College of Medicine Yearbook University of Vermont

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College of Medicine Yearbook University of Vermont University of Vermont ScholarWorks @ UVM University of Vermont College of Medicine University Libraries Yearbooks 1957 College of Medicine Yearbook University of Vermont Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/dmlyearbook Recommended Citation University of Vermont, "College of Medicine Yearbook" (1957). University of Vermont College of Medicine Yearbooks. 5. https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/dmlyearbook/5 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Libraries at ScholarWorks @ UVM. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Vermont College of Medicine Yearbooks by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks @ UVM. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Yearbook of ®f)e Clasisi of 1957 SJntijer^ttp of Vermont College of iHebtctne iO M S EDITORS: William Allard Donald Zehl ADVERTISING: William O'Rourke FUND-RAISING: The Medical Wives Association SPECIAL CREDITS: Patricia Brown Susanne Zehl Ann Margiotta Enid Gershen Bart Gershen Herbert Beam Larry Colletti Archie Golden Page Forty-Three I Dedication We take this opportunity to thank one of our outstanding teachers for his efforts. Dr. Harold B. Pierce has shaped the course of many classes of embryonic physicians. By teaching sound principles and habits of clear and critical thinking he has helped his students to develop into able practition- ers and through them has participated in the conquest of disease. His own researches have contributed to the growth of scientific knowledge in his own field, and his excellent example lights the way to further searches by his l students. Page Five MRS. PATRICIA HOILMAN BROWN HERBERT PATTERSON BEAM Burlington, Vermont Burlington, Vermont University of Vermont, A. B. Earlham, A. B. Class Secretary Phi Chi, Class President WILLIAM EDWARD ALLARD, JR. DUDLEY MOORE BAKER Rutland, Vermont Brattleboro, Vermont University of Vermont, B. S. Williams College, B. A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Sigma Xi Nu Sigma Nu Phi Chi, Student Council Page Six SANFORD BLOOMBERG EDWIN M ERRI MAN BROWN Burlington, Vermont Barton, Vermont University of Vermont, B. A., cum laucle Mass. Institute of Technology, B. S. Columbia, A. M. Sigma Xi, Phi Chi Phi Delta Epsilon JAMES DONALD CHERRY LARRY COLETTI Chatham, New Jersey Norwich, Connecticut Springfield College, B. S. Brown University, A. B. Albany Medical College Graduate School, M. S. Nu Sigma Nu, Sigma Xi Page Seven JOHN EDWARD CRISP ALFRED DORN Nashua, New Hampshire Brooklyn, New York Dartmouth College, A. B. University of Vermont, B. A. Nu Sigma Nu, Student Council Phi Delta Epsilon JACK EDWIN FAR N HAM DANIEL GFORGF FISCHER Burlington, Vermont Hamden, Connecticut University of Vermont. B. A. University of Connecticut, B. S. ' Phi Chi Alpha Omega Alpha Phi Delta Epsilon Page Eight JOHN C. FULMER BARTON JEROME GERSHEN Rye, New York Burlington, Vermont Saint Michael's College University of Vermont, B. S. Nu Sigma Nu Alpha Omega Alpha, Sigma Xi ARCHIE SIDNEY GOLDEN JERROLD GILBERT GOLDMAN New Milford, Connecticut Newark, New Jersey niversity of Connecticut, B. A. New York University, B. A. Nu Sigma Nu University of Vermont, M. S. Sigma Xi, Phi Chi 1'age Nine LEONARD WILLIAM IIALL1NG HOWARD SMITH IRONS Aurora, Illinois Bennington, Vermont University of Vermont, B. A. Dartmouth College, B. A. ' Phi Chi Nu Sigma Nu PHILIP BERNARD KAPLAN LEONARD KREISLER Bridgeport, Connecticut White Plains, New York University of Vermont, B. A. Allegheny College, B. S. Phi Delta Epsilon Page Ten DENTON EDWARD MacCARTY BRUCE RUSSELL MacICAY Burlington. Vermont Sheldon Springs, Vermont Saint Michael's, B. S., cum laude Micldlebury, A. B. Phi Chi Alpha Omega Alpha Nu Sigma Nu, Sigma Xi PETER ROLF MANES MARK RICHARD MARGIOTTA Bennington, Vermont Waterbury, Connecticut Yale University, B. A. University of Vermont, B. A. Alpha Omega Alpha, Sigma Xi Page Eleven RICHARD NOAH MATUS THOMAS CRAIG McBRIDE North Conway, New Hampshire Chicago, Illinois University of New Hampshire, B. S. Dartmouth, B. A. Nu Sisrma Nu WALTER FRANCIS MINER THEODORE LEON MUNSAT Akron, Ohio Rutland, Vermont Middlebury" College, A. B. University of Michigan, A. B. Phi Chi Nu Sigma Nu Page Twenty-Three WILLIAM ANDREW O'ROURKE, Jr. STUART OSTER Rutland, Vermont Brooklyn, New York College of Holy Cross, B. S. University of Vermont, B. A. Nu Sigma Nu, Osier Society CARL LEE PERRY FRANCIS LEE PERRY Burlington, Vermont Rutland, Vermont University of Vermont, B. A. University of Vermont, B. S. ' Phi Chi ' Phi Chi Page Thirteen EDWARD JOSEPH QUINLAN FRANK JOSEPH SCHMETZ, JR. Bristol, Connecticut Merchantville, New Jersey Dartmouth, B. A. University of Pennsylvania, A. B. Nu Sigma Nu Sigma Xi, Phi Chi JOHN ALFRED SCHREMLY, JR. JOEL NATHAN SHEPARD Rutland, Vermont West New York, New Jersey University of Vermont, A. B. Rutgers, B. S. Nu Sis'nia Nu Page Fourteen WILLIAM MEYER SOYBEL ARNOLD CLIFFORD TAYE Hamden, Connecticut Merrifield, Minnesota University of Chicago, A. I». University of Minnesota, B. A. Siinna Xi Univ. ol Minn. College of Dentistry, D.I). S. HOLL.IS XORMAN TRUAX DONALD NICHOLAS ZEHL Burlington, Vermont New Haven, Connecticut University of Vermont, B. A. University of Connecticut, B. A. Xu Sigma Nu Yale University, M. S. Nu Sigma Nu, Osier Society Pag Fifteen INTRODUCING Front Row—Left to right: Truax, Cunningham, Dreyer, Novikoff, Dunihue, Pearson, Newhall, Jordan Second Row—Left to right: Bannister, Powell, McMahon, VanBuskirk, Morrow,Reed, Third Row—Left to right: Saunders, Maeck, McSweeney Fourth Row—Left to right: LeFevre, Wilson, Robertson Page Eighteen TlrfE FACULTY Sichel, Dean Brown, Assistant Dean Harwood, Rees, Pierce, Gallagher, Raab, Amidon, Stultz, Soule. Lamden, Schein, Gladstone, Medivetsky, Miller, McKay, Korson, Peterson, Okey, Slavin, Sims. Terrien, Wallman, Keller, Smith, Stephenson, Bardavvill. Russell, Haines, Donaghy, Cohen, Flower, Woodruff. Page Nineteen Page Twenty-Three Uymg-ô» .f Kindt RubeSitnsbuvd by OMt|1>Stt*si«a>v °*H Page Twenty-Three September 1953: An apprehensive, nearly chosen by lot. His hands shook violently as he spastic group of students trickled up over the heav- approached with a gastric tube, if not a needle. ing granite steps of a dirty brick building on the Only the dedication and interest of the staff kept corner of Colchester and Prospect and gathered for our spirits from defeat. Not to mention the humor. the first time as the class of 1957 of the College of When the man in the dentist's jacket rang his bell Medicine of the University of Vermont. They sat we never knew whether it would be, "last call for with their peers 011 the banked seats of Hall A and fed rabbits", or the announcement of, "another Iron listened to the words of wisdom of the speaker. To in the lire". the freshmen, sitting in the highest rows, only two words floated up clearly from the pit below. These Physiology is chiefly memorable for the care- words were to become the watchwords of the year: fully prepared and delivered lectures which kept the integrate and correlate. This day was a dramatic class busy with their notebooks if they didn't always and fateful one in the lives of the members of the keep the class members awake. An understanding class of 1957. Luckily we have obtained a record of of this discipline allowed the group to describe a new the impact of that day upon the features of these syndrome. Reading with a heavy textbook propped students, photographed with pathological accuracy on the chest causes hypoventilation and carbon di- (Fig. 1) oxide narcosis. This was seen in numerous other- wise healthy medical students, especially post cibum. The next evening there was a different sort of introduction to medical school life. In the smoky In Histology a series of flowery lectures, sup- Apple Orchard room faculty and students toasted plemented with colorful diagrams, replete with a each other's health in beery good fellowship and ifetime's information going beyond mere microscopy vied with one another in ribaldry that would have to an integrated correlated discussion of the func- pleased Rabelais. The smoker was a roaring suc- tiono-morphological details, including the socio- cess and set another ideal for the medical green- economic and psychological aspects and the neuro- horns. endocrinological controls, went on almost intermin- ably but were always supplemented by the curt in- Monday morning came, books were bought, junction, "See Ham". But again personal attention classes started and the class of '57 began work. All pulled us through and we finally learned to tell too soon they were drowning in the well of knowl- breast from prostate by the fingerprints on the slide. edge that flowed around them. After the first few months of warming up we Biochemistry was a bugbear. Rumor had it were introduced to the most basic and venerable that at least half the class would flunk the first exam, part of medical education, (now's the time to say it) it was bad enough to try to encompass the second Anatomy. After the first shock of contact with the law of thermodynamics with its physical and meta- cadavers made us realize that this was a serious physical implications and the thorny concept of en- business, we went blithely to work. We were soon tropy. But it was incomprehensible to suffer in acquainted with Lacertus fibrosus (a lieutenant of addition the experimentations of an unsure partner, the Roman army), Princeps pollices (an Eastern Page Twenty-Three potentate), and the other characters of the anatom- Our social life was not finished with the smoker. ical world. When we could roll such high sounding At several class parties our spirit was bonded in names glibly off our tongues we became truly stu- bottle. The crowning achievement of the year was dents of medicine. It was hard work but memory our famous skit at the Osier Banquet. The apt was aided by poetry : caricatures of faculty personalities brought the The lingual nerve house clown.
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