A BI-MONTHLY COMMUNITY PUBLICATION OF & the JEWISH HOSPITAL of St. Louis

Vol. 12 — No. 2 APRIL, 1963 216 S. KINGSHIGHWAY, ST. LOUIS lO, MO. Political Celebrity Federation Drive Begins; Marietta Tree—"Our Top Girl at the UN"— To Speak at April 26 Auxiliary Meeting Hospital Goal: $6,900 Marietta Tree, once described as "the Jewish Hospital personnel will be asked to make their annual contributions to the living doll of the Democratic party's hier- Jewish Federation campaign which will be conducted here April 15 through April 26. archy," and now US representative on the This year's goal is $6,900 — slightly more than three per cent over the $6,690 United Nations Commission on Human collected here last year. The 1962 campaign, incidentally, set an all-time record for Rights, will speak at the Auxiliary spring Federation contributions. luncheon meeting at noon, April 26 in the The Jewish Federation, embracing eight Chase Club. Jewish health, welfare and educational The top American woman in the United RuwitchHeads Board; agencies in St. Louis, contributes sub- Nations, Mrs. Tree's career in public serv- stantially to the hospital each year. In ice and politics has rarely been matched Other Officers Elected 1962, it gave $360,000 to fully or partially in this country. support medical and surgical teaching Before President Kennedy appointed her Joseph F. Ruwitch has been elected to programs, the chronic disease unit, Aaron to the UN commission, she served on New a one-year term as president of the board Waldheim Clinics and the Home Care York City's Commission on Intergroup of directors of Jewish Hospital. He suc- program. Relations and the advisory council of the ceeds John M. Shoenberg, president since During the two-week campaign within Democratic National Committee. 1958. the hospital, all employees, including full- Mr. Ruwitch, president of Renard Lino- For many years, Mrs. Tree was on the time physicians and research persons, will MRS. TREE leum and Rug Co., has served on the hos- receive cards from one of nearly 100 team board of the National Urban League and pital board six years, the last two years the International Rescue Commission. She during World War II. England's royal captains. Once again, payroll deduction as a vice president. (See related story, was elected a director of Harlem's Syden- family attended a farewell dinner and ball is being stressed as the most convenient at Dytchley Park when the Trees decided below.) method of giving. The first payroll deduc- ham Hospital shortly after it became New Mrs. Morton D. May, Sydney M. Shoen- York's first interracial hospital. to move back to America in 1949. tions for the Federation campaign will be berg, Jr., and Gordon Scherck were newly taken from May 20 paychecks. "Luxury is merely a means to an end to elected to one-year terms as vice presi- Team captains will meet at 2:30 p.m., National political figure Mrs. Tree," Look Magazine reported re- dents. Re-elected to one-year terms were April 11 in Steinberg Auditorium to re- cently. "Her tastes and demands are sim- Stanley M. Richman, Edward F. Schweich view campaign details. It is expected that It was in politics, that Mrs. Tree became ple. She would rather travel by subway and Edward B. Greensfelder, vice presi- Harry N. Soffer, the Federation's general a national celebrity. Columnist Inez Robb than in her husband's Rolls-Royce, is dents; Edwin G. Shifrin, secretary, and wrote in late 1960 that "Marietta's greatest happy with eight-year-old dresses from Herbert S. Schiele, treasurer. campaign chairman and a new member of contribution to her party is a spacious Balmain or Gres, writes her own speeches Newly elected to three-year board terms the Jewish Hospital board, will be guest home in which the elite and beat of the in long-hand." She is "marvelousiy con- were Saul A. Dubinsky and Hariy N. Sof- speaker. Democratic Party meet to exchange ideas, tent to be completely feminine," Look fer. Maurice L. Hirsch was elected to a In 1962, 959 employees contributed to launch trial balloons and stimulate action. said, repeating a friend's characterization two-year term. the record campaign which raised $6,690. Her drawing room, the focus of one of the of her. Re-elected to three-year terms were J. most exquisite private homes in New York, In 1961, $5,185 was raised and in 1960, Arthur Baer, II, Norman Bierman, Julius $3,239. can accommodate as many as 200 of the Director of World's Fair Cohen, I. E. Goldstein, Edwin Levis, Jr., faithful at suffocating point. Here Marietta Lee M. Liberman, Mrs. Harry Milton, Campaign headquarters will again be in In addition to her UN duties, she is a brings together presidential possibilities Schiele and Scherck. the first floor public relations office. Rob- director of the New York World's Fair and precinct workers from coast to coast." Millard A. Waldheim and John M. ert Rubright, public relations director, will and the National Conference of Christians In 1952, she worked on the "Volunteers Shoenberg were elevated to life member- serve as campaign chairman for the fifth for Stevenson" committee in New York and Jews. She is also a member of the ship. year. and two years later was co-manager of an advisory council of the National Commit- unsuccessful congressional campaign in tee Against Discrimination in Housing and that city's Silk Stocking district. She headed the Puerto Rican Board of Guardians. 13 Interns Named to 1963-64 House Staff the New York "Volunteers for Steven- Mrs. Tree is the granddaughter of Dr. Thirteen new interns will join the hospital's house staff July 1, Dr. Morton D. son" committee in 1956. Endicott Peabody, founder of Groton Pareira, chairman of the house staff and education committee and director of the School. Her maternal grandmother was a department of surgery, announced. Back in 1947, she married Ronald Lam- founder of Radcliffe College. Her brother, bert Field Tree, a naturalized Briton whose Eleven are medical interns and were obtained through the National Internship Endicott Peabody, is governor of Massa- Matching Program (NIMP), which serves as a clearing house for medical students and grandfather was Chicagoan Marshall Field. chusetts. Tree had been a conservative member of hospitals. The two dental interns were not processed through the NIMP. She attended Shady Hill School, Chest- Parliament for 13 years and a good friend The hospital sought eight mixed (medicine-surgery) interns and matched seven. of Winston Churchill. nut, Pa., St. Timothy's, Catonsville, Md., It matched four of the nine rotating general interns sought. La Petite Ecole Florentine, Florence, Italy, According to statistics compiled by the NIMP, Jewish Hospital was above the In their first years of marriage, the and the University of Pennsylvania in Phil- national average in matching 65 per cent of the internships it sought. Among all United Trees lived in his estate, Dytchley Park, adelphia. At Penn she majored in political States hospitals the percentage of interns matched was 56 per cent; among near Oxford. This country home has been science and modeled clothes at John Hospitals, 48 per cent; and among St. Louis hospitals, 52 per cent. Across the country described as Churchill's "second home" Wanamaker's. there were 12,456 interns sought, but only 6,954 matched. (See related story, page five.) J, F. Ruwitch Holds Long Record of Service Jeane Susman Nominated as Auxiliary Head He was the first chairman of the pro- members at their Spring meeting April 26 fessional services committee of the board at the Chase-Park Plaza Hotel. and later served as chairman of the re- The auxiliary's first recording secretary search committee. He has been a member and more recently a board member, Mrs. of the executive, resources and develop- Susman has put in more than 273 hours ment, long-range planning, joint confer- as a hospital volunteer. Though she's ence and out-patient services committee. worked as Gift Gallery cashier and Mr. Ruwitch is president of Renard planned parties for nursing students, her Linoleum and Rug Company and a mem- favorite volunteer job was in the newborn ber of the board of directors of the Bank nursery. "I fed and bathed my own new- of St. Louis, Alvey Conveyor Mfg. Co., born grandchildren," she recounted. "It Jewish Federation of Saint Louis, St. Louis was a wonderful thrill." Zoo Association, and the National Con- Devoted to her family, Mrs. Susman de- ference of Christians and Jews. clared that it and the auxiliary are to be He is a member of the president's coun- her only interests during her two-year term cil of St. Louis University and a graduate as president. Her husband, Earl, an at- of the and its torney, has recently been elected president school of law. of the Jewish Federation of Saint Louis. Mr. Ruwitch has served as president of They have three married daughters, two the Jewish Federation of St. Louis and of sons, and five grandchildren. Another Westwood Country Club; he was a vice- grandchild is expected before Mrs. Susman president and a member of the executive assumes office. Mrs. Susman has also made extensive committee of the United Fund of Greater MRS. SUSMAN MR. RUWITCH St. Louis. contributions to the community, serving Mrs. Earl Susman, who's been active in as a vice-president, St. Louis section, Joseph FJ__Ruwjtch, recently elected His wife, Elizabeth, is a past-president of the hospital's Women's Auxiliary. The the Auxiliary since its formation 11 years National Council of Jewish Women, and as president of~the hospital's board of direc- recording secretary, Jewish Community tors, has served on the board for six Ruwitchs have three children, one grand- ago is slated to be its next president. Her Centers Association board. years, the last two as a vice-president. child. nomination is to be confirmed by auxiliary CM PAGE 2 Purchasing Storekeeper Pair Honored for 70 Years of Service; Director of Nursing "Hep" Robinson Notes 72 Others Also Receive Employee Awards Edna Peterson Traces Department Changes Progress in Nursing Progress has been the keynote of Miss Thirty-five year service award winner Edna E. Peterson's 33 years as director of Hepple Robinson has been working for nursing at Jewish Hospital. She was hon- the hospital almost as long as the hospital ored recently for her 35 years of employ- has been in its present location. ment here. "This place was only a few months old "One of the first things I did when I when I started work," he recalled, "and became director was shorten the sleeves of there were so few employees that everyone the nurses' uniforms," Miss Peterson re- knew everyone else's name. Most folks now called. "The girls wore long-sleeved dresses don't even know my last name—some even with wide starched cuffs. They had to give call me 'Mr. Hepple' but it used to be baths and do everything else without roll- just plain 'Hep'." ing up their sleeves—it was all very un- "Hep" began his Jewish Hospital em- sanitary. One of the girls became so upset ployment as a busboy in the dietary de- at my 'shocking' decision that she shoved partment and later was an assistant chef. a dead mouse under my door!" For the past 26 years he has served as Some 1,300 students have graduated keeper of the purchasing storeroom. from the School of Nursing since Miss "The storeroom used to be known as 'the Peterson became its director. She was in commissary'," he recalls. "We didn't buy her twenties then, and some students were just file cards and other paper goods but DR. DAVID LITTAUER, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE HOSPITAL, PRESENTS LUGGAGE TO MISS EDNA older than she was. School enrollment was groceries, china dishes, and medical sup- E. PETERSON IN COMMEMORATION OF HER 35 YEARS HERE, WHILE HEPPLE ROBINSON, HOLDING HIS 35-YEAR AWARD, A WATCH, LOOKS ON. only 57, about one-fourth the present en- plies. We even bought the nurses' uni- rollment. forms." Seventy-four hospital employees were Mrs. Vernice Dismukes, central supply; No nurses' residence existed in 1927. The storeroom is now located in the presented service awards at a special tea Miss Elizabeth A. Dubansky, social work; Students attended classes in the area of the Steinberg wing, but at one time it was a March 13 in Steinberg Auditorium. Fred C. Dupree, dietary; Attila Fogarasi, hospital now occupied by the Medical Care tiny alcove off the kitchen. "During 1955 Two employees received 35-year awards. maintenance; Mrs. Melba Gierse, nursing, Research Center and the social work de- and 1956 when Steinberg was being built, They are Miss Edna Peterson, director of delivery room; Mrs. Mary Giliyon, clinical partment; they lived where the research purchasing operated out of a quonset hut nursing, and Hepple Robinson, purchasing labs. laboratories now are. just outside the kitchen," he said. "I had storekeeper. Mrs. Matilda Goldberg, accounts re- In the past 35 years community inter- to crawl through a kitchen window to get Mrs. Alto Bryant, nursing, delivery ceivable; Jack Hasson, M.D., clinical labs; est and responsibility in the educational into the hospital. The hut was so hot in Mrs. Rubie Hutson, housekeeping; Albert program of the nursing school has grown the summer the tar fell on my head and room; Mrs. Edna Love, laundry; and Mrs. Jones, animal room; Miss Mollie Jordan, Rosie Straub, housekeeping; received 15- considerably, Miss Peterson noted. "Jewish so cold in the winter I had to work with housekeeping; Mrs. Ethel Kelly, heart sta- Hospital's School of Nursing has had more my overcoat on all the time." year awards. tion; Mrs. Mozell Knox, dietary; Edward Other award winners were: Ten years, Kunz, maintenance. scholarships given it than any other nurs- Hepple and his wife, Ida, an assistant ing school in the city," she said. Charlie Anderson, maintenance; Mrs. Sue housekeeper here, live in Eureka, Mo.—30 Mrs. Marie Little, nursing administra- The most significant development in Bryson, School of Nursing; Miss Grace miles away—and he gets up at 5 a.m. in tion; Edouard Michel, clinical labs; Miss nursing at the hospital during her tenure Campbell, dietary; Miss Helen Davis, re- order to be at the hospital at 7 a.m. Mamie Moody, dietary; Miss Grace Moore, has been "relieving graduate nurses of habilitation; Mrs. Grace Campbell, dietary. nursing education; Miss Grace Nabors, duties that don't require professional skill." Miss Helen Davis, rehabilitation; Mrs. housekeeping; Mrs. Eleanor Oglesby, ac- "Thirty-five years ago we had no aux- Anzel Lifts 250 Lbs., Bella Fendelman, general accounting; Miss counts receivable; Kenneth N. Purcell, iliary personnel," Miss Peterson pointed Marjorie Greer, nursing administration; maintenance; Samuel Roberts, housekeep- out. "Today we average more than 175 Wins AAU 1st Prize Mrs. Hazel Hall, child psychiatry; Mrs. ing. practical nurses, aides and surgical tech- Juanita Irving, dietary; Mrs. Elnora Lev- Miss B e r n i c e Rogers, out-patient nicians. Nurses can do the jobs for which ells, laundry. clinics; Eddie Robinson, housekeeping; they're specially trained." Mrs. Oreda Robinson, share the nurse; "Nurses used to work 12 hour shifts," Mrs. Inez Lyons, nursing, 7 center; Mrs. Mrs. Bessie Stinkard, dietary; Mrs. Shirley Barbara McReynolds, radiology; Mrs. Smith, dietary; Miss Shirline Spratt, she said. "For years I worked from 7 a.m. Josephine Marshall, nursing, 6 center; and housekeeping; Mrs. Frances K. Stoval, to 7 p.m., 7 days a week." Early morning Mrs. Marcella Sykes, housekeeping. public relations; Mrs. Revivian Thomp- rising has become a habit: Miss Peterson Five years, Bo Axelrod, dietary; Mrs. son, nursing, 2 south. is always at her desk by 6:30 a.m. Florence Ayata, out-patient clinics; Mrs. Miss Mary Trees, anesthesiology; Mrs. Born of Swedish parents in a small Vastie Banks, nurses' residents; Mrs. Gen- Grace S. Vertrees, nursing, 5 center; Miss Minnesota town, Miss Peterson spoke only ora Blanks, housekeeping; Mrs. Edna J. Helen Vineyard, Clinical labs; Miss Bettye Swedish—no English—until she was five. Boyd, operating room; Miss Thelma Boyd, Watson, nursing, 2 Steinberg; Miss Jeanne After graduation from high school she nursing, delivery room; Joseph H. Braun, Weaver, nursing, 4 Steinberg; Mrs. Ger- obtained a teacher's certificate, so she dietary. trude West, nursing, operating room. could earn a living while saving money to realize her real ambition—to become an Mrs. Mary Bryant, laundry; Mrs. Miss Bonita White, clinical labs; Mrs. Samella Butler, nursing, operating room; Charlotte Williams, nursing, 3 center; actress with the traveling theatre known as the Lyceum. By the time she had the MR. ANZEL Mrs. Earlene Carter, nursing, 2 center; Mrs. Maggie Williams, nursing, 2 center; Mrs. Marion Chabay, social work; Joe Mrs. Marcella Williamson, housekeeping; money, however, the popularity of the Jewish Hospital's Dan Anzel hoisted 250 Clay, laundry; Harold Cochran, main- Mrs. Margaret Williamson, coffee shop; Lyceum was fading, and the enthusiasm pounds over his head recently to become tenance; Roosevelt Davis, dietary. and Mrs. Doris B. Zahradka, radiology. of a young nurse in whose father's house the weightlifting champion of the Ozark she roomed while teaching convinced her Amateur Athletic Union. to enter nursing. His first place in the light-heavyweight Hungarian-Born Electrician Is Live Wire During her student days at St. Mary's class at the 24th annual Ozark AAU School of Nursing in Rochester, Minn., she championships held recently at the Boys' Twenty-three year old chief electrician served as an operating room assistant to Club of St. Louis qualifies him to enter the Attila (Dale) Fogarasi is one of the few both of the famous Mayo brothers and Junior Nationals meet this June. If he Jewish Hospital employees to begin work was at one time their operating room triumphs there, he becomes eligible to here without knowing a word of English. supervisor. enter the Senior Nationals a year later A Hungarian refugee, he fled to the Miss Peterson attended Columbia Uni- with a shot at the national championship United States in the wake of the 1956 versity and the University of for in his class. revolution and settled in St. Louis with graduate courses and then came to Jewish Anzel, coordinator of the Dental Care relatives. A cousin, Dr. Michael Somogyi, Hospital as a science instructor for two Demonstration Project and research as- biochemist emeritus here, recommended years. Night classes at St. Louis University sociate in the Medical Care Research him for a job here a few days after his brought her both a B.S. in nursing educa- Center, began lifting weights as a gradu- arrival. tion and an M.S. ate business student at Stanford University "I had to communicate with signs when Asked to identify an outstanding event in 1955. He shifted to University of Cali- I first came here," Dale explained. "People of the past 35 years Miss Peterson ex- fornia for a master's degree in public were very kind, though, and with everyone claimed, "I haven't had the time to stop health and there joined the Berkeley helping me I was able to learn the lan- and think about any one thing; I've been YMCA weightlifting team. guage rapidly." He now speaks fluent too busy!" He told a Berkeley reporter that "Too English. many people mistake weightlifting with Dale was trained as an electrician in body building. There is no connection. Hungary. Until his recent promotion to Choir Plans Concert People should be enlightened." chief electrician, he kept the physicians' DALE FOGARASI TESTS INTER-COM SWITCH ON The 72-member School of Nursing choir "Weightlifting stresses strength and com- paging lights, patient-nurse call system, and MOBILIZED ELECTRIC SHOP WHICH HE BUILT will present its annual concert at 8 p.m., petition," he continued. "It's more strenu- electric beds in top working condition. He IN HIS SPARE TIME. April 26 in the gymnasium of the Moses ous and difficult. On the other hand, body has designed and installed a safety alarm they worked. With the mobilized "shop" Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing building is just what it implies: to build to indicate power failure or temperature the switches can be plugged directly into Building, 306 S. Kingshighway. muscles and to enhance the physical beau- change in such areas as the laboratory, the call system and tested in seconds. The free one-hour concert will consist ty of the human body. Our guys just kitchen, and blood bank cold storage Dale is pursuing a certificate in elec- of light music, solos and novelty numbers, don't go in for that stuff." rooms. tronics at Washington University. Attend- said Albert Burmeister, choir director for Last year, Anzel finished second in the One of his major accomplishments at ing classes three nights a week, he has the past eight years. annual Missouri State Prison open meet the hospital is a mobilized electric "shop" completed one and one-half years of a Mr. Burmeister and students Jean Miller, at Jefferson City. When at Berkeley, he which he built in his spare time. Supplied five year course, which is. he said, only Judith McElligott and Linda Goetz will said, his team competed against San Quen- with all tubes, spare parts, tools and other a stepping-stone to a B.S. in electrical join in a piano quartet to play Edward tin's. Weightlifting is popular with prison- equipment needed for any electrical job, engineering. He also is working on a two- Grieg's "In the Halls of the Mountain ers, he said, and it "helps their rehab- the "shop" can be connected to a regular year correspondence course for electronic King." ilitation." wall socket. technicians. Student accordionist Kathie Golomski Anzel has always been a sportsman. At One of its chief uses is in testing switches He has served a six month hitch as an will solo on "Nola" and a trio comprised Dartmouth, he was captain of the tennis for the patient-nurse call svstem. Pre- electrical technician in the United States of Miss Miller, Joan McKinney and Carla team and he participated on the varsity viously switches had to be installed—a Army medical corps and has applied for McHugh will sing "Swing Low Sweet soccer, squash and swimming teams. three hour job—before it was known if American citizenship. Chariot." \M PAGE 3 Physical Therapists from 25 States Attend Hospital Revitalized with Spring Face-Lifting Seminar Here on Their Role in Home Care It's Spring and Jewish Hospital is busting out all over. Physical therapists from all over the The employees' dining room will get a new face. Sixteen permanent booths are United States and parts of Canada at- installed around the outer walls of the dining room and tables are anchored together tended a unique seminar on the role of to present a more orderly arrangement. In about the same amount of space as before, physical therapists in home care and nurs- 64 seats have been added. ing home programs March 28 through The dining room walls adjoining the March 30 in Steinberg Auditorium. booths will be covered with a burlap The seminar was conducted by the material and the drinking fountain will be Training Center for Coordinated Home shifted to a more accessible site at the end Care and Other Out-of-Hospital Health of the cafeteria line. Services with assistance from the hospital's A contest among employees to name the department of rehabilitation. newly re-decorated dining room will be The Training Center was established announced shortly. in 1962 with a $45,000 one-year grant In the dining room's northeast corner, from the United States Public Health two meeting-dining rooms will be created. Service. David Littauer, M.D., is project Meeting room D, known as the "private director of the Training Center. COPING WITH EVERYDAY ACTIVITIES THOUGH dining room", will become part of the "The program was unique because it was PARALYZED ON ONE SIDE IS DRAMATIZED BY DR. BETH FOWLES (IN WHEELCHAIR) IN A MOCK present Auxiliary Coffee Shop, expanding really the first ever held to convey techni- THREE-ROOM APARTMENT SET UP ESPECIALLY FOR kitchen and storeroom areas. THE SEMINAR. ACTING AS DR. FOWLES' HELPFUL cal information to physical therapists on SISTER IS MISS HELEN TOLIN, CLINICAL SUPER- A new speech and hearing center, under the management of patients in settings that VISOR OF THE HOSPITAL'S PHYSICAL THERAPY auspices of the Department of Otolaryn- are outside the hospital," said Robert J. DEPARTMENT. gology is being built in the basement across Hickok, physical therapist who is co- services in home care programs and in from the radiation therapy quarters of the ordinator of the department of rehabilita- nursing homes." department of radiology. A more elaborate tion and main planner of the seminar. Enrollment in the seminar was closed description of this unit will appear in a "Heretofore, we have seen physical with 63 registrants. At least 20 more later 216. therapists completely lost outside the con- would-be registrants were told that a An ever-increasing number of bacterio- fines of a well-equipped hospital physical repeat seminar will be held here next logical and immunological tests will be therapy department," he said. "I hope October. conducted in a 125 square foot addition NEW BOOTHS AND TABLES ARRANGED IN ROWS that this will be but the first of many Registrants included representatives from to the bacteriology lab. The lab will house MAKE WAY FOR 64 MORE SEATS IN THE EMPLOYEE DINING ROOM. programs designed to orient physical the National Society of Crippled Children the unit's fluorescence microscope. therapists to the tremendous need for their and Adults, Chicago; Kansas University Nearby, a central flammable storage past year with the addition of new fluores- Medical Center; Minnesota Department of area is under construction across from the cent lights to substitute for the conven- Health; Indiana University Medical Cen- department of laboratories and pathology tional incandescents. ter; University of Oklahoma; Washington office. The new space will allow safe stor- The hospital's exterior lights have been University; Cincinnati and Chicago Visit- age for volatiles used in various labs, put on photocells that automatically turn ■ I -few ing Nurse Associations; Sargent College thus reducing the quantities now stored on lights at dusk — just like city street T m of Boston University; University of Mani- in separate labs. lights. The magic carpet door by the toba; Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society; United States Public Health Service Nursing Home Program; Henry w\ isoME-nM %JMK:I/ M Ford Hospital, Detroit; Mississippi State Board of Health, and Kenny Rehabilita- tion Institute, Minneapolis. One of the few physical therapists ROBERT HICKOK, REHABILITATION COORDINATOR, to obtain a Ph.D. spoke at the seminar TEACHES PATIENT USE OF ISOMETRIC BAR HE March 28. She is Dr. Beth H. Fowles, ORIGINATED. THE BAR LOCKS INTO A BED FRAME, ALLOWS PATIENT TO EXERCISE ARM MUSCLES BY chief physical therapist, Highland View PUSHING OR PULLING AN IMMOVABLE OBJECT. Hospital, Cleveland. r 3E =" 1>= II- if= 1 1 Calendar of Events l==ll II IF=]I )L==3I If 3J THE OLD EXTENSIVE MANY-PURPOSE ROOM (ABOVE L.) WAS DIVIDED INTO THE EFFICIENT GALLEY (ABOVE R.), AS WELL AS A HANDY UTILITY ROOM AND A NURSING INSTRUCTOR'S OFFICE. THE 2-CENTER UTILITY ROOM (BELOW L.) IS BEING TRANSFORMED INTO A MUCH-NEEDED NURSING April 10 Through May 31 CONFERENCE ROOM, WHILE IN THE X-RAY DEPARTMENT (BELOW R.), A PASS-THROUGH WAS CARVED IN THE WALL TO SPEED UP RECORDING OF PATIENTS' RECORDS. APRIL 11 8 p.m., "The Treatment of an Autistic Child—The Nature of Primitive Object Attachments," lecture by Dr. Roy Mendelsohn, director of Washington University child psychiatry clinics, division of adult psychiatry, monthly meeting, Room A APRIL 15-26 Jewish Federation campaign for employees, goal: $6,900 APRIL 21 1 to 5 p.m., Student Nurses' Open House for Parents, Moses Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing Building APRIL 24 8:45 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Seminar on nursing and long-term illness for nursing faculties and faculty candidates, conducted by Train- ing Center for Coordinated Home Care and Other Out-of-Hospital Health Services, Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium APRIL 25 9:00 a.m. to 12:15 p.m., Seminar for nurses, Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium APRIL 26 Noon, Women's Auxiliary annual spring luncheon meeting, Mari- etta Tree, guest speaker, Chase Club APRIL 26 8 p.m., Student Nurses' Choir Spring Concert, Moses Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing Building gym, admission free. APRIL 27 8:30 a.m., School of Nursing pre-entrance examinations, Moses Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing Building APRIL 29 7:30 p.m., "Dental and Medical Characteristics of Chronically 111, Aged, and Handicapped Patients," seminar presented by Dental Care Demonstration Project in cooperation with St. Louis Dental Society, Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium MAY 2 8:30 p.m., "Current Eye Research of General Medical Interest," 16th Annual Jack H. Tritt Memorial Lecture, presented by Dr. Bernard Becker, professor and head, department of ophthalmology, On 2-center, the once sprawling kitchen ambulance entrance has been re-set to Washington University School of Medicine, Mark C. Steinberg was carved into a utility room and galley, open automatically in temperatures above Auditorium. where nurses daily prepare coffee, tea, 35 degrees. MAY 6 7:15 p.m., School of Nursing Student Association installation of cereal, juices and other nourishments for The hospital's print shop, with its officers, Moses Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing Building patients. As an added dividend a nursing duplicating machines, folding unit and new gym. instructor's office was also created. Xerox machine, has moved from its former The doctors' message center has been first floor mail room quarters to the ground MAY 13 & 14 2 to 4 p.m., medical staff rounds, conducted by Dr. Paul M. Zoll, revitalized for more efficiency. A "Dutch floor, across from Personnel. The shop, associate clinical professor of medicine, Harvard Medical School, Room A door" has been placed outside the switch- which seems to be continually growing, board room so that operators may hand has about 50 per cent more space down- MAY 14 9 a.m., "Treatment of Cardiac Arrhythmias with Electric Cur- doctors messages at the window. Further stairs. rents," lecture by Dr. Paul M. Zoll, sponsored by department of plans for enlarging the capacity of the Noise abatement in the building is being medicine, Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium switchboard are in the offing. abetted with the gradual installation of MAY 17 7:30 p.m. to midnight, School of Nursing Spring Dance, "Apple Old-fashioned phone booths are gradual- acoustical ceilings in corridors. The ceil- Blossom Time," Moses Shoenberg Memorial School of Nursing ly being removed and replaced by modern, ing in the corridor leading to Steinberg Building gym unenclosed booths offering better acoustics Auditorium has just had the acoustical MAY 18 Noon, Nurses' Alumnae Association luncheon, Clarissa Start, guest in less space. The new phone arrangement treatment. speaker, Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium permits a patient on the rehabilitation Across the street at the Moses Shoen- MAY 20 6:30 p.m., Medical Staff Alumni Association annual banquet, Star- unit, for instance, to wheel his stretcher berg Memorial School of Nursing Building, light Roof, Chase-Park Plaza Hotel up to the phone booth and place a call. new offices are being created for faculty MAY 23 6:30 p.m., Medical Staff Bowling League annual awards banquet, Lighting in the corridors of patient areas members and classrooms are being re- Mark C. Steinberg Auditorium has been completely revamped over the designed. \M PAGE 4 ] r -i Gas Chromatograph Medical Staff Acquired by II!—ii ii i[==ii II==II ir II II ii==ii ir=ii ir^i Endocrine Lab Drs. Naomi Grant and Alvin Frank appeared in panels on "My Child's Well A time-saving instrument which sep- Being—The Emotional Life of Childhood and Youth" sponsored by local school arates and measures substances in urine districts, the Family and Children's Service of Greater St. Louis, and Famous-Barr .... and blood—such as sex hormones—is in Dr. Sidney Goldenberg has been appointed chairman of the diabetes detection com- operation in the Endocrine Diagnostic mittee of the Missouri State Diabetes Association, was elected to the executive council Laboratory, Dr. Miguel Ficher, director, of the board of directors of the St. Louis Diabetes Association, and spoke at the reported. Oklahoma State Diabetes Association an- Called a Gas Chromatograph, the ma- nual banquet February 9 . . . . chine accurately performs in about 15 Disposable Nursers Drs. David Rothman and Marvin Ren- minutes, analyses that take a technician nard co-authored a paper on "Myoma— several days to do. It makes these analyses Given 2-Month Trial Erythrocytosis Syndrome" for the January, in minute concentrations, therefore making 1963, Obstetrics and Gynecology .... Dr. practical what otherwise would be labori- Rothman will discuss psychosomatic infer- ous and unwieldy. tility at the April 24 American College of OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST JEWELL COLE ADMIRES Operation of the Chromatograph in- Obstetrics and Gynecology Convention in GROUP PROJECTS MADE BY PATIENTS IN THE volves gas-propelling substances extracted ADULT PSYCHIATRIC UNIT. New York .... At the February 14 meet- from urine or blood, through a tube filled ing of the St. Louis Gynecological Society with a solid-liquid material. The material Adult Psych Patients is adsorbent; that is, it causes the gas to Dr. Rennard discussed the results of a adhere to it, thus separating the sub- five-year study of hospital's infant death Try Art for Therapy stances, which are measured automatically rate which he and Dr. Robert C. Ahlvin, as they emerge from the tube. The quan- hospital pathologist, conducted .... Studio 5 sounds like a beat name for tities are recorded on a graph, each sub- Dr. Bernice Torin spoke on "Adams and an artist's sanctum, and that in fact is stance having its own special identifying Atoms" and "Eves and Atoms" before what it is. Serving the hospital's division pattern. local groups requesting her services as a of adult psychiatry, Studio 5 is the pa- A similar machine was recently pur- member of the Committee for Nuclear tients' name for the occupational therapy chased by the Missouri Botanical (Shaws) Information speakers' bureau .... Dr. workshop. Gardens in St. Louis to measure odors. David Littauer has been elected chairman, Individual activities include needle- The botanical Chromatograph was fitted A completely new system using plastic consultant committee, Health and Hospital crafts, metal work, painting, leather work, with a "nose" so that it could identify cones known as disposable nursers (above, Division, Health and Welfare Council of ceramics, small woodwork projects, a substances in the air. right) replaced the traditional glass bottles Metropolitan St. Louis .... Dr. Alex H. variety of minor crafts and cooking. As According to Dr. Ficher, Jewish Hos- (above, left) used in feeding newborn in- Kaplan will speak on "An Attempt at a group, patients may also make party pital's Chromatograph will provide phy- fants in the Jewish Hospital nursery during Differentiation between Casework and Psy- decorations or furniture such as mosaic sicians clinical evaluations not available a two-month period recently. chotherapy" at the American Psychiatric tables for the ward as a whole. anywhere else in the Midwest. The instru- The cones were used here, as in four Association annual meeting in St. Louis "Occupational therapy isn't just busy ment will also be used for research. similar hospitals across the country, as May 6 to 10 ... . "The Sexual Relation- work with no real purpose," psychiatric The lab, which has been in operation part of a study to evaluate an innovation ship of Marriage" was the subject of a occupational therapist Jewell Cole ex- for nine months, has been performing in formula feeding. about a dozen different types of analyses talk by Dr. B. Y. Glassberg at a B'Nai plained. "It's based on the idea that emo- The project involved formulas prepared tional disorders can be treated with ac- for local and out-of-state hospitals, as B'rith meeting March 20 ... . and packaged in cans under sterile con- tivity." well as Jewish Hospital. ditions at a factory instead of formulas Dr. Harry Cutler is the new president "The difference between mental health prepared here. The factory-prepared for- of the St. Louis Urological Society, which and sickness is one of degree; the two mulas required no further sterilization, re- will hold its national meeting in St. Louis aren't extremes," Dr. Mary Bishop, as- Pressure Tool Bought frigeration, and warming. May 13 to 16 ... . Dr. Marvin E. Levin sistant clinical director of the division, ex- A tiny instrument, only 2%" long, which The five-hospital study was coordinated was elected vice-president of the St. Louis plained. "Occupational therapy, like the measures pressures within the heart, has by the hospital-based Medical Care Re- rest of our treatment program, is geared Clinical Diabetic Society. He and Dr. been acquired by the cardio-pulmonary search Center and reported in a mono- to utilize the patient's healthier parts. But laboratory, Dr. Herbert Zimmerman, di- graph, A Sterile Disposable Nurser Sys- Heshel Haddad wrote "The Use of a New OT can be useful in treating the sickness rector, said. tem, recently published by the Washington Drug in the Treatment of Endrocrine by helping the patient to deal with his Funds for the purchase were donated University Press. Supervising the research Exophtalmos" in the March, 1963, Jour- problems in more acceptable ways." by family and friends of Albert S. Aloe were Dr. David Littauer, Dr. Albert F. nal of Clinical Endocrinology and Me- "The same activity can be therapeutic in honor of his seventieth birthday. Wessen, and Dr. Jay Goldman. tabolism .... With Dr. Arthur Gale, Dr. for one patient and not for another," Called a pressure-transducer, the in- The researchers found that the factory- Levin co-authored "Pericarditis and Auric- Miss Cole noted. strument is part of the equipment used prepared formulas were well received by To learn which needs of particular ular Fibrillation in Familial Mediterra- to diagnose acquired and congenital heart nursing infants with no injurious clinical nean Fever" for the Spring, 1963, A.M.A. patients can be met through occupational conditions. It is used to monitor patients effects, thus insuring adequate nutrition. therapy Miss Cole is given an initial pre- Archives in Internal Medicine .... during open heart surgery or heart x-ray Since this system is completely dispos- scription by the patients physician. exams. able except for a dispensing stand, it les- Chief psychiatric social worker Miss She also attends staff conferences regard- It gives instantaneous readings. sens chances for breaks in sterile tech- Helen Darragh will present a paper which ing patients and patient-staff meetings. niques in preparation and administration she and Dr. Nathan Simon co-authored on In addition, referring psychiatrists often of formulas. The system was also preferred "The Social Worker in a Therapeutic discuss the progress and treatment of indi- Skin Atlas Donated over traditional methods by mothers, nurs- Community: Widening Perspectives" to the vidual patients with her. ing personnel and pediatricians. The Color Atlas of Dermatology has American Psychiatric Association annual Since space for Studio 5 on the 35-bed Despite the elimination of certain per- psychiatric unit is limited to one room, been purchased for the hospital's medical meeting May 10 ... . research audiologist sonnel, equipment and supplies, the cost most of the patients use the first floor library with a $126 donation from Richard of the new system was found to be slightly Lloyd L. Price authored "Threshold Test- facilities of the occupational therapy de- L. Yalem. more than the traditional one. For this ing with Bekesy Audiometer" for the partment. An average of 29 patients a The four volume Atlas contains 320 reason, plans to install the system here are March, 1963, Journal of Speech and month spend one to three hours a day, color plates illustrating both major and indefinite. Hearing Research. five days a week, in OT, Miss Cole said. minor skin lesions. Staff Doctors Face the Music — Literally!f The newly organized physicians' orches- Society Bulletin, came across notes about tra includes several Jewish Hospital staff a physician's orchestra which functioned members, Dr. Bernard Loitman, recruit- here 1954 and 1955. ment chairman and assistant in radiology Former orchestra members, and inciden- at the hospital, reported. tally, Jewish Hospital staff men, Drs. Julius The orchestra has about 50 members, Elson, Ben Mannis, and Barrett Taussig, Dr. Loitman said, although head count were enthusiastic about the possibility of at weekly Sunday morning meetings reviving an orchestra, as were two other averages 25. "We don't demand attend- staff men, Drs. Carl Heifetz and Seymour ance; we just hope people will be inter- Monat. Such professionals as Laurent ested enough to show up as often as Torno and William Schatzkamer were possible," he remarked. called on for advice. Another 20 to 30 musicians—especially Music was found in the basement of the violinists and woodwind players—are medical society building, an organizational needed. The repetoire is standard sym- notice was drafted and the first rehearsal phonic concert fare, with Haydn and was held February 24 in the foyer of Dr. Mozart symphonies the group's first ven- Loitman's home. Schatzkamer, Washington tures. U. professor of music, is serving as con- The majority of the orchestra are medi- ductor, and rehearsals are now staged in a cal men, but other professional persons recital room of the music school on the are welcome. "We don't want an empty university campus. stage if people suddenly decide to need Jewish Hospital staff physicians who are their doctors," Dr. Loitman quipped. At orchestra members include violinists Drs. present the group includes a lawyer, a Elson, Gilbert Lassar, Morton Rothbard, pharmacist, and several students and David Rothman, and Ray Wolff. Others faculty members at Washington Univer- are Drs. Loitman, tuba; Benjamin Boon- sity, as well as families of physicians. shaft and Mannis, trumpet; Kenneth The idea for the orchestra was formu- Michael, french horn; Leonard Berg, clari- lated when Dr. Loitman, researching in- net; Ben Senturia, saxophone; Monat, formation for an article about physicians viola; Heifetz and Taussig, piano. Dentist MUSIC PROFESSOR WILLIAM SCHATZKAMER CONDUCTS A REHEARSAL OF THE PHYSICIANS' ORCHESTRA. MEMBERS SHOWN FROM I. TO R., ARE CLARENCE GAY, MORTON ROTHBARD, BENJAMIN BOONSHAFT, and music for the St. Louis Medical Louis Altshuler plays clarinet. JULIUS ELSON, JOHN MUELLER, BARBARA CLARK, DAVID GUTSCHE AND LEONARD LEVIN vw PAGE 5 7 Mixed (Medicine- Surgery), 4 Rotating, Dental Care 2 Dental Interns to Start Here July 1 Seminar Planned Here are thumbnail sketches of our 13 new interns, who will graduate from their Practicing dentists in the St. Louis area medical or dental schools in June and will report for duty at the hospital July 1: will attend a seminar here April 29 on dental and medical characteristics of chron- Mixed Interns: ically ill, aged and handicapped persons. The sole female The program begins at 7:30 p.m. in Stein- intern, Susie Shu- berg Auditorium. cart, received her A.B. from the Uni- Speakers include Dr. I. J. Fiance, "Den- versity of Missouri tal and Medical Care of Patients in the and will graduate Home"; Dr. Donald J. Dickler, "General from its medical Anesthesia for the Hospitalized Dental school. She plans Patient"; Dr. Franz U. Steinberg, "Med- private practice in ical Characteristics of the Chronically 111, either internal med- Aged and Handicapped"; Dr. Leonard J. icine or obstetrics Rosen, "Management of the Handicapped and gynecology. She Dr. H. Mass Dies Patient", and Dr. Calvin H. Weiss, "Spe- cial Considerations Involved in the Dental was born in St. Dr. Hermann Maas, a courtesy member Treatment of Chronically 111, Aged and Louis. of the hospital's surgical staff since 1946, SHUCART died March 6 of a heart condition at his Handicapped". home, 7438 Stratford, University City. He The seminar will be conducted by the BARNET COHEN Rotating Interns: was 75 years old. Dental Care Demonstration Project of the A native of Meisenheim, Germany, Dr. hospital in cooperation with the Greater A graduate-to-be of Washington Uni- Maas was assistant professor of clinical St. Louis Dental Society's committee on versity School of Medicine Ronald Wain surgery at St. Louis University School of dental care for the handicapped. Dr. Rosen Barnet attended the University of Arizona Medicine since 1945. He was a member is chairman of the latter committee and in his home state. He did research in of the American Medical Association, St. Dr. Weiss is director of the dental care hematology and ophthalmology and plans Louis Medical Society, Southern Medical project. to practice ophthalmology. He will be Association and Mississippi Valley Medical married in June. Association. Sheftel Japhe Cohen is from New York Dr. Maas is survived by his wife, Alumni Group to Meet City. He attended Cornell University and Hedwig, a daughter, Mrs. Hannah Herring, will receive his M.D. from Washington Former Jewish Hospital interns and resi- and a son, James Maas. dents who are now visiting staff members University. He externed in medicine here Contributions to the hospital's teaching for nine months and plans to do general will hold their annual banquet 7:30 p.m., and research programs were made by the May 20, at the Starlight Roof of the surgery. Bridge and tennis are his hobbies. medical staff in memory of Dr. Maas. He is married and lives in Clayton. Chase-Park Plaza Hotel. A cocktail hour ORTH ROZEN will start at 6:30 in the Zodiac Room. Oliver Gerald Orth is married and has Current Eye Research Entertainment for the evening will be one child. A native St. Louisan, he grad- a skit spoofing the visiting staff, tradition- uated from St. Mary's College, Winona, Is Tritt Lecture Topic; ally staged by interns and residents. Minn., and will receive his M.D. from New officers will be installed. They are St. Louis University. He was listed in Dr, Becker to Speak Dr. Joseph Kendis, president; Dr. Martin Who's Who in American Colleges and Bergmann, vice-president, and Dr. Jerome Universities in 1959 and is interested in Dr. Bernard Becker, professor and head Gilden, secretary-treasurer. of the department of ophthalmology at surgery. The alumni association has 250 members. A graduate of Tulane University, Jay I. Washington University School of Medicine, Rozen will receive his M.D. there also. will deliver the sixteenth annual Jack H. He externed here last summer, is single Tritt Memorial Lecture at 8:30 p.m., Dr. Zoll to Talk on and a Tulsa native. May 2 in Steinberg Auditorium. Dr. Becker will speak on "Current Eye Research of General Medical In- Irregular Heartbeats terest." JOFFE LAMBERG The Tritt lectures are given annually in memory of a former Jewish Hospital Another future ophthalmologist, William intern and resident who died in 1941 at Steven Joffe received his A.B. from Wash- the age of 31. ington University and will graduate from Former Tritt lecturers have included its medical school. He has held a research Dr. Maxwell Finland, Harvard University; fellowship in ophthalmology, is married Dr. Warren H. Cole, University of Illinois and lives in University City. He is a College of Medicine; Dr. Carl V. Moore, native of Kansas City. Washington University, and Dr. Leon Stanford Irwin Lamberg attended Wash- Schiff, University of Cincinnati. ington University as both an undergradu- Chairman of the 1962 Tritt Lecture ate and a medical student. He did research SALADIN WILBERS committee is Dr. Ben H. Senturia, chair- in the department of preventive medicine man of the department of otolaryngology. and won the pathology book prize as a Fernando Maximo Arturo Saladin, who The medical public is invited to attend sophomore. A member of Alpha Omega will graduate from St. Louis University the lecture. Alpha medical honorary, he is undecided School of Medicine, was born in the as to private or academic practice in med- Dominican Republic. He got a B.S. from DR. ZOLL icine. Married, he is a native St. Louisan. the University of Notre Dame, is married Bowlers End 3rd Year; Dr. Paul M. Zoll, a pioneer in the use and a Brentwood resident. and plans an academic career in surgery and development of the pacemaker, a in his native land. Aw a rds D inner May 23 battery-powered device to stimulate heart- A June graduate of the University of Medical staff bowlers will celebrate the beat, will speak in Mark C. Steinberg Missouri medical school, Raymond H. end of their third season at a banquet Auditorium of the hospital 9 a.m., May 14. Wilbers attended both Lincoln University 7:30 p.m., May 23, in Mark C. Steinberg His topic will be "Treatment of Cardiac in Jefferson City and Mizzou for pre- Auditorium of the hospital. Cocktails will Arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats) with medical training. He is single and a native be served at 6:30 p.m. Electric Currents." of Jefferson City. Trophies will go to 32 of the league's Well known as one of the original in- 92 members. Awards include first and vestigators of the use of electricity in Dental Interns: second place team trophies, and first, treating heart problems, Dr. Zoll is as- second and third place individual trophies sociate clinical professor of medicine at for high games, high averages, and high Harvard Medical School. He is associate series. The most improved male and editor of Circulation, the official journal female bowlers will also be honored. of the American Heart Association and is Dr. Daniel Klaff's candid films of the a graduate of Harvard College and Har- medical staff and their wives in action vard Medical School. NEWMARK ROSENBAUM on the alleys will be shown. Dr. Zoll will conduct rounds at 2 p.m., Final games will be rolled May 16 at May 13 and 14, in Room A of the hos- Married and the father of two children, Tropicana Lanes, with the first and second pital. His appearance is sponsored by the Leonard Nathan Newmark will get his place teams from both halves of the season department of medicine, and the medical M.D. from Washington University. During opposed. public is invited to attend. a three-year fellowship in pathology for The team captained by Dr. Alfred Gold- which he received an M.A., he published man won the first half of the season. Team several papers. He also has an A.B. from HUHN JOHNSON members include Mrs. Goldman, Dr. and New Research Fund Washington U. He externed in obstetrics Mrs. Irwin Levy, Dr. Arnold Goldman, and gynecology here for the past five From St. Louis University School of and Dr. Robert Treiman. A research fund in the department of months. His home is in Creve Coeur. Dentistry comes David Charles Huhn, who There's a tie for second place between otolaryngology has been established in The third new intern planning a career also attended the university as an under- the teams of Dr. Ellis Lipsitz and Dr. memory of Daniel R. Cohen, late board in ophthalmology, Louis Jerome Rosen- graduate. He is single and a native St. Shale Rifkin. chairman of Glasco Electric Co. Mr. baum is a native St. Louisan. He received Louisan. His hobbies include automobile Dr. Lipsitz' team members are Mrs. Cohen died recently at age 69. his A.B. from the University of Michigan restoration and boating. Lipsitz, Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Grosby, Dr. He had contributed to ear, nose and and will receive his medical degree from James Stanley Johnson, also from St. Hy Goldman, and Dr. Bernie Friedman, throat research at the hospital for many Washington University. He did research Louis University School of Dentistry, re- and Dr. Rifkin's include Mrs. Rifkin, Dr. years. in ophthalmology at the medical school ceived his B.S. from Seattle Pacific College. and Mrs. Aaron Birenbaum and Dr. and Donations to the fund may be sent and served a medical externship here. He Born in Ghana, West Africa, he is a Mrs. Leonard Weidershine. to the hospital's department of resources likes politics and sports, is unmarried. widower and the father of two children. Dr. Murray Chinsky is league secretary. and development. \M PAGE 6 rttmA> & Jflmwm

CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED ARE USED FOR RESEARCH. APPLIANCES FOR CLINIC PATIENTS, NEW EQUIPMENT, AND OTHER WORTHY UNDERTAKINGS, SPONSORED BY THE JEWISH HOSPITAL MEDICAL CENTER AUXILIARY. THE FOLLOWING ARE CONTRIBUTIONS RECEIVED DURING PERIOD DECEMBER 21, 1962, TO MARCH 4, 1963. (CONTRIBUTIONS TO THIS FUND MAY BE MADE BY SENDING CHECKS, PAYABLE TO THE JEWISH HOSPITAL TRIBUTE FUND, TO MRS. HENRY H. STERN, 63IO WATERMAN AVENUE, ST. LOUIS 30, OR MRS. JOSEPH F. RUWITCH, 102 LAKE FOREST, ST. LOUIS 17).

DONOR IN MEMORY OF DONOR IN MEMORY OF DONOR IN MEMORY OF DONOR IN MEMORY OF PHILIP ABERSON BROTHER OF MRS. ALBERT COPILEVITZ BERNARD GLASER MAX KUSMER Mr. and Mrs. Lee Aberson Margie Bender Mr. and Mrs. Lee Aberson DOROTHY K. ABRAHAM Mr. and Mrs. David I. Stellar AL CRYSTAL BIRDIE SOLTZ GLICKSMAN ALBERT S. LANDAU Mrs. Hattie K. Wedeles Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mathes (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baskowitz Mrs. Alvin L. Bauman MIREL ABRAMOWITZ ESSIE DAVIDSON Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. Handelman Fred Herzog Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kaye Mrs. Oscar Brand (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) Management of Stix, Baer and Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Meyer K. Weil SELMA ALTHEIMER Mrs. Bessie Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Harry Soltz BROTHER OF MARTIN LANDAUER Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Scherck, Jr. DR. MELVIN DE GROOTE DAVID F. GOLDBERG SAM ARSHT Mr. and Mrs. Willy Herrmann Mr. and Mrs. Albert Arndt Mr. and Mrs. Herman Katcher DAVID LANGSAM Mrs. Sam Arsht (Heart Research Fund) Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Freund IDA S. GOLDBERG Mr. and Mrs. Jerome B. Cohen SISTER OF MR. AND MRS. HENRY BAKER Mrs. Elsie S. Glik Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Blustein The Frenzels Mr. and Mrs. Jack Desbecker Dr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Reiches Mr. and Mrs. Stanley M. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. George Glass SANFORD BAUMAN Dora K. Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gidlow Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Goldfarb Mrs. Ralph Weil Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Herman Glick Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. Handelman BROTHER OF OTTO BAUMOEL Mr. and Mrs. Eli Sandperl Mr. and Mrs. Charles Liebert Mr. and Mrs. Philip N. Hirsch Dr. and Mrs. Benard C. Adler Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schasch Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Molasky Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Laba ISAAC BERLAND Mrs. A. Tuholske Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Poslosky Mr. and Mrs. Sigmond S. Langsam Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Lowenhaupt YALE DRAZEN Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Schapiro Mr. and Mrs. Morris A. Shenker jSam and LEWIS BETTMAN (Birthday) Dr. and Mrs. Harry Cutler Mr. and Mrs. Gene Schneider Jeanette Koplar Rehabilitation Brace Fund) Mrs. Lewis Bettman (Oscar Brand Special Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Trlarry Sherman (Lewis Bettman Memorial Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Alvin J. Shuchart Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Sigoloff ANNA AND JULIUS M. BLOCK Mr. and Mrs. Abe Small Mr. and Mrs. David Lentzner Mr. and Mrs. Saul Spielberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spector ISAAC LEARS MICHAEL BLOOM Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Yalem Dr. and Mrs. Louis Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lieberman ALVIN D. GOLDMAN (Birthday) (Home Care Service) (Dr. Herbert Mazur Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Shoninger Mrs. D. B. Goldman LILLIAN BLUMENFELD RACHEL GOLDMAN FLOSSIE LEESER Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Berzon Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cohen Miss Jane Glassberg Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ginsberg (Julius-Sara Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Klein Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius-Sara Ginsberg Cancer Mr. and Mrs. Henry Unterberger and Son Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) SADYE LENDING •Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Aaron Levin (Jackie Sue Margulous Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ginsberg {Julius-Sara Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Wyde Dr. and Mrs. William A. Marmor MOTHER OF SAM LEVIN Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Steinbach Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. PoIIak Mr. and Mrs. William Ginsberg (Julius-Sara (Sadye Mathes Special Fund) ESTHER LEVY Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) HARRIS GOLDWYN Mr. and Mrs. George Cohn Mr. and Mrs. Herman Click Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Scissors Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper KATE BLUTMAN ROSE GOLLUB Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kolchinsky Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Sigoloff and Family Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur H. Eckstein Rae and Cecelia Levy LOUIS BODENHEIMER Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper RICHARD LINZER Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Laba Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fadem OSCAR BRAND (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) NATHAN GORDON Mr. and Mrs. Lee Aronstein LOUIS LIPSITZ MEYER P. DRUZINSKY Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Bobroff Mrs. Sylvan Eisenstein (Research) OSCAR BRAND SPECIAL MEMORIAL FUND MAX GOTTSCHALK NATHAN LIPSITZ Alfred Moore Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Mrs. Max Gottschalk Julius Raven Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Sylvan Eisenstein (Research) JOHN G. DUFNER MAX GROSS MRS. M. L. LIPSUTZ LOIS BANASHEK BROWN Mr. and Mrs. Jacob N. Sapin Mrs. Harry Zuke Mr. and Mrs. George Glass The Cohen Family MR. GUSS Mrs. David F. Goldberg ISADORE EISENSTEIN DR. BEN H. LYONS The Deutch Family Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pass Pauline, Alex and Ruth Freund Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kaufman TERRY HAAS BEN MANDEL Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mendelson RACHAEL EISENSTEIN Mrs. Flora Gottschalk and Mother Mr. and Mrs. Max W. Redler The Freunds Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Mr. and Mrs. Isador A. Solomon Dr. and Mrs. David W. Helman Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Bertha Lasky Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. David Spector (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) , „ MRS. J. BROWNSHER Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lieberman The following letter was received by Mr. and wMrs. N.XT Emas Mr. and Mrs. Elvin Silyerman Mr. and Mrs. Milton Sharp Tribute Fund Chairman Mrs. Henry MARTIN MARKENSON ,„..,. MOSE BROWNSTEIN Mr. and Mrs. Burt Weisman Mr. andJ wMrs. William R. Klein DR. SYLVAN EISENSTEIN Stern: Mr. and Mrs. George Glass MR Mrs. Sylvan Eisenstein (Research) Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs x* A u T ,- «r- - BUCHALTER ELI ETTLINGER "/ am enclosing a $100 check for Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Sherman Mr. and Mrs. Julian Winnerman MRS. SAMSON MARKS . „ „, MORRIS CARAFIOL Mr. and Mrs. F. Bert Baer the Tribute Fund. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Boonshaft Mrs. Esther Brown Mr. and Mrs. John Roos Helen S. Drazen "Z read 216 while a patient at the Mr. and Mrs. Eli Strassner J w „ FANNIE CHODOROVSKY Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mrs. Fannie Dunie hospital and have long been in awe FLORENCE G. >«AY Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Friedman Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Flotken Mrs. Mae Gluck Mr. and Mrs. Edgar L. Orchard Mrs. Adolph Fremder and admiration of the many who al- (Florence G. and David May Research Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Fuhrer ways give to the hospital instead of MRS. ISAAC H. MAYER Mrs. Siemund Halpern Mr. and Mrs; Albert S. Aloe Mr. and Mrs. Tilford Hearsh sending flowers and birthday presents Mrs. M. Erwin Bry Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs (Cancer Research) to friends. Mr. and Mrs. G. -L. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kraus Mr. and Mrs. Irvin S. Lang Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mathes (Sadye Mathes Fund) "The Tribute Fund is a wonderful Mrs. Harry Lesser Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Mathes (Sadye Mathes Fund) idea." Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Mosbacher Mrs. Ethel Newman Mr. and Mrs. Theodore R. Samuels Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Rothbarth Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Scherck Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Schermer Mr. and Mrs. William H. Schield Mr. and Mrs. Gene Schneider Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Shoenberg .(Oscar Brand Special Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Sydney M. Shoenberg Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Schwab Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Alvin J. Schuchart Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tenenbaum Mr. and Mrs. Harold P. Yalem Mr. and Mrs. Millard A. Waldheim Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Wittels ARTHUR MEYER MR. FEINBERG Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ross George Glass FRIEDA MILLER SISTER AND BROTHER-IN-LAW OF Mrs. Henry G. Macy MRS. JOHN FEINSTEIN I. W. MILLER Mr. and Mrs. Jules Biegelsen Mr. and Mrs. Harry I. Sloan CHARLES H. FENDELL DR. IRA H. MYERS Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Collinger The Deutch Family PEARL FISCH BROTHER OF MR. AND MRS. JACK HAIMES Mrs. Sol H. Engel Edwin A. Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Julius Greenblatt Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Wyde Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Horwitz Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Kline NATHAN FISCHER LESLIE HEISSLER Mrs. Walter Wurdack Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Byron Kaminer SELMA NATHAN Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) IRENE Mrs. Elsie S. Glik Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs Mrs. M. Erwin Bry Dora K. Rosen Mrs. Paul S. Sigan ROSE GASEN JONES Mr. and Mrs. Harold Yalem Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Yoffie Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Frank DR. WILLIAM NEULAND EDWARD FRANKEL Mr. and Mrs. Ira M. Lang Ernest Wachenheim Dr. and Mrs. Bernard C. Adler SISTER OF MRS. CHARLES JOSEPH SAM FRED Lilian Jossem Mr. and Mrs. George Newfeld HARRY KAISER HATTIE L. FREEMAN Mr. and Mrs. Henry Blatt Mrs. Charles Glazer Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Blustein ANNIE COHEN RENE FRIBOURG Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Boonshaft Mr and Mrs. S. Charles Baer Mr. and Mrs. Jack Desbecker Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M. Brody Mr, and Mrs. Nathan Berger Mr. and Mrs. Millard A. Waldheim Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Flotken Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Charak ISADORE FRIEDMAN Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gelber Mrs . Sol H. Engel Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Meyer (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr and Mrs. Melville Friedman ANNA FRIEDMAN FUCHS Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mrs . Charles Glazer^ Mr. and Mrs. Herman Glick Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Maurice L. Hirsch GOLDIE FURMAN Bess Grodsky Dr. and Mrs. Irwin B. Horwitz Mr. and Mrs. Lester Busch Sara, Dora and Yetta Kaiser Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rammer Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kolchinsky Mr. and Mrs. Herman Katcher Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leventhal Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lieberman Mrs. Harry Rovak Mrs. Aaron Levin (Jackie Sue Margulous Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Lowenhaupt Mr. and Mrs. Milton Sharp Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mandel Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Meyerhardt NATHAN E. GARBER Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mathes M . Gus Mosinger Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Arnstein, Jr. (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Molasky Mrs . Milton Price Mr. and Mrs. Henry Blatt BEN NEUMAN Dr. and Mrs. Harry Rosenbaum Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Poslosky Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Ruprecht Mr. and Mrs. Ted Fischer Mr. and Mrs, Harold P. Yalem Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baskowitz Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Dr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Freund SISTER OF MRS. HELEN KANE Dr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Bortnick Mr. and Mrs. Jay V. Zimmerman Mr. and Mrs. Marcus HafTner Mr. and Mrs. Jack Desbecker Mr. and Mrs. Archie Bregman BROTHER OF Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Horwitz SIGMUND KATZ Walter J. Creely MR. AND MRS. ISADORE COHEN Mr. and Mrs. William H. Kester Mrs. Flora Gottschalk Mr. and Mrs. Hy Feldman and Carol Mr. and Mrs. Herman Glick Dr. and Mrs. William A. Marmor DR. MARCUS KLAUSMAN Joseph S. Fischer ^ MOTHER OF MRS. JACK COHEN Mr. and Mrs. Fred Michelson Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Edison Mr. and Mrs. Julius Greenblatt Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Friedman Mr. anH Mrs. Burney Salkey EMIL KOPLIN Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Horwitz SISTER OF JACK COHEN Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Schermer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Silverstein Mr. and Mrs. Max B. Jackoway Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Friedman MAX GIDLOW FATHER OF MRS. HARRY KORNBLUM Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Kay RALPH COHEN Mr. and Mrs. Carl Boime Mr. and Mrs. Sol Kaiser (Dr. Arthur E. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Kolbrener Mr. and Mrs. Herman Katcher Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Gidlow Strauss Visiting Physicians Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Martin Landauer SARAH COHEN Mr. and Mrs. Herman Glick CHARLES KRAM Mr. and Mrs. Rodrick J. Lewin Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Schmidt Dr. and Mrs. Alfred Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Harry Milton Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Fishman LENA GIDLOWITZ Dr. and Mrs. Justin F. Kraner (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Phillip F. Fishman Mr. aid Mrs. Herman Glick MOTHER OF MRS. MILTON KRAVITZ Mr. and Mrs. M. GillyReifer Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Kreisman JULIUS GINSBERG (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Simon Mrs. Beniamin G. Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Loewe Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) BROTHER OF MORRIS KRONEMER Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern JOSEPH COHN Mrs. Julius Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Sol Kaiser (Dr. Arthur E. Mr. and Mrs. R. Reuben Zimmerman Mrs Florence K. Green Mr. and Mrs. Aberl. Goodman Strauss Visiting Physicians Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Irving Zveitel Mr. and Mrs. Louis Karpf^ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Meisel WILLIAM F. KUEBLER ESZIE NEWMAN Mrs. Paul S. Sigan and Lois Mr. and Mrs. Max Sloan Mr. and Mrs. George Glass Dr. and Mrs. Harry Cutler PAGE 7 \M :

DONOR IN MEMORY Of DONOR IN MEMORY OF DONOR IN HONOR OF DONOR IN HONOR OF PARENTS OF RUTH ARBER SOKOLIK HENRY V. PUTZEL (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stein MR. AND MRS. JOE OXENHANDLER Dr. and Mrs. William Berman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Ruwitch Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Joe Oxcnhandler ROBERT SOMMERS (Blanche Greenwald Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tennenbaum MRS. PEARLMUTTER Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Oberman MRS. HATTIE G. EBERT (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Tucker Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Iglauer LOUIS SPEROS Dr. and Mrs. Jerome E. Cook Mr. and Mrs. Millard A. Waldheim IDA PIAN Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Franc, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Weil Mr. and Mrs. EH P. Schwartz Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) DR. MILTON H. MEYERHARDT '(Sadye Mathes Fund) HARRY SPIRO Dr. and Mrs. B. Y. Glassberg (60th Birthday) JULIUS R. POWELL Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg GEORGE S. LEVIS (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Charak Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Bobrorf Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Walter E. Levis Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lieberman The Frenzels Mr. and Mrs. William R. Klein MILTON D. MENDLE (80th Birthday) HARRY L. FRANC, JR. (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gelber (Sadye Mathes Fund) SARAH STEPANSKY Rose M. Marglous Mrs. Hattie M. Loble Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Hausfater Mr. and Mrs. Saul Spielberg MRS. ADOLPH SINGER (Birthday) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Philip N. Hirsch HENRY STEIN Mrs. Edward S. Block Mrs. Louis G. Rothschild Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Roth Mr. and Mrs. Edward Boonshaft MRS. MARK C. STEINBERG (Birthday) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Tureen Mr. and Mrs. Saul Spielberg (Ellen Steinberg Child Psychiatric Department) EDWARD GREENSFELDER (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Julian Winnerman Mr. and Mrs. Sydney M. Shoenberg Mrs. Hattie M. Loble BEN STEINBERG Dr. and Mrs. Franz U. Steinberg Mrs. Louis G. Rothschild The Frenzels DR. J. G. PROBSTEIN (Birthday) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) TACK STEINBERG Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Orenstein JOHN M. FRIEDMAN (55th Birthday) Mrs. Oscar Brand (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) MRS. FREDA TREPP (75th Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Kline LAWRENCE E. STERN Margaret Falkenburg LIONEL KALISH, JR. (50th Birthday) Mrs. Esther Brown ALBERT S. ALOE (*0th Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Kline EUGENE J. STRAUS (Heart Research) MRS. BERNARD MELLITZ (50th Birthday) Mrs. Dave Agatstein Mr. and Mrs. Lester P. Ackerman, Jr. Mrs. Beckye M. Elkas Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. Arnstein Mrs. Frederic A. Arnstein Mrs. Kathryn E. Nordhaus Mr. and Mrs. Howard Baer Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. Arnstein RICHARD PRAGER (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Morton D. Baron Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Baer, II Mrs. Lewis Bettman Mr. and Mrs. Archie Bregman Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. Baer (Lewis Bettman Memorial Fund) Mrs. M. Erwin Bry Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Berger Mrs. Oscar Brand (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Jack Desbecker Mrs. Lewis Bettman Mrs. Sanford Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. William B. Eiseman Richard B. Cronheim MRS. WILLARD SEGELBAUM (50th Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Franc, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Major B. Einstein Mrs. Marian Cook (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Mrs. Rhea J. Fligman MRS. JEROME FLEXNER (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Frank Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Franc, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Westheimer Mrs. Henry Freed Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Frank MRS. MILTON PRICE (Birthday) Mrs. D. B. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Frank Mr. and Mrs. Sam Langsdorf Mr. and Mrs. Edward Greensfelder Mr. arid Mrs. S. E. Freund HAROLD LEVY (40th Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Lee I. Kaufman Mr. and Mrs. Jqhn M. Friedman Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper , Mr. and Mrs. Irvin S. Lang Mr. arid Mrs. Edward B. Greensfelder MRS. J. ARTHUR BAER, II (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Levis Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weinstock Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick H. Levis Mr. arid Mrs. Marc A. Hirsch MRS. LOUIS COHEN (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Levy Mr. and Mrs. John Isaacs, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Abe Lieberman Mr. and Mrs. Jack A. Jacobs MRS. ARTHUR NACKMAN (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. AI Loeb Mrs. Sanford Jacobs Mrs. Henry Freed Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Loeb Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan H. Jacobson MRS. MAX WEISL (Birthday) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Ira M. Lang Mr. and Mrs. Herman Spivack Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lowenbaum Mr. and Mrs. Sam Langsdorf MRS. M. L. WEISS (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Putzel Mrs. Marjorie Frank Lesser Mr. and Mrs. Herman Spivack (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) Ellie Levi m BEN YEDLIN (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Richman Mr. and Mrs. J. Melvin Levi Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg SARAH RABEN Mrs. Wilton Rubinstein Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Levis Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Slonim Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Ruwitch Mr. and Mrs. Lawton J. Levy MRS. JOSEPH L. RAUH, SR. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Scherck Mrs. Willard L. Levy Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Westheimer Mr. and Mrs. William H. Schield Mrs. Hattie M. Loble JOSEPH REICENSTEIN Mr. and Mrs. Dan Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lowenbaum Mrs. Elsie S. Glik Mrs. Adolph Singer Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Mayer EVA RICHMAN Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Steiner Mr. and Mrs. Morton Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Max Redler Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Moog DAVID RIDKER Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tenenbaum Mrs. Milton Price Dr. and Mrs. Harold J. Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Tucker Mr. and Mrs. Louis R. Putzel Mrs. Bertha Lasky Mr. and Mrs. Millard A. Waldheim Mrs. Earl Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Marcus Mr. and Mrs. Robert Watel Dr. and Mrs. Harry Rosenbaum ELIAS ROSEN Mr. and Mrs. Sander Zwick Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rosenheim Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Stein CHARLES STRAUSS Mr. and Mrs. John Rothschild LAURA G. RUBIN Mr. and Mrs. Herbert N. Arnstein Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rothschild, Jr. Louis Rubin Mrs. Alvin L. Bauman Mrs. Wilton Rubinstein ROSE SACKS Mrs. Henry Freed Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Ruwitch Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur H. Eckstein Mr. and Mrs. Julian G. Samuels Mr. and Mrs. Theodore R. Samuels Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Stern Mr. and Mrs. William H. Schield Mr. and Mrs. Philip N. Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Schiclc MARTHA SCHIEBLE Mr. and Mrs. Bert Schweizer MR. AND MRS. AARON WASSERMAN Mr. and Mrs. Eli P. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Jerome M. Scissors (55th Wedding Anniversary) (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern Dr. and Mrs. Harry Rosenbaum ELI SCHNEIDER Dr. Arthur E. Strauss MR. AND MRS. SAM COHEN Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Boonshaft Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tenenbaum (51st Wedding Anniversary) Mrs. Sol H. Engel Mrs. Paul Treuman Gertrude Cohen Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. Tucker MR. AND MRS. EDWARD FELSENTHAL Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Richard E. Turner (50th Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Mrs. Norman Wolff Mrs. Robert V. Friedman Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Wolff MR. AND MRS. NATHAN MATHES Dr. and Mrs. Harold Joseph ROBERT H. MAYER (70th Birthday) (47th Wedding Anniversary) Sadie Kohn Mrs. M. Erwin Bry Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gelber (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mrs. Bertha Lasky Mr. and Mrs. Sydney M. Shoenberg MR. AND MRS. JACK BURACK Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Marcus Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tenenbaum (40th Weddmg Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Otto Salomon EDWIN LEVIS (Birthday) Mrs. Lillian Franklin Mr. and Mrs. Dan Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Major B. Einstein Mr. and Mrs. Louis Gelber (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Silverstein MRS. HARVEY FROHLICHSTEIN (Birthday) MR. AND MRS. HAROLD TOBER Mrs. E. A. Sparbur Dr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Kirstein (35th Wedding Anniversary) MAX SCHNEIDER GORDON SCHERCK (60th Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin M. Loeb Harry Schneider (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) (Edna E. Peterson Scholarship Fund) MR. AND MRS. NAT TUCKER Sam Schneider (Oscar Brand Memorial Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Baer (35th Wedding Anniversary) AUGUST A. SEIGLE Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Bettman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Susman Mr. and Mrs. Jack A. Cohn Mrs. Lewis Bettman DR. AND MRS. MILTON H. MEYERHARDT Mrs. Sarah Goodman Mrs. M. Erwin Bry (Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Louis Karpf Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burnett _ Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Mrs. Benjamin Levin (Dr. Arthur E. Strauss Mr. and Mrs. Major B. Einstein DR. AND MRS. MELVIN B. KIRSTEIN Visiting Physicians Fund) RACHELLE K. SWARTCHILD Mr. and Mrs. William N. Eisendrath, Jr. (25th Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mandel Mrs. Milton Price Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Franc, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Clarence T. Eckert ABRAHAM SENDER DANN K. TELLER Mr. and Mrs. Irving D. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shifrin Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fadem Mr. and Mrs. Milton Susman Mr. and Mrs. Edward Greensfelder MR. AND MRS. J. ARTHUR BAER, II ROLAND SENDER EMMA TENNENBAUM Mrs. Sanford Jacobs (20th Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fadem Lilian Jossem Mrs. Marjorie Frank Lesser Mr. and Mrs. Lawton Levy ABRAHAM SHAMPAINE RABBI SAMUEL THURMAN Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Levis Mr. and Mrs. Julian G. Samuels, Jr. Mrs. Edward Hopper Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baskowitz Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lowenbaum MR. AND MRS. BUDDY GOLDBERG FANNIE SHANK Louis Chackes Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Mayer (10th Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cohen Mrs. Sol H. Engel Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Milton Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rothbarth Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mrs. Mae Gluck Mr. Alvin Novack MR- AND MRS. MIKE YEDLIN Mrs. Henry Freed Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Klein Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Peltason (Wedding Anniversary) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Mr. and Mrs. Stanford I. Lamberg Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Ruwitch Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mendelson Mr. and Mrs. Morris A. Shenker Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mrs. Harry Soltz Mr. and Mrs. John M. Shoenberg JUDGE ROBERT L. ARONSON (Recovery) Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Weil Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Shoninger Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Friedman Mr. and Mrs. William Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wittcoff Mr. and Mrs. A. Ernest Stein ROBERT BLUMOFF ^Recovery) Ginsberg Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) GOLDIE TORGOVE Mr. and Mrs. Elliot H. Stein Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Glick Mrs. Doreen Broudy and Family Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mrs. Paul Goldblum Mrs. Norman A. Feldberg NATHAN A. BUFFEN (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Lester J. Handelman Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Max A. Horwitz Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Fuhrer MRS. MELVIN R. CABE (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Kay Mr. and Mrs. Milton S. Rothman Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Mosbacher Mr. and Mrs. Chester S. Laycob Mr. and Mrs. EH P.. Schwartz MRS. MANNE CUTLER (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mathes (Sadye Mathes Fund) (Sadye Mathes Fund) Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Nathanson Mr. and Mrs. Alvin J. Shuchart HARRY DAVIS (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Poslosky Mr. and Mrs. Dan Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hammerman Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Ross EDWIN J. WALCHLI ERWIN FENDELMAN (Recovery) Deedie Seidel Joseph Kohn Miss Dorothee Block Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Steinbach MOTHER OF SAM WALDFOGEL MRS. BERTHA FLEISHMAN (Recovery) (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Ross Sunshine Club — Stix, Baer and Fuller Lilian Jossem DR. MAX FRANKEL (Recovery) MORRIS SIEV DR. JULIUS WALTER Dr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Reiches Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. BobrohT Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Hoehn LOUIS GELBER (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs KATHYLENE ANN WEEKS Mr. and Mrs. Edgar L. Levin Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper Mr. and Mrs. David A. and Thomas H. Gee Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Simon Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Laba BERTHA WEINBACK SAM GERSTEIN (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Stanford I. Lamberg Mrs. Vera C. Silverman Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stone Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Roth Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wittcoff ADOLPH D. GLASER (Recovery) NETTIE SACKS SILBERMAN MOTHER OF LOUIS WELTMAN Mrs. Gus Mosinger Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Cook Mr. and Mrs. George Perlmutter HERMAN GLICK (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. William B. Eiseman DR. SAMUEL B. WESTLAKE (Birthday) Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Berzon Mrs. Henry Freed (Samuel B. Westlake E.N.T. Research Fund) MRS. HERMAN GLICK (Recovery) Mrs. D. B. Goldman Dr. Daniel D. Klaff Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Milton I. Goldstein Mrs. Samuel B. Westlake and Family Mr. and Mrs. Morrie L. Flotken Elmer Price MILTON M. WOLF Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Marcus Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Rashbaum Mr. and Mrs. Carl Finn Mr. and Mrs. Perry L. Mehlman Mr. and Mrs. Edward Silverman Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg ISADORE GOFFSTE1N (Recovery) Mrs. Faye M. Tuholske !Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brown DAVID C. SIMON Mr. and Mrs. Al D. Goldstein MRS. JOSEPH GOLDBERG (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. George A. Cohn Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pass Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Marcus Mr. and Mrs. William Livingston MRS. LAWRENCE H. GREENBERG (Recovery) SAM SITEMAN Mr. and Mrs. Walter Morris Mrs. Nathan E. Garber Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) Mrs. Gus Mosinger MARVIN HARRIS (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Morrie L. Flotken Kate C. Soltz Mrs. Robert Rothbarth Mrs. Julius Ginsberg (Julius and Sara Ginsberg Mrs. Maurice Weil MRS. MAURICE L. HIRSCH (Recovery) Cancer Research and Therapy Fund) Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wilensky The Bowling Mrs.' Mr. and Mrs. Philip N. Hirsch EDNA YANISH Mrs. Siegmund Halpern Mrs. Frank Kenner Joseph Motchan MOTHER OF MRS. PHILIP HIRSCH Mrs. Leone Solov LENA YAWITZ (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Burt Weisman Mrs. Rose Friedman Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper MARY SLAY Mr. and Mrs. Sam Scheinkman MRS. MEYER HOROWITZ (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Sam Pass WILLIAM ZINNER Mrs. Irving Hartmann SARAH SLOBIN Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Mann MRS. HILDA JONES (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Sam Karsh Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Scheiner (Cancer Research) Mr. and Mrs. Bud Lowy Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rosenthal Mrs. Alice M. Wortman MRS. FRANK KENNER (Recovery) SISTER OF MR. AND MRS. RAY SLUNG NATHAN ZONNIS Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Deutsch Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Klein Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pass \M PAGE 8 ]

DONOR IN HONOR OF ALVIN GOLDMAN RESEARCH FUND IN HONOR OF BEN KESSEL (Recovery) GORDON SCHERCK r i Mr. and Mrs. George Glass (Birthday) ROBERT KNEFF (Recovery) Mrs. Alvin D. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Deutsch JACKIE SUE MARGULIS LIVER SIMON KRAMER (Recovery) RESEARCH FUND Women's Auxiliary Miss Dorothee Block IN MEMORY OF MRS. LIBBY KUBITZKY (Recovery) HARRY KAISER Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Berland Mr. and Mrs. John Grossman NATALIE LEVY (Recovery) JACKIE SUE MARGULIS Dr. and Mrs. David W. Helman Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen New Officers Named 16 Volunteer Aids MRS. HARRY MARGULIS (Recovery) JULIUS POWELL Mrs. Lester Lowenstein Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen MRS. BERNARD MELLITZ (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fishgoll Mrs. Earl Susman has been recom- Learn Nursing Rules The Bowling Mrs.* Mr. and Mrs. John Grossman HARRY MENDELSON (Recovery) MR. STEINBERG mended for the presidency of the hospital Mr. and Mrs. Morris Londe Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen Women's Auxiliary for 1963-65 by the Hospital bedmaking, clerical duties, DR. MILTON H. MEYERHARDT (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. E. Frolichman Dr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Reiches Mr. and Mrs. Lester Rosenblatt auxiliary's nominating committee. Her two- communications, transportation jobs and HENRY MINKOFF (Recovery) GOLDIE TORGOVE year appointment is to be ratified by feeding patients meals are among the du- Mrs. Lillian Franklin Mr. and Mrs. Ben Cohen SIDNEY MINTZER (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. E. Frolichman auxiliary members at their April 26 an- ties mastered by 16 Auxiliary members Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Lester Rosenblatt nual meeting. She succeeds Mrs. Sander who are the first graduates of a new Mr. and Mrs. Ben Shanfeld Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stein Zwick, president since 1961. Mrs. Susman course in nursing routines and procedures. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stein was the group's first secretary in 1952. For Jointly sponsored by the hospital's divi- ELSIE PROBSTEIN - HARRY KOPLAR BRACE FUND the past year she has served as a director- sion of nursing service and department of IN MEMORY OF at-large. (See related story, page one.) auxiliary services, the program is designed CLARA LONDON (On anniversary of birthday) Nominated for two-year terms are Mrs. to prepare volunteers to better assist nurses. Jacob G. Probstein, M. D. Stanley Cohen, vice-president, fund rais- The volunteers will not supplant regular LOUIS MONHEIMER (On anniversary of birthday) ing; Mrs. Harry Hammerman, financial nursing personnel. Jacob G. Probstein, M. D. secretary; Mrs. Myron Fisher, assistant fi- The course was initiated at the request IN HONOR OF nancial secretary; Mrs. Richard Ferer, cor- of volunteers who wished to lend "more ROBERT NASSAUER (Recovery) DR. J. G. PROBSTEIN Mr. and Mrs. Frank Flotken (Sadye Mathes Fund) (Birthday) responding secretary, and Mrs. Jerome meaningful aid" to the hospital, according LOUIS L. OXENHANDLER (Recovery) Larraine and Kay (Kay M. Chaloupsky) Marx, assistant corresponding secretary. to Mrs. Mordecai Brown, director of aux- The Deutch Family MRS. F. Z. SALOMON Adele, Jamie and Cindy Ginsberg (Birthday) Mrs. Walter Stern was named to fill a one- iliary services. ANN RASKAS (Recovery) Jacob G. Probstein, M. D. year unexpired term as assistant record- The volunteers, who have been awarded Mr. and Mrs. Louis Karpf LIBRARY FUND MRS. DAVID SAIFER (Recovery) IN MEMORY OF ing secretary. Volunteer Aide badges to be sewn on their Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pass DR. HERMAN MAAS Mrs. Norman Drey, Mrs. Milton Jasper pinafores, attended six three-hour sessions, BEN SHANFELD (Recovery) Joseph Gitt, M. D. Dr. and Mrs. William A. Marmor The Jewish Hospital Medical Staff and' Mrs. Ben Samuels have been nomi- which included lectures, demonstrations, MR. AND MRS. ALVIN J. SHUCHART RESEARCH INSTITUTE OF JEWISH HOSPITAL nated for three-year terms as directors. discussions, and a written final exam. All (Recovery) SPEEDY RECOVERY Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Friedman JUDGE ARONSON Named to fill a two-year unexpired term 16 graduates pledged a minimum of 100 ABE L. SIMON (Recovery) Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Feldman is Mrs. Melvin Kirstein, and a one-year hours of volunteer service during the 12 Dr. and Mrs. Milton H. Jasper Mr. and Mrs. Harold Greenberg HARRY SOFFER (Recovery) SYLVIA GOLDSTEIN term, Mrs. S. Charles Baer. months following the course's completion. Mrs. Lillian Franklin Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Feldman Nominating committee members are: The new Volunteer Aids are Mesdames LOUIS TIGER (Recovery) BARNEY DIAMOND Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Harold Greenberg Mrs. Harry Loeb, chairman, Mrs. Norman John Bamberger, Jack Epstein, Harry Esst- Mr. and Mrs. Millard A. Waldheim man, Irving Garon, E. Ghertner, Jack SIDNEY J. WITTELS (Recovery) REBECCA SENTURIA MEMORIAL LIBRARY FUND Drey, Mrs. Solon Gershman, Mrs. Sieg- Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman IN MEMORY OF mund Halpern, Mrs. Paul Kranzberg, Mrs. Golder, Herman Gram, Walter Heiman, MRS. DAVID P. WOHL (Recovery) REBECCA SENTURIA Morton D. Hyman, D. B. Mendelson, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Langsdorf Alex and Anne Rubenstein Harry Lieberman, Mrs. Roswell Messing, Dr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Reiches IRA AND HERBERT SIMON RESEARCH FUND Jr., Mrs. Edwin Shifrin and Mrs. Elliott Charles Nuccio, Chester Radziejewski, Ed- Mrs. Harry Sandperl IN MEMORY OF Mrs. Paul Treuman MARY BRENNER Stein. ward Rosenkranz, Max Sacks, Morris DR. MILTON ZEMLYN (Recovery) Mrs. Laura Simon Schwartz, and Sidney Svarin. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Orenstein MRS. H. LEVI JERRY BLUMENTHAL Mrs. Laura Simon Summarizing the class' attitude toward iHis membership in A.D.A.) MRS. ESSERMAN the course, Mrs. Ghertner said, "every- asper Mrs. Laura Simon Mr. and Mrs. Simon Polinsky IN HONOR OF Color Movie Tells thing we learned we have to know to MR. AND MRS. CLEM CARP MR. AND MRS. A. FISHMAN really help out at a nursing station. We (Their Granddaughter) (Anniversary, March 17) Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Mosbacher Mrs. Laura Simon Auxiliary Story no longer bother the nurses for explana- JOHN E. DUNKINS, III. ARTHUR E. STRAUSS VISITING PHYSICIAN'S FUND tions and instructions." Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wittcoff IN HONOR OF Those who envision an annual report Conducting the course were Miss Edna MR. AND MRS. RICHARD FISHER ,. , . ARTHUR E. STRAUSS (Their New Son) Mrs. Louis Cohen as page after page of dull facts and figures E. Peterson, director of nursing, Mrs. Vir- Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Friedman Esther Sigan will be pleasantly surprised by the Aux- ginia Reisinger, director of nursing serv- HAROLD FREUND BAKERY COMPANY, WESTLAKE ENT RESEARCH FUND GLENDALE, CALIFORNIA IN MEMORY OF iliary's year-end statement: It's a movie! ices, and Mrs. Marcella Baldwin, Mrs. Ruth Hartmann DR. SAMUEL B. WESTLAKE Designed as a permanent record of the Marcella Gasperi and Mrs. Berneeda Rup- MR. AND MRS. GUS GILLERMAN (Anniversary of birthday) (Their Health) Mary E. Holloway Auxiliary's services to the hospital, the precht, all of nursing service and the Esther Sigan GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER 8m.m. color film is named for the Aux- school of nursing faculty. Also assisting Mr. and Mrs. Emil Sakowski iliary's symbol and called "We're in were head nurses Mrs. Linda Constantine, MRS. FLORENCE GUTFREUND AND MR. M. FISCHMAN (Their Forthcoming Marriage) Clover". The premier showing will be at Miss Gail Barenfanger, Miss Margaret Mrs. Paul S. Sigan the organization's spring meeting April 26. Hoffman, and Miss Barbara Peterson, and BENJAMIN M. LOEB (40th Year at Renard Linoleum and Rug Company) Through the story of a young couple instructor, Miss Marjorie Van Cleave. Mrs. M. Erwin Bry Wf . * ' ^\ whose first child is born in the hospital, A similar course for teenage volunteers MRS. BEN MANHEIMER Mr. and Mrs. Eli Sandperl the eight minute movie focuses on some of will begin June 10. MARCIA POLINSKY AND MEL WEISMAN the 42 areas where volunteers aid patients. (Their Engagement) Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Schwartzman Areas shown include the admitting desk, who took part in the movie are long-time MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH F. RUWITCH coffee shop, gift gallery, hostess desk, and volunteers or committee chairmen. They Julius H. Funk EDWIN G. SHIFRIN patients' library. Also graphically illus- include Mesdames Melvin Block, Edward Ellen Shifrin trated are such Auxiliary projects as baby Boonshaft, David Corwin, Robert Feilich, DONATIONS Nathan Goldring photos, life membership, baby alumni fund, Eli Flusser, Nathaniel Glick, Alfred Gold- Mrs. Jack H. Herman f£ if™! and gift magazine subscriptions. man, Geneva Halliburton. Mrs. Henry Ittleson Gertrude McDonald In 1962 the Auxiliary gave the hospital Also, Mesdames Jacques Horowitz, Sol Mr. and Mrs. Morris Pessikoff Kaiser, Joy Powell, Mark Robbins, Joseph Mrs. Clover Hartz Seelig a record $126,985. GREETING CARD DONORS The movie, which was filmed during a F. Ruwitch, Ben Samuels, Gordon Scherck, Harvey Friedman " jfli l*~ <'-■■■ .' J - ■ "'' | Barrie Sommerfield, A. Ernest Stein, Syd- Dr. J. G. Probstein single day, was shot by Benny Greenberg, Minnette Rubenstein a St. Louis photographer. ney Weissman and Frank P. Wolff. Herbert B. Seidel Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Stein Mrs. Melvin B. Kirstein was producer, Candy-stripers who had roles were Mrs. Edward Wittcoff Mrs. Harry Milton, script writer, and Misses Helen Hirsch, Nancy Rimbach, BETH EL CONGREGATION OF Mrs. Milton Jasper, arrangement coordi- and Lynn Marshak. FLAT RIVER ASSISTANCE FUND IN MEMORY OF WOHL CANCER RESEARCH FUND nator. Mrs. Arthur Fihn will narrate the Other participants were Mrs. Mordecai ANNIS L. MILLSAP IN MEMORY OF film at the Auxiliary meeting. B. Brown, director of auxiliary services, (Aunt of Mary McKeever) MRS. MARY ZENITSKY Betty Ann Dubansky (Grandmother of Mrs. Robert Shapiro) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tamarkin played and Mrs. Margaret Williamson, director MAX LEIRTZ Mr. and Mrs. Milford Schneiderman the expectant parents. Auxiliary members of the coffee shop. A, « w .. (Father) PATIENT CARE Mrs. Meyer Nuell IN MEMORY OF WILLIAM ZINNER Gilbert Harris HARRY KAISER Student Nurses Elect Four New Officers Bernard Kornblum HARRY PORTNER (Husband of Mildred Portner) Hyman and Ida Polishuk ELIE SCHNEIDER (Husband of Sarah Schneider) Mrs. Elsie Schneider LEWIS S. BAER Otto C. Sdhultz MRS. ANNIE SIEGEL Murray Steinberg MRS. LILLIAN BLUMENFELD Murray Steinberg IDA SHANKER Irwin Albrecht Barbara Bakker Pat Bryan MISS KENNEY MISS LAUBINGER MISS SEATON MISS GREFE Donna Dragovich Miss Danielle Kenney, a junior, has been elected president of the Student Associa- Bella Fendelman Rose Glaser tion of the School of Nursing for the 1963-64 school year. Other new officers are Misses Elaine Goldberg Pat Laubinger, a freshman, vice-president; Nancy Seaton, a freshman, secretary; and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Goldberg Debby Gottlieb Betty Grefe, a junior, treasurer. Miss Eloise De Lap, R.N., was reelected advisor. I. W. MILLER Cheryl Gretsch Miss Kenney is a member of the choir and basketball team. She was freshman Mr. and Mrs. Irvin E. Shanfeld Ray Highfill Jules Horning class representative to the Student Association and school representative to the National CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH FUND Marguerite Humes Student Nurses Association in 1962. She is chairman of the St. Louis district, Missouri IN MEMORY OF Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Kerchal SAM STEIN Evelyn Laratta State Student Nurses Association. Matilda Goldberg (Father) Deloris Lyons Miss Laubinger is freshman class president and freshman representative to the Gladys Manne Louis Stein Eleanor Oglesby president's cabinet of the Student Association. She is a cheerleader and represented CHRONIC DIVISION EDUCATION AND Rosemary Rinkle the school at a Missouri State Student Nurses Association meeting last fall. RESEARCH FUND Bob Smith IN MEMORY OF Vernon Spradling Miss Seaton is on the staff of the yearbook, and Miss Grefe is junior class repre- LENA FISHER LADIMSKY Jannis Steele sentative to the Student Association. (Mother of Mrs. L. Lamberg) Blanch Sylvester Greens Cousins Club Mr. and Mrs. Louis Vergere The new officers will be installed May 6. \M PAGE 9 IBMs, Charge-A-Plates, New Order Forms, Rehab Patients Poet Delighted 1 Mean Accuracy, Speed in Patients' Bills Publish Monthly With Special Diet Just as ambrosia inspired the Greeks Wheelchair Review to write odes, the hospital's special diets A patient-written, mimeographed news- inspired a patient to compose the follow- letter has been added to the list of Jewish ing poem to our home economist: Hospital publications. "Thank you Miss Orr for being so nice Composed by patients in the division I got instant results without asking twice of rehabilitation, the Wheelchair Review You cut out my coffee and substituted tea is scheduled to appear monthly. The first That was just fine and dandy with me issue contained seven pages of news, The diet is ample, I get more than enough features, editorials, and jokes. Of meats, fruits and salads and all that kind of stuff Editor-in-chief is Professor Albert Gold- You are most efficient, serve a well bal- stein, former associate dean of the college anced diet of liberal arts at Washington University As a Kosher diabetic, everything is just and a part-time patient of the rehabilita- right tion division for 10 months. Your personal interest is a tribute to the In his lead editorial Professor Goldstein staff said the purpose of the paper was "to All the trouble we give you, all the back- acquaint rehabilitation patients with each talk and gaff other and the staff, to acquaint patients Thanks again from a patient who appre- with the scope of Rehabilitation, and to ciates you give the patients a means of self expres- For all you have done and will continue sion." to do." Praising the spirit of unity character- istic of the rehabilitation division, Pro- fessor Goldstein said, "I have seen patients Former Patients In come into the department very much discouraged with life and the possibilities Child Psych Study it held for them. Their spirits and their Pinpointing characteristics of emotion- hopes were at a low ebb. It was at this ally disturbed children was the first year point that 'rehabilitation' began. project of a three-year research program BUSINESS OFFICE MANAGER VERN SPRADLING OPERATES AN IBM SORTER WHICH RAPIDLY "The doctors and nurses . . . are quietly in the Ellen Steinberg Division of Child SEPARATES AND ALPHABETIZES PATIENT-CHARGE FORMS. encouraging, as are the workers in physical, Psychiatry, Rodney Coe, research soci- When a patient pays his bill at the for department records and the remaining occupational, and recreational therapy. ologist and project director, reported. cashier's window upon discharge from the cream-colored part is forwarded to the Everyone is affected by their friendliness Such items as school behavior and hospital, he seldom is aware that some Business Office. In the case of the four- and reassurance . . . One cannot be de- parents' attitudes were tabulated on all 20 persons were directly involved in com- part forms, the additional white section is pressed in this environment of courage and former patients of the unit. The same data piling it or that numerous others helped sent to the medical records department. good spirits." was collected on similarly disturbed to insure that yesterday's lab test appears Once a day a business office messenger children who were not patients but were on today's bill. picks up the orange copy of the requisi- diagnosed at the Washington University "We want to be certain that the patient tions at the nursing station. Back in the Child Guidance Center as needing hospital is correctly billed for all the chargeable business office a speedy machine sorts care. services he receives," Vern Spradling, these as well as the cream-colored cards During the next two years former business office manager, said. "We also and matches them by their serial numbers. patients will be matched with non-patients want to protect him against being charged These pairs serve as a patient protection, having like "profiles." "By comparing the for any services he did not receive." since they confirm receipt of the service adjustment of the two groups, we will be "We average six charges a day for each which was requisitioned, Spradling pointed able to determine the effectiveness of hos- acute patient in the hospital," Spradling out. pital treatment," Dr. Coe said. pointed out. "In addition, we handle more Charges totaled daily A psychiatrist, psychologist and sociol- than 1,800 charges daily from such vari- ogist will investigate families of disturbed Another machine sorts the sets by holes children and personalities of employees on ous areas as the laboratories, x-ray, central keyed to the patient's name and punched supply and pharmacy—a total of 2,300 a the division. They will seek an objective in the cards. The charges indicated on the way of evaluating daily behavior of ward day." requisition slips are entered on the pa- Three years ago, the business office patients. Specific short-term studies as tient's bill daily. A new balance is totaled well as other extensive research programs handled about 1,200 patient charges daily, daily. are to be initiated. Spradling noted. To cope with the in- A patient's "charge-a-plate" is used for creases, brought about mainly by the ex- The division of child psychiatry has the last time when he is discharged. He provided intensive care for approximately pansion of auxiliary services, the hospital's takes a discharge notice stamped at the patient-charge accounting system has been 150 disturbed children since it opened in nursing station on his floor to the cashier's 1958. redesigned. Now the quiet scratch of pen- desk, pays his bill and pockets one copy cils has been replaced by the smooth hum The research is financed by the Medical of that five-part ledger sheet that was is- THE PLATINUM BLONDE TRESSES OF FRESHMAN Care Research Center located in the hos- and clickety clack of business machines. sued the day of his admission. NURSING STUDENT CARMEN MUNSEY ARE SHOWN IN THE FIRST STAGES OF A RE-STYLING JOB BY pital and a $36,000 total grant from the "Charge-a-plates" used Any last minute charges—lab tests run COSMETOLOGIST EUGENE VARCHETT1. FORTY-FOUR Children's Research Foundation. A St. Here's how the new system works: When the morning of discharge, for instance— OTHER STUDENTS FROM THE SCHOOL OF NURSING JOINED CARMEN AT THE PARK PLAZA BEAUTY Louis charitable organization, the Founda- a patient is admitted to the hospital, two will appear on an itemized statement sent SALON LAST MONTH FOR AN EVENING OF tion was created "to preserve, protect, and to the patient's home three to five days BEAUTY TIPS AND HAIR TREATMENT AS PART OF special metal "charge-a-plates" are stamp- NATIONAL BEAUTY SALON WEEK. SALON OWNER improve the mental and physical welfare ed with his name, address, physician's after he leaves the hospital. At this time BUDDY WALTON HAS HOSTED THIS GROUP FOR of infants and children." name and admitting number. One plate is a patient also receives an up-to-date copy MANY YEARS. sent with the patient to the nursing sta- of his ledger sheet. Of the remaining tion on the floor where he will be staying. copies two go to the patient's insurance The other is used to stamp a yellow ledger companies and one in the hospital's per- It's A Kid! sheet and four copies, one of which will manent business records. A young mother delivered her own eventually become the patient's bill. The The new patient-charge system elimi- child at Jewish Hospital recently. No doc- second plate is also used to stamp cards nates hand-written charges and thus pro- for the information desks, mail rooms, die- vides positive patient-charge identification, tors or nurses were in attendance. Four tary department, auxiliary office, and other Spradling noted. female friends of the mother were present but lent no aid. None-the-less, the mother areas concerned with making the patient's was aware of the procedures of natural stay as comfortable as possible. The ledger sheet is sent to the accounts childbirth, and no problem arose. receivable department in the business office The mother and her 6 lb., 4 oz. son are where it is filed alphabetically in the cur- doing fine. rent in-patient file. On the nursing stations a numbered re- The new kid—for that's what it is, a quisition slip is prepared, whenever a pa- baby goat—is surveying his harem from tient needs chargeable services. Stamped wobbly legs. He is the only male goat with the patient's embossed metal plate, among five females in the hospital's ani- the requisition form is the standard IBM mal room. size and consists of three or four different colored sections. There are now 27 of these Dubbed Charlemagne, the new king of uniformly designed requisition forms, re- the goat pen arrived unexpectedly. His placing 40 variously-sized ones formerly mother joined the other four ladies of the in use. court nine weeks before her infant's birth, No matter which of the 50 different with nary a bleet about her delicate con- services a patient needs—whether it be a dition. blood test, x-ray or drugs—the orange CHARLEMAGNE POSES WITH HIS MOTHER IN THE The goats are being used by the De- LIVING ROOM OF THEIR COMFORTABLY FURNISHED section of the requisition form is removed HOME. and retained on the nursing section. The partment of Medicine in an experiment rest of the form goes with the patient or concerning sugar metabolism in muscles. B. Eisenstein, director, department of med- his specimens or prescriptions to the service They are injected with different varieties icine. area. of an enzyme which causes sugar stored in the muscles to change into sugar used And what about Charlemagne?—As soon At the service area the tests and sup- for activity. The techniques learned in as he's old enough to be weaned, he'll be plies are checked off when completed and measuring the quantity of the enzyme in moved away from the women. "We don't costs are written down. Then the yellow A PATIENT HANDS CASHIER MRS. DOLORES LYONS A DISCHARGE NOTICE. MRS. LYONS WILL TOTAL the goat's blood may eventually be ap- want any more greasy kid stuff around section of the form is detached and kept THE PATIENT'S BILL AND COLLECT PAYMENT. plied to humans, according to Dr. Albert here," a spokesman said. [W PAGE 10 Tyke Takes First Steps on Artificial Leg Thanks to Hospital's Rehab Department Two-and-one half year old Greggory Mo., was first seen at the hospital when Warren walks as well as any toddler. He he was only three months old. At that first started walking when he was about time surgery was performed to remove one—the same time most infants reach a residual six-toed foot from his left leg. Just before his first birthday he was VISITING HOURS the walking stage. The only difference GENERAL net. between Greggory and other youngsters brought to the hospital again to prepare is that his left leg is not real. the stump to be fitted with an artificial leg. DIVISION OF ADULT PSYCHIATRY Greggory has been fitted with an artificial During this second visit Greggory learned leg in the department of rehabilitation to walk. of the hospital and is the youngest child Greggory's youth posed special problems ever to be fitted here. Anyone observing in fitting the artificial limb, according to him walk would never know of his de- Robert Hickok, coordinator of the depart- formity. ment of rehabilitation. "A child's tissues And, because he is so young, Greggory are so soft that it is difficult to fasten the will never have to face the problems that prosthesis on securely," Hickok said. A concern an older person who has lost a special prosthesis was designed for limb through injury and is trying to Greggory by members of the hospital's master the use of a prosthesis or artificial "amputee team" — Hickok; Dr. Franz limb. Steinberg, department director; another To Greggory, his artificial leg is as much physician; a therapist; and a professional a part of him as his real one. Of course limb-fitter. he'll have to have the prosthesis replaced Greggory's defect was the first of its kind as he grows; he may use 8 or 10 before to be corrected at Jewish Hospital," Hickok he's full grown at 21, and after that he'll said, "but the problem is not unique. The wear out his artificial leg at the rate of one unfortunate consequences of the use of every five years, making a total of 20 in the drug Thalidomide have focused wide- DELIVERING TOYS FOR PURIM TO PATIENTS IN THE HOSPITAL'S ELLEN STEINBERG DIVISION OF CHILD an average lifetime. spread attention on infant deformities," PSYCHIATRY ARE CHILDREN FROM THE SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASSES OF SHAARE ZEDAK SYNAGOGUE. He will be able to play football, dance, he added, "but many treatment centers GIFT-GIVING IS A TRADITION OF PURIM, ONE OF THE MOST JOYFUL JEWISH HOLIDAYS. FROM L. TO R., THE CHILDREN ARE: ALAN BIERMAN; ILENE SCHATZMAN, STUDENT COUNCIL VICE-PRESIDENT; CHUCK and ride horseback. already exist to help fit children born with- BLITZ, AND PHYLLIS ABT, STUDENT COUNCIL PRESIDENT. According to Greggory's father, Jerry out all or parts of their extremities for Warren, the toddler's favorite activity is useful lives. The limb industries which climbing. "I was repairing the roof of the have made limbs for adults who had suf- Career Day Held Hospital Receives house and he climbed up the 16 foot fered amputation through machinery or ladder right after me," his father said. automobile accidents, diseases such as dia- Approximately 200 St. Louis area high "I call him my little monkey." betes and cancer, or wars, now also make school seniors and juniors interested in $28,565 from USPHS Greggory, whose home is near Sikeston, limbs in infant sizes." nursing careers recently attended the an- nual "Nurse for a Day" program at the For General Reseach Jewish Hospital School of Nursing. Nursing students guided the visitors The United States Public Health Service through the hospital, the nurses' residence, has awarded Jewish Hospital a one-year classrooms, and laboratories. High school $28,565 grant for general research support. students met the faculty and saw demon- This is a new type of grant and was strations and displays of operating room created by the government to help re- equipment, dietary services, rehabilitation search programs as a whole rather than techniques, and other nursing activities. specific projects. Previously available to Miss Edna E. Peterson, R.N., director of certain schools engaged in health-related nursing, discussed the school's educational research, the grant was made available to program. hospitals this year. In charge of the annual event were Miss Jewish Hospital may use the funds free- Vivian Dressel, junior student, East St. ly to initiate or improve research activities Louis, Illinois, chairman of the student and resources. Pilot projects requiring fur- council recruitment committee and Miss ther development prior to more formal Rose McClellan, R.N., administrative as- consideration for financial support can be sistant in nursing education at the school. begun with the aid of these general funds. Mrs. Ben H. Senturia is chairman of the The grant also provides stable salaries recruitment program of the Women's Aux- for key research personnel whose salaries iliary committee on nursing. would otherwise depend upon individual research grants or similar less stable sources. It will assist the operation of such They Vie for Queen resources as the research animal facilities, Senior queen nominees of the School of which are not related solely to a specific Nursing are Misses Mary Frohardt, Nancy project, but are essential to the total re- Hoppe, Joan McKenney, Rosemary Page, search program. and Pat Voellinger. The sum granted to the hospital was The identity of the queen will be re- based on the total funds the hospital re- vealed at the school's annual spring dance ceived last year to finance health-related which begins at 7:30, May 17, in the gym research as well as the hospital's total ex- of the Moses Shoenberg Memorial School penditures for such research. Grants and of Nursing Building. contributions last year totaled $445,000.

WITH TYPICAL CHILDISH ABANDON, TODDLER GREGGORY WARREN RUNS TO GRAB A NICKEL IN THE OUTSTRETCHED HAND OF R03ERT HICKOK, COORDINATOR OF THE HOSPITAL'S DEPARTMENT OF 3 Hospital Employees REHABILITATION. TH£ YOUNGEST CHILD TO BE FITTED WITH AN ARTIFICIAL LEG HERE, GREGGORY WALKS EASILY, LIKES CLIMBING. Win $10 Apiece For Suggestions

A trio of Jewish Hospital employees Non-Profit Organization netted $10 apiece for winning ideas U. S. POSTAGE through the Employees' Suggestion System. The employees are Shirley Davis, R. N., PAID nursing 3 South; Gail Friedman, personnel ST. LOUIS, MO. interviewer, and Helen Davis, rehabilita- PERMIT NO. 2376 tion Secretary. Shirley Davis offered a way to keep tabs THE JEWISH HOSPITAL OF ST. LOUIS on oxygen technicians when they are called out on emergencies. She suggested that all incoming calls be written on a blackboard near the phone in Central Supply and d HAMS 11 that the technicans erase the message HELEN DAVIS (L.) SHOWS GAIL FRIEDMAN (R.) IIOSPITAL as they return from completing the job. WHERE JEWISH HOSPITAL VISITING HOURS WILL BE LISTED IN THE YELLOW PAGES OF THE PHONE Purchasing copies of the King James DIRECTORY. Version of the Bible for the patients' library was the suggestion of Mrs. Fried- man. She pointed out that even though 216, published bi-monthly by the the Old Testament was on hand, the New Public Relations Department of the Testament was often on demand and not Jewish Hospital of St. Louis. available. Joseph F. Ruwitch, president Including visiting hours in the hospital's David Littauer, M.D., executive yellow page listing in local telephone director ST-L()l'IS directories was suggested by Helen Davis. The information would be convenient for Robert Rubright, director of public 216 S. KINGSHIGHWAY, ST. LOUIS 10, M0. the public and would eliminate many calls relations about visiting hours that tie up the switch- Lynne F. Lamberg, editor Form 3547 Requested board. [$r5exe$