARDS CHARLES CROWDER DON PIERCE RAY BROWN PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF I EVAN ASHEY JIM CAUSEY ANN SHULTZ LARRY GILLIAM ED SAWADA WALTER MCCOOK JESS REED JACK RANSONE HARRY TAYLOR JESS REED AL ARMSTRONG AL RIGSBEE FRANK RICHMOND ASSISTANTS BOB HUTT PAGE MAUCK MIKE FITE JUNE PEARSON PAT FERRAZI NICK DAVIES ARMISTEAD WILLIAMS MARY LOU HOWARD JIM ODOM FLETCHER REIMAN NANCY NICHOLSON SALLY GRIFFIN KEN HELENBOLT P. T. CRADDOCK ANNE COLEMAN BROOKS OVERTON Sifuafion Analysis: The pofienf is well adjusted fo his sfofus, buf strives fo move cheodwiihhisgroup. THE CLASSES Q-'? A ' , E .I Sli 'QETQ . G , ggi I . ul.: ' Z , 9 ' f . 5, ,. wg .. ....: -- K. . , ,- . W . Ab .A , ' jf! 5 ,vm 'QA' X N 7 1 ' i A E , M 4 A Q51 ul wa W 55,--SYS Qfzy' Kf M325 5557? 'fri A We-Wi,, ' QI Q I J Q53 KENNETH WILLIAM BERGER ALBERT WILLIAM BIGGS FRANK STODDERT BLANTON, JR. BOYD WARREN BOND MILTON HENRY BROCKMEYER MELVIN HUGH BURKE OUINTIN OSWALD CARR RANDOLPH CATLIN, JR. WILLIAM BELFIELD CAVE JESSE REECE COVER BEN LAKE CRITZER JESSE WESLEY CUMBIA NICHOLAS EDWARD DAVIES DAVID BARNES DREWRY MEADE CASTLETON EDMUNDS, RICHARD THOMAS ELLISON JULIA LANGHORNE EMMETT JAMES EDGE FARIS, JR. MARTIN PAUL FISCHER JAMES MITCHELL FITE RICHARD ORVILLE FLYNN GUSTAVE LENNARD GOLD HAROLD LOUIS GOLDMAN WILLIAM STUART GREENSPON FIRST YEAR CLASS ROBERT HUMPHREYS GRUVER WILLIAM McLAURINE HALL, III EUCLID MURDEN HANBURY, JR. JOHN FREDERICK HARLAN EUGENE WILDER HEATWOLE KENNETH STEBBINS HELENBOLT LOUIS REAMS HUNDLEY HOLCOMBE HARRIS HURT, JR. ROBERT MERCIER HUTT PRESTON LANKFORD JONES ROBERT CLAGGETT JONES ROBERT STANLEY KAPLAN HARVEY DAVID KARKUS JAMES BUNTING KENLEY CHARLES HUNTER LEYS LIONEL MELVIN LIEBERMAN JAMES WATTS LIPSCOMB MARY JANE LUKE JASON EUGENE McCLELLAN ROBERT EARLL McCONNELL, JR. JAMES PORTER McNEIL, JR. ARTURO TORRES MACHIN HENRY PAGE MAUCK, JR. RICHARD HARDAWAY MEADE, III JOHN GIRARDEAU MURRAY JAMES LINWOOD ODOM. JOHN EDWARD OSBORNE EDGAR ELLIOTT PELTZ WILLIAM CLARKE POLE JAMES WHITMELL RANSONE WILLIAM NORTON REINGOLD BEVERLY LEE REYNOLDS NELSON GLASGOW RICHARDS GILBERT FLETCHER RIEMAN HUGH WALTER RULE MARION MOORE SHERMAN, JR CARTER ASHTON SINCLAIR JAMES ROGER SMITH JOSEPH H. SMITH CHARLES HALLACY SPENCER AUBREY GRANVILLE TOLLEY FRED WASSERMAN ROBERT BASYE WEBB, JR. WILLIAM HARVEY WHITMORE, JR CHARLES ROBINSON WICKE ADNA GODFREY WILDE ARMISTEAD MARSHALL WILLIAMS GEORGE EDWARD WIRE, JR. EDWARD ASHBY WOODS, JR. SECOND YEAR CLASS ALBERT HAROLD ARENOWITZ EVAN HAMILTON ASHBY, JR. RATCLIFFE COX BARNES WAYLAND RICHARD BENNETT FRANK NASH BILISOLY, III LEWIS BOOKER HARVEY JEROME BREIT SEYMOUR BRENNER RAYMOND KEITH BROWN JOHN CHALKEY BUCHANAN IRA MARSHALL CANTIN WALLACE ALEXANDER COBURN CHARLES HARPER CROWDER, JR, WILLIAM TEMPLETON DAVIS PAUL SAHAK DERIAN WILLIAM STRIBLING DINGLEDINE CHARLES COLEMAN DON EGAN, ADOLPHE MAX EHRENWORTH WARREN DUNLAP ELLIOTT KENNETH HALL EPPLE CYRUS CRESTON FARROW, JR. CLIFFORD HENRY FOX JOHN BRECKINRIDGE GORMAN ANTHONY JAMES GRIECO FRANCIS GORDON GRIFFIN ROBERT HARRIS ROBERT TRAYLOR HELMEN PHILIP KEARNEY HENSEL DURELL BOYD HORSLEY AUSTIN TABER HYDE, JR. LAWRENCE PERRY HYDE ALLAN HAMMETT JEFFERIES JAMES EDWARD JOHN, JR. ALBERT MCCRAY JONES HERBERT CLAIBORNE JONES, JR. JAMES MOULTRIE LEE BILLY FRANCIS McGUIRE JOSEPH HUMPHRIES MAGEE JAMES DUNN MASON, JR. RICHARD BENNETT MERIWETHER CHARLES SAMUEL MILLER ANDREW CHRISTMOND MITCHELL CHARLES HUNTER MONTGOMERY BERNARD OSEROFF WILLIAM HERMAN PIFER HARRY HAWTHORNE ROBINSON CHARLES HENRY SACKETT ROBERT BAILEY SANFORD, JR. JOSEPH LEE SEDWITZ LEWIS WILLARD SHANKEL WILLIAM HENRY SIPE PHILIP GEORGE SPAETH CARL ELLROY STARK JOHN MILES STIREWALT EDWARD JORDAN STOLL JAMES WALTER STONE WILLIAM HAROLD STOUT ALBERT ISADORE STRAUSS HENRY MORSE TANNER, JR. RICHARD NORVELL TAYLOR FOXHALL PARKER THORNTON, JR WILLIAM TAYLOR TUCKER MOFFETT ROBSON WALKER WILLIAM PULLER WHARTON JAMES DAVID WILSON THOMAS MAHLON WRIGHT HARRY ROBERT YATES, JR. THIRD YEAR CLASS CHARLES OLD BARCLAY, JR. WILLIAM RUSSELL BROOKS GEORGE ALLEN BUCKMASTER IVAN HAYS BUSH ROBERT SIMS CALDWELL JAMES CAMPBELL CANTRILL FLOYD WOODSON CARNEAL, JR. JOHN BALDWIN CATLETT JAMES COLVIN CAUSEY EVERETT LEE COFFEY CRISTINO MANUEL COLON-BETANCES JOHN ARCHIBALD CAMPBELL COLSTON, JR. PAUL TULANE CRADDOCK FRED SELDON CRUSER JAMES ANDREW DeLOZIER LEONID EBIN MARION DEES FARIS HARRISON FERTIG ROBERT JEROLD FRANK CLAUDE ROBERTSON GARFIELD WALTER BUHRMAN GARLAND, JR. LAWRENCE NOAH GILLIAM WARREN COLLINS GREGORY ROZELLE HAHN THOMAS MARION HALL REGINALD BUCHANAN HENRY, JR. GEORGE WILLIAM HERRING SETI-I GUILFORD HOBART GUY FOSTER HOLLIFIELD JAMES MORRISON HUTCHESON, JR. PATRICIA ANN LAWRENCE THEODORE LATHERS MARKS PAUL RANDALL MARSH EDWARD JOSEPH MEARS SAMUEL EDMUND MILLER ROBERT EDGAR MITCHELL, JR. BERYL MACY OSER RUPERT WILSON OUAINTANCE, JR. RICHARD EUGENE RANKIN JOSIAH FREDERICK REED JAMES CIPRIANO RESPESS DOROTHY LOUELLA REYCROFT BENJAMIN PRICE RILEY, JR. JOHN KENNETH ROBERTSON WILLIAM HENRY ROMM ROBERT LOUIS ROWAN ROY PRESTON SANDIDGE, JR. EDWARD AKIRA SAWADA JOSEPH LEON SCHWARTZ, JR, JOSE ANIBAL SEMIDEY ELMER OSWALD SMITH, JR. RUSSELL SMITH DAVID VALENTINE STRIDER GLADYS PIETRI-OMS SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT BOYD SWEET FRANK EUGENE TAYLOR BRUCE EDWARD TOPPIN CLARENCE BROCK TROWER, JR. GLENN BRADY UPDIKE, JR. CHARLES WILLIAM WAGNER JAMES MOUNTS WOLCOTT, JR. JAMES BURNLEY WOOD PAUL HOWARD WORNOM WILLIAM GEOFFREY WYSOR, JR. Nurses' Notes: The pofienfs inifioi con- fusion is giving way fo G more rational outlook, buf resfiessness continues NURSES' NOTES Xi! :Ai .fm , 5 ,vi l-rf? n ...ig A ,, 2 5 5 5 Q. ,K H W - Q 2 S 1 V S 0,4 I ' il' . :..:. , Q is 'fi-3 gg Qi? if 1:55-I I-J A - I Y M 2 2 - . 5 Q 0,1 , , W 'i 'Q M gg rxf ,N ...J ? CLASS OF FEBRUARY, 1952 FRONT ROW: Jean Morrow, l-lollie Amos, Jane White, Frances Hall, Fonda Williams, Frances Gray, Polly Durham RACK ROW: Sue Racey, Charlotte Stevens, Elma Ward, Patricia Pennington, Evelyn Sorrell, Mary Perry, Agnes l-lart CLASS CF SEPTEMBER, 1951 FIRST ROW: Dot Blackwell, Annette Griffith, Jo Campbell, Maxine Buttrick, Joan Kirchman, Jean Lewis, Jean Van Valkenburgh, Susan Hopkins SECOND ROW: Margaret Megginson, Natalie Johnson, Estaline Reeves, Anna Lee Fauver, Judy Brockenbrough, Mary Ellen Swecker THIRD ROW: Helen Bell, Betty L. Smith, Jean Collett, Linda Dofflemoyer, Santino Ciatto, Lorraine Bowers, Charlotte Moore, Ann Heinrich FOURTH ROW: Margaret Williams, Virginia Steele, Jo Sykes, Truladane Hale, Thelma Smith, Alma Tice, Peggy Williams, Christine Jones NOT SHOWN: Clara Belle Balis, Marion Balzer, Pat Boteler, Charlotte Bouchard, Paula Cash, Jeanne Cotton, Elsie Dickens, Betty Dyke, Maxine Elsea, Mary Frances English, Mary Louise First, Juanita Giannini, Virginia Gocldin, Louise Labofish, Jean Lynn, Yavonne Mabry, Mary Frances Murphy, Nancy Jane Murphy, Pat O'Brien, Mary Sue O'Neill, Carolyn Rieck, Rachel Redenhizer, Julia Shrewsbury, Ann Smiley, Ann Smith, Betty Keen Smith, Jackie Sweetwood, Nancy Taylor, Mary Blanche Thorpe, Clara Tinsley, Evelyn Wages CLASS CDF FEBRUARY, 1951 LEFT TO RIGHT: Maxine Mclnturlf, Clvlrsj Barbara Wilkerson, Julia Deaves, Lee Hornsby, Lucy Long, Barbara Thayer Helen Mace, Charlene Baxter, Caroleen Dail, Linnea Nelson NOT PICTURED: Anne Reilly, Cornelia Gilliam, Alice Mayes A ?r 3' ' 'W' 'im 'T' F 'A ' Wi' T' ' ' CLASS OF SEPTEMBER, 1950 FRONT ROW: Levanda Duncan, Betty Jane Crawford, Betty Lilly, Mary Frances Fulton, Patricia Brown, Dorothy Beadles SECOND ROW: Jane Christie, Jean Swanson, Sylvia Jander, Anne Finley, June Giannini, Jean Lewis, Margaret Brooks, Doris l-lolmes, Elizabeth Ann Eepass BACK ROW: Lucille Cregger, Nancy Nicholson, Jacqueline Meador, Alice Moore, Jeanine Eberhard, Anne Schultz, Sharon Sutherland, Anne Coleman NOT PICTURED: Frances Barlow, Elizabeth Bass, Pauletta Bishop, Constance Cooke, Alice Cowherd, Mary Jane Crews, Celia Dillon, Anne Dunlap, Ruth Elton, Sally Foster, Louise Gilbert, Marian l-lamner, Gwendolyn l-logan,Elizabeth Johnson, Carolyn Lawrence, Dorothy Lipscomb, Celia Mitchell, Suzanne Paret, Anne Patrick, Priscilla Rieners, Jean Roberts, Elsie Shuttle, Antoinette Thacker, Mary Wheat, Nell Willis, Anne Young CLASS OF FEBRUARY, 1950 FRONT ROW: Betsy Harris, Joyce Lassiter, Betty Parker BACK ROW: l-lelen Faullces, Phyllis Moler, Amelie Lipchalc, Doris Bell AFFILIATES EVERY three months we wave good-bye to our newly made Friends, dry our eyes and put smiles on our faces to welcome the incoming affiliates, An alliliating nurse with the University of Virginia I-Iospital is a student coming from another hospital to Fill a gap in her training. These young ladies are from Stuart Circle in Richmond and Rockingham Memorial in Harrisonburg and are alliliating with the University ol Virginia in the Psychiatric Department. FIRST ROW: Winifred Parker, Jane Maddox, Mae Dickerson, Ramona Westbrook - CStuart Circleb SECOND ROW: Helene Harris, Jeannette Keyser, Elsie Mae Shiflet, Betty Burkholder - Cllockingham Memorialj MX iii. - iii Q M .,-as . , 'swag' M ,V W I f M ,MIT if .U f f -,.fpPeiZ'i'Xf,., sr., .Mgfgu I 1 V, :L L., W My-f,,. ,Inj W tg. A As, ii'9sf:g?'fY', ' gf , , ,. , gif, V, AQKQEM,-. . . . . J- .n 1.'1-3?-W .1 -I fs-if .arf ia. - , , ,W fa . ia ,Mg M. .Mae A 4 Acme. . .. W jaxfmgs 5 s M: M 3 asset- A on . AWK. .. .eh ,wg 'J' f ,i:ygA- , M f .f --wg-1' ,Maw - 12111.-.ai f ,SJ ta . favs ,Y A , Hg' TE 'fax M gi I' 4 f, :Aa ya QNX- as 5-wg, 3 2f,,1.,gse2iSsM : .isgwzwa 25' 1 1fg:..51a.3.m s. A ' E ' W ' - 5,5 'T fi QE? W f .1 Ixrd'.lEf?'f 551 if i' 'LYEW , '-.fsazfjf 'JY-ii X LH -S8153 Q rf'lQ'A'5...mg M .Fi .xl fl.. ' mix-:iw 'il'y3Wf3a- H.-, f fm A ,.-we f.Q..t,i- L, az. H :I i L., N aw IM , , .,-,iw:Q5.i.V5gL55,,r-ESM., ,. M 34, L. 'RJ-like 5 .gqaui ...W M W N.. - 1 -- whom .. mf? .ai awnzw-v , W ie 1- y-W .LWMAL - -vg- W ww 1 4 ilk 3 Ji' is W Wir -: i im i .. , is M . .ss rig. H v -2 T, 7 in ?s3gg,51ggi a .-'A tt .-i. GRADUATING CLASS SEPTEMBER, 1949 DORA MAE ANDERSON Alton, Virginia ALICE MAE ALICIELLO Welch, West Virginia MARGARET BACI-ITELL Lexington, Virginia JACOUELINE BOOTI-IE I-Iopewell, Virginia FLORENCE BRANI-IAM Charlottesville, Virginia MARY E. BLIRNETTE Portsmouth, Virginia VIRGINIA CAMPBELL Clifton Forge, Virginia LAURA SPEED ELLIOTT Charlottesville, Virginia BETTY SUE FAIRCI-IILD Bluefield, West Virginia SHIRLEY GREENE Buchanan, Virginia x 0780 GRADUATING CLASS SEPTEMBER, 1949 BARBARA GREGORY Charleston, West Virginia MARGARET LEE GWINN Whipple, West Virginia JEAN HARRIS Bluefield, West Virginia JEAN HOLSCLAW Hopewell, Virginia VELMA HOUCHENS Alexandria, Virginia JANET R. HUDSON Virgilina, Virginia MARY FRANCES JENNINGS Appomattox, Virginia ELIZABETH KENNEDY Westminster, Maryland MARGARET KlNG Belgian Congo, Africa JEAN E, KINSEY Boone's Mill, Virginia Noi pictured: DOROTHY KOONTZ Luray, Virginia OF 7 GRADUATING CLASS SEPTEMBER, 1949 NANCY JUNE KYRE Gypsy, West Virginia DARLENE LAYMAN Troutville, Virginia MARIANNE LINI-IOSS New Marlcet, Virginia NAOMI EVELYNNE LINK Waynesboro, Virginia BETTY ROSE MANN Cypress Chapel, Virginia GLORIA JEAN MIDDLETON Arlington, Virginia VIRGINIA MOORE Washington, D. C. PATRICIA MORRIS Hopewell, Virginia NANCY FAYE NORMAN Chatham, Virginia FRANCES ELIZABETH PALMER South Boston, Virginia o 860 GRADUATING CLASS or SEPTEMBER 1949 BETTY LENORA PATRICK Norton, Virginia NEVA PEARL PENCE Minden, West Virginia MARY BETSY PHARR Waynesboro, Virginia KATHRYN ANN SHORT Lovingston, Virginia PEGGY ANN SIMPSON Hurt, Virginia DALE SLOAN Rocky Mount, Virginia SUSIE STERRETT Montgomery, West Virginia ARETTA WEBB Man, West Virginia GRADUATING CLASS FEBRUARY, 1949 HELEN LOUISE BASON Graham, North Carolina SUE ETHEL BRACEY Farmville, Virginia ELIZABETH W. BRYANT Bryant, Virginia MARY ELLEN DRAKE Egan, Georgia JANE M. GERBER Arlington, Virginia RUTH ADELAIDE HANN Tampa, Florida DOROTHY J. HANSEN Washington, D. C. JEAN PATRICIA KING Arlington, Virginia JUNE ALLEN PEARSON Alexandria, Virginia Not Pictured: KATHRYN HAMMOND Charlottesville, Virginia MARY LOUISE STANLEY Roanoke, Virginia o 8Q o 9 Thp d I lyd Nt rr df ly p d Q DTC! In PRCGRESS NCJTES THE f v XX f ' , p N. 4 f ,iff A xx 5 -I I! 1' 5 a www THE CLASS or '49 JULY 6, 1945, was a hot day, Quite typical ol Charlottesville in the summer. Un the other side ol the world a war was going on. Bombs rained on Tokyo, battering the Jap into submission. Cn this side ol the world, some forty-odd Army and Navy personnel, plus a hand- lul ol civilians, strode down the halls ol the Medical School lor the First time. 8:30 o.m.-Biochemistry Room 335. A welcome . , . we were inloimed that there was a war on-and could we detect a note ol sarcasm? So this was medicinel Already we didn't IiI4e it. The class decreased by one the very lirst day. Anatomy. , . . No, that wasntt the janitor. A box ol bones . . . do all those bumps have a name? Bones oral-the First hurdle. Rush parties before we taclcled the cadavers. The Fraternities were decent. Many ol us joined. The beer was Free anyhow. The cadavers. Who would be First to touch them? In short days we became refractory to the stench-why, we could even eat a sandwich with one hand and dissect with the otherl ALLAN LEROY ARMSTRONG MIAMI, FLORIDA fl, X Treasurer, BIOPSY Statt, '47, Photography Editor, '48, Managing Editor, '49, Student Instructor, Bac- teriology, '48, AIMS, Honor Committee, Extern, Medicine and Surgery, '48, Internship, University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia LUNDIE WEATHERS BARLOW, JR. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA fb X, BIOPSY, Features Editor, '48, Extern, Martha Jetterson Hospital. Internship, Grady Memorial Hospital, Atlanta, Georgia FRANCIS ELWOOD BARRETT COUDERSPORT, PENNSYLVANIA 'I' X, Medical ROTC, Extern, Martha Jefferson Hospital. Internship, Episcopal Hospital, Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania EUGENE RUSSELL BEBEAU SCHOOLFIELD, VIRGINIA John Sealey Hospital, Galveston, Texas o 84 o B.S,, Hampden-Sydney College. H K A, fb B II, Dean's List, AIMS, Extern, Obstetrics. Internship, JOHN BAYARD BRITTON CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA B.A., University of Virginia. Internship, Mason Clinic, Seattle, Washington WILLIAM UPSON CAWTHON MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA B.A., M.A., University ofVirginia. QI' B K, A Q A, President, Cincinnati Prize in American I-listory, Raven Society, Calconon Club, President, BIOPSY, Extern, Blood Bank. Internship, New York I-Iospital, New York City THOMAS ALFRED COOK, JR. SANTURCE, PUERTO RICO CID B H, AIMS. Internship, Bayamon Districtl-lospital, Bayamon, Puerto Rico ROBERT VINCENT CROWDER, JR. LYNCI-IBURG, VIRGINIA A.B., Syracuse University. LD A IT, Internship, Syracuse Medical Center I-lospitals, Syracuse, New York 85 JAMES LOVERN DEADWYLER ELBERTON, GEORGIA fb X, A Q A, Extern, Obstetrics, Medical ROTC. Internship, Marine I-lospital, Staten Island, New York PATRICK SALVATORE FERAZZI BAYONNE, NEW JERSEY B.A., University ol Virginia. 111 X, Extern, Blood Bank, Intramural Athletics. Internship, St. Louis City I-lospital, St. Louis, Missouri DONALD HENRY FERGUSON TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA fb X, Dean's List, Student Instructor, Anatomy, Extern, Urology. Internship, University of Virginia I-lospital, Charlottesville, Virginia EDWARD HALSELL FITE, JR. MUSKOGEE, OKLAHOMA ll, I' A, N E N, BIOPSY, Advertising Manager, '47, Dearfs List, First Year Social Committee, Assistant Manager, Football Team, Medical IFC, Extern, Martha Jefferson I-lospital. Internship, University of Virginia I-lospital, Charlottesville, Virginia iii? WIT Ir . ROBERT EMERY GOULD NEW YORK CITY fb A Ii, Dean's List, AIMS, Medical ROTC, Extern, Neurology. Internship, Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Illinois CAMPBELL HARRIS, JR. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Calconon Club, Extern, Obstetrics. Internship, Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio JAMES EDWARD HENNEY KOHLER, WISCONSIN E N, fb X, II A E, BIOPSY, Circulation Manager, '47, Advertising Manager, '48, Business Manager, '49, Medical ROTC, AIMS, Extern, Clinical Laboratory. Internship, Milwaukee County General Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin FRANK IMBODEN HOBBS LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA E A IC, N E N, Intramural Athletics, Medical ROTC. Internship, University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia AMMON WALTER HOOVER I-IARRISBURG, PENNSYLVANIA A .Q A, K K lIf'. Internship, Cincinnati General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio LEON EDWARD KASSEL BALTIMORE, MARYLAND fl' A K, President, A .Q A, 0 A K, Raven Society, BIOPSY, Assistant Managing Editor, '49, AIMS, Presi- dent, Vice-President, Medical School, Honor Com- mittee. Internship, Sinai Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland THOMAS ALLEN KIRK, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA BS., Hampden-Sydney. GJ X, fb X. Internship, Germantown Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania TRENT LAVIANO WOODSIDE, LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK A.B., University of Virginia. 2 E, Dean's List. Internship, LISPHS, Marine Hospital, Staten Island, New York WILLIAM EDGAR LAWTON, JR. MOUNT HOPE, WEST VIRGINIA A.B., West Virginia University, B 9 IT, O A Ii, Medical School President, Honor Committee, Student Council, '48,'49, Class President, '46-'49 Internship, St. Luke's Hospital, Chicago, Illinois MIRIAM LENDING CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Dean's List, Medical School Show, Band, Extern, Medicine, '48. Internship, St. Louis City Hospital, St. Louis, Missouri CLAIR LIEBRAND HELENA, OKLAHOMA A.B., University of Virginia, N E N, President, O A K, BIOPSY, Treasurer, '47,'-'18, Circulation Manager, '48, Medical IFC, President, Jabbervvock Society, Glee Club, Medical School Shows, Raven Society. Internship, University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia BRIDGER PEARL LITTLE, JR. LEEDS, SOUTH CAROLINA l'I K A, Calconon Club, Extern, Blood Bank, Medical ROTC. Internship, USPHS, Staten Island I-Iospital, Staten Island, New York THE CLASS OF 49 Then, with only a month in school, the blast that shook the world-August 6, 'l945fthe lirst atom bomb. Short days later the war was over. We took to peace easily. ln no uncertain terms we were told the War was over. Get to work. Summer llevv into lall, lall to winter. ln December the Navy men shed their unilorms, to be lollowed in March by the Army men. Exams. Sixteen lelt. Physiology. Talks that passed lor lectures. Work now vvith the living rather than the dead. The slavery to biochemistry paid oil. Kymographs and Cannon. Then another summer-and the First vacation in lour years. From Massachusetts to Arizona, Florida to Oregon. We enjoyed it. The lall, and still nine months left in the second year. Physical diagnosis and our First contact with real patients. Medicine began to take on a look ol reality. The murmurs still escaped us. We studied, we listened. Pharmacology . . . and a bunch ol Uadolescent morons made good. Surgery, Medicine-aerophagia, pneumonia, and then a smattering ol O. B. An introduction to that torture chamber-the amphitheater. Catching up on sleep in clinical diagnosis class. The second year vvaned. A couple more ol us Fell by the wayside, a couple sought greener pastures, a couple, a better lile. Another summer and many ol us picked up a levv extra dollars. 0870 THE CLASS OF '49 We went on the vvards. The cruel long-hand physicals, The myriad blood counts . . . urines . . . stools. The occasional party became a vital necessity. The Out- patient Department. A quick beer at the Virginian, Then the bridge craze hit. Next hearts. Anything to lceep from studying. The third year was gone. Our last lree summer loomed before us. The decision between vvorl4 or play was upon us. We did both. Several of us spent six weeks in Texas with the Army . . . Nuevo Laredo, Monterreyl Many tales were brought baclc to be told and retold. The summer passed all too quiclcly. The lourth year davvned. Several nevv laces greeted us-some of the old ones were gone. A scramble to get internship applications in. Then the breathless waiting. We held out lor the best. We got the best. Seattle to Miami, Boston to Denver. The lirst orals quickly lollovved, and shoclced us. Our collective egos may have sutlered, but vve lcnevv humility. There was much to review, much to learn. DAVIS CRAIG LUCAS BLACKSBURG, VIRGINIA K A, fb X, A Q A, Raven Society, Extern, Ortho- pedics, Medical ROTC. Internship, University of Michigan Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan ROBERT ARTHUR MARKS QUEENS VILLAGE, NEW YORK Band, Intermediate Honors, Dean's List. Internship, USPHS, Staten Island Hospital, Staten Island, New York WALTER RAMON McCOOK KEY WEST, FLORIDA fir X, BIOPSY, Medical School Shovv, '47. Internship, Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, Florida EUGENE MENDELSOHN CHICAGO, ILLINOIS dl A K, Medical ROTC, Extern, Orthopedics. In- ternship, Wesley Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois i l 0880 DAVID ALAN MULLON PORT WASHINGTON, NEW YORK E N, Calconon Club, Medical ROTC. Internship, Bellevue Hospital CN.Y.U.D, New Yorlc City JOSEPH ALLAN OFFEN BROOKLINE, MASSACHUSETTS A.B., University of Virginia, lb A K, Dean's List, BIOPSY, Chairman, Class-Faculty Dinner. Internship, Boston City Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts DONALD ROBERT PIERCE BELOIT, WISCONSIN 112 X, BIOPSY, Assistant Business Manager, Student Instructor, Bacteriology, Extern, Medicine and Sur- gery, '48. Internship, Milwaukee County General Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin MICHAEL POTTER PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY B.A., Princeton, E 3,Special Research, Pharmacology. Internship, University of Virginia I-lospital, Char- lottesville, Virginia - THE CLASS OF '49 A new adventure awaited us on the delivery room. We lelt the thrill of bringing new life into the world. . . We ielt what it was like to spend days with only a cat- nap lor the much needed and much wanted sleep. A little panic hit us at the thought ol parting with cherished friends, but now it was all drawing to a close. Ol the original sixty-six, lorty-seven were here to graduate. Eight additions made a slightly more respectable Fifty-six. That MD. was going to loolc good. But in our minds we ltnew it was not an end, lout only a beginning. -Allan L, Armstrong. '13 June 1949. o8Q0 JOHN CHRYSOSTOM ROURKE NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA fb X, President, A S2 A, AIMS, Vice-President, Medical ROTC, Extern, Obstetrics, Extern, Clinical Laboratory. Internship, University of Iowa Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa JOHN HENRY RUSSELL TARRYTOWN, NEW YORK AB., University of Virginia, 9 A X, A H, N E N, Medical ROTC, Extern, ENT. Internship, Milwaukee County Hospital, Milwaukee, Wisconsin HARVEY DANIEL SMALLWOOD ROANOKE, VIRGINIA K E, fl? X, A Q A, Raven Society, Council, AIMS, Treasurer. Internship, University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia WILLIAM MUERICE SNOOK PORTLAND, OREGON .E N, KD X, Dean's List. Internship, University of Oregon Hospital, Portland, Oregon HARRY WAMPOLE REINSTEIN, JR. JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Z B T, Boxing Team, '45, College Topics. Intern- ship, Touro Inlirmary, New Orleans, Louisiana FRANK RAYMOND RICHMOND FORT MADISON, IOWA A.B., University ol Virginia- 'IP I' A, N E N, Track, '43, '44, '45, V Club. Internship, Cook County Hospital, Chicago, Illinois if ALBERT viNsoN messes if JIU DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA 112 X, Medical ROTC. Internship, Charlotte Memorial Hospital, Charlotte, North Carolina JOHN ALDEN ROGNESS MADISON, SOUTH DAKOTA LIP X, Medical ROTC, Extern, Clinical Laboratory, Extern, Obstetrics. Internship, Brooke General Hospital, San Antonio, Texas CHARLES FRANKLIN TATE CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA A.B., Morehead State Teacher's College, Kentucky, CII B IT, A Q A, BIOPSY, Circulation Manager, Chairman, Lounge Committee, Extern, Medicine, '47, '48, Surgery, '48 HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR KULING, CHINA A.B., University of Virginia, E III IC, fb X, YMCA, Jefferson So iet -Jabberwock Societ Extern Neuro C Y Y. . Psychiatry. Interlnship, St. LuIce's I-IoSpitaI, Chicago, Illinois MARVIN THALENBERG NEW YORK, NEW YORK Z B 'I', TIP A K, AIMS, Jefferson Society, Virginia Spectator, College Topics. Internship, Montefiore Hospital, New York, New York DOUGLAS JAMES THOMPSON DETROIT, MICHIGAN BS., Wayne University, KID X, Medical ROTC, Extern, Blood Bank. Internship, Fitzsimmons General Hos- pital, Denver, Colorado 0910 MARTIN HERMAN STERNSTEIN NEWARK, NEW JERSEY 'IP A K, A Q A, BIOPSY, Treasurer, '49, Medical School Show. Internship, Mount Sinai I-lospital, New York City FRANCIS SIMON SULLIVAN CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS fb Internship, Wayne County General I-lospital, Eloise, Michigan JOSEPHINE YOUNG SULLIVAN CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS A.B., Agnes Scott College. Internship, Wayne County General I-lospital, Eloise, Michigan ROBERT LUDWIG SUNDRE DULUTH, MINNESOTA QI' X, Medical IFC, Dean's List, Medical ROTC, Extern, Orthopedics. Internship, Brooke General I-lospital, San Antonio, Texas GEORGE EDWARD TROXEL BALTIMORE, MARYLAND A B Universit oiVir inia Nl V N Varsit Cross - - Y 8 - A - i Y - Country, '43-'47, Varsity Track, '45-'48, Captain, '48, V Club, Medical ROTC. Internship, Virginia Mason Hospital, Seattle, Washington JOHN DAVID VARNER EL PASO, TEXAS B L9 TI, A H, PK Society, Eli Banana, IMP, Calconon Club, Freshman Football, '4'I, Varsity Football, '42 Internship, John Sealy I-lospital, Galveston, Texas JOHN MARSHALL VIVIAN PHOENIX, ARIZONA E X, N E N, Glee Club. Internship, Colorado General Hospital, Denver, Colorado HARRY GORDON WALKER CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA E 111 E, fl-' X, Dean's List. Internship, USPHS, Marine Hospital, New Orleans, Louisiana 099. DONALD LESLIE WEEKS, JR. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA E X, A .Q A, Calconon Club, Raven Society, College Topics, Assistant Manager, Football, YMCA Field Club, First Year Social Committee, Extern, Martha Jelierson Hospital. Internship, The New York Hospital, New York, New York HENRY HARRISON WILSON, JR. RADFORD, VIRGINIA A.B. University of Virginia. 0 A K, II A IC, St. Anthony Hall, TILKA, Skull and Keys, College Topics, Editor, BIOPSY, Managing Editor, '47, Calconon Club, German Dance Society, Football, Track, IFC, Governing Board, Z Society. Internship, Hermann Hospital, Houston, Texas ' HAROLD RAY YARBRO JACKSON, TENNESSEE A.B., University of Virginia. N If N, IT A E, LD I3 K, O A K, Glee Club, Dean's List, Raven Society, Council, '48, AIMS,Student Council, '47, '48, Medical School Show, .labberwock Society, BIOPSY, Art Editor, '48, Editor-in-Chief, '49, Internship, University of Virginia Hospital, Charlottesville, Virginia SPENCER PIPPEN BASS, JR. TARBORO, NORTH CAROLINA B.A., University ol North Carolina. Internship, Medi- cal College of Virginia Hospital, Richmond, Virginia fNoi Piciuredl DISCHARGE NOTE Tl-lE publication of a yearbook traditionally entails a multitude of difficulties and obstacles to be overcome. BIOPSY's third annual phoenix-like resurrection from the ashes of what appeared to be final death is no exception to the above axiom. ln fact, the yearly struggles of our publication fora place in the sun are well known and need hardly to be gone into here. Suffice it to say that were it not for the clear realization of the injustice of our plight on the part of two gentlemen, Messrs. Lew Bowman and Churchill Young, editor and business manager, respec- tively, of Cork: ond Curls, BIOPSY would have been forever dead. For it was they who, aware of the impasse which had arisen as a result of the original shackling and entangling agreement upon which BIOPSY was first allowed to be published, consented graciously to discard the old and form a new and more liberal contract between the two publications. BIOPSY,l feel, now has a firmer foot- ing than ever before, lt remains for those in charge in future years to strengthen that footing even more. Money, as always, caused a tremendous amount of concern. The few dollars left from the past two issues was a rather small foundation upon which to build. l-lowever, from the beginning the Nurses Student Government Asso- ciation came to our aid with a liberal donation to the cause. Our sincere thanks and appreciation. ln addition, with the authorization for solicitation of local advertise- ments formerly denied, but now possible because of the new agreement, the business staff under the efficient direction of Jim l-lenney and Baron Elliot did a tremendous amount of work with great success. Without this work BIOPSY could not have gone to press. lt has been satisfying to feel that our yearbook has been not the product of one or two individuals' time and effort, but has been the result of the closely co-operative en- deavor of many. Each has been an important cog in the machine and to all go the credit or blame. It should be the function of the editor merely to guide and to co-ordinate. For a yearbook should be everybody's business and the product of a concerted enterprise. Such l feel has been the case this year. Special thanks should be given to many. The staff listings speak for themselves. To name but a few: To the photog- raphy staff especially, who spent many long hours gather- ing material and even longer hours in the darkroom- many nights until morning, to all who contributed their own photographs, to Miss Gigi McKnight for the clever drawings for the title pages, to Sam Miller, who without benefit of listing on the staff came to our aid in the rushed latter days with much excellent writing, and last but certainly not least to Misses Sally Griffin, Mary Lou l-loward, and Brooks Overton, who not only willingly gave up much of their time to type copy but offered much encouragement and brightened up the long weary hours as only they can do. lf BIOPSY is to continue, and we hope it will, let me wish for the future staffs that they haveithe same unselfish team-like spirit which has characterized our group this year. -The Editor. 0930 Hardware of All Kinds I CHARLOTTESVILLE HARDWARE COMPANY CARROLL'S TEA ROOM Teo by The Keg ta Phone Q22-Q33 'ii For dresses that loolc right Come io Phone 4638 L E V y ' 5 ii 102 East Main phone Q78 BACTERIOLOGY You will grow leery o' mycobacteria, Spirochetes cause you to shiver, Youlll fear you'll take home a fine case of myxoma Or fungi infecting the liver. The lectures will tarry with old Typhoid Mary And range from Rangoon to Rivanna, Youlll hear of the babies infected with rabies From coyotes loosed in Montana. And what was amiss so in old San Francisco, When Wun l'lung Lo died of the plague, And how, in Australia, if bandicoots ail, you lnoculate fresh fertile egg. Then you'll begin, sir, to wear out your Zinsser Looking up Virus, stunt, bushy, And Trichophytosis and Ufxspergillosis' And Fever, tsutsugamushif' You'll learn and you'll cuss all the bugs grown on Russell CThe media, that is, not the teacherll You'll meet millions of yeasts and the other wee beasts And memorize every last feature, Your brain will be paining from cramming and straining, The exam will be soalced in your sweat, Then, talce it from me, you'll be glad for a C, Which is probably what you will getl -Hemophilus virginius. 0940 The Modern Office of Distinction and Quality POWERS 8: ANDERSON The Largest and Oldest Surgical Instrument House in the South RICHMOND NORFOLK LYNCHBURG ROANOKE VIRGINIA WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA COLUMBIA, SOUTH CAROLINA 'E Medical Student, Interne, Physician and Hospital Supplies and Equipment 0950 OMOHUNDRO ELECTRIC CO. . Frigidaire Air Conditioning CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA EIectricaI Contrecti 9 PREDDY'S FUNERAL HOME CITIZENS BANK AND TRUST CQ- ' Superior Ambulance Service CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST CO. Ph n sos PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA All Members of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporal FRANK B. I-IAVNES O You can have confidence in GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES FROM RAY FISHER'S Complimenfs of STROTHER DRUG COMPANY Lynchburg, Va. - Wiwoiesaie Drug Supplies 0960 The Cheery Warmth of E112 Eli-Iearth Will Remind You oi Qld England E STEAK DINNERS E 2112 Miles East on 250 A.B.C. License 1114 Boclelcer is the worcl for drugs . . . Y What Sterling means to silver . . . Bodel4er means to drugsl 'ii THE BODEKER DRUG COMPANY Now in its second cenfury of friendly service Richmond, Virginia 0970 3 Home of HART-SCHAFFNER 8: MARX CLOTHES KNOX HATS - NUNN-BUSH SHOES T 7 f W f O ABSOLUTE TRUTH K E L L E R ln contrast to Zeno's paradox, Democritus made his universe , . . Of hloclcs. A N D G E O R G E y Now, those who have a working smatter X.2 .',', ' . S.--'57 I ' Q. ' -ew Q JEWELERS AND Of physics, produce energy 4 . . From matter. ln Eden, Adam got the nod From Eve, and both got dispossessed . . . By God. When you were young, merely a lcid, You had no super-ego . , . Only ld. From the culture where we dwell The super-ego piclcs its specifications . . . For l-lell. Getting along with this world is but A reflection of what goes on within Q6 . . . The gut. Or to malre the thing more emphatic, Our personality is but a whole Since1875 . . . Psychosomatic 0980 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA RING VIRGINIA SEAL GLASSES STUDENTS' SUPPLIES 'E JAMESON COLLEGE BOOK STORE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA CHANCELLOR'S DRUG STORE Meet your friends here 3 Phone Nos. 1 and 2 University, Va. Wi N fi 0 fa f e 6 W X d It X , E V , G .,o,,,.e- 4,1 c, vf'1 ,,. ,, ' A , I X 'iii .X fliif ds ' -- X -.i ll AI x! .H -l 1 , ,L-' .0 . ,. I . ' - 1 I I,.i-.. gym 4 r M ies ,gr I - V. ' .1 ry R 12 Lv .. 1 - vi ' 4 D 1 ' -i L- ' ffw H , v 4 1 9 TQ ,we ' , i L ' 2,1 :- p ' fjw' - -x 'f -is -N' . . .. ,,, X V-' . i ' is ' '-' i Q g, ' - 1 an I. 'i I- ,gag in J N x ' 'H 5 ' - i ,i - 'X ff' L J . is-I .- -r ,-is 1, if ,t . -, .5 .wore-g.,.,. zi. , M, '71 4' f' A X ' y i .n b tif- X FN-A ? 1 .1-fn' his- H W ' Y r ' c ' , ?f- ' M I .f35L:a:. ' 1' 8 ' .1 7 :-N ' if E .aaiiriw Xt 'K P i -M- - A aniiziff' . ' s- E ff- ' gm , mf : L .-, V ji! aw 1- 4 ,f -f ' . ui u e xt -' fe. if - ,.. d dr . - - 'QP' I X -H . I 1 fj 132,- ' 7 2727312 ff ,,.-.... Kei- ' U i' 4: 'J if - 5575- ff ,I f', iii' fif- ,Q 'LQ' N -N5XXf 7 Ml ev ' e xi , , we X QQ A H 7 ,QM , my Q I , J -' ' L - I JW- '-1 x L ' s V . 3 ' -11.5, -l e , '-'v i 1, H 1 n - f - 4,1 ' ,sw R Q3 i- '-022 -P ' f - . , ' e ff' - f ,ffi rffs ,df .Q-. 5:51 y . U Y I lOO' SPOTTED FEVER 'Tis spring! Be careful in the grass! You may get ticks upon your leg . . . Then for clwioromycetin beg, And hope the fever soon will pass. -Anon. UR advertisers have supported us nololy. You can show your appre- ciation by patronizing them. VANPELT AND BROWN, INC. , f f EE : g'f .Dv .,55:,twi.-any i.e.-:zu iff 5-5 Egfr, 5'i?iiS,E?mf 2:2 FG1 1: fx 1' 'zgiizggifiiw ' -V U-. Hin' f ,l?s',ir.-f:.n,lf T-il, .4 f ', a.-L' ri Riclwmoncl PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMISTS 'E Monufocfurers of Pharmaceuticals Ethical Prescription Specialties LABGRA TGRIES I NTEGRITY 7 -L 92 b r QQ' J. Q Virginia '1O'l' K! UNIVERSITY DINER 1331 West Main Street Cpen Day and Niglwf rv Z Good l-lOfTlC-COOl4CCl Food - l'lOl'Tl2-lvldde Pies EGGS ANY TIME 3 Meals from 45c to 51.50 Three Vegetables, Coffee and Dessert Five and Ten Dollar Meal Tickets for Students ai? ., diff? fix ff' ,imma ' f.-L---. . VEPARTMENT or :bfd X I3L1usuoLnnurs-A T 'la IV-OFWRGINIA . D- T ' ' 4 K 9 9 5 E - f ff m. Z '1OQ' MTCRQSCQRES SUSSTAQSE LAMPS EAR TIPS UNIFQRMS DIAGNOSTIC PIPETTES PERCUSSION HAMMERS INSTRUMENTS LANCETS CURETTES INSTRUMENTS APRUNS EMBLEMS LIGHTS STETHQSCQRES 'Q Book of All Publishers UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE STUDENT HEALTH BUILDING Q. Prompt Affenfion fo Mail Orders 'IO3' Sass SQ .... X Q zvq? ' . R,-Qs I I W we E Q A .2 :' '- .-S 1 1 f . ' . ,.-.- I I. S?EI:S.1:1-1' ' A ' -' if . jf 1 THE MONTICELLO HOTEL CI-IARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Sw ---. ,--w wsu 2 1 gears-v?fI:vbf'N'fr2'::, I .. - V tI1EE z '-EA' 4? .... 4 ,,,.,,,. ,,,, ,.,. , . asxltgytq ,,,.,, I 'S II '--I I Z II' i 4: .I4:: 4 I 1'-3 '- t ,I I I-L- I ggkg TT me X T N , f X 4 , yt xg 1 Q X ' QQ, 'wi' Q T X M.c'3,at 9' X Q 3 I es Q. vw I 'RSI 5 1 :fits 4 2 5 svwese, Q 2 t x ' .I we A- 1 X gr we 4 at .. , + . . . 2351. . I . 'ff . WT 'W' if ,I 'll , me-' .---- 5 NSFKX 'E Home of Jeffersonian Hospifalifyu 'S T. W. ETI-IERIDGE, Manager GIVE HER THE GUN, AS IT WERE, RANDOLPH! Full often I sally across tlwe rear alley To my navy-built Cinder bloelc hell, And investigate 9 with the greatest of glee Cn my medical carousel! There my clogs and my cats ancl my frogs and my rats And my panama slotlws and my monlceys Are spun gaily about wlwilst directions I slwout To my poor Ilustered party of Ilunlceys. Where friends meef CASH FOOD MARKET MAIN STREET T VANCE-BUICK, INC TQWN AND CQUNTRY IQOO West Main Street PRESTON AVENUE CI-IARLOTTESVILLE, VA 'IO4 For Efficienf and Prolonged Dehydration and Diuresis THE VIRGINIAN ON TI-'IE CORNER Phone 2456 HARRY and JIM I'Iow the needles do twirl as the animals whirl To furnish statistics internal! And the spot for all these is my serial thesis In the physiological journal. For, if you've not heard, I'm the very Iast vvorcl In centrifugal matters profounclf So, What, ho! I cry, as I operate my Zoological merry-go-'roundI -Hemophilus virginius fi? DIGGES' UNIVERSITY NEWS STAND I 5 Complete line of X fx Pipe Tobacco and Cigarettes ,X I at Cut Rate Prices N I MAGAZINES POCKET BOOKS 'IO5' BACKGROUN Three Decades of Clinical Experience THE use ol covv's mill4, water and carbohydrate mixtures represents the one system ol iniant Feeding that consistently, lor over three decades, has received universal pediatric recognition. No carbohydrate employed in this system ol inlant leeding enjoys so rich and enduring a background ol authoritative clinical experience as Dextri-Maltose. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. 1 Cwith 201, sodium chloridel, for normal babies. DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. 2 Cplain, salt freej, permits salt modifications by the physician DEXTRI-MALTOSE No. 3 fwith 372, potassium bicarbonaiej, for constipated babies. DEXTRI-MALTO Please enclose professional card when requesting samples of Mead Johnson products to co-operate in preventing their reaching unauthorized persons Mead Johnson 81 Company, Evansville, Ind., U. S. A+- UR advertisers are expected to support many publications. Their generous response EARL to l3lOPSY's ad men deserves your individual and i t 't r d. 608 Preston Avenue Id em' Y rd 2 Phone 416 l x X X . 'E 1 lim , I III' l X I l ll CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA I , . SL-W 'l lO6' ANDERSON BROS. BOOK TEXT BOOKS STATIONERY - ATHLETIC GOODS 'S Agenfs For MEDICAL PUBLICATIONS OF W. B. Saunders J. B. Lippincott C. V. Mosby I Appleton-Century-Crofts Williams 8: WiIIcins Lea 8: Febiger 3 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA RINGS A Balfour Creation Y TI-IE STUDENTS STORE SINCE 1875 STORE 'TOT' 10 Services THE GRIDDLE Has to Offer 1. Plenty of Free Parking 2. The Griddle ,........ Phone 4624 With New, Modern Horseshoe Counter and 25 Stools for Quick Service 3. The Hunt Room ......... Phone 781 Featuring Large Booths Seating Six or Eight for Large Parties 4. The Green Room ....,.. Phone 3472-J The Best Seafood and Steaks in Town Served in Pleasant Surroundings 5. The Anchor Room ...... Phone 3472-.I Beautiful Pine Paneling for Private Parties, Luncheons, Clubs, and Teas 6. The Baby Griddle ....... Phone 2569-R Curb Service at its Best-Barbecues, Hamburgers, Sandwiches, Soda Fountain. Parking lor 150 Cars ' 7. Delivery Service ......... Phone 781 Chicken - Steaks - Sandwiches - Beer 8. Chicken In The Rough ....... Phone 781 The World's Most Famous Chicken 9. CharIottesviIIe's Largest and Finest Restaurant Locally Owned and Operated 10. Open 24 Hours a Day Go to Classes Early-Stay Out Late at Mid- Winters. The Griddle ls Always Ready to Serve You REMEMBER OUR SLOGAN Good as the Best F 4 o. uw N' Qi. M' lxx -NN wx X X ff: a ,,, t I ost M it nf fl fd i 9 REFERRED PAIN God made man, and made him weII, I'Iad I-Ielstopped right there, all would have been we . Adam was happy, this must be true- With no women around, he couIdn't be blue. It seems this man developed pain- 'Twas in his side, he IeIt the strain. I'Ieaven's surgeons, the pain to relieve, Removed a rib . , . and created Eve. Q Adam welcomed the Ioss of weight, And humbIy accepted his new-found mate. Things went well, but just lor awhile: Then Adam leII victim to a womanly smile. I-Ie lost his wit, his pleasant laugh, I-Iis Iile was ruined by that better haIl. There's a moral hidden within these Iines To remember, boys, when Iovelight shines, It's better to have pain in the side, by hecI4l Than to have it removed and recur in the neck. -William Moira. CONWAY PRINTING CO. INCORPORATED 423 East Main Street Telephone 482 CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. 'E We can supply medical fraternity printing needs quiclcly ' O Doctors are men who prescribe medicines ol which they Icnow little, to cure diseases ol which they know Iess, in human beings oi whom they Icnow nothing. MVoItoire. O 80 Red Hills Farm BUILT over a century ago by a member ot the First faculty at the University, it is today an extremely practical and comfortable home for anyone desiring the delightful privacy and beauty ot the country-just twenty minutes motor from the Rotunda. This-and many other -lovvn and Country l'lomes-are OF'l:2I'Cd by MAD ESTATE 8 'Po 'eo lv? lets S'I'EVENS Sc COMPANY MONTICELLO Horan. euiuamc CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Sporting Goods MONTICELLO DAIRY E All Types of Dairy Products Phone 888 P A U L ' S 1411 West Main Street Cl afl0tte5Ville1 Vifginia Quit nothing is more estimable than a physician who, having studied nature from his youth, knows the properties of the ti human body, the diseases which assail it, the remedies which will benefit it, exercises his art with caution, and pays equal atten- cANDiEs, MAcsAziNEs, NEWSPAPERS, ToBAcco Hon i0 the fl'Cl7 Gnd the DOOV-H ' - Voltaire. '109' -,...-mai? ,N Sv psf XQXP N 'ill' g ggfsiigliltlllili' THE UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA 5 ,ff :1.74 ii 'J'-fi ' gl af fl1e Corner l 4 I k i' Eff l f, ,X 3 -. i ' i THE ALBEMARLE HOTEL , ik f ffl f -4, .ma cornea SHOP i, ,gllw 2 fll ' l lltxl -ff: 615 West Main Street l'T'. f f Il A n,...J1-J And last, not least, in each perplexing case Learn the sweet magic of a cheerful face, Not always smiling, but at least serene, When grief and anguish cloud the anxious scene Each loolc, each movement, every word and tone, Should tell your patient you are all his own, Not the mere worlcer, purchased to attend, But the warm, ready, sell-forgetting Friend, Whose genial presence in itself combines The best of cordials, tonics, anodynesf' -Oliver Wendell Holmes. l'IO' N. ',,'l11' Engravings for the 1949 B I O P S Y Manufactured by QMZWWZQQZQH ENGRAVING and ELECTROTYPE CO., INC Richmond, Virginia l'lQ' VHD 'IH HUS3 HSV - 'UNI OD '9'1'l3 Hd DIIIIEDVWHVHJ NOlld PDS3 STV VINIOH A 'GNOWHDIH VINIEJH A :IO A.LISHElAINf1 3H.L L178l NI A-SF: 'w , 1 1 1 1 1 1.:1 gf? ' EEE . Ri 1:- T ,11f7Qw 1lgV1f ' ' ' 1111 1. 1.11513 ' H31 CE ' H' 1136333 :ENE 112- 1: 1 Fi ee 11:6 ' , 'TEZQ75 13 Q55 ff' 1 if. , V 5.121 is . 221 1591, 1' N ai ,LH ' 1 JT? H 1, 411111, 131515 X f 1 W1 11591- 1 , 111-1 111111 A 1111, .111 1 , .141-111,151 AWA 1 wig 11-1111319131 W-11-'J11115 :',11b1,QlQm.1U 1 www ' 1 1 . ' 111 1:111111?:g5 1 W, 11111.-1 1 QW 1 X -' 2,1 4 :TL 13, 11 ' H'l 21 -11 11


Suggestions in the University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) collection:

University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 7

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University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 68

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University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 98

1949, pg 98

University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 70

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University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 123

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University of Virginia School of Medicine - Biopsy Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 46

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