Bulletin of the Medical Alumni AssociationThe University of ChicagoDivision of the Biological SciencesThe Pritzker School of Medicine lVol. 35, No.3SPRING 1981President's LetterAnother Lesson From the PastThe old Chinese society followed a practice called theprinciple oj reciprocity. It held that a gift was to be repaidin equal measure. This symmetry provided the balanceinherent in a society in which self-respect was prime.Equity obtained when GET = GIVE.How do we repay those from whom we have receivedgifts? Obligation is personal, and not easily quantifiable;but it is reflected in what we are willing to give up. As didour parents, this school of medicine gave us gifts withoutmeasure. Though difficult, alumni try to repay these gifts.In evaluating this alumni effort, one might consider itreasonable that each living alumnus or alumna would makefinancial contribution to his or her medical school; andthat a medical alumni group of about 7,000 students, housestaff, fellows and faculty would annually contribute aboutone million dollars. As can be seen by referring elsewherein this issue, there is a gap between these expectations andtheir achievement.This school has the same mission it had when you werea student-to continue to generate the best physicians,teachers and investigators-and nothing less. As a privateinstitution it depends on each of us. It must. Our currentstudents contribute, through tuition, only one of everythree dollars expended on their education. This is no smallfinancial vexation, especially when one does some simplearithmetic. The annual tuition in the senior year is now$7,680. Double this to obtain the costs not covered bytuition. Multiply this product by 400 students to obtain anapproximation of the total annual costs not covered bytuition. It is worth noting that this disparity is not differentfrom what it was when we were students. Two-thirds of thecost of educating each of us was borne and contributed byalumni and people other than ourselves.We must narrow the gap noted above, by remindingourselves of the principle of reciprocity, and acting on it.And if not now, when?-Louis Cohen, M.D. ('53)Medicineon the MidwayVol. 35, No.3, Spring 1981Medicine on the Midway is publishedby the Office of Medical Center PublicAffairs in collaboration with the Medi­cal Alumni Office.Photographers: Kathe Crowley, JohnWells, the Mort Kay Studios.Medical Alumni AssociationPresident: Louis Cohen ('53)President-Elect: Sumner C. Kraft ('55)Vice-President: Robert L. Schmitz ('38)Secretary: Randolph W. Seed ('60)Director: Katherine Wolcott WalkerCouncil Members:Fredric Coe (,61)Walter Fried ('58)David G. Ostrow ('75)Robin O. Powell ('57)Jerry G. Seidel (,54)Francis H. Straus ('57)Editorial Committee:Chairman: Robert W. Wissler ('48)Members: Robert Haselkom, Julian Rim­pila (,66), Francis Straus (,57), PeterWolkonsky (,52)Copyright 1981 by the University ofChicago Medical Alumni Association In this issueReunion 1981 4Culver Hall? 7Construction Under Way! 8Rubloff pledges support 10The Kaiser Challenge 11Medieval Medicine: two scriptural justifications 12Profile-the 1980 entering class 14Alumni welcome freshmen 16Focus on Pediatrics: Dr. Lawrence Gartner 181980 Honor Roll 20In Memoriam .40Alumni Deaths .42Alumni News 43Departmental News .48News Briefs 51Cover: Illustration from Jazz, by HenriMatisse, Teriade, Paris 1947, one of thebooks from the Berkman Collection ofillustrated books by twentieth centuryartists. A selection of these books pro­vided by Dr. Sam Berkman (S.B. '38,M.S. '39, Ph.D. '42) will be on exhibitas Livres des Artistes in the Departmentof Special Collections at the Joseph Re­genstein Library during Reunion Week.3Activities planned towelcome medical alumniback to campusTuesday, May 12-Thursday, May 14Randolph Seed, M.D. '60, alumni coor­dinator of social programs, and PeterWolkonsky, M.D. '52, alumni coordina­tor of scientific programs, have organizedthe 1981 Reunion Week with a series ofscientific and social events.Wednesday, May 13th, "Back toSchool" day, offers alumni an opportun­ity to participate in departmental caseconferences, beginning with HospitalTeaching Rounds.That afternoon, alumni can meet withsection heads during special, one-hoursessions, "Visits with the Professor."The afternoon finishes with an address byNobel laureate Francis Crick, who willdiscuss . 'The Explosion of Biological In­formation. "Thursday, May 14th, is set aside forthe scientific session. Recipients of the1981 Medical Alumni Association Dis­tinguished Service and HumanitarianAwards will speak. A luncheon will fol­low honoring them, along with the 1981Gold Key recipients, Dr. Albert Dorf­man, '44, Dr. Paul Harper, John O.Hutchens, and Dr. Frank W. Newell.Attendance at these events qualifies forContinuing Medical Education (CME)hour-for-hour credit.Later that afternoon, Livres DesArtistes, selected illustrated books by ear­ly twentieth-century artists from the col­lection of Dr. Sam Berkman (S.B. '38,M.S. '39, Ph.D. '42) and Mrs. Berkmanwill be on exhibit in the Department ofSpecial Collections in the Joseph Regen­stein Library. The exhibit presents bookillustrations by Henri Matisse, PabloPicasso, Joan Mir6, Marc Chagall, Alex­ander Calder, and others. These booksare original graphic works, normally li­mited in number.Reunion Schedule of Events &1lTuesday, May 12 2:00 p.m. Surgery: Endocrinology-Leslie De"The Future of Surgery" Groot, MD.9:00 a.m.- Senior Scientific Session David B. Skinner, M.D. Gastroenterology-Irwin5:00 p.m. Radiology: Rosenberg, M.D. and Dr.Charles Winans, MD.7:00 p.m. Recognition Dinner for "Current Problems in General InternalDean's Associates (By Imaging" Medicine---invitation) John J. Fennessy, M.D. Alvin Tarlov, MD.8:00 p.m. Informal Open House 2:30 p.m.- Obstetrics & Gynecology: Hematology/Oncology-"What's new in Obstetrics Stanley Yachnin, MD.and Gynecology and Infectious Diseases--Changes in CLI for the Elliot Kieff, MD.Wednesday, May I3-"Back to School" 80's" Nephrology-Arthur L. Herbst, M.D. Adrian Katz, MD."Current Advances in Pulmonary Medicine---7:30 a.m. Anesthesiology: Scrub Infertility and Tubal Whitney Addington, MD.7:30 a.m. Obstetrics: Grand Rounds Surgery" 5:00 p.m. Medical AlumniGeorge B. Maroulis, M.D. Association and AOA8:00 a.m. Surgery Procedures Lecture8:30 a.m. Alumni Registration "The Explosion ofVISITS Biological Information"9:00 a.m. New Frontiers of Medicine: WITH THE PROFESSOR Dr. Francis H. C. CrickPerinatal Problems Kieckhefer DistinguishedLawrence M. Gartner, MD. 3:00 p.m. Surgery Research Professor, TheProgram Director Transplantation- Salk InstituteFrank Stuart, M.D. 6:30 p.m. AOA Reception andHOSPITAL TEACHING Thyroid Cancer- Dinner for Students andROUNDS Edwin Kaplan, MD. Alumni of AOAPancreatic Cancer-9:00 a.m. Medicine: Resident's A. R. Moossa, M.D. 7:00 p.m. Class of 1946 DinnerMorning Report Dissecting Aneurisms--Constantine Class of 1951 Dinner9:00 a.m. Obstetrics & Gynecology: Anagnostopoulos, M.D.Oncology Conference Thermal Injury- Class of 1956 Dinner10:00 a.m. Medicine: Student John Heggers, Ph.D. Class of 1961 DinnerTeaching Rounds Short-Gut Syndrome---with Attending Dennis Shermeta, M.D. Thursday, May I4-Scientific SessionsPhysicians Neurovascular Surgery-John Mullan, M.D. 7:45 a.m. Dean's Breakfast honoring10:00 a.m. Radiology: Reporting Macrosections Revisited-Sessions Michael Simon, M.D. Century Club Members(By invitation)12:00 p.m. Class Chairmen's Head & Neck Cancer-Luncheon Meeting (By Gregory Matz, M.D. 9:00 a.m. Alumni Registrationinvitation) The Cancer Operation-George Block, MD. 9:15 a.m. Scientific Program by the12:00 p.m. Medicine: Morbidity & Distinguished ServiceMortality Conference and Humanitarian3:00 p.m. Medicine A ward RecipientsCHAIRMEN UPDATESArthritis & Metabolism- 9:20 a.m. "Malaria, Drugs and1:30 p.m. Anesthesiology: Michael Becker, MD. Hemolysis"4:30 p.m. "Scientific Session" Dermatology-A llan Paul E. Carson, S.B.'44,Donald Benson, MD. Lorincz MD. M.D., Professor andCardiology-Harry Chairman, Department of2:00 p.m. Medicine: Fozzard, MD. Pharmacology, Rush"Department Update" and Dr. Leon Resnekov, Medical College,Arthur Rubenstein, M.D. MD. Chicago, Illinois(continued on next page) 59:45 a.m. "Hereditary Hemolytic 11:00 a.m. "Malignant 12:15 p.m. A wards LuncheonAnemias and Glioma-Advances in 2:30 p.m.- Livres Des ArtistesErythrocyte Enzyme Management"Deficiciencies" Joseph Ransohoff, M.D.'41, 4:30 p.m.Ernst R. Jaffe, 5.8.'45, Professor and Chairman, 6:30 p.m. The Celebration honoringM.5.'48, M.D '48, Department of Joseph Ceithaml in hisProfessor of Medicine, Neurosurgery, New York thirtieth year as Dean ofHead, Division of University School of StudentsHematology, and Senior Medicine, New York, 7:30 p.m. Dinner and ProgramAssociate Dean, Albert New YorkEinstein College of11:25 a.m. "Delivery of Health CareMedicine of YeshivaUniversity, Bronx, New in an Urban Setting"York Abraham J. Kauvar, The Reunion Schedule will carry furtherMD.'39, President, New details of these events. Should you have10:10 a.m. "The Optic Nerve--Lifeline York City Health and any further questions, please call theof Vision" Hospitals Corporation. Medical Alumni Office at (312) 947-Albert M. Potts, Ph.D.'38, Formerly, Head of Health 5443.M.D., Professor and and Hospitals, Professor 11Chairman, Department of of Medicine andOphthalmology, Associate Dean,University of Louisville University of ColoradoSchool of Medicine, School of Medicine,Louisville, Kentucky Denver, Colorado.Reunion Week HighlightsDon't miss Nobel laureate Dr. Francis H. search around the world has resulted andC. Crick as he presents the Medical Alum­ni Association/AOA Lecture on "The Ex­plosion of Biological Information" Thurs­day, May 14 in Cobb Hall.Dr. Crick is best known as the co­discoverer of the genetic code. This theoryof the "double helix" structure of molecu­lar DNA in the 1950s made possible muchof modem biology. Subsequent genetic re-6 continues to result in information of primeimportance to the health sciences. It maywell be that the original discovery will tumout to be the single most important eventin biology in the 20th century.In addition to the Nobel Prize, which hewas awarded in 1962 with J.D. Watsonand M. H. F. Wilkins, he has beenawarded numerous other honors. He is aForeign Associate of the French, German,Irish and U. S. Academy of Sciences, aFellow of University College in London,an Honorary Fellow of Churchill Collegein Cambridge, as well as an Honorary Fel­low of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.Furthermore, he is the holder of the Royaland Copley Medals of the Royal Society ofLondon and has been a distinguished lec­turer at universities all over the world.His current interest, in addition tomolecular biology, involves developmentof the brain.We hope you will join us in welcomingthis distinguished guest to our campus dur­ing the Reunion Week festivities.• This year marks the thirtieth year thatJoseph Ceithaml has served as Dean ofStudents for the Pritzker School of Medi­cine and the Division of Biological Scien­ces. To _honor this occasion, plan onattending The Celebration on Thursday,May 14-a gala evening of tribute for histhirty years of dedication .Culver Hall?Where is Culver Hall?That's a question that we, in the Medical Alumni Associationoffice, hear often from our alumni.The Medical Alumni Association Office occupies part of thefourth floor of Culver Hall, in what had been the Biology Libraryuntil 1971. Today, Culver Hall houses not only the MedicalAlumni Association, but also the Development and Campaignoffices of the Medical Center, the Medical Center Public Affairsoffice, the editorial office for Perspectives in Biology and Medi­cine, faculty offices and laboratories. Perhaps you remember CulverHall as the building where Professor Heinrich Kluver kept hisoffice and monkey laboratories, or the place where your first yearanatomy lab almost did you in.Built in 1897, Culver Hall, at 1025 East 57th Street, is one ofthe four buildings that make up the ensemble known as Hull Court.Recognizable by its iron ornamental gate, Hull Court consists ofthe Anatomy and Zoology Buildings, the Erman Biology Centerand Culver Hall.The history of Culver Hall and Hull Court begins with the storyof one woman, Helen Culver.Helen Culver was one of those few people who seemed to beable to handle any job she chose. She was constrained only by hertimes. There was little a woman could do outside the home in the1800's.Culver, a native of upstate New York, was fortunate in beingable to receive an education at the Chamberlain Institute before thedeath of her father in 1851. She relinquished her family estate toher stepmother, and departed for Chicago in 1852 at the age of 20,where she became principal of one of Chicago's six elementaryschools. She continued there for six years, rising to a teachingposition in the high school.In 1858, the wife of her cousin Charles Hull became gravely ill.Knowing that her end was near, Mrs. Hull asked if Culver wouldgive up her teaching career and take care of her two young chil­dren, and Culver became mother to the Hull children.Soon Culver found that other responsibilities called. The CivilWar drew her away to Tennessee, where she was given the posi­tion of administrator of nurses in a Union hospital close to the bat­tle lines.When she returned, she found Mr. Hull still trying to rebuild hisbusiness from the crash of 1857. She joined with him in his far­flung national business. With no previous experience, she became areal estate executive. Hull's connections in the field and Culver'snew-found business acumen turned the company into a huge suc­cess in a matter of years. Culver became an indispensable part ofthe huge real estate operation, acquiring the rank of sole executivein charge of Chicago affairs.Both of Hull's children had meantime died, and when in 1889 hebecame seriously ill, he decided his wealth should go to a publiccause. He decided to let Culver dispense their joint wealth, anddied that same year. This was the year she turned over Hull's (and her) former resi­dence, Hull House, to Jane Addams. Her other large gift was tothe University. The school needed a biology laboratory, but couldnot find anyone to foot the $100,000 bill. Culver not only gave themoney for the lab itself, but also donated an additional $1 millionworth of real estate to the school to build Hull Biological Labor­atories and to support the study of biology.Culver requested that all buildings erected and endowmentsstarted with this money should be made in Hull's name. Thus thearea between Cobb gate and the iron ornamental gate is called HullCourt. The four labs erected with this money were the Anatomy,Zoology, Botany (now the Erman Biology Center), and Physiology(now Culver Hall) Buildings. Culver Hall still occupies the south­west corner of Hull Court.Renovation of the Hull Court buildings is planned as part of theMedical Center Modernization Program, and will be funded by the$35 million Renewal Campaign.Any time you are on campus, the staff of the Medical AlumniAssociation welcomes you to visit the alumni office, Room 400,Culver Hall. The phone number is 947-5443.7Construction Under Way!Construction on the Medical Center's new hospital and intensivecare tower is well under way, as the adjacent photos show.The six-story replacement hospital is being constructed on landowned by the University, along 58th Street, east of Maryland Ave­nue. It will replace approximately 468 of the oldest patient beds inthe existing Billings Hospital and Chicago Lying-in Hospital.Design and construction for the facility remain on schedule.Concrete work for the bulk storage area truck dock and mechanicalroom which will be underneath the new parking structure is virtual­ly complete and framing has already begun on the third floor.Sheet piling and caissons for the hospital have been placed andworkers are beginning to place forms for the foundation walls. Bythe beginning of May, they will begin erecting structural steel onthe hospital.These photos show various stages of the early construction proj­ect, which is expected to be completed by the Fall of 1983.89Rubloff pledges supportfor Medical CenterModernizationThe Medical Center's Renewal Campaign to fund the Moderniza­tion Program came one step closer to its goal earlier this year whenChicago real estate developer Arthur Rubloff pledged $5 million insupport of the project."This is an act of extraordinary generosity," said Hanna H.Gray, President of the University, about Rubloff's gift. "It will beof enormous significance to the University's long-range plans tostrengthen the Medical Center's academic programs and to providemedical care of unequaled quality. We are most grateful to Mr.Rubloff for his support and confidence in the University of Chica­go.In announcing the pledge, Rubloff said, "An ambitious under­taking of such significance to medical science, to the University ofChicago and to the city comes along perhaps once in a lifetime,and I wished to become involved through my personal support forthe project."The University's Medical Center Modernization Project," hecontinued, "is a far-sighted move to further enhance the medicalfacilities and programs which yearly benefit hundreds of thousandsof persons from Chicago and elsewhere."In response to Rubloff's pledge to Renewal, Robert B. Uretz,Vice-President for the Medical Center and Dean of the Division ofBiological Sciences and The Pritzker School of Medicine, said,"The need for private support of our facilities and programs inmedical education, research and health care is especially importanttoday. Mr. Rubloffs pledge ensures that our plans for the MedicalCenter will be successfully completed without a compromise in thequality of our efforts. "Rubloff was born in Duluth, Minnesota. He began his real estatecareer in 1919 in Chicago, and in 1930 founded Arthur Rubloff &Company. Since then, he has been deeply involved in real estateprojects that have had a major impact on the city of Chicago andother areas of the country.Rubloff has been associated with the University for many yearsand has supported a number of its special programs. He is a mem­ber of the Citizens Board of the University of Chicago and a Trus­tee of the University of Chicago's Cancer Research Foundation.His philanthropic interests have associated Rubloff with a num­ber of Chicago area organizations and institutions. In 1978, Rubloffdonated his collection of rare paperweights, considered to be theworld's largest and most important, to the Art Institute of Chicago.In 1975, he established the Josephine Rubloff Pulmonary Center atthe Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, as a memorial to his firstwife.10 Rubloff serves as Director and National Co-Chairman of the Unit­ed Cerebral Palsy Association, as well as Chairman and Directorof United Cerebral Palsy of Greater Chicago. His efforts on behalfof the Heart Attack Prevention program earned him a Life Mem­bership in the Chicago Heart Association, on which he serves asdirector. Other directorships include the Chicago Boys Clubs, theBergstrom Museum, the Hundred Club of Cook County, JuniorAchievement of Chicago, Lyric Opera of Chicago, and the Nation­al Conference of Christians and Jews. Rubloff is also a director ofthe State Street Council, and, as the creator of North MichiganAvenue's Magnificent Mile, the founder and now a director of theGreater North Michigan Avenue Association.Rubloff has been the recipient of a variety of awards and honors,including the 1955 Horatio Alger Award of the American Schooland Colleges Association, the 1973 Variety Club King of Hearts,and the 1980 Chicago Wedgewood Society Illustrations ModernsAward.Time is running out on the Kaiser Challenge!As this issue of Medicine on the Midway goes to press, con­tributions to our Medical Student Loans and ScholarshipsFunds from alumni have earned $35,000 of Kaiser matchingmonies. An additional $15,000 remains available but will belost unless our alumni come through before June 30 withnew or increased gifts to medical student aid funds. Ourmost critical need is in the area of loan funds. Kaiser match­es $1 for every $3 raised for these funds. Therefore wewould need to raise $45,000 more in loan fund contributionsto take full advantage of the Kaiser opportunity. Won't youhelp us meet this challenge?Contributions to the Medical Student General ScholarshipFund are similarly matched $1 for every $2 raised,Virginia Frei hails from rural Idaho. She graduated fromCarroll College in Helena, Montana with an outstandingacademic record. She has performed admirably in medic­al school. Her parents, both farmers, have not been in aposition to give her much financial assistance during herfour years at Pritzker. Even with partial tuition awards,Virginia Frei has had to borrow a total of $23,000 ineducational loans, including both State Guaranteed BankLoans and Medical School loans. In this, her final yearin medical school, she has received loans from both ourR. W. Johnson and Medical Alumni Medical StudentLoan Funds.Thomas St. Amour is a native of Chicago. He is 27 yearsold and married to a working R.N. He and his wife havea 2-year-old daughter. After receiving his Ph.D. inBioengineering at the University of Illinois Circle Cam­pus, he decided to study medicine. He has financed mostof his graduate school education with the aid of his wife'sincome and his own income from a part-time job andassistantships, but has also had to borrow. He thus en­tered medical school $2,600 in debt. This year, his firstat the medical school, he has already received a StateGuaranteed Bank Loan and a Medical Student Loanfrom our Max Goldenberg Medical Student Loan Fundfor a total of $7,000 in addition to a partial tuitionaward. and we welcome them. However, student loan funds repre­sent the most important and flexible. source of funding at thedisposal of the Dean of Students. These low interest and nointerest funds provide critical assistance at a time when thefinancial burdens of medical education are nothing short ofstaggering. Our medical students recognize and appreciatethe generosity of our alumni and friends in establishing andsupporting generosity of our alumni and friends in estab­lishing and supporting these medical student loan fundswhich enable so many of our students to help finance theirmedical education. We present the profiles of two students,one a freshman, the other a senior, whose medical studentcareers have been made possible through loans. They aretypical of our students in the scope of their financial needs.All contributions made to either our Medical Student Loan Funds or to our Medical Student General ScholarshipsFund before June 30, 1981, will still qualify for matching funds from the Kaiser Challenge Fund. We need thehelp of all alumni to secure the entire $50,000 in Kaiser matching funds.IIMedieval Medicine:two scriptural justificationsStephen R. Ell, M. D.12 called Paracelsus, 1493- The Middle Ages saw medicine dominated by religious thought.The goals of the discipline were often primarily moral rather thanpractical. The practice of medicine was frequently justified onscriptural grounds, as was the practice of nearly every occupation.Such justifications varied over time in a way indicative of overallintellectual attitudes. I propose to contrast two scriptural justifica­tions of medicine which bracket the medieval period both tempor­ally and intellectually. The change from the one to the other inmany ways mirrors the change from medieval to modern modes ofthought. The justifications are those of St. Benedict and of Para­celsus.Early medieval medicine was monastic in character. In the con­fusion and institutional collapse following the decline of Rome,few trained lay physicians remained in the West. Furthermore,there was no longer an educational apparatus to provide them. Aswith most of the classical heritage, continuity came through monas­teries. St. Benedict founded, in the sixth century, the most impor­tant monastic order of the age. Benedictine monks copied and readbooks, a function which maintained the perilous existence of manyclassical works.Benedict also enjoined his monks to practice medicine. "Aboveall things," he wrote, "care for the sick, for Christ said, 'I wassick and you visited me.' " This Benedictine medicine performed avariety of functions in the intellectual climate of the Early MiddleAges. For the monk, the practice of medicine was an act of humil­ity and a road of virtue. This is really medicine turned back uponitself. The physician in this system is the primary beneficiary of hiscare of the sick. The main perceived function of healing was adidactic one. Many persons were felt to be converted to Christian­ity by witnessing miraculous cures at the hands of holy men.The idea of medicine as being of moral benefit to the physicianhimself was not new. The Roman Law did not permit physicians tocharge a fee. Medicine was one of the liberal arts, whose practicewas its own reward in that it led to the cultivation of character andthe acquisition. Writers like Scribonius Largus saw medicine asfostering compassion and humaneness in the physician.The patient himself is not lost in this system. Many thinkers,such as Gregory the Great and Bede considered physical illness de­sirable to the individual, for it gave him the chance to realize thetransitory nature of life and to expunge some of his sins while stillon earth. To interfere in the course of an illness could be risky­for the patient.Much of this thought is based on a perceived dichotomy withinmedicine itself. Most medieval religious writers described a bodilyand a spiritual medicine. Fulbert, eleventh century bishop of Char­tres, wrote, "As Christians, we recognize two medicines, one forearthly matters, the other for loftier ones." The idea of the twomedicines was old in Fulbert's time. In its Christian form, it datedfrom the Patristic Period. Roman writers, notably Cicero, had madea similar distinction as well. The ideal medicine of the MiddleAges was predicated on the balance between the two medicines.Spiritual medicine was held superior. Thus St. Francis, like St.Benedict, bade his followers to visit their sick brothers. Their rolewas to prevent the sick person's becoming absorbed by his bodilyills. The Franciscans were to bring the sick to penitence. Peter theChanter saw the danger of physical illness in the patient's obses­sion with his own body. He feared lest the sick man be morepleased to see his physician than his confessor.In a sense, the truest expression of this view of medicineappeared among heretics. The Cathars, adherents of a twelfth andthirteenth century dualist doctrine, numbered many physiciansamong their priesthood. The Cathars abhorred the flesh, consider­ing it the product of the God of Evil. Yet Catharist priest­physicians loyally tended the sick. Partly they did so as an imita­tion of the Apostles, for Christ charged his Disciples with the careof the sick. Beyond that function, however, these priest-physiciansjudged those whom they might aid physically and those whom theymight aid by the consolamentum, the deathbed sacrament of theirreligion. When life could be preserved, it was, for life held thepotential for the acquisition of wisdom, which might permit the in­dividual to escape the cycle of rebirths in flesh in which theCathars believed. When the patient's life lay beyond the skill of thephysician, then the state of his soul in the face of death became thecentral focus.In many ways, this is a system of considerable moral elegance.Body and spirit are both taken into account and the moral implica­tions of medical decisions are placed in a grand conceptualframework. If one might argue that such medicine has little placefor technical progress, one must admit that the limitations of tech­nique were realistically taken into account. It is easy to forget howineffectual medieval and classical medicine was. Beyond a limitednumber of therapeutic interventions, such as the draining of an ab­cess, or the operation to remove a urinary tract stone (at huge risk),few medical actions had any real effect on the outcome of illness.In that situation, the emphasis on spiritual medicine is readily com­prehensible. Such concepts gave value and dignity to suffering anddeath, which were ineluctable regardless of the medical actionchosen. Suffering could at least be viewed as a way to wisdom andatonement. If life and indeed all worldly things are transitory, therecognition of this fact and its acceptance constitute a victory.The very concept of the two medicines, however, led inevitablyto tensions. As the medieval period witnessed intellectual growth,earthly medicine came to be viewed as possessing its own poten­tial. For Albertus, the goal of medicine was health, for medicinewas the forma et ratio sanitatis. Both Albertus and Peter Lombardconsidered the preservation of health as a good in itself.The potential conflict inherent in such views was compounded asthe practitioners of the two medicines became identifiably different. In the high medieval period, western Europe once again had agroup of trained lay physicians, who practiced medicine for a liv­ing. Some of them learned their craft at the new universities,though most were more practically trained.At the same time, the Church began to discourage the practice ofmedicine by the clergy. The reasons fOT, and the extent of, thiseffort are unclear. Formally, the principle often cited was that theclergy was obliged to avoid bloodshed. Taken literally, this forbadesurgery. Such concepts were expanded to include a prohibition ofthe clergy taking any action which might result in someone's death.This effort to withdraw the clergy from medicine was far fromcomplete (one of the late medieval popes was himself a physician),but the clergy completely lost its previous dominance in earthlymedicine.The high medieval period, with its grand hopes for human en­deavor, ended in war, depression, and plague. The incredible tollof the Black Death of 1348 recurred regularly thereafter, whichunderlined the ineffectuality of medicine as an adversary of dis­ease. Unfortunately, the technical advances capable of curing andcontrolling epidemic diseases lay centuries in the future.Still, efforts were made. Cities such as Venice imposed quaran­tines and established offices to safeguard public health. Hospitalswere scrutinized and regulated in a way to increase the benefitsobtained.In Paracelsus, the sixteenth century saw a man who desired anew medicine. His scriptural justification for medicine came fromDeuteronomy: "Honor the physician for you have need of him."Paracelsus and his followers abandoned much traditional medicinein favor of greater practical benefit. They argued that new methodswere necessary to oppose the frightening new crop of diseases con­fronting Western Europe. The biblical citation stressed the utility ofthe discipline. This view lacks the implications of spiritual gain tothe physician. Medicine's primary purpose is to heal the patient.Medicine qua medicine has become practical and earthly.We have seen in our own day the fruits of earthly medicine. Wehave obtained an almost terrifying degree of technical competencein an equally frightening lack of common values. Earthly medicinehas become spiritual medicine as well, for nothing can now justifyor ennoble inevitable suffering or death. Action is seen as good forits own sake, death as the ultimate enemy. If medieval physiciansmight have learned much from our technique, we might equallywell learn from them the value of a philosophically-groundedmedicine.Dr. Stephen R. Ell is a resident in the Department of Radiology.He holds a doctorate from the Department of History and is lectur­er in the Biological Sciences Collegiate Division.Erratum:In our summer issue, vol. 35, no. I, we erroneously identified thewoman in the picture with Timothy Buchman on page 19 (bottomright) as Mrs. Harold Lamport. She is Mrs. John Van Prohaska.Our profuse apologies to Mrs. Van Prohaska and to the family ofMrs. Lamport.I3Profile-the 1980 entering classJoseph CeithamlDean of StudentsThe new medical class assembled on September 24, 1980, for thecustomary three-day orientation period. The class of 104 had beenselected from 3,083 applicants, down slightly from last year's3,197. The number of applicants has decreased annually since1975, when there were a record 5,428. However, the quality of thetop 1,000 applicants each year has remained essentially unchanged.The 1980 entering class consists of 25 women (I married) and79 men (7 married). Eight entrants are in the Medical ScientistTraining Program (MSTP) leading to both the M.D. and Ph.D. de­grees, usually requiring 6 to 7 calendar years of studies. These stu­dents began their studies in the summer of 1980, the remaining 96students in the fall.All but two of the entering students possessed at least a bache­lor's degree. Three also have master's degrees. Three have Ph.D.degrees, two in chemistry and one in bio-engineering. Eleven stu­dents are from minority groups. One student is a Pakistani citizenfrom England. (See Table I.)The average age of the entering students (aged 20 to 29) was 22years, 78% of the students being under 23 years of age. Theyoungest student is an MSTP trainee who just turned 20. The old­est student, a young woman, had majored in Studio Art in college.She was a professional artist before deciding on medicine.Academic majors in college are shown in Table II. Most studentsmajored in sciences, especially biology (40%) and chemistry(31 %). Nine percent of the entering class had non-science majors.Table III shows the distribution of students by residence. Illinois,as usual, has the most with 42, followed by California and Michi­gan with 8 each, Indiana and Ohio with 7 each, and Wisconsinwith 5. Missouri, New Jersey and New York each has contributed4, and Connecticut, Minnesota and Oregon, 2. Eight states and oneforeign country have one each.The entrants' credentials are as follows: the average cumulativegrade point average (GPA) was 3.76 on a scale where 4.0 repre­sents an A and 3.0 a B grade. Science GPA (3.77) and non-scienceGPA (3.73) were nearly identical. The class was the third to havetaken the revised Medical College Admission Text (MCAT) andscored just slightly below last year's class. The new MCAT con­sists of six sub-tests, scored on a scale of I to 15. The sub-tests arein Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Scientific Problem-Solving, Read­ing, Comprehension and Data Analysis. The class averaged 10.6for the six sub-tests. Nationally it scored within the top 15th per­centile in each sub-test and somewhat higher than that for the entireMCAT. The class scored slightly higher in Chemistry, Physics,and Scientific Problem-Solving.Table IV lists the 53 different colleges and universities repre­sented in this year's class. The College of the University of Chica­go provided 23; of these, 4 are in a special ASHUM program (Artsand Sciences Basic to Human Biology and Medicine) in which theywill simultaneously complete the first two years of medical studiesand the requirements for a M.S. degree in Human Biology prior tobeginning their clinical studies. As in the past several years, thenext largest contingent (7) came from the University of Illinois,Urbana. Northwestern University contributed 5, the University ofMichigan and Loyola University in Chicago, 4 each, and NotreDame, 3 students. Two each came from II schools, while 36 otherschools each had one.14 The family educational background is heterogeneous. Six mem­bers of the class had one or both parents with less than a highschool education. Twenty two had a parent with either an M.D. orPh.D. degree. In 73 families one or both parents are college gradu­ates. Twelve students come from University of Chicago alumnifamilies (9 fathers and 5 mothers); in two instances both parentsare alumni. Six fathers received their M.D. degrees from the Uni­versity of Chicago, and of these, 5 also received their bachelor's de­gree from the University. Two other fathers earned their Ph.D. de­grees and one his M.B.A. degree at the University. Of the fivealumnae mothers, three received B.A. degrees and two, M.S. de­grees.Fathers include 14 physicians, 11 engineers, 7 business execu­tives, 6 lawyers, 5 university professors, 5 merchants, 4 chemists,3 high school teachers, 2 advertising executives and 2 optometrists.Among the other fathers are an anesthetist, banker, carpenter,commercial artist, contractor, cutter/grinder, deputy sheriff, diplo­mat, draftsman, factory inspector, financial analyst, furniture crafts­man, high school principal, hospital administrator, importer, juniorcollege teacher, laboratory technician, laborer, lithographer,machinist, molder, pawn shop clerk, plant foreman, railroad con­ductor, research consultant, safety representative, salesman, salesmanager, sanitarian worker, social worker, truck driver and uni­versity administrator. The occupations of 4 fathers are unknown, 4others are retired and 5 are deceased.Of the mothers, 40 were identified as homemakers while theothers have additional careers. There are also 13 schoolteachers, 6nurses, 6 secretaries, 3 each of artists, office workers and specialeducation teachers and 2 realtors. Among the other mothers arean accounting clerk, administration coordinator, advertising ex­ecutive, bookkeeper, budget analyst, businesswoman, collegeteacher, community relations representative, dietitian, dress grader,financial analyst, hotel manager, importer, label maker, librarian,machine operator, nursing home aide, personnel manager, physi­cian, school bus attendant, school psychologist, seamstress, socialworker, speech therapist, tax specialist and teacher's aide. Themothers of two of the entering students are deceased.This entering class, like those before it, displays the potential forgreatness. Our rigorous program of medical studies is specificallydesigned to prepare students for distinguished careers in medicine.Consequently, we fully expect that the interaction of this bright,personable, and talented group of students with a stimulating andchallenging curriculum, catalyzed by the presence of 'our excellentfaculty will produce highly competent, responsible and empatheticphysicians. Our faculty members join me in wishing the membersof the 1980 entering class every success in their academic en­deavors on campus to be followed by long, productive, and satis­fying professional careers.Joseph Ceithaml is Dean of Students in the Division of the Biolo­gical Sciences and The Pritzker School of Medicine and Professorin the Department of Biochemistry.TABLE I: ENTERING MEDICAL CLASS, 1980Men WomenSingle 72 24Married 7 1Married with children (1) (0)Total 79 25Total applicants (2,274) (809)American Oriental 2 6Black 1 0Hispanic 0 1Puerto Rican 0Pakistani 1 0----Total 5 7Total students 104Total applicants 3,083TABLE III: GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTIONOF ENTERING MEDICAL CLASS, 1980California 8 Missouri 4Colorado 1 Montana 1Connecticut 2 New Jersey 4Florida New York 4Hawaii Ohio 7Illinois 42 Oregon 2Indiana 7 PennsylvaniaKansas Tennessee 1Massachusetts 1 Wisconsin 5Michigan 8 EnglandMinnesota 2 Total 104Number of States: 20Number of Foreign Countries: 1 TABLE II: ACADEMIC MAIOR DISTRIBUTIONOF ENTERING MEDICAL CLASS, 1980Major Men Women TotalArt 0 1Biochemistry 5 2 7Biology 32 14 46Biomedical Engineering 3 0 3Biophysics 2 0 2Chemistry 27 8 35Chemical Engineering 0Economics 0English 1 1 2Mathematics 2 0 2Molecular Biology 0Natural Sciences 0Physics 1 0 1Physiology 2 0 2Preprofessional Stud ies 2 0 2Psychology 2 3 5Social Service Administration 0Zoology 0Totals 85' 29' 114''Four men and four women had double majors, andanother man had a triple major in college.TABLE IV: UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGE DISTRIBUTION OF ENTERING MEDICAL CLASS, 1980Adelphi University, NY (1)Barnard College, NY (1)Brown University, RI (1)Butler University, IN (1)University of California, Irvine (1)University of California, L.A. (2)Calvin College, MI (2)Carleton College, MN (1)Carroll College, MT (1)University of Chicago (23)City University of New York, Lehman (1)University of Colorado, Boulder (1)De Paul University, Chicago (2)Earlham College, IN (1)Duke University, NC (1)Florida State University (1)Grinnell College, IA (1)Harvard College (1) University of Illinois, Chicago Campus (2)University of Illinois, Urbana (7)Indiana University, Bloomington (2)Ithaca College, NY (1)Johns Hopkins University, MD (1)Kansas State University (1)Kenyon College, OH (1)Lawrence University, WI (1)Loyola University, Chicago (4)Marquette University, WI (1)Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1)University of Michigan (4)Michigan State University (1)Middlebury College, VT (1)University of Missouri, Columbia (1)Northwestern University, IL (5)University of Notre Dame (3)Oberlin College, OH (1) Ohio State University (1)Princeton University (2)Reed College, OR (2)Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, NY (1)St. Louis University, MO (1)College of SI. Catherine, MN (1)University of Southern California (2)Southern Illinois University (2)Stephens Institute of Technology, NJ (1)University of Tennessee, Knoxville (1)University of Toledo, OH (1)Tulane University, LA (1)Washington University, St. Louis (2)Wayne State University, MI (2)Wesleyan University, CT (1)Wheaton College, IL (1)University of Wisconsin, Madison (1)15Alumni Welcome FreshmenOn November 12, members of the 1980 entering class met atRobie House to relax and socialize at a wine and cheese partygiven in their honor. The occasion also served to kick-off theMedical Student! Alumni Host Program, sponsored by the MedicalAlumni Association. Fifty-four Chicago-area alumni are participat­ing in the program, serving as informal counsel and professionalfriends to the first-year students.The party gave students a chance to meet their alumni hosts, aswell as mingle with various faculty members. Joining them in thefestivities were: A. N. Pritzker, benefactor; Cornelius Vander Laan,M.D. ('44), chairman of the program; Robert B. Uretz, Vice­President of the Medical Center and Dean of the Division of Biolo­gical Sciences and The Pritzker School of Medicine; and JosephCeithaml, Dean of Students for the Division of Biological Sciencesand The Pritzker School of Medicine.Top photo: Dr. Marcel Frenkel ('58), alumnihost, discusses alumni projects with MedicalAlumni Association President, Dr. Louis Cohen('53).Bottom photo: Conferring together are JosephCeithaml, Dean of Students, Dr. Randolph Seed(' 60), Secretary of the Medical Alumni Associa­tion and alumni host, and Dr. Robert Schmitz(' 38), Vice-President of the Medical AlumniAssociation and alumni host.16Clockwise from upper left: Susan Tanabe, student, enjoys the festivities; Nealand Anna Uitvlugt, students, chat with Mrs. Betty Vander Laan, hostess; Dr.Paul Volkman (,74), alumni host, Dr. Helen Carlson ('40), alumni hostess,and students listen attentively to A. N. Pritzker, Medical Center benefactor;Dr. James Crawford ('54), alumni host, listens to Dean Uretzs opening re­marks.17Focus on PediatricsAn interviewwith Dr. Lawrence GartnerDr. Lawrence M. Gartner assumed the chairmanship ofthe Department of Pediatrics last July. He comes to theUniversity after 27 years of service at the Albert EinsteinCollege of Medicine in New York, where he was Direc­tor of the Division of Neonatology and Professor ofPediatrics. He received his B.S. in 7954 from ColumbiaUniversity and his M. D. in 7958 from Johns HopkinsUniversity. Dr. Gartner's clinical and research specialtyareas include neonatology and liver disease in children.He was interviewed for Medicine on the Midway by Dr.Richard Landau, Professor in the Department of Medicineand the College.Landau: Chairman of clinical departments are not just heads ofacademic departments but are chiefs of staff and business adminis­trators. What is it that attracted you to the position as chairman ofour Department of Pediatrics?Gartner: I gave much thought to that question before I made thedecision to come to the University of Chicago. I was ripe in myown career to try something more challenging. I found that after anumber of years doing the same kind of research-as exciting andsuccessful as it was-and the same kind of teaching, it just wasn'tenough. I now realize that I was bored and that I was looking for achallenge. As for the U. of C. specifically, even on my first visit Ifelt quite at home. I felt very comfortable with the people, theirvalues, and with what I thought and continue to think are the enor­mous opportunities to build something. There are very fewacademic departments of pediatrics in which it is still possible todevelop new programs, but this is one with great opportunity, espe­cially great since the starting point is already so high.Landau: How do you envision the Department of Pediatrics willbe like six years from now, after two terms as chairman? What doyou wish to build?Gartner: I envision a number of new and innovative research andclinical programs. Some of them are of my own personal interest­neonatal and hepatologic pediatrics-sections of the Departmentcurrently in need of development. Neonatology clearly needs a bigboost in staffing as well as a major input in research. I think weare now well on the way to a rebirth of neonatology. Dr. K wangSun Lee came with me from Einstein to head up this section. He isan outstanding, internationally recognized investigator and clini­cian. Two young faculty have also been selected for July to joinwith one other for a total of four. A new physical plant for neona­tology is also desperately needed. The commitment to build onewas made before I arrived and was part of the attraction for me.The new hospital will have a 36-bed intensive care nursery of themost modem design, immediately adjacent to the new deliverysuites of the new Chicago Lying-in Hospital. We have been able todesign exactly the type of facility we need for patient care,teaching and research.18 Landau: These facilities are currently in the existing ChicagoLying-in. The new facilities would be in the new hospital. Whatwill be the administrative arrangement in the new facility?Gartner: The Intensive Care Nursery has always been in theLying-in Hospital, which is where it belongs. The operation of thatnursery is part of the Department of Pediatrics even though it ishoused in the Lying-in. We are also looking toward developing amajor clinical research program in neonatology, coupled with theprograms in the Department of Obstetrics at both the Lying-in andMichael Reese Hospitals-all components of the University of Chi­cago Perinatal Center.Landau: What is neonatology? How does it differ from other sub­specialties in Pediatrics?Gartner: Neonatology involes the treatment of any infant bornalive, regardless of size. The smallest babies now that are survivingweigh as little as one pound. Survival at that weight is rare, butsome do survive. We cared for an infant in New York weighing 14ounces (420 grams) who lived and went home. Unhealthy full-terminfants are also treated by neonatologists. These infants remain inthe intensive care and special care nurseries until they are dis­charged from the hospital. For most, the length of stay is only aweek to a month, but we have occasionally treated infants who re­mained hospitalized for as long as six months or even a year. Forstatistical purposes the newborn period ends at 28 days after birth,but for clinical management, it extends well beyond. The neonatol­ogy group maintains interest in their patients for many years-fol­lowing their later development and growth.Landau: So this would include pulmonary problems, cardiac prob­lems ....Gartner: ... infectious, gastro-intestinal, liver, metabolic andneurologic disorders.Landau: And apparently this area of pediatrics is as different fromthe rest of pediatrics as pediatrics is from internal medicine?Gartner: Yes. Neonatology has become increasingly specializedboth in terms of the body of research knowledge and the trainingand clinical techniques.Landau: What other changes do you envision for the Department?Gartner: Dr. Dorfman's program in biomedical genetics has beenone of the major achievements of the Department for many years. Iwant it to continue, but also to expand into human clinical geneticswith development of genetic diagnostic and counseling programscoupled with extensive clinical research and teaching in this area.Other new programs are also planned. Some are already underway. The pediatric endocrinology program has been very successfuland is growing very well, particularly in research work. The sameis true of pediatric cardiology and pediatric immunology. The liverand GI program in pediatrics (which is one of my personal in­terests) is an area that is also ripe for rapid growth. I should pointout that each of these programs maintains close links with the De­partment of Medicine and also with the basic science departments.Landau: Let me change the subject a little. If I were a psychiatristI would feel that the great hope of psychiatry lies in the area ofpediatric psychiatry. Do you have any plans in that direction?Gartner: We have a new child psychiatrist, Dr. Bennett Leventhal,who has just joined the staff. He is already developing a trainingprogram not just for child psychiatry, but for pediatricians, as well.We have started close collaboration to design teaching and investi­gational programs in behavioral and developmental pediatrics. Wealready have expertise in this Department in these areas, but we aredrawing them together into a cohesive program which will improveour teaching and clinical care in all parts of the Department both atWyler and at La Rabida Hospitals. Expansion of the formal childpsychiatry training program is also planned. We will have close in­tegration of all aspects of child psychiatry and developmentalpediatrics with members of the team having joint appointments inboth departments.Landau: What about psychological research in conjunction withthis? Is this likely to expand?Gartner: Within the Department of Pediatrics we have severalpsychologists including Paul Weiner, an infancy and early child­hood psychologist, who has been doing work in development formany years and has a well-funded program. We are very interestedin expanding research into other psychiatric/psychological and de­velopmental areas, including the effects of prematurity, adolescentpregnancy, impact of critical illness, and preparation for death anddying. These are all fields in need of new insight.Landau: It is my impression that this city has rather few real spe­cial facilities in Pediatrics. There is Children's Memorial and thisinstitution, but I do not know whether there are others comparablealthough there are other hospitals that take care of children. Givenyour need for special patient populations, those with G.I. disease,serious psychiatric disease, or problems of perina to logy , is the hugeprimary care responsibility for the neighborhood going to prove too burdensome? Is it likely that efforts will be madc to curtail to someextent the great amount of acute medicine?Gartner: We do not plan to curtail primary care. The South Sideneeds more and improved primary care. Obviously, the space with­in the hospital is limited. We are affiliated with institutions andfacilities that provide community health care services. For instance,at the Woodlawn Child Health Center on 6lst Street, we operate acommunity-based child health care program of 25,000 outpatientvisits a year. We also provide additional primary care at La RabidaChildren's Hospital in the highly specialized areas of chronic dis­ease. If appropriate funding can be found in the future, we wouldlike to expand to provide more primary care for children on theSouth Side. We are also considering future affiliations with severalother hospitals on the South Side for improved medical care. Whenwe cannot provide the kind of primary care that is needed in anarea ourselves, we would encourage development of programs atthese other hospitals to provide that kind of care.Landau: What do you foresee for the future of La Rabida in termsof its relationship with the Department of Pediatrics?Gartner: The future there is an interesting one. We are now in theprocess of recruiting a new medical director for the institution.What attracted me to the U. of c., to a significant extent, was LaRabida, which has some remarkable people. Since I have a greatdeal of personal interest in chronic disease through my liver work,I view this as an opportunity to develop an interdisciplinary, non­categorical program for the care of children of all ages with seriouschronic disease. The institution up to the present time has concen­trated on rheumatologic diseases, asthma and child abuse. We havealready planned expansion into many new areas of chronic disease,such as long-term hyperalimentation for patients with short bowelsyndromes, long-term care of respirator-bound infants and children,physical rehabilitation of trauma and bums, long-term care of chil­dren with cirrhosis and chronic hepatitis and many more.Landau: That also will depend on the existence of faculty in theareas involved. Will these physicians be based at La Rabida?Gartner: One of the guiding concepts for La Rabida will be thatprimary care general pediatricians will be the mainstay of the careof the chronically ill children. They will become specialists ingeneral disease and provide the base support for care of children incollaboration with subspecialists who may have their primary baseat Wyler, La Rabida or Michael Reese. This is a plan for a fullyintegrated three-hospital center.Landau: Will it be possible under these circumstances for someonewho is interested in research in liver disease, for example, to carryout this work?Gartner: Yes. As a matter of fact, we had a model for this in NewYork that worked very well. General pediatricians and nurse practi­tioners cared for chronically ill children with a wide variety of liverdisorders. They became collaborators in collecting the data andspecimens as needed. That worked out extremely well-probablybetter than having the subspecialists in the role of primary carephysicians for these children, whether in their own institution or inanother building.191980Honor RollThe University of Chicago Medical Alumni Associationsalutes its generous contributors20The University of Chicago Medical Center1980 Fund Report to Alumni and FriendsDear Alumni and Friends,Thank you for responding to the 1980 Medical CenterAnnual Fund. Your generous response helped us achievea new record in Alumni support. I would like to sharesome of the highlights with you.Total dollars raised increased 33% to $590,92l.Unrestricted gifts increased 19% to $154,235.Student aid gifts increased 44% to $189,265.Donors to named gift clubs increased 15% to 1,088.Alumni participation increased to 41 %.This year the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation of­fered us a $50,000 challenge grant for new and increasedgifts for student aid. This became the special emphasis ofthe 1980 Annual Fund. We have almost generated suffi­cient gifts to reach our goal, and I feel confident that bythe challenge deadline of June 30th we will have earnedthe entire $50,000. A report on the Kaiser challenge ap­pears elsewhere in the magazine.Facilitated by the outstanding efforts of our classchairmen, alumni participation increased to 41%. Elevenclasses reached over 50% participation. Even our mostrecent alumni, the Class of 1980, had 25% of its mem­bers make a first gift.On the following pages you can review the statisticalcomparisons of the 1980 Annual Fund with the previousyear, along with the accomplishments of our MedicalSchool classes. You will see the names of those alumniand friends who responded to our appeal and those whosegenerosity qualified them for a donor gift club.I am grateful to the donors who contributed to thesuccess of the 1980 Annual Fund. As we look ahead werecognize the challenges of the 80's. The commitment ofalumni and friends will become increasingly important inthe years ahead as inflation continues to cut deeper intocurrent operating funds and endowment. We hope wewill continue to merit your support in 1981.Sincerely,Randolph W. Seed, M.D. (,60), Ph.D.ChairmanMedical Center Annual Fund21Percent ofClass Chairman ParticipationTop Class 1947 Henry DeLeeuw 66%1957 Francis H. Straus II 63%Participation 1946 Edward Munnell 58%1950 Attallah Kappas 57%1960 Randolph Seed 56%1962 B. H. Gerald Rogers 55%1955 Sumner Kraft 54%1951 Arnold Tanis 53%1954 Jerry Seidel 52%1953 Marvin Weinreb 50%1931 50%Class ReportNo. in No. of 1980 $ Percent ofClass Class Chairman Class Donors Amount Participation1931 6 3 $ 600 501932 9 4 455 441933 7 3 150 431934 10 2 200 201935 Vida Wentz 39 14 2,535 361936 John P. Fox 31 13 3,245 421937 Joseph Teegarden, Jr. 25 12 870 481938 Willard B. Weary 40 16 1,755 401939 Leon O. Jacobson 30 12 4,044 401940 Gerald B. Macarthy 29 11 2,920 381941 John J. Bertrand 40 18 4,560 451942 46 15 3,095 331943 March Campbell Cutler 47 15 1,625 321943 Dec. William E. Froemming 42 14 1,300 331944 J. Alfred Rider 54 24 9,644 441945 Stewart Taylor 52 23 5,920 441946 Edward R. Munnell 50 29 11,960 581947 Henry De Leeuw 50 33 7,875 661948 Asher Finkel 44 15 1,560 341949 Mary D. Carroll 49 20 1,925 411950 Attallah Kappas 51 29 6,560 571951 Arnold L. Tanis 58 31 5,435 531952 Benjamin Spargo 59 25 5,360 421953 Marvin Weinreb 64 32 6,195 501954 Jerry Seidel 62 32 6,050 521955 Sumner C. Kraft 63 34 6,714 591956 Walter B. Eidbo 69 32 8,671 461957 Francis H. Straus II 65 41 4,515 631958 Gerald P. Herman 68 27 2,870 401959 Everett H. Given, Jr. 67 32 8,235 481960 Randolph Seed 72 40 9,535 561961 Dennis K. Wentz 73 34 5,580 471962 B. H. Gerald Rogers 66 36 32,102 551963 Rostik Zajtchuk 64 29 4,550 451964 Daniel Paloyan 63 28 5,595 441965 Robert G. Hillman 66 24 3,575 361966 Julian J. Rimpila 57 27 2,636 471967 Andrew J. Griffin 71 30 2,955 421968 Burr S. Eichelman 62 27 2,634 441969 Andrew J. Aronson 60 28 2,705 471970 Calix to Romero 67 26 5,039 391971 Mary Ann Polascik 67 25 2,300 371972 Eric and Lucille Lester 72 33 2,680 461973 Richard F. Gaeke 85 34 2,615 401974 John and Pamela Gallagher 86 25 1,740 291975 Maga E. Jackson 109 35 2,835 321976 David Hall 108 29 1,105 271977 Burton F. Vander Laan 98 26 775 271978 James W. Fasules 105 31 908 301979 DeCarr Dowman Covington III 99 20 765 201980 David Dries 109 27 911 25Total 2,985 1,225 $220,383 41%22Medical Center Donor Participation1980 1979University of ChicagoM. D. DegreesRush Medical CollegeDivision of the BiologicalSciences: M.S., Ph.D. DegreesNon-Alumni Former HousestaffFaculty - AlumniFaculty - Non-Alumnifriends 1,225278 1,02434518141222696 1662522810464Total 2,220 2,289Medical Center Fund Comparisons1980 1979Unrestricted Gifts:Medical Center and Division ofthe Biological Sciences $154,235Student Aid 189,265Restricted Gifts 234,751Matching Gifts 4,590AMA - ERF 8,801Bequests (177 , 302) $125,071105,56861,1822,8454,284Total $590,921 $398,950Medical Center Donor Categories1980 1979Phoenix Society($2500 or more annually)Dean's Associates ($1000)Midway Club ($500)Century ClubOthersBequests 2467539441,1266 71488091,361Total 2,220 2,28923Bequests to the Medical CenterMedical CenterPhoenix Society The Estate of Dr. Harold BowmanThe Estate of Dr. Arthur GoetschThe Estate of Mr. Max GoldbergThe Estate of Dr. John S. GordonThe Estate of Mr. William LoedheThe Estate of Mrs. Golden S. LamportGifts of $2500 OT moreMrs. William Bloom' 19 Ph. B.Dr. John M. DavisDr. Catherine Dobson R'32Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell DudnikovDr. and Mrs. HughEdmondson R'31Dr. John W. Green, Jr. '46Dr. Charles B. HugginsMedical CenterDean's Associates Dr. Clara Ritchie Johns '41Mr. and Mrs. Edward KapelanskiFrancis L. Lederer FoundationDr. Ann Pearson '47Mr. A. N. PritzkerDr. Clarence Reed R'24Roesing Family FoundationGifts of $1 000 or more Dr. B. H. Gerald Rogers '62Dr. and Mrs. Boris Schuster R'37Dr. Simon Shubitz R'36Dr. Donald F. Steiner '56Stein-Freiler FoundationDr. Cornelius Vander Laan '44Mrs. Delferd R. Walser '24 Ph.B.Anonymous (1)Dr. Joseph Afterman '51Dr. Lampis Anagnostopoulos '61Dr. George Andros '60Dr. and Mrs. William BarclayDr. Helen Rislow Burns '25Dr. Robert Callaghan '62Dr. Ralph F. Carlson '45Dr. Clarence Cawvey '55Dr. Louis Cohen '53Dr. Robert Costarella '64Fred J. Early, J r. FoundationDr. Clayton Edisen '53Dr. Walter Eidbo '56Dr. Daniel Fortman '40Dr. Nicholas Fugo '50Dr. Everett Given, Jr. '59Dr. Harvey Glasser '59Dr. and Mrs. Dallas Glick '54Dr. Robert B. Gordon '52Dr. Herbert Greenlee '5524 Dr. Clifford Gurney '51Dr. Paul Harmon R'31Mr. and Mrs. Philip HofferDr. Richard JonesKaiser Steel CorporationDr. Attallah Kappas '50Dr. Ralph Kirsch '39Dr. James Knecht '63Dr. Elwood Kronick '59Dr. Stephen LernerDr. William Lester '41Dr. Herman Linn R'37Dr. Gerald Macarthy '40Dr. Chauncey Maher, Jr. '45Dr. Harold Marcus '51Arthur R. Metz FoundationDr. Rudolph MoragneDr. Edward R. Munnell '46Dr. Edward S. Murphy R'36Dr. Martha Jane Mutti '70Dr. Frank Newell Dr. Oliver Nichols '52Dr. and Mrs. Walter Palmer R'21Dr. Paul Patchen R'30Dr. Morton Pearce '44Dr. and Mrs. Leroy PeschDr. James F. Regan '35Dr. J. Alfred Rider '44Dr. Raymond Robertson '45Mrs. A. Louis RosiDr. Randolph W. Seed '60Dr. Irving E. Slott R'35Dr. Kendrick A. Smith '36Dr. Edward Spencer '60Dr. Barbara SpiroDr. Sarkis Telfeyan '42Dr. Otto Trippel '46Dr. Leo Van Der Reis '54Wasserman Family FoundationDr. Bruce Wiley '60Dr. Edward Woodward '42Dr. Clarence Young '53Medical CenterMidway Club Gifts of $500 or moreDr. Samuel Adler R'37Dr. Eugene G. Anderson '56Dr. Thomas W. Andrews '63Dr. Robert AuerbachDr. Joan E. Carlson '62Dr. Kee N. Chan '64Dr. David CofrinDr. James Dahl '59Dr. Hugh L. DavisDr. Henry Deleeuw '47Mr. Thome DeuelDr. L. Alan Drake '70Dr. Thomas F. Dutcher '54Dr. Stanley A. Englund '64Dr. Joseph P. EvansMrs. Howard A. Felding '27 Ph.D.Dr. Evans Z. FiakpuiDr. Otto Bousquet GagoDr. Robert A. Goepp '67 Ph.D.Dr. E. Jack Harris '55Dr. David T. Hellyer '44Medical CenterCentury Club Dr. Kenneth O. Hendricks '60Dr. Frederick W. Hornick '65Dr. leon O. Jacobson '39Dr. Mihailo M. JevticDr. Richard A. Katzman '55Drs. John and lorraine Kottra '65Dr. Kai B. Kristensen '57Dr. James T. Lambeth '61Dr. Theodore levine '56Dr. Jack J. lewisDr. [ui-Kuang LinMrs. Anne MacphersonMartin B. Mathews '49 Ph.D.Dr. James A. McClintock '42Dr. Dale V. Moen '39Dr. Hallie E. Moore '61Dr. Bill M. Nelson '52Dr. Yoshio Oda '59Dr. Constantine G. Panos '56Drs. Michael and lauren Plumer '70 Dr. louis F. Plzak, Jr. '58Dr. Mary Ann Polascik '71Dr. Mary M. Porter '39Dr. Alexander P. Rernenchik '51Dr. John R. Russell '45Dr. Raymond L. Schwinn '59Dr. Edward H. Senz '46Dr. Joseph Skom '52Dr. Jean A. Spencer '50Dr. Frederick J. Stare '41Dr. Costello Cornwallis Stokes '75Dr. William Armory Taylor R'16Dr. Robert Warner '39Dr. Willard Weary '38Dr. Marvin S. Weinreb '53Drs. Stephen and MaryWeinstein '72Dr. James R. WilliamsDrs. Rostik and JoanZajtchuk '63, '66Gifts of $100Anonymous (1)Dr. Walter J. Aagesen'40Dr. Ruth Aaron '37Dr. Sander M. Abend'56Dr. Robert K. Adamson'48Dr. Whitney W.AddingtonDr. Jack J. Adler '62Dr. Carl R. Ahroon III'65Dr. Charles M.Alexander '58Dr. William C. Allen '60Dr. Florence D. AmesR'21Dr. Joe G. D. AndersonDr. Robert Anderson '61Dr. Roscoe B. AndersonDr. Kenneth W. Andre'72Dr. George J. AndrosDr. Joseph P. Arcomano'49Dr. Catherine A.Armstrong '42Dr. Earl M. Armstrong'73Dr. John D. Arnold '46Dr. Jacob S. AronoffR'37Dr. Andrew J. Aronson'69 Dr. John D. Arterberry'57Dr. Varda P. Backus '57Dr. Charles R. Bacon '49Dr. Dean R. Bahler '50Dr. Hillier L. Baker, Jr.'47Dr. Neal H. Baker '60Dr. William H. Baker '62Dr. Louis W. Baldwin'59Dr. Maria BalkouraDr. John C. Ballin '55Ph.D.Dr. Eugene L. Balter '56Drs. Nancy and DavidBarber '61Dr. J. Roland Barberio'47Dr. Maurice P. Barcos'75Dr. Robert I. Barickman,Jr. '44Dr. Sam S. Barklis '47Dr. Charles F. Barlow'47Dr. Barbara D. Barnes'65Dr. Charles A. BarnesR'37Dr. Joseph M. Baron'62Dr. Harris W. Barowsky'75 Dr. Michael E. Barricks'65Dr. Berle I. Barth '59Dr. Gregory BarthaDr. Gerald D. Barton '46Dr. M. Dennis Barton'63Dr. Robert Barton '67Dr. Harold N. Bass '63Dr. James W. Bateman'72Dr. John L. BattyDr. Clarence M. Baugh'54Dr. Carl H. Baumann '51Dr. Adnan B. BaydounDr. William G.BeadenkopfDr. David D. Beal '61Dr. John M. Beal '41Dr. Mark S. Beaubien'46Mr. Robert N. BeckDr. Roger W. Becklund'61Dr. Marc Beem, Sr. '48Dr. Julius Belinkoff R'32Dr. John R. Benfield '55Dr. Jack B. Bennett '47Dr. Donald W. Benson'50Dr. George Benson R'32Dr. Harold Bernstein '56Dr. Joel R. Bernstein '71 Dr. Marvin J. Bernstein'64Dr. John J. Bertrand '41Dr. Richard N. BeskowR'33Dr. Paul L. Bessette '70Dr. Robert L. BestosoR'40Dr. William F. BethardR'42Dr. Stanley J. Bezek, Jr.'72Dr. Daniel K. Billmeyer'46Dr. Jacob D. BitranDr. Eugene H.Blackstone '66Dr. Richard K. Blaisdell'47Mrs. Lloyd E. Blauch '39Ph.D.Dr. Michael E. Blaw '54Dr. M. Eleanor Blish '38Dr. Marcus T. BlockR'31Dr. Mathew H. Block'43Dr. Edward T. Blomquist'41Dr. Clara D. Bloomfield'68Dr. J. R. Bloomfield '52Dr. Dorothy N.Bogdanow Dr. Michael Bonfiglio '43Dr. John T. Bonner '63Dr. E. L. Borkon '37Dr. David Borman '64Dr. John A. Bostrom '62Dr. Louis P. Botta R'27Dr. Harold I. Boverman'56Dr. Richard C. BoyerDr. Richard C. BozianDr. Wilbur G. BrahamR'39Dr. Lloyd L. Brandborg'55Dr. Abraham A. BrauerR'25Dr. Arnold K. Brenman'55Dr. Howard L. Bresler'57Dr. Diana J. Breslich '73Dr. Paul J. Breslich R'28Dr. Caesar Briefer '59Or. Herbert I. BrizelDr. Donald S. Broder '62Dr. Judith T. Broder '63Dr. Nicholas Van LiewBrokaw '80 Ph. D.Dr. Kenneth S. Brown'60Dr. James L. BrowningR'28Dr. Albert W. Brownlee'6125Dr. Faylon M.Brunemeier '55Dr. Dean L. Bunderson'46Dr. Scrichitra C. Bunnag'64 Ph.D.Dr. Hildahl I. BurtnessR'30Dr. Russell B. Butler '67Dr. Jon D. Byler '70Dr. Wallace Byrd '35Dr. Norman L. Cadman'53Dr. Patrick Campbell '67Dr. Kenneth M.Campione '47Dr. Donald C. Cannon'60Dr. Donald L. Cantway'67Dr. Robert H. Caplan'61Dr. Richard E. Carpenter'43Dr. Mary E. D. Carroll'49Dr. Leon A. Carrow '47Dr. Byron L. Casey, Jr.'43Dr. M. Louise Cason '50Dr. Raymond M. CassidyR'29Dr. Marilyn SedonaCebelin '75Mr. Joseph J. Ceithaml'41 Ph.D.Dr. Henry T. ChangDr. Robert M. Chanock'47Dr. Myron G. Chapman'51Dr. Ruth F. Charles R'39Dr. A. Max Chaurnetre ,Jr.Dr. John J. Chiakulas '51Ph.D.Dr. John T. Chiles '69Dr. Anna-Marie Chirico'50Dr. Joseph c. Chisholm,Jr. '60 M.S.Dr. Sam S. Chrisos R'40Dr. Ralph P. Christenson'38Dr. Eugene ChukudebeluDr. George K. T. Chung'66Dr. P. LeMon Clark, Jr.R'34Dr. Mark G. Coan '70Dr. Warren Alan CoaxDr. Sarah B. CobbsDr. David G. CoganDr. Bruce E. CohanDr. R. Catherine CohenDr. Eli B. Comay '57Dr. Donald Comiter '60Dr. Clinton L. Compere'37Dr. Harold T. Conrad'58Dr. Joseph Conway R'3926 Dr. David A. Cook '69Dr. Martin J. Cook R' 41Dr. Robert E. Cook '45Dr. Norman R.Cooperman R'38Dr. H. Cary Coppock '41Dr. Eugene C. Corbett,Jr. '70Dr. Howard F. Corbus'52Dr. Joaquin Co toDr. DeCarr CovingtonIII '79Dr. James W. Crawford'54Dr. G. Campbell Cutler'43Dr. Earle P. DaleMrs. Walburga P. Dalton'28 Ph.D.Dr. Richard E. Daniels'56Dr. Paul T. Davidson '62Dr. Domingo De LaFuenteDr. Jan P. De Roos '73Dr. Loren T. DeWind'45Dr. Allen M. Dekelboum'60Dr. Donald J. Depinto'68Dr. Kenneth R. Diddie'73Dr. Dean F. Dimick '53Dr. Salvatore Dina, Jr.R'34Dr. Israel A. Dinerman'34Dr. Frederick H. Dobbs,R'35Dr. Richard L. Dobson'53Dr. William Dock R'ZZDr. Richard H.Dominguez '66Dr. Lincoln V. Domm'26 Ph.D.Dr. Lilian Donaldson '40Dr. Samuel H. Doppelt'73Dr. Albert Dorfman '44Dr. Peter DorisDr. James DoughertyDr. Charles F. DowningR'42Dr. William ClayDrennan '46Dr. Jeffrey W. Dubb '68Dr. David R. Duffell '57Mrs. Irma W. Duncan'50 Ph.D.Dr. Werner R. DziadzkaDr. Walter G. Eades '73Dr. Richard H. Earle '57Dr. Edwin G. Eby '45Dr. Peter Economus '61Dr. Jack P. Edelstein '56Dr. William A. Ehlers'68Dr. Evelina W. EhrmannR'Zl Dr. Burr S. Eichelrnan'68Dr. Edwin H. Eigenbrodt'59Dr. Charles Eil '74Dr. James H. Eldredge'51Dr. W. RobertElghammer '47Dr. Juliette M. EliscuR'36Dr. Charles Ellenbogen'64Dr. Howard R. Engel '55Dr. Murray Engel '72Dr. Wolfgang EpsteinDr. Kermit C. Ericsson'57Dr. Alexander Ervanian'53Dr. J. Nick Esau R'32Dr. James A. Esterly '63Dr. John S. Evans '39Ph.D.Dr. Richard H. Evans '59Dr. Shirl O. Evans, Jr. '51Dr. Alan I. Faden '71Dr. Mark E. Faith '69Dr. William FallerDr. Albert J. FarrellDr. Donald J. Faulkner'54Dr. Jerry E. Fein '61Dr. Alvan R. Feinstein '52Dr. Philip J. FeitelsonDr. David FeldDr. Bruce P. Fenster '78Dr. Marianne FerraraDr. Jose A. Filos-Diaz '50Dr. Victor H. Fink '44 '74Dr. Asher Finkel '48Dr. Harry W. Fischer '45Dr. Donald A. FischmanDr. Frank W. Fitch '53Dr. Ronald J. Fitzgerald'75Dr. Kathleen H. FlohrDr. Roberto F. Fortuno'50Dr. David S. Fox '44Dr. John P. Fox '36Dr. William Fox '71Dr. William P. Fox '44Dr. Harry A. FozzardDr. David H. Frank '71Dr. Janice G. Frank '74Dr. William P. FrankR'35Dr. Jeffrey Frankel '66Dr. Paul G. Fredrickson,Jr. '50Dr. Paul A. Freiter '80Dr. Floyd A. Fried '61Dr. Sigmund W.Friedland '60Dr. Ralph FriedlanderR'38Dr. William E.Froemming '43Dr. Willard A. FryDr. Peter G. Gaal '54Dr. James I. Gabby '53 Dr. Charles G.Gabelman '44Dr. John M. Gaca '76Drs. Mary Ellen andRichard Gaeke '75, '73Dr. Leon J. Galinsky '34Dr. John F. Gallagher '74Dr. Pamela M. Gallagher'74Dr. Paul A. Gallagher'72Dr. Thomas F.Gallagher, Jr. '62Dr. Edward Ganz '67Dr. Robert K. Gassier '43Dr. Theodore H.Gasteyer R'31Dr. David A. GehlnoffDr. Richard A. GelineDr. Herbert Z. Geller '57Dr. Robert D. Gerwin'64Dr. R. KennedyGilchrist R'31Dr. Frances McNiell Gill'65Dr. Paul C. GillilandR'29Dr. David J. Ginsberg '58Dr. Michael J. Ginsberg'71Dr. Harry T. Glaser R'28Dr. James E. GlasserDr. Paul B. Glickman '53Dr. Maurice E. GlockDr. Donald J. Glotzer '52Dr. Louis Gluck '52Dr. Jon P. Gockerman'67Dr. Mark A. Goldberg'62Dr. Michael F. Golden'58Dr. James M. Goldinger'41Dr. Milton GoldmanR'34Dr. Martin G. GoldnerDr. Gary W. Goldstein'66Dr. Madeline K.Goldstein '61Dr. Morton H. Goldstein'59Mr. Eugene Goldwasser'50 Ph.D.Dr. Manuel R. GomezDr. Eugene Y. Gootnick'52Dr. Elsa Gordon '52Dr. Leon Gordon '52Dr. Seymour B. Goren'58Dr. Anthony A. Gottlieb'61Dr. Lawrence I. Gottlieb'56Dr. Frank J. Grabarits '68Dr. Norman I. Graff '49Dr. Philip W. Graff '46Dr. John H. GrahamR'42 Dr. Richard L. Grant '59Dr. Edward W. Grey '39Dr. John T. Gravhack'47Dr. Charles GreenbergR'32tOr. Maurice H. Greenhill'36Dr. David S. Greer '53Dr. James A. Grider, Jr.R'35Dr. John Arthur GriepDr. Andrew J. Griffin '67Dr. Max E. Griffin '46Dr. Dale S. Grimes '55Dr. William Gronewald '64Dr. Maria Gumbinas '66Dr. Carl H. Gunderson'58Dr. Robert E. LeeGunning '50Dr. Dale Hager '41Dr. Donald L. Hager '60Dr. Cornelius S. HagertyR'32Dr. John S. Haigh R'38Dr. David C. Halperin '61Dr. B. Halperin R'38Dr. Bela HalpertDr. Eugene Halpert '56Dr. Arno H. Hanel '60Mrs. Chester E. Hansen'50 M.S.Dr. Joseph HarasztiDr. Merel H. HarmelDr. David S. Harrer '65Dr. Judith Hartman '75Dr. Moses Hartman R'33Dr. Thomas Harwood '45Dr. Arnold R. Haugen'54Dr. Leland G. Hawkins '60Dr. Noel HaydenDr. James HeckmanDr. Bruce R. Heinzen '46Dr. Kingsbury G. Heiple'53Dr. Zolman HelfandDr. John A. HenkeDr. Earl W. Henry '74Dr. L. Dell Henry '35Dr. Walter R. Hepner,Jr. '44Dr. Gerald P. Herman '58Dr. Geoffrey B. Heron '71Dr. Raymond C. Herrin'33Dr. Samuel T. Herstone'37Dr. Frank E. Hesse '45Dr. Ruth M. Heyn '47Dr. David J. Heywood'59Dr. Imre HidvegiDr. Ralph L. High R'38Dr. Russell G. HightowerR'37Dr. Mary M. Higley '73Dr. Thomas B. Hill '50Dr. Elliott B. Hochman'69Dr. Clarence V. Hodges Dr. William T. Kabisch'41 '54 Ph.D.Dr. Glenn R. Hodges '67 Dr. Sidney P. Kadish '67Dr. Jack Hoekzema R'34 Dr. George KaganDr. Noel L. Hoell '64 Dr. Frederic R. Kahl '67Dr. Paul B. Hoffer '63 Dr. Walter J. Kahn '59Dr. Michael B. Hoffman Dr. David B. Kalayjian'69 '67Mr. Philip C. Hoffmann Dr. Arthur N. Kales '65'62 Ph.D. Dr. Soo Sang KangDr. John R. Hogness '46 Dr. David P. KapelanskiDr. Paul H. Hohm '43 '77Dr. Theodore A. Hohm '41 Dr. Henry S. KaplanDr. Elbridge T. Holland, R'40Jr. '75 Dr. Karen Kaplan '69Dr. Vincent P. Hollander Dr. Laurel E. Karges '49'44 Ph.D. Dr. Robert Karp '70Dr. John A. Holt Dr. Lawrence D. KartunDr. and Mrs. Richard '55Homer '53 Dr. Herman E. KattloveDr. Theodore C. Hooker '62'49 Dr. Dewey KatzDr. William F. Hopkins Dr. Julian Katz '62'57 Dr. Michael W. KaufmanDr. Chikao G. Hori '72R'39 Dr. Abraham J. Kauvar '39Dr. Edward N. Homer '45 Dr. Audrey B. Kavka '76Dr. William S. Horowitz Dr. Henry M. Kawanga'48 Dr. Carl H. Keller '57Dr. Llewelyn P. Howell Dr. Robert W. Keller '66'31 Dr. Leland E.Dr. Te Shen Hshei Kellerhouse, Jr.Dr. Robert L. Hunter, Jr. Dr. Frances O. Kelsey '50'65 Dr. William C. KennerDr. Edward D. Hutt '75 IIIDr. Duane F. Hyde '51 Dr. John F. Kenward '44Dr. Paul R. Hyman '62 Dr. Thomas F. KeoughDr. Theodore M. Ingis '59_'71 Dr. S. Bruce KephartDr. Henry S. Inouye '51 Dr. Graham A.Dr. Julien H. Isaacs '46 Kernwein '31Dr. Fred L. Jacobs '75 Dr. Richard D. KershnerDr. Douglas R. Jacobson '47'65 Dr. Nelson Y. Kiang '55Dr. Samuel Jacobson '68 Ph.D.Mr. Tobias Jacobson '51 Dr. Charles KimballM.S. Dr. Neil B. Kimerer '44Dr. Ernst R. Jaffe '48 Dr. David A. Kindig '68Dr. Norman J. James '64 Dr. Albert G. KingDr. Robert W. Jamplis Dr. Peter D. King '54'44 Dr. Nicholas C. KinnasDr. Wayne E. Janda '65 Dr. Raphael K. KinneyDr. John A. Jane '56 '37Dr. Charles T. Janovsky Dr. Donald B. Kinsler'73 '59Dr. Edward R. Janowitz Dr. Joseph c. Kiser '57'60 Dr. William A. KiskenDr. Robert S. Jason '58Dr. E. Roy John '54 Dr. Ronald Klar '71Ph.D Dr. Joel E. Kleinman '73Dr. Charles F. Johnson Dr. Arthur P. Klotz '38'54 Dr. Frederick M.Dr. Charles R. Johnson Knierim R'31'53 Dr. Russell F. KnopeDr. Dorothy Davies Dr. William B. Knox R'20Johnson '71 Dr. Vincent c.v. Ko '63Dr. Newell A. Johnson Dr. Matthew W. Kobak'49 R'41Dr. William M. Jones '32 Dr. Charles Koch '35Dr. Robert E. Joranson Dr. Timothy R. Koch '80'44 Dr. Jean G. Kohn '50Dr. Paul H. Jordan, Jr. Dr. Kate H. Kohn R'35'44 Dr. Martin S. KohnDr. Walter K. Jung '68 Dr. Masaru Koike '54Dr. Joseph Just '64 Dr. Louis W. Kolb '62 Dr. Horst R. Konrad '63Dr. Sumner C. Kraft '55Dr. Bernard Kramer R'38Dr. S. Walter Kran '56Dr. Kenneth D. Krantz'73Dr. Stanley J. Kreider '65Dr. George W. Kriebel,Jr. '69Dr. Thomas T. Kubota'74Dr. Paul R. Kuhn '56Dr. Dwight R. Kulwin'73Dr. Werner Kunz '55Dr. Fangtsun KuoDr. Kenneth Z. Kurland'58Dr. Joseph D. Lackey, Jr.'53Dr. Edward L. LadenR'40Dr. Fredric D. LakeDr. Anthony F. Lalli '54Dr. Paul K. Lam '56Dr. James L. LambDr. John W. Lamb '64Dr. Richard G. Lambert'40Dr. John H. Landor '53Dr. Robert W. LangleyR'20Dr. Gerald S. LarosDr. John Larrabee '42Dr. Luis LarramendiDr. Harold Laufman R'37Dr. Eric W. Lauter '51Dr. Walter Lawrence, Jr.'48Dr. Ivan C. LeCompte '50Dr. George V. LeRoy '35Dr. Lester Lebo R'41Dr. Stephen H. Lebowitz'72Dr. Leonard R. Lee '47Dr. Soo K wang LeeDr. E. E. Lefforge '43Dr. Albert L. LehningerDr. Robert C. Lentzner'63Dr. William Leong, Jr.'61Dr. Benjamin H. LernerR'33Dr. Lee D. Leserman '73Dr. Barry S. Levine '64Dr. Robert S. Levine '53Dr. Albert Levy '54Dr. Mark R. LevyDr. Jack K. Lewis '51Dr. Lawrence M.Lichtenstein '60Dr. Peter J. Lindberg '65Dr. James Lindblade '62Dr. Herbert A. LintsDr. Emanuel C. Liss R'37Dr. Milly Liang LiuDr. Wei C. Liu '55 M.S.Dr. Vivien Loh '57Dr. John P. Lombardi '45Dr. Enrique H. LonghiMrs. Clayton G. LoosliDr. Emmett Lorey, Jr.'55 Dr. Andrew E. Lorincz'52Dr. Donald M. LoveDr. John Y. Low '75Dr. Harry LoweDr. Gary D. Lower '62Dr. Abbie R. Lukens '50Dr. Clarence Lushbaugh'48Dr. Leonard J. Lyon '62Dr. Thomas J. Madden'44Dr. Hywel Madoc-jones'73Dr. James Magidson '57Dr. Henry C. Maguire,Jr. '54Dr. Mahmood MahdaviDr. Lawrence P. Maillis'52Dr. Samuel MaimonDr. Sidney J. Malawer'60Dr. Morris Malbin R'38Dr. Matthew M.MalerichDr. Harold M. Malkin'51Dr. Harold M. Maller '60Dr. Henry MankinDr. Gerald J. Margolis'60Dr. Renee K. Margolis'66 Ph.D.Dr. Richard U. Margolis'66Dr. Paul L. Margulies '70Dr. John S. T. MarkDr. Charles E. Marshall'42Dr. Teackle W. Martin'72Dr. David J. Martini '72Dr. William H. Massover'67Dr. Thomas D. MastersR'30Dr. Ruth A. SmithMatsuo '70Dr. Gregory J. MatzDr. Robert E. May '57Dr. Thomas May, Jr. '70Dr. AlvardMayorga-CortesDr. Jack D. McCarthy'51Dr. William F. McColl,Jr. '55Dr. Wallace G. McCune'43Dr. Angus McDonaldR'25Dr. John T. McEnery '58Dr. Barbara L. McGann'59Dr. Charles J. McGann'60Dr. James McGrath '45Dr. Gerald McInerneyDr. William W.McIntyre '72Dr. Richard V. McKay'43Dr. Thomas J.McNaughton Dr. Robert L. McTrustyIII '60Dr. Sharon C. Mead '55Dr. Hyman J. MeltzerR'42Dr. Leland G. Mew '75Dr. Fred N. Miller R'24Dr. Roscoe E. MillerDr. Gregory J. Milrnoe'73Dr. Eugene R. Mindell'45Dr. Victor J. Mintek '46Dr. Frederick S. Mishkin'62Dr. Shizuro Mizuire R'32Dr. Robert H. Moe '46Dr. Clarence W. MonroeR'33Dr. Francis B. Monroe'41Dr. Stanley E. MonroeR'36Dr. Robert A. Moody '60Dr. Hideo D. Mori '56Dr. Peter Morse '63Dr. Reza S. Mostofi '77M.S.Dr. Ruth Moulton '39Dr. Charles R. Mowery,Jr. '43Dr. Charles A. MuddDr. Charles E.Muhleman R'37Dr. G. Arthur Mulder'43Dr. Richard P. MullerDr. James E. Mungas '70Dr. George T. MurphyR'25Dr. David T. MurrayR'38Dr. Everett E. MurrayR'20Dr. Raymond G. Murray'42 Ph.D.Dr. Thomas Y. NakaoR'42Dr. George L. Nardi '44Dr. Cornelius A. Navori'52Dr. Richard H. Neal '51Mr. Kenneth H. Nealson'69 Ph.D.Dr. Sidney W. NelsonDr. Richard J. Neudorfer'51Dr. Wayne M. Nichols '60Dr. Harry A.Oberhelman, Jr. '47Dr. John H. Oberhelman'57Dr. Felix H. Ocko R'37Dr. Yvo T. Oester '43Dr. Robert Okin '67Dr. Dunlap Oleson '46Dr. Harry S. Olin '57Dr. Jose Oliver-Gonzalez'41 Ph.D.Dr. Mary B. OlneyDr. Frank). Orland '49Ph.D.Dr. Paul K. Orsay '60Dr. David G. Ostrow '7627Dr. Evelyn AdamsOthman '49Dr. Charles E. Ott '57Dr. Charles E. OxnardDr. Angelo K. Ozoa '66Ph.D.Dr. Daniel J. PachmanDr. Milan J. Packovich '61Dr. Robert Painter '41Dr. Daniel Paloyan '64Dr. [ung ParkDr. Joseph A. Parks, Jr.'43Dr. James J. Pattee '44Dr. Cary S. PeabodyDr. Sarah A. PearlDr. Jerry P. Pendras '57Dr. Selwyn J. Pereira'56Dr. David M. Perin '67Dr. Emanuel Peterfreund'50Dr. Harlan R. PeterjohnDr. Laurence R. Peterson'73Dr. Frank M. Petkevich'37Dr. Carl W. Pierce '66Dr. Anthony Pizzo'45Dr. and Mrs. Louis F.Plzak, Sr. R'28, '59M.S.Dr. Ronald B. PortDr. Daniel Porte, Jr. '57Dr. John Post '37Dr. Joseph Post '37Dr. Albert M. Potts '38Ph.D.Dr. William J. PowellDr. William F. Powers'69Dr. Robert A. Preisman'61Dr. Jean H. Priest '53Dr. Robert E. Priest '54Dr. Bernard B. Pritzker'73Dr. Julio J. Pro '60Dr. Theodore J. Pysher'73Dr. David T. Quanbeck'62Dr. Marion A. Quinn '72Dr. Harold A. QuintR'23Dr. Robert J. Raiman '51Dr. Edgar A. Rainin '65Dr. Alfonso RamayoDr. Robert Ramsey '72Dr. Stephen Rand '71Dr. Pisit RangsithienchaiDr. Robert C. RanquistR'36Dr. Bernard J. Ransil '64Dr. Rosemary J. Raphael'51Dr. Sylvan H. Raphael'52Dr. Arthur Rappeport R'31Dr. Reed C. Rasmussen'70Dr. Richard A.Rasmussen '38Dr. C. George Ray '6028 Dr. A vtar RazdanDr. Owen Reese R'40Dr. Raoul E. Reinertsen'62Dr. George J. Reul, Jr.Dr. J ames RhodesDr. George S. Rhyneer'64Dr. Irwin Rich '52Dr. Joseph Richard '57Ms. Dolores M. RichertDr. Dean L. Rider II '78Dr. David Rifkind '57Dr. William J. Riley '60Dr. and Mrs. Julian J.Rimpila '66Dr. Jerry N. RingerDr. Aldon N. Roat '49Dr. Stephen M. Robbins'67Dr. Cicely F. RobertsDr. Ernest S. RobertsR'28Dr. Jack C. Robertson'55Dr. David Rochester '71Dr. Richard E. Rodgers'62Dr. Arnold J. RodmanR'37Dr. Irma De L. RodriguezDr. Elsa J. RoeDr. Thomas Roland '54Dr. Calixto A. Romero,Jr. '70Dr. Deborah S. Rose '67Mr. Irwin Rose '52 Ph. D.Dr. Norman A. Rose '57Dr. C. Peter Rosenbaum'56Dr. Stanley Rosenblatt'59Dr. Arthur H.Rosenblum '35Dr. Daniel Rosenblum'66Dr. Robert Roskoski, Jr.'64Dr. Weldon T. RossDr. Lyle H. Rossiter, Jr.'62Dr. Isadore Rossman '42Dr. Donald A.Rothbaum '68Dr. Herbert J.Rothenberg '51Dr. Donald Rothman '63Dr. William RottersmanR'37Drs. Janet and DonaldRowley '48, '50Dr. Raymond S. Roy '39Dr. Norman M.Rozansky '60Dr. Irving Rozenfeld '47tOr. Richard 1. Rubinstein'55Dr. David G.Ruschhaupt '66Dr. Charles J. Ruth '47Mr. Ray Rutledge '30Ph.D.Dr. Stuart RyersonDr. Edith G. Sabshin '51Dr. Maria O. Sacris Dr. Leo Sadow '51Dr. Virginia C. Saft '53Dr. Mark Sajjadi '54Dr. Joel F. Sammet '33Dr. Gene H. Samuelson'64Dr. Thomas SanchezDr. Nils F. Sandstrom'71 M.S.Dr. Phisit SaphyakhajonDr. George A. SatherR'37Dr. Richard N. SatherR'37Dr. Winston SatterleeDr. Howard Schachter'63Dr. John H. Schaeffer'46Dr. Fenton Schaffner '43Dr. Lois G. Scheimann'54Dr. Stephen M. Scher'68Dr. Mark S. Schiffer '71Dr. Richard L. Schilsky'75Dr. Charles M.Schlossman '63Dr. John F. Schneider'63Dr. James A.Schoenberger '43Dr. Joseph C. Schoolar'60Dr. Eugene 1. Schreiner'69Mr. Gilbert F. J. Schrodt'33 M.S.Dr. Fredric A. Schroeder'55Dr. Melvin SchudmakDr. Sidney Schulman '46Dr. L. Peter Schwiebert'74Miss Martha H. Scott '29M.S.Dr. Orland B. Scott '44Dr. Morris J. Seide '53Dr. Jerry G. Seidel '54Mrs. Ruth M. Sellers '39M.S.Dr. Coleman R. Seskind'59Dr. Buel L. Sever '43Dr. Philip D. Shanedling'37Dr. Bertrand J. Shapiro'61Dr. Charles M. Shapiro'54Dr. Howard A. Shapiro'55Dr. Roger L. Shapiro '49Dr. John E. Sheedy R'37Dr. Yiu-Wah ClementShekMr. Paul C. Shelley '29M.S.Dr. Joanna H. Sher '56Dr. Susan J. CookShumway '60Dr. John A. Sibley '46Dr. Gordon S. Siegel '54Dr. Saul M. Siegel '55 Dr. Mark Siegler '67Dr. Bernard Silber '37Dr. Julius Silberger, Jr. '57Dr. Louis B. SilvermanR'37Mr. Eric L. SimmonsDr. Richard D. Simon'44Dr. George A. SimpsonDr. David Singer '55Dr. Milton Singer '51Dr. Jack C. Sipe II '68Dr. William H. Sippel'51Dr. Albert Sjoerdsma '49Dr. Lawrence E. Skinner'35Dr. William R. Sloan '67Dr. Paul Siotwiner '59Dr. Donald P. Smiley '50Dr. Brian N. Smith '60Dr. Kenneth M. Smith'37Dr. Lawrence F. Smith'46Dr. Ralph O. Smith '43Dr. W. McFate Smith'51Dr. Louis S. Smolensky'72Dr. Joseph M. SmolevDr. Mark A. Snyder '60Dr. James A. Soderberg'75Dr. Richard S. Sohn '68Dr. Donna M. Sommer'54Dr. John L. Sommer '53Dr. Robert E.Sonnenburg '62Dr. Benjamin H. Spargo'52Dr. H. Gladys Spear '38Dr. Louis H. SpectorR'37Dr. Samuel SpectorDr. Malcolm C. Spencer'43Dr. Ronald B. Spinka '61Dr. Robert G. Stagman'62Dr. Philip J. Stein R'37Dr. Ralph Stephan '51Dr. W. Mary StephensR'32Dr. Loraine M. Stern '69Dr. Lynne Stettbacher'62Dr. Paul B. Stewart '57Dr. Edwin L. Stickney'54Dr. Leonard A. Stine '40Dr. Jerrold M. Stock '68Dr. Marvin Stone '62Dr. Edward H. Storer '45Dr. Nada Logan Stotland'67Dr. Richard B.Stoughton '47Dr. James D. StrattonR'37Dr. Francis H. Straus II'57Dr. Walter A. Stryker'41 Dr. George W. Stuppy'32Dr. Jerome Styrt '45Dr. James A. Survis '58Dr. Charles F. SuttonR'36Dr. Harold G. Sutton,Jr.Dr. David SwarnerDr. William J. SweelyR'32Dr. Donald M. Switz '62Dr. George E. Tagatz '61Dr. Leong T. Tan '58Dr. Arnold L. Tanis '51Dr. Roy T. Tanoue R'40Dr. D. J. Taylor '52Dr. Harris C. Taylor '65Dr. Stewart F. Taylor '45Dr. Joseph A. Teegarden,Jr. '37Dr. Donald E. Temple'58Dr. David M. Terman'59Dr. Charles E. Test '41Dr. Peter B. TheobaldR'37Dr. M. C. ThirumoorthiDr. Colin G. Thomas,Jr. '43Dr. E. Gregory Thomas'46Dr. Randall L.Thompson' 40Dr. Sharon L. ThomsenDr. Frank S. ToloneDr. Betty Lou Tom '66Dr. Sanford S. Tom '57Dr. Jerry J. Tomasovic'65Dr. Robert David Toon'73Dr. Stuart J. T oporoff '65Dr. Hernando TorresDr. Nello P. Torri '45Dr. David Neil Toth '72Dr. Thomas T.Tourlentes '47Dr. Guy L. Tourney R'37Dr. Axel Trangsrud '38Dr. Paul S. Treuhaft '68Dr. Dan L. Tritch '68Dr. Richard W. Trotter'40Dr. Peeing Jau TsaiDr. David J. Tschetter'35Dr. Nicholas G. Tsoulos'66Dr. Michie TsunooDr. Violet H. Turner '40Dr. Sakae Uehara '55Dr. John E. UltmannDr. Marshall R. Urist '37M.S.Dr. Stanley A. Uriu '58Dr. Robert G. Van Etten'52Dr. Albert L. Van NessDr. Thomas L. VanderLaan '79Dr. Jose Luis Velazquez'72Mr. Ferdinand VerdonckMrs. Margriet Verdonck'78 Ph.D.Dr. Paul J. Vincent '57Dr. Gerald W. Vogel '54Dr. Bert J. Vos R'37Dr. Gert VossDr. Harold Wagner '50Dr. Jay E. Wagner '57Dr. Samuel Wagonfeld'62Dr. Verner S. Waite '54Dr. Herbert Wald '38Dr. Jerome WaldmanR'42Dr. Stephen J. Walker'75Dr. Susannah B. Walker'75Dr. Robert Wallach R'31Dr. Edmund N. Walsh'36 Dr. Philip D. WalsonDr. Herbert E. Warden'46Dr. Nancy E. Warner'49Dr. Sherwyn E. WarrenDr. Tom T. WatanabeR'38Dr. John A. WatsonR'40Dr. William O. Webster'43Dr. William C. Weese'69Dr. Robert J. Weiler '58Dr. Richard WeinbergDr. William M. WeinerR'30Dr. Irwin M. Weinstein Dr. Mary M. Weinstein'72Dr. Stephen H.Weinstein '72Dr. Alan M. Weintraub'56Dr. John M. Weir, Jr.'37Dr. Sanford G.Weissman '49Dr. John J. Weiter '68Dr. Dennis K. Wentz '61Dr. Vida B. Wentz '35Dr. Peter W. Werner '63Dr. John P. Westergart'51Dr. Jeffrey S. Wexler '70Dr. Joseph G. White '63Dr. Robert J. White '63Dr. William D. White'63Medical Alumni Donors by Class Dr. Gail F. Whitman '76Dr. Dorothy B.Windhorst '54Dr. Robert J. Wirtshafter'51Dr. Max V. WisgerhofDr. Fred Winsberg '55Dr. Robert W. Wissler''49Dr. Eugene C.Wittenstrom '64Dr. Robert L. Wollmann'69Dr. Edward A. Wolpert'60Dr. Wayne Won WongR'40Dr. Barry E. Wright '73Dr. George D. Wright'61Dr. James K. Wright '73 Dr. Masa Yamamoto '51Dr. Luis R. YarzagarayDr. Eugene YearginDr. William YehDr. Donald E. Y ochem'31Dr. Morton Yohalem '35Dr. Robert D. Zaas '57Dr. John D. Zachary '67Dr. Theodore N. ZekmanR'34Dr. Stanley Zemer '50Dr. Nicholas T. Zervas'54Dr. Perry Zevin '56Dr. Sheldon ZinnDr. Frank G. Ziobrowski'40tDeceasedDonors to the Medical CenterDonors to other University fundsRush Medical College Alumni are listed under the year the certificate was awarded.University of Chicago Alumni are listed under the year the alumnus considers his or her class.tDeceased1911 Rush 1923 Rush 1926 Rush H. Dick Countryman Frank HolecektLouis Smith William Corr Julian Bruner Daniel Cunningham Paul JohnsonWilliam Meyer Helen Rislow Burns Arthur Ferguson Frederick Knierim1915 Rush Harold Quint James Ellis Paul Gilliland Samuel MillerEdmund Jacobson Elmer Vorisek Harold Henke Jacob Golden Arthur RappeportStanley Lawton Myrtle Jackson Donald Sabath1916 Rush 1924 Rush Irene Mead Roy Langdon Lawrence SadlekEloise Parsons Baker Lucia Tower Charles Lesage Jacob SchoolnicEdwin Hirsch Wayne Brandstadt tVictor Levine Zaven SeronWilliam Taylor W. Noble Carter 1927 Rush M. Mulvania Louis SilvermanFred Miller Louis Botta Mildred Nordlund Jack Sloan1918 Rush Ernest Olson Edward Compere Harold Parsons Louis SoloffJoseph Calvin Mila Pierce John Davis Vernon Schick Edward SteichenHarold Caylor Clarence Reed Stella Davis Peter Schunk Albert TerryC. Phillip Miller Paul Rhoads tWard De Young Alexander Wolf Robert WallachHerman Weishaar Arthur Wilson Elmer Olson Howard WeaverDominic Zerbolio Minnie Perlstein 1930 Rush1920 Rush Louis Plzak, Sr. Samuel Berger 1931 U of CWilliam Gallagher J. C. Thomas Rogers Leonidas Berry Llewelyn P. HowellGeorge Irwin 1925 Rush Theodore Smith Harry Brandman Graham A. KernweinWilliam Knox Abraham Braver Hildahl Burtness William SteenRobert Langley George Callahan 1928 Rush Thomas Masters Donald E. YochemEverett Murray Paul Cannon J. Paul Bennett Benjamin Neiman 1932 RushChester Williams Arthur Coombs Martha Bernheim Paul Patchen Marshall BakerPaul Ellwood Paul Breslich Theodore Proud Julius Belinkoff1921 Rush Walter Hoeppner James Browning Abraham Schultz George BensonFlorence Ames Robert Johnstone Harry Glaser Harry Shapiro Samuel BernsteinCarl Dragstedt Ellen Leong Palmer Good William Weiner Floyd BondEvelina Ehrmann Angus McDonald Helen Hayden Catherine DobsontAnna Grey George Murphy Priscilla Olson 1931 Rush M. Elizabeth DowningAbraham Lash Glenway Nethercut Ernest Roberts Anthony Bay George EisenbergWalter Palmer Erroll Rawson Allan ShohetEsther Somerfeld- Marcus Block J. Nick EsauGail Soper Ziskind Isaac Vandermyde John Dorsey Morris FinkelHoward Wakefield Hugh Edmondson Walter Gower1922 Rush Sol Wolffson 1929 Rush Theodore Gasteyer Charles GreenbergPedro Castaing Eugene Ziskind John Brewer R. Kennedy Gilchrist Cornelius HagertyWilliam Dock Raymund Cassidy Paul Harmon Daniel Kingsley291937 Rush Joseph Teegarden, Jr. Walter HambourgerShizuto Mizuire Joseph RushtonJack Abrams Elaine Thomas Leon JacobsonTom Paul Irving SlottAbraham KauvarSamuel AdlerRalph KirschPaul PerkinsJacob AronoffPercy Poliak 1935 U ofC Dale MoenJoseph Shaffer Sam Banks Ruth Balkin1938 Rush Ruth MoultonW. Mary Stephens Theodore Burkholder Charles BarnesLouis Baer Lauren NeherWilliam Sweeley Wallace Byrd Peter BeinarEugene Boros Roy NelsonEli BernsteinFrederick Owens, Jr.Clayton Weber Eugene Chang non Wesley Bosworth Norman CoopermanRobert Cohen Leonard Braun Frederick Eihl Mary Porter1932 U ofC James Hall, Jr. Adrian Brodey Samson Fisher John RoweWilliam Moses Jones Elizabeth Gentry Elmer Broen Ralph Friedlander Raymond RoyRobert Porter L. Dell Henry Irving Crain Morris Friedman Robert WarnerLucile Robey Lent Johnson Paul Doehring Francis FryJoel F. Sammet George LeRoy Martin Dollin John Haigh 1940 RushGeorge W. Stuppy Alfred Margolis Effie Ecklund B. A. Halperin Robert BestosoArthur Rosenblum Walvin Giedt Robert Hasterlik Helen Carlson1933 Rush James Regan Sanford Goodfriend Ralph High Sam ChrisosRichard Beskow Lawrence Skinner Seymour Greenwald Bernard Kramer Frederic De PeysterAllan Filek David Tschetter Russell Hightower Evelyn Levitin Julius FriedHarry Goldberg Jay Venema Heinz Hoffman Morris Malbin Frank HillMoses Hartman Edmund Walsh Ann Huizenga Sydney Mannel Henry KaplanHarvey Karam Vida Wentz Mayer Hyman Horace McGee Stephen KruzichJohn Keith Morton Yohalem William Klein Lester Mermell Edward LadenT. Jackson LaughlinHarold Laufman David Murray Irvin PilgerBenjamin Lerner 1936 Rush Charles Lawrence Irwin Neiman Owen ReeseHarry Miller A. Lawrence Bennett Henry Lederer Arthur Robinson Vincent SchilleciClarence Monroe Samuel Bolonik Herman Linn Herman Serota Kazimer SkubiLouis Newman Frances Brennecke Emanuel Liss Joseph Walzer Bums SteeleWilliam Stein Harold Brumm Irving Lornhoff Tom Watanabe Roy TanoueMarshall Cohen Oliver Lowry Lester Wold John Watson1933 U ofC Thomas Dorrance Francis Lyle Wayne Won WongJustin Frank Juliette Elise u Robert Mindrup 1938 U of CMaurice Friedman Earl Fisher Charles Muhleman Charlotte Babcock 1940 U ofCRaymond Herrin Stephen Gates John Nelson M. Eleanor Blish Lilian DonaldsonS. Kenneth Robinson Howard Hamilton Felix Ocko David Bodian Daniel FortmannRoland Kesler Richard Pettit Ralph Christenson Horace Gezon1934 Rush Louis Krafchik Wallace Pierce Clinton Compere Richard LambertP. Le Mon Clark, Jr. Edwin Lennette Nathan Plimpton Carl Davis, Jr. Gerald MacarthyJohn Cremer Stanley Monroe Arnold Rodman Gerald Demarest Roland OlssonSalvatore Dina, Jr. Edward Murphy Rudolph Rosenberg Henrietta Herbolsheimer Leonard StineAlbert Frank Adolph Nachman William Rottersman Arthur Klotz Randall ThompsonStanton Friedberg Simon Pollack Allan Sachs Richard Rasmussen Helen TrotterMilton Goldman Robert Ranquist George Sather Robert Schmitz Richard TrotterJack Hoekzema John Reiger Richard Sather Clark Sleeth Violet TurnerWilliam Holmes Karl Roth Joseph Schiff H. Gladys Spear Edward WhiteleyFrances Huston Frank Rubovits Boris Schuster H. Todd Stradford Frank ZiobrowskiLoyd McCormick Charles Shaffer Leon Seidman Axel T rangsrudBryce Ozanne Simon Shubitz John Sheedy Herbert Wald1941 RushRobert Phillips Charles Sutton Louis Silverman Willard Weary Osmond BagenstossMargaret Posey Jerome Tucker Louis Spector James Whittenberger Harold BjorkYounger Staton Gordon Wormley Hugh SteeleIrving Brown, Jr.James Stickney, Jr. Philip Stein 1939 Rush Delma CaldwellJames Tobin1936 U ofC James Stratton Wilbur Braham Martin CookOram Wolpert Anonymous Charles Stroebel, Jr. Ruth Charles Joseph EckertTheodore ZekmanAbraham Cherner Peter Theobald Joseph Conway Mathew KobakMiguel Dobrinsky J. M. Thomas P. Blair Ellsworth Lester Lebo1934 U ofC John Fox Thomas Torgerson Harold Fuller Ralph MorganLeon Galinsky Elizabeth Gentry Guy Tourney George Gill Morten OlsonIsrael Dinerman tMaurice Greenhill Sidney Trubowitz Robert Henry William WardKendrick Smith Michael Viggiano Albert Hilker John Wichman1935 Rush Frank Petkevich Bert Vos Chikao Hori John WilcoxHerbert Breuhaus John Post 1937 U ofC Willard Peterson Vinton WrightLeo Brown Charles Rammelkamp Ruth Aaron Allen RabinHenry Dickerman, Jr. Bernard SarnatLeonard Asher Robert RushmerFrederick Dobbs Philip Shanedling E. Borkon Thomas SugarsRalph Fitts Bernard Silber Richard Ebert J. Coburn WhittierWilliam Frank Glen Smith Vern ZechElmer Friedman Kendrick Smith Gertrude Fox1941 U of CSamuel HerstonJames Grider, Jr. John Weir, Jr. Raphael Kinney 1939 U ofC John BaugherKate Kohn Margery Wile Joseph Post Edward Camp John BealEva McGilvrayJohn Ransmeier Arthur Downing John BertrandJohn OlwinKenneth Smith Edward Gray Edward BlomquistMorris Rubenstein30H. Cary Coppock Ralph Smith John Lombardi Merrill Nelson Nicholas FugoGeorge Dohrmann Malcolm Spencer Chauncey Maher, Jr. Harry Oberhelman, Jr. Marvin GoldmanJoseph Freilich William Stone James McGrath Ann Pearson Robert GunningJames Goldinger Colin Thomas, Jr. Eugene Mindell Charles Ruth Martin HansonDale Hager Anthony Pizzo Dwight Smith Noel HeyrentClarence Hodges 1943 December U of C Raymond Robertson William Smith Thomas HillTheodore Hohm Richard Carpenter John Russell Richard Stoughton Attallah KappasRobert Painter Arthur Conner Edward Storer Thomas T ourlentes John KehoeClara Ritchie Johns William Froemming Erling Struxness Daniel Weaver Frances KelseyPrescott Jordon, Jr. William Hand Jerome Stvrt Eugene Weber Jean KohnCharles Kligerman Robert McCormack Stewart Taylor Harry KrollM. Frederick Leeds Wallace McCune Nello Torri 1948 U ofC I van Le CompteWilliam Lester Charles Mowery Robert Adamson Abbie LukensFrancis Monroe G. Arthur Mulder 1946 U of C Marc Beem, Sr. Jack McClureGene Richardson Yvo Oester John Arnold Jack Bennett Gordon McKinlayFredrick Stare Gerald Barton Emmanuel PeterfreundWalter Stryker Joseph Parks, Jr. Mark Beaubien Richard Blaisdell John ProcknowJohn Plunkett Daniel Billmeyer Asher FinkelRobert Sweet Fenton Schaffner Winslow Fox Donald RowleyCharles Test James Schoenberger Dean Bunderson Clifford Gilpin Donald SmileyWilliam Drennan Jean SpencerJonas Schreider John Edgcomb Doris Gilpin1942 Rush Buel Sever Philip Glotzer Harold WagnerRichard Berlin Daniel Enerson Stanley ZemerWilliam Webster Laurence Finberg J. Thomas GraystonWilliam Bethard William Horowitz 1951 U ofCGraham Chen Phillip Graff Ernst Jaffe Joseph AftermanRobert Crawford 1944 U ofC John Green, Jr. Walter Lawrence, Jr. Donald AndersonCharles Downing Robert Barickman, Jr. Bruce HeinzenJohn Hogness Clarence Lushbaugh Carl BaumannJoseph Finney Charles Branthaver Julien Isaacs William Newman Robert BloomJohn Graham Albert Dorfman Paul Russell, Jr. Myron ChapmanRussell Hafer Victor Fink Jack KahounGeorge Handy David Fox Edward Lukasek J. Edwin Seegmiller James EldredgeWilliam Hart William Fox Victor Mintek tBedford Shelmire Shirl Evans, Jr.Frank Johnson Hugh Frank Buel Morley Albert Sjoerdsma C. Larkin FlanaganEdward Munnell Jane Spragg Clifford GurneyHyman Meltzer Charles Gabelman Dunlap Oleson Roy Walford, Jr. Duane HydeIsaac Michael Peter Giovacchini George Whatmore Henry InouyeThomas Nakao Raymond Goodman Howard OwenJohn Schaeffer Eric LauterBernard Ross David Hellyer 1949 U ofC Jack LewisEdward Schlies Walter Hepner, Jr. Sidney SchulmanEdward Senz Joseph Arcomano Harold MalkinJerome Waldman Van Hunt John Sibley Charles Bacon Harold MarcusFrederick Webster Robert Jamplis H. William Jack McCarthyRobert Joranson Lawrence Smith1942 U ofC Mary Swanberg Bardenwerper Clyde MillerCatherine Armstrong Paul Jordan, Jr. E. Gregory Thomas Mary Carroll Richard NealGeorge Barry Alfred Kahn John Charles, Jr. Richard NeudorferJohn Kenward Otto TrippelCarl Billings Herbert Warden William Clark, Jr. Carolyn PalmgrenWilliam Bond Neil Kimerer Paul Zuelke Robert Dowben Naomi RaginsPaul Bunce Thomas Madden Norman Graff Robert RaimanHerbert Domke Henry McWhorter 1947 U of C Burton Grossman Rosemary Jaros RaphaelRobert Ebert George Nardi Nicholas Azzato Theodore Hooker Alexander RemenchikPaul Gray Melvin Newman Harry Arnold, Jr. William Hummel Herbert RothenbergJohn Larrabee James Pattee Hillier Baker Newell Johnson Edith SabshinCharles Marshall Morton Pearce J. Roland Barberio Laurel Karges Leo SadowJames McClintock J. Alfred Rider Charles Barlow Sherwood Miller Milton SingerJoseph Ransohoff David Rubinfine Sam Barklis Evelyn Adams Othman William SippelWilliam Renner Lee Russell William Beach Harold Plotskv W. McFate SmithIsadore Rossmann Orland Scott Kenneth Campione Aldon Roat Ralph StephanSarkis Telfeyan Richard Simon Leon Carrow Janet Rowley John WestergartEdward Woodward Cornelius Vander Laan Robert Chanock Roger Shapiro Henry Wildberger1943 March U of C James Charles Nancy Warner Robert WirtshafterRobert Bigelow George Curl Sanford Weissman Masa YamamotoMatthew Block 1945 U ofC Henry De Leeuw Arthur WendelMichael Bonfiglio Herbert Arnolde W. Robert Elghammer Robert WisslerByron Casey Frank Brooks John Grayhack 1952 U ofCMarvin Courtney Ralph Carlson Max Griffin 1950 U of C Thomas BenedekWalter Cox Robert Cook Ruth Heyn Dean Bahler J. R. BloomfieldG. Campbell Cutler Loren De Wind Gerald Hill Donald Berry Howard CorbusRobert Gassier Edwin Eby Frank Kelly, Jr. Donald Benson George DaviesPaul Hohm Harry Fischer Richard Kershner Richard Bernard R. Sally FandE. E. Lefforge Thomas Harward Leonard Lee Ernest Beutler Alvan FeinsteinArthur Lowey Frank Hesse L. Ovelia Linton Marjorie Braude David France, Jr.Raymond Malott Frederick Hilgert, Jr. William Lorton M. Louise Cason Donald GlotzerRichard McKay Edward Horner Frank Lossy Anna-Marie Chirico Louis GluckDavid Minard Neel Huckleberry Robert Martelle Jose Filos-Diaz Eugene GootnickHarold Reames George Krakowka David McDougal, Jr. Roberto Fortuno Elsa GordonLouis Rubin Robert Langdon Robert Moe Paul Frederickson, Jr. Leon Gordon31Robert Gordon Mary Kneller Edgar Bristow III Paul Stewart Raymond SchwinnWillis Gouwens, Jr. Masaru Koike Donald Brown Francis Straus II Coleman SeskindFred Gwyer Anthony Lalli George Coade Sanford Tom Frederick ShusterKenneth Hayes Daniel Levinson Richard Daniels Paul Vincent Paul SlotwinerAndrew Lorincz Albert Levy Jack Edelstein Jay Wagner David TermanLawrence Maillis Henry Maguire, Jr. Walter Eidbo Robert Zaas Wendell WeberBill Nelson Robert Peters Donald Fink 1960 U ofCOliver Nichols Robert Priest Byron Francis 1958 U ofC William AllenMarshall Pattullo Milton Raskin Norman Gevirtz Charles Alexander George AndrosLaurent Radkins, Jr. Thomas Roland Arnold Gombiner Robert Barbee Neal BakerPatrick Ragen David Rosenberg Lawrence Gottlieb Peter Bokat Leon BalterSylvan Raphael Mark Sajjadi Eugene Halpert Jerry Chutkow Kenneth BrownIrwin Rich Lois Scheimann Jarvin Heiman Harold Conrad Donald CannonLloyd Roth Jerry Seidel John Jane David Ginsberg Donald ComiterJoseph Skom Charles Shapiro Keith Kelly Michael Golden Allen DekelboumBenjamin Spargo Gordon Siegel Edward Kolner Seymour Goren Sigmund FriedlandRaymond Steblay Donna Sommer S. Walter Kran Carl Gunderson William FritschD. J. Taylor Edwin Stickney Paul Kuhn Seth Haber Claude GianettoPeter Wolkonsky Richard Thompson Paul Lam Gerald Herman Donald HagerLeo Van Der Reis Theodore Levine James Huffer Arno Hanel1953 U ofC Gerald Vogel Hideo Mori Myron Jacobson Leland Hawkinst Alexander Breslow Verner Waite Ronald Myers William Kisken Richard HeimbachNorman Cadman Dorothy Windhorst Phillip Nelson Arnold Knepfer Alfred HellerLouis Cohen Nicholas Zervas Constantine Panos Kenneth Kurland Kenneth HendricksDean Dimick Selwyn Pereira Norman Mages Edward JanowitzRichard Dobson 1955 U ofC C. Peter Rosenblum John McEnery Lawrence LichtensteinJohn Doull John Benfield Sheldon Schiff Louis Plzak, Jr. Harry LopasClayton Edisen Charles Boardman Joanna Sher tColette Rasmussen Sidney MalawerAlexander Ervanian Lloyd Brandborg Norman Sher Richard Rothberg Harold MallerFrank Fitch Arnold Brenman Donald Steiner Henry Rothschild Gerald MargolisJohn Foret Faylon Brunemeier Harold Varon Sanford Schreiber Charles McGannJames Gabby Clarence Cawvey Alan Weintraub Frederic Solomon Robert McTrusty IIIPaul Glickman John David Perry Zevin James Survis Donald MillerRobert Goldsmith Thomas Ednie 1957 U ofC Albert Svoboda, Jr. Charles MittmanDavid Greer Howard Engel John Arterberry Leong Tan Robert MoodyKin�sbury Heiple Martin Flax John Aycrigg Donald Temple Wayne NicholsRic ard Homer Herbert Greenlee Donald Thrush PaulOrsayVarda Backus Stanley UriuJack Japenga Dale Grimes Howard Bresler Julio ProCharles Johnson E. Jack Harris Eli Comay Robert Weiler George RayWilliam Kneller Lawrence Kartun Nathan Davis 1959 U ofC J. Gordon RichJoseph Lackey, Jr. Richard Katzman David Duffell Louis Baldwin William RileyJohn Landor Charles Koch Richard Earle Francis Barham Norman RozanskyRobert Levine Sumner Kraft Kermit Ericsson Berle Barth Joseph SchoolarEdward Lyon Werner Kuntz Philip Fireman James Bennington Randolph SeedJean Priest Emmett Lorey, Jr. Herbert Geller Caesar Briefer Susan Cook ShumwayGerald Reaven William McColl, Jr. William Greenwood James Dahl Brian SmithBernard Rubin Sharon C. Mead William Hopkins Richard Degowin Mark SnyderVirginia Saft George Meyer Theodore Jacobs Edwin Eigenbrodt Edward SpencerMorris Seide Dorothy Millon Marcus Jacobson Richard Evans Duane TaebelJohn Sommer Larry Nathanson Carl Keller Lawrence Freedman Frank ThorpHorst Weinberg Robert Ozeran M. Barry Kirschenbaum Gary Friedman Melvin VinikMarvin Weinreb Jack Robertson Joseph Kiser Everett Given, Jr. Edward WeinshelbaumMarjorie Montague tRichard Rubinstein Kai Kristensen Harvey Glasser Bruce WileyWilson Leonard Sagan David Lagunoff Morton Goldstein Edward WolpertHerman Wolfson Robert Schlegel Vivien Loh Hugh Graham, Jr. Alvin YusinClarence Young Frederick Schroeder James Magidson Richard Grant 1961 U ofCHarvey Zartman Howard Shapiro Robert May Avrum Gratch Lampis AnagnostopoulosSaul Seigel B. Lynn Miller Ethel Grene Robert AndersonRichard Seigler Richard Moy J. David Heywood Arthur Auerbach1954 U of C David Singer Karin Nelson Jordan Holtzman David BarberClarence Baugh Sakae Uehara John Oberhelman Walter Kahn Nancy BarberMichael Blaw Elliot Weitzman Daniel Offer Franklin Katz David BealJohn Cooper Ronald Wemple Harry Olin Thomas Keough Roger BecklundJames Crawford Fred Wins berg Charles Ott Donald Kinsler Albert BrownleeHugh Davis Jerry Pendras Sanford Krantz Robert CaplanThomas Dutcher 1956 U of C Daniel Porte, Jr. Elwood Kronick I van DiamondDonald Faulkner Sander Abend Robin Powell Richard Leck Peter EconomusPeter Gaal Robert Allen Joseph Richard Barbara McGann Jerry FeinDallas Glick Eugene Anderson David Rifkin Yoshio Oda Edward Filmanowicz, Jr.Arnold Haugen Eugene Balter Norman Rose Jane Pascale Floyd FriedCharles Johnson Hillel Ben Asher Henry Russe Donald Pearson Madeline KleinJohn Kasik Harold Bernstein Ira Schneider James Roberts GoldsteinPeter King Harold Boverman Julius Silberger, Jr. Stanley Rosenblatt Donald Goldstone32Anthony Gottlieb Brian Gallagher Peter Lindberg Ronald Slaughter 1970 U ofCDavid Halperin William Gemon Jacob Pinnas William Sloan Lawrence BernsteinJames Lambeth Gary Girnick Edgar Rainin Nada Logan Stotland Paul BessetteWilliam Leong, Jr. Paul Hoffer Edwin Rosenblum Saul Wasserman Jon BylerHallie Moore James Knecht Lawrence Ross Douglas White Mark CoanLauren Pachman Vincent Ko Samuel Schonberg Elliot Winton Eugene Corbett, Jr.Milan Packovich Horst Konrad Harvey Strauss John Zachary Lawrence DevoeRobert Perlman Richard Kraines Harris Taylor Joseph DicksteinRobert Preis man Robert Lentzner Howard Tessler 1968 U ofC L. Alan DrakeBertrand Shapiro William Logan Jerry Tomasovic Evans FiakpuiRonald Spinka Peter Morse Stuart T oporoff Terence Anthoney David KarlinJames Spratt Charles Platz David Turner Blake Berven Robert KarpThomas Stucker Stanley Quanbeck Betty Wolf Donald Blanford Paul MarguliesWendel Swanson Selwyn Rose Clara Bloomfield Ruth Smith MatsuoGeorge T agatz Donald Rothman David Busch Thomas May, Jr.Richard Tompkins Howard Schachter Donald Depinto Sanford MeyersRichard Tracy Charles Schlossman 1966 U ofC Jeffrey Dubb James MungasDennis Wentz John Schneider Gerald Becker William Ehlers Martha MuttiCharles Williams Peter Werner Howard Benensohn Burr Eichelman Anthony PhilippsGeorge Wright Joseph White Eugene Blackstone Milton Estes Lauren PlumerRobert White Jeffrey Block Frank Grabarits Michael Plumer1962 U of C William White George Chung Jerome Hruska Reed RasmussenJack Adler Rostik Zajtchuk Hal Crawford Samuel Jacobson Arthur RobinsWilliam Baker Jay DeVore Walter Jung Calixto Romero, Jr.Joseph Baron Richard Dominguez David Kaufman Vincent Tornabene1964 U ofC Robert Elvove David Kindig Bessel Van Der KolkJohn Bostrom Marvin Bernstein Jeffrey Frankel Leonard Korn Jeffrey WexlerDonald Broder David Borman Gary Goldstein Larry LarsonRobert Callaghan Kee Chan Maria Gumbinas Timothy Lindquist 1971 U of CJoan Carlson Melvin Chavinson Ronald Hirz Fitzhugh Mullan Harlan AlpernRuth Covell Lee Coleman Robert Keller Donald Rothbaum Bruce AndichPaul Davidson Charles Cooper, Jr. James Krivo Stephen Scher Kenneth BegelmanDaniel Devries Robert Costarella Donald Krone Jack Sipe II Joel BernsteinThomas Gallagher, Jr. David Dressler John Kurnick Richard Sohn Michael BrownRussell Gardner, Jr. Charles Ellenbogen Richard Margolis Jerrold Stock Michael BrownsteinMark Goldberg Stanley Englund Carl Pierce Gordon Stoltzner Robert ChaffeePaul Hyman Robert Gerwin Julian Rimpila Paul Treuhaft Christine HoladayKenneth Kaplan William Gronewald Daniel Rosenblum Dan Tritch ComstockLeon Kass John Hammerstad David Ruschhaupt Arlene Weinshelbaum Jeffrey DavisHerman Kattlove Noel Hoell Michael Shelanski John Weiter Alan FadenJulian Katz Norman James Alan Snyder William FoxLouis Kolb Joseph Just Betty Lou Tom David FrankJames Lindblade John Lamb Nicholas Tsoulos Michael GinsburgGary Lower Barry Levine Raymond Wong Vincent GurucharriLeonard Lyon Daniel Paloyan Joan Zajtchuck 1969 U ofC Geoffrey HeronDonald Megill Richard Rada Andrew Aronson Theodore IngisStephen Michel Bernard Ransil Kenneth Bridbord Dorothy Davies JohnsonFrederick Mishkin George Rhyneer 1967 U ofC John Chiles Ronald KlarRonald Moline Mary Roloff Robert Barton David Cook Roger KurlanderErnest Norehad Robert Roskoski, Jr. Monte Bernstein Mark Faith Donald MosierArthur Pedersen Gene Samuelson Russell Butler Bernard Fish Mary Ann PolascikDavid Quanbeck Carrie Schopf Patrick Campbell John Grant Michael PorembskiRaoul Reinersten Richard Strauss Donald Cantway Martin Gross Stephen RandRichard Rodgers Eugene Wittenstrom John Carlson Elliot Hochman David RochesterB. H. Gerald Rogers Edward Ganz Michael Hoffman Jeffrey RosemanLyle Rossiter, Jr. Jon Gockerman Karen Kaplan John SchaferJames Scheinin Andrew Griffin Franklin Kozin Mark SchifferRobert Sonnenburg 1965 U ofC Glenn Hodges George Kriebel, Jr. Marshall McLean UristRobert Stagman Carl Ahroon III Sidney Kadish John Matan Charles WelanderLynne Stettbacher Barbara Dean Barnes Frederic Kahl Raymond NelsonMarvin Stone Michael Barricks David Kalayjian Michael O'NeillDonald Switz Hugh Firemark David Larson Edward Pesanti 1972 U of CSamuel Wagonfeld Frances McNiell Gill Francis Lumia Norman Pickens Kenneth AndreDavid Harrer William Massover Francis Pien James BatemanFrederick Hornick Robert Okin Michael Popkin Stanley Bezek, Jr.Robert Hunter, Jr. Marcus Panzarella William Powers Robert Brier1963 U ofC Douglas Jacobson David Perin Carol Robins Karyl ColeThomas Andrews Wayne Janda Stephen Robbins Robert Rubenzik Fred CoreyH. Roberts Bagwell Arthur Kales Deborah Rose Eugene Schreiner Jonathan CostaM. Dennis Barton John Kottra Arthur Schneider Loraine Stern Robert DacheletHarold Bass Lorraine Kottra Joel Sherman Fredrick Washburn Murray EngelJohn Bonner Stanley Kreider Stanford Shulman William Weese H. Lee FrankJudith Broder Murray Kuhr Benjamin Siegel Robert Wollman Paul GallagherJames Esterly Lewis Leavitt Mark Siegler Laurens Young Thomas Gift33Sandra Ginsberg 1974 V ofC Terence O'Connor Sander Glatt 1979VofCErnest Hamel Lawrence Aggerbeck Mary Pat Pauly Petrich Jeffrey Gutstadt Anne BrennerSheldon Hersh Oliver Cameron Robert Quaas Mariel Harris James BuddJohn Huntwork Daniel Cooperman David Schanzlin Linda Hughey Holt Joseph CarterMichael Kaufman Robert Dinsmore Richard Schilsky Jerri Ann Jenista Curt ChristiansenElliot Landaw Edwin Douglass James Soderberg David Kapelanski De Carr Covington IIIStephen Lebowitz Charles Eil Norman Sossong Catherine Klein James GasparichRobert Lorenz Kathleen Flohr Melvin Sterling Ralph Kuncl Robert IkeJames Lustig Janice Frank Costello Stokes Donald Leung Aidan IpPaul Marquis John Gallagher Steven Tuck James Magner Wynn JacksonTeackle Martin Pamela Gallagher Joaquin Uv Margaret McLaughlin Vance Lauderdale I I IDavid Martini James Hedrick Bruce Wainer George Moll, Jr. Jonathon MakielskiWilliam Mc Intyre Earl Henry Stephen Walker Michael Press Allan NadelRichard Nelson, Jr. Richard Horne Susannah Walker Harry Richter I I I Andrew SchrieberMarion Quinn Robert Kaufman Wai-Kwan Yung John Scarlett I I I Jeffrey SugimotoRobert Ramsey Thomas Krueger James Schmitt Roger T okarsStephen Schabel Thomas Kubota Patricia Simmons Sandra TurnerLouis Smolensky Edward Linn 1976 V ofC David Simon Thomas Vander LaanSusan Soboroff Lewis Margolis William Abend Joseph Soffer Neil WeintraubDavid Toth Roland Che-Kee Ng Thomas Adamec Julian Stewart Jacqueline WhartonJose Velazquez Peter Ree Robert Alpern Burton Vander Laan Charles WitrnamMary Weinstein Barry Rich Patrick Beatty Richard Williams Joan WrightStephen Weinstein Niles Rosen Richard Bergenstal Kenneth YawGolder Wilson Howard Schwartz Eugene ChangL. Peter Schwiebert Susan Claster 1978 V ofC 1980 V of C1973 V of C David Smith Leslie Cohen James Abbruzzese J. Steven ArnoldEarl Armstrong James Stankiewicz John Gaca Brooke Alt Jeffrey BaermanDiana Breslich Stewart Taylor, Jr. James Goldstein Mary Austin-Seymour James Breeling I I ICatherine Covey Paul Volkman David Hall David Beswick Lawrence CutlerJan De Roos James West Fred Haruda Mitchell Bitter David DriesKenneth Diddle Roger White Siegfried Hausladen Gary Bos Paul FreierSamuel Doppelt Paul Kaplowitz A. K. Conrad, Jr. Mitchell GallagherWalter Eades 1975 V ofC Lee Katz Richard Dodd Bruce GivenRobert Freilich John Albrich Audrey Kavka James Fasules Douglass GivenWilliam LiRichard Fulanetto Constantine Stephen Mariani Richard Feit James GrotbergRichard Gaeke Athanasuleas Bruce Fenster Renee JacobsDavid Gilbert Harris Barowskv Thomas McFarland Diane Fenster David KaplanRaymond Monnat, Jr.Michael Glick Samuel Bernal David Ostrow Linda Goluch Carolyn KellyMary Highley Arnold Calica Ivan Pac old David Hansen Lawrence KernsArlen Holter Gabriella Castillo Thomas Paukert John Heisler Timothy KochCharles Janovsky Marilyn Cebelin George Shybut Kenneth Kampman Stephen LeeJoel Kleinman John Danielson Kwok-Fai Lok Mark LitzowKenneth Krantz Marion Danis Eric Simon Robert May Frances MunkenbeckRudiger Krantz Michael Eisenberg J. Walter Smith Patricia McElroy Nathan Nachlas, Jr.Dwight Kulwin Gerald Farbv Marcis Sodums Craig Meyer Richard NovackLee Leserman Ronald Fitzgerald David Strayer William Pekman David PalmerHywel Madoc-jones Howard Forster Susan Terris William Phillips Harry Poulos, Jr.Marcia WendlandGregory Milmoe Chad Friedman Gail Whitman Warren Post William ReusDavid Ota Mary Ellen Gaeke Robert Wolfe Allan Prochazka Ricardo RomanJean-Paul Pegeron Judith Hartman Ward Rice Jack RushLaurence Peterson Elbridge Holland, Jr. Dean Rider I I David SchifelingBernard Pritzker Edward Hutt 1977 V of C Ralph Smathers, Jr. Craig SchrammTheodore Pysher Maga Jackson Larry Alphs Walter Stoller Carl VybornvElizabeth Reid Fred Jacobs Michael Bauer Paul SullamWalter Schell, Jr. Lisa Kaplowitz George Bigley, Jr. James TashiroMichael Silverman Richard Kurzel Myron Dolyniuk Frank VentimigliaRobert Toon Jennifer Leaning Link Robert Doroghazi Michael VidasJames Weese John Low Jon Farber Lisa WaxmanBarry Wright Leland Mew Scott Fields Debra Weese-MayerJames Wright Paul Monroe Mitchell Glass Vaughn Wittry tDeceased34Divisional AlumniAnonymous (1)Rollie Sue Ackerman'72 M.S.Harry Adler '38 M.S.Mrs. Mitrofan Afanasiev'32 M.S.Gene Albrecht '76 Ph. D.Frank Allen '53 Ph.D.Mary Jane Allen '42M.S.Rex Allen '47 M.S.Alvito Alvares '66 Ph.D.Bernice Anderson '40M.S.Beulah Anderson '48M.S.Edna Anderson '48 M.S.Mrs. Wilfred Anderson'48 M.S.Robert Angell '65 Ph. D.Mrs. George Armstrong'53 M.S.Mrs. Paul Arnot '41M.S.William Ashby '50 Ph. D.Mrs. William Ashby '48M.S.Francis Atkins '78Ph.D.Mrs. Norman Axelrad'62 M.S.Kathleen Ayres '76Ph.D.Evelyn Bacon '46 M.S.James Bacon '70 Ph.D.Eloise Baker '32 M.S.Roger Baker '52 Ph.D.Josephine Balaty '45M.S.John Ballin '55 Ph.D.Robert Bandurski '49Ph.D.Frank Banks '46 M.S.Mrs. Seymour Banks '47M.S.Maurice Barcos '75Ph.D.Herbert Barghusen '60Ph.D.Patricia Barker '58 M.S.Gwendolyn Barnett '45M.S.Mrs. Grover Bartoo '30Ph.D.Abraham Bass '33 Ph.D.Myron Beal '49 M.S.Mrs. Ralph Beck '12M.S.Daniel Bedharek '78Ph.D.John Beebe '70 Ph.D.Herbert Beeskow ' 54Ph.D.Edward Benjamin '48M.S.Joan Bennett '67 Ph.D.Ross Benham '57 Ph.D.Peter Bensen '79 M.S.Myron Benuck '62 M.S. Claire Berg '62 M.S.Richard Berk '58 Ph.D.Barney Berlin '56 M.S.Mrs. John Berner '30M.S.Alba Biagini '47 M.S.Arthur Bierman '54Ph.D.Jorgen Birkeland '33Ph.D.Carolyn Blake '35 M.S.Grace Blake '40 M.S.Mrs. Lloyd Blauch '39Ph.D.Jacob Blum '52 Ph.D.Lawrence Bogorad '49Ph.D.Marjorie Bohnhoff '50M.S.Mrs. Ian Bond '31 M.S.James Bond '61 Ph.D.Catherine Bonnema '41M.S.Harold Bomstein '49M.S.Anne Bourquin '23 M.S.Helen Bourquin '22Ph.D.Bertha Brandt '56 M.S.Helen Brecht '37 M.S.Ruth Breen '29 M.S.Roy Brener '39 Ph. D.Nathan Brewer '36Ph.D.Virginia Britton '38 M.S.Jules Brodeur '64 Ph.D.Nicholas Brokaw '80Ph.D.Ludvig Browman '35Ph.D.Arthur Brown '50 Ph.D.Darrell Brown '64 Ph.D.Kenneth D. Brown '68 M.S.Kenneth T. Brown '51Ph.D.Robert Brubaker '66Ph.D.Ann Budv '54 Ph. D.Marion Bunch '34 Ph.D.Phillip Bunch '75 Ph.D.Scrichitra Bunnag '64Ph.D.William Burbanck '41Ph.D.Mrs. William Burbanck'41 Ph.D.Gordon Burghardt '66Ph.D.Mrs. Leroy Burkhart '40Ph.D.Daniel Burton '47 Ph.D.Elizabeth Butler '34Ph.D.Lauren Cagen '70 Ph. D.Mary Caldwell '32 Ph.D.Ruth Callahan '35 M.S.Doris Calloway '47 Ph. D.Robert Campbell '32Ph.D. Samuel Caplin '46 Ph.D.Kathryn Cardwell '42M.S.Mrs James Carhart '50M.S.Catherine Carroll '54M.S.Edith Carson '34 Ph. D.George Cartland '27Ph.D.William Castle '28 Ph. D.Joseph Ceithaml '41Ph.D.Bernard Century '53Ph.D.Glenn Chambliss '72Ph.D.Gisela Charlang '64Ph.D.Helen Charley '41 M.S.Herman Chase '38Ph.D.Peter Chase '66 M.S.Mann- Jy Chen '75Ph.D.John Chiakulas '51Ph.D.Amy Chin '47 M.S.Joseph Chisholm, Jr. '60M.S.Walter Chizinsky '50M.S.Theresa Christian '47M.S.Faith Clark '34 M.S.Kenneth Cochran, Jr. '50Ph.D.Eloise Cofer '55 Ph. D.Jean Coffin '48 M.S.Charles Coleman ' 54M.S.Nicholas Collias '42Ph.D.Stephen Combs '77 M. S.Bernard Conley '56Ph.D.Eric Conn '50 Ph.D.Alvin Conway '48 M.S.Julius Coon '38 Ph.D.Merlin Cooper '18 M.S.Mrs. Winton Corbett '49M.S.Ruth Corte II '39 Ph.D.Mrs. J. Ritchie Cowan'43 M.S.Joseph Crean '66 Ph.D.Irene Crichton '70 M.S.John Crofts '38 M.S.George Cross '29 Ph.D.Paul Cull '70 Ph. D.Samuel Cummins '39M.S.Charles Cure '50 Ph.D.Lemuel Curlin '40Ph.D.Roy Curtiss III '62 Ph.D.Marie D'Amour '31Ph.D. Walburga Dalton '28Ph.D.Hung-Chen Dang '64Ph.D.Barbara Dau '67 M.S.Francis De T oma '68Ph.D.Mrs. Best Deis '40 M.S.Richard Depew '74 Ph.D.Mrs. Leon Despres '36Ph.D.Johanna Devries '45M.S.G. Richard Dickersin '50M.S.Mrs. Jess Dietz '40 Ph.D.Jeffrey Doering '75 Ph. D.Larissa Dolinsky '67Ph.D.Lincoln Domm '26Ph.D.Ralph Dorfman '34Ph.D.Robert Doty '50 Ph.D.Clara Douglas '27 M.S.Mrs. Herbert Douglas'35 M.S.Marjorie Douglis '47Ph.D.Arthur Dover '65 M.S.Laurence Draper '56Ph.D.Victor Dropkin '40 Ph.D.Howard Ducoff '53 Ph.D.John Dulaney '62 M.S.Irma Duncan '50 Ph.D.Donald Dusanic '63Ph.D.David Dusenbery '70Ph.D.Hubert Dyer '46 Ph.D.Daniel Dykhuizen '71Ph.D.Edward Eagle '40 Ph.D.Lelia Easson '43 M.S.Lois Ebinger '46 M.S.Florence Eckfeldt '28M.S.Barry Edelstein '70Ph.D.Dallas Edwards '65 Ph. D.John Edwards '32 M.S.Mary Edwards '50 M.S.Douglas Eggen '57 Ph.D.Mrs. Oscar Eggers '71Ph.D.Mrs. James Eheart '34M.S.Marion Ehrich '70 M.S.Forry Eisenhart, Jr. '75M.S.Donald Ekberg '52 M.S.Mary Ann Ellis '76 M.S.Barbara England '79Ph.D.Daniel Entingh '69 Ph. D.S. C. Ericksen '38 Ph.D.Joseph Etlinger '74Ph.D. John Evans '39 Ph.D.Valeska Evertsbusch '54Ph.D.Saverio Falco '77 Ph.D.Mildred Faust '33 Ph.D.Philip Feiveson '41 M.S.Ernest Fergus '31 Ph. D.Vera Mae Fisher '45M.S.Vera Fitzgerald '80 Ph. D.Jack Fooden '60 Ph.D.Ernest Ford '42 Ph.D.William Foster '67 M.S.Peter Frank '51 Ph.D.Irma Fricke '50 M.S.Martin Fried '51 Ph.D.Morris Friedkin '48Ph.D.Herbert Friedmann '58Ph.D.Eugenia Friess '52 M.S.Henri Frischer '65 Ph. D.Irving Fritz '51 Ph.D.Mrs. Richard Furlanetto'69 M.S.Leonard Gage '69 Ph.D.Thomas Gallagher '31Ph.D.Sanford Garfield '74Ph.D.Arthur Gentile '53 Ph.D.Phillip Gertler '56 Ph.D.Marcella Gewirth '54M.S.Wade Gibson '73 Ph.D.Norman Gillette '37Ph.D.Charles Gilvarg '51Ph.D.Mrs. Charles Gilvarg '48M.S.Benson Ginsburg '43Ph.D.Howard Glass '42 Ph.D.Robert Goepp '67 Ph.D.Alan Goldberg '67 M.S.Howard Goldfine '57Ph.D.Eugene Goldwasser '50Ph.D.John Golin '79 Ph.D.William Gonyea '73Ph.D.Morris Gordon '42 M.S.Ulys Gore '34 Ph.D.Joseph Gorsic '56 Ph.D.Joseph Gowgiel '58Ph.D.Faye Woodard Grant '54Ph.D.John Graves '56 Ph.D.Michael Graves '76 M.S.Walter Greaves '71Ph.D.Mrs. Raymond Greb '26M.S.Ruth Greenfield '44M.S.Robert Gregg '41 Ph.D.35Mrs. Robert Gregg '45 George Hoffman '69 David Kahn '42 M.S. Mary Lewis '31 M.S. Sheldon Moline '58M.S. M.S. Ruth Kahn '43 M.S. Tehming Liang '73 Ph.D.Mary Grier '47 Ph.D. Philip Hoffmann '62 Mrs. Emil Kaiser '70 Ph.D. Dorothy Moore '65 M.S.Alvin Grove, Jr. '40 Ph.D. Ph.D. Paul Libby '62 Ph. D. Jean Moore '71 Ph.D.Ph.D. Christopher Holabird '52 Edwin Kalan '53 Ph.D. Benjamin Libet '39 Rufus Moore '36 Ph. D.Ruth Groves '48 M.S. M.S. Mrs. Daniel Kapica '68 Ph.D. Richard Morimoto '78Donald Gruol '75 Ph.D. David Holden '56 Ph.D. M.S. Hsiu-San Lin '68 Ph. D. Ph.D.Harold Gulliksen '31 Vincent Hollander' 44 Joan Karlin '69 M.S. Margaret Liston '49 Katherine Morrell '46Ph.D. Ph.D. Robert Katzman '50 M.S. Ph.D. M.S.Mrs. Harold Gulliksen Gerald Holmquist '67 Naomi Keller '45 M.S. Raymond Litwiller '37 Lawrence Morse '78'31 Ph.D. M.S. Florence Kelly '43 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D.Naba Kumar Gupta '60 Arthur Holtorff '40 M.S. Thelma Kennedy '49 Wei Liu '55 M.S. Reza Mostofi '77 M.S.Ph.D. Howard Holtzer '52 M.S. Mrs. Arthur Lowey '40 Lena Moszkowski '53Charles Hagen, Jr. '56 Ph.D. Garth Kennnington ' 5 2 M.S. M.S.M.S. Sybil Holtzer '55 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ernestine Long '32 M.S. James Moulton '41 Ph.D.Edgar Hale '50 Ph.D. Clyde Homan '33 Ph.D. Paul Kahn '49 M.S. Mrs. Jere Lord '47 M.S. Wendell Mullison '38Esther Hall '37 M.S. Penelope Hope '48 M.S. Nelson Kiang '55 Ph.D. Agnes Love '49 M.S. Ph.D.Duane Hallesy '56 Ph.D. Samuel Horowitz '56 Eugene Kimura '48 Ph. D. De Witt Lowell '49 Mrs. Wendell MullisonAlice DeMauriac Ph.D. Lawrence King '52 Ph.D. Ph.D. '38 Ph.D.Hammond '32 M.S. Walter Hoskins '39 Samuel Kirk '31 M.S. Amelita Luncsford '79 Paul Munson '42 Ph.D.Harold Hammond '67 Ph.D. Hadley Kirkman '29 M.S. Mrs. Francis Murphy '55M.S. Nicholas Hotton III '50 M.S. Ernest Lundelius '54 M.S.Mrs. Chester Hansen Ph.D. Joseph Kirsner '42 Ph. D. Ph.D. Raymond Murray '42'50M.S. Paul Houdek '32 M.S. Nathaniel Kleitman '23 Walter Lurie '35 Ph.D. Ph.D.Robert Hansen '69 Ph.D. Mrs. Harry Hougham '34 Ph.D. Channing Lushbough '56 Phillip Musich '73 Ph.D.Sophy Hess Hardy '41 Ph.D. Edward Klem '69 Ph. D. Ph.D. Lydia Mussman '39 M.S.M.S. Riley Housewright '44 Janet Klich '76 M.S. Grace Madsen '47 Ph. D. Ruth Myers '52 Ph.D.Mrs. Samuel Harris '44 Ph.D. Emil Kmetec '53 M.S. John Magness '23 Ph. D. Tokumasa Nakamoto '59M.S. Myron Howland, Jr. '63 Mrs. James Knecht '66 Mrs. Raymond Mahon Ph.D.Carter Harrison '30 Ph.D. Ph.D. '36 Ph.D. Paul Nathan '53 Ph.D.Ph.D. Ruth Huenemann '41 Kathryn Knowlton '39 Samuel Mandlow '63 Michael Nathanson '71Arlene Hart '68 M.S. M.S. Ph.D. M.S. Ph.D.Katherine Hart '32 M.S. Clayton Hunt '79 Ph.D. Nan Koehler '66 M.S. Margaret Mangel '51 Aubrey Naylor '40 Ph. D.Arthur Hartman '36 Marjorie Hunt '54 Ph.D. [ai Kohli '52 M.S. Ph.D. Mrs. Aubrey Naylor '40M.S. Thomas Hunt '29 Ph.D. Jerry Kollros '42 Ph. D. Jose Manglano '44 M.S. Ph.D.Constance Hartt '28 John Husa '64 Ph.D. Mrs. Jerry Kollros '44 Mrs. Frederick Mann '34 Kenneth Nealson '69Ph.D. Betty Hutt '55 M.S. Ph.D. M.S. Ph.D.Milicent Hathaway '32 Robert Inger '54 Ph. D. Lottie Kornfeld '60 Ph.D. Frederick Mapp '50 John Neff '55 M.S.Ph.D. Joseph Ingraham '50 Ph.D. Marian Koshland '49 Ph.D. Mirdza Neiders '61 M.S.Isabelle Havens '56 M.S. Marian Iwert '64 M.S. Ph.D. Renee Margolis '66 Joyce Newman '55 Ph.D.Ada Hawkins '50 M.S. Carola Jackson '27 M.S. Igor Kosin '43 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ann Nicholas '80 M.S.Robert Hawkins '49 M.S. Tobias Jacobson ' 5 1 Joseph Kovach '63 Floyd Markham '35 Ph. D. Alice Nightingale '32Gertrude Heidenthal '38 M.S. Ph.D. Charles Marshall '49 Ph.D.Ph.D. Jacob Jacoby '47 Ph.D. Lloyd KozIoff '48 Ph.D. Ph.D. Alfred Novak '42 M.S.Charles Heisler '57 Gloria Jahnke '70 M.S. Bernard Krask '56 Ph.D. Louise Marshall '35 Ph.D. Mrs. John O'Hale '49Ph.D. Eugene Janssen '52 M.S. Mrs. Arthur Krause '38 Martin Mathews '49 M.S.David Heller '42 M.S. Robert Jason '32 Ph.D. M.S. Ph.D. Jessie Obert '43 M.S.Charles Helmstetter '61 William Jensen '53 Ph.D. Carl Krekeler '55 Ph.D. Mrs. Harry Maynard '51 Evelyn Oginsky '39 M.S.Ph.D. Harry [erison '54 Ph.D. Donald Krizek '64 Ph.D. M.S. George Okita '51 Ph.D.Elizabeth Hemmens '41 Joseph Jerome '50 Ph.D. Roland Kuhn '36 Ph.D. John McArdle '76 Ph.D. Jose Oliver-Gonzalez '41Ph.D. Kenneth Jochim '41 Mary Kunst '42 Ph.D. Raymond McCants '47 Ph.D.F. J. Hendler '77 Ph.D. Ph.D. Dorothy Kupelian '62 M.S. Hazel Olson '23 M.S.Daniel Hendley '54 E. Roy John '54 Ph.D. M.S. Margaret McIntyre '33 Frank Orland '49 Ph.D.Ph.D. Harold Johnson '42 John Lahr '29 M.S. Ph.D. James Orr '75 M.S.Viola Henrikson '47 M.S. Jule Lamar '38 Ph.D. Fred McKinney '31 Evelina Ortiz '46 Ph.D.M.S. Ruth Johnson '49 M.S. Ruth Lambie '43 M.S. Ph.D. Jane Overton '50 Ph.D.Grace Hered '53 M.S. Willis Johnson '32 Richard Lamey '48 M.S. Ruth McKinney '33 Ph.D. Saundra Oyewole '67Lawrence Herman '56 Ph.D. Herbert Lamp '51 Ph.D. Kent McLean '76 M.S. M.S.Ph.D. Carter Johnston '42 Margaret Larsen '43 Robert McMurry '32 Angelo Ozoa '66 Ph.D.Vernon Hernlund '31 Ph.D. M.S. M.S. Alice Palmer '37 M.S.M.S. Faith Johnston '29 M.S. Jules Last '41 Ph.D. Maureen McReynolds '66Alice Herriott '44 M.S. Frances Johnston '41 Mrs. Jules Last '42 M.S. Ph.D. Barbara Palser '42 Ph.D.Frank Hess, Jr. '55 M.S. Ph.D. Mary Lauer '39 M.S. John Mellinger '56 Ph.D. Richard Pannabecker '57Laura Heston '35 M.S. Paul Johnston '49 Ph.D. Mrs. Oscar Le Beau '29 Ruth Merwin '44 Ph.D. Ph.D.William Hewitt '42 Robert Johnston '49 M.S. Patrick Michaels '75 Steven Pantelick '57Ph.D. Ph.D. Heide Lee '72 M.S. M.S. Ph.D.Hanna Hill '77 Ph.D. Lois Swan Jones '54 M.S. Howard Lee '52 M.S. Eugene Miller '67 Ph.D. Mrs. Thomas Passin '71George Hillyer '72 Ph. D. Joanne Jumonville '68 Irving Leiden '47 M.S. Dr. James Miller, Jr. '37 M.S.Jerome Hines '79 Ph.D. Ph.D. Mildred Leigh '32 M.S. Ph.D. Sara Patterson '45 M.S.Gar-Bo Ho '64 Ph.D. Preston Jumonville '67 Sarah Lenington '77 Morton Miller '62 Ph.D. Dorothy Patton '67Howard Hochman '7 J M.S. Ph.D. Robert Miller '51 M.S. Ph.D.Ph.D. John Juskevice '69 Ph.D. Stuart Levin '72 Ph.D. Perla Miranda '77 M.S. Eleanor Paul '49 M.S.Esther DaCosta Hoelzel William Kabisch '54 Mrs. John Lewis '46 Radhakanta Mishra '70 Henry Paulus '59 Ph. D.'40 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. Kenneth Pearse '32 M.S.36Mildred Peirce '48 M.S. Jay Roshal '53 Ph.D. Paul Shelley '29 M.S. Mrs. Carl Strouse '43 Roy Weinrach '57 Ph.D.Durey Peterson '37 Ph.D. L. Evans Roth '57 Ph.D. David Shephard '62 M.S. Emilio Weiss '48 Ph.D.James Peterson '74 Ph. D. Rodney Rothstein '75 Ph.D. Kenneth Strubler '69 tWalter Welch '37 Ph.D.Norma Pfeiffer '13 Ph.D. Ph.D. Debra Sherman '70 M.S. M.S. Carl Welty '32 Ph.D.Roland Piddington '65 Loyd Rowland '35 Ph.D. Louis Sherman '70 Ph. D. Oscar Sugar '40 Ph.D. Harvey Werner '34Ph.D. Mrs. Herbert Rubin '49 Shev-Shing Sheu '79 Hiroshi Sugiyama '50 Ph.D.Carol Pierce '63 M.S. M.S. Ph.D. Ph.D. Zoe Wertman '33 M.S.Mary Pierce '44 M.S. Samuel Rubin '57 M.S. Robert Shideler '41 M.S. Albina Surbis '49 M.S. Mrs. Frank West '49Frank Pihlik '51 M.S. F. Hermann Rudenberg Arthur Siedler '59 Ph.D. Mrs. Frederic Sweet '36 M.S.Margaret Pisciotta '76 '54 Ph.D. Israel Siegel '63 Ph.D. Ph.D. Robert West '68 Ph.D.M.S. Morrison Rudner '46 Willys Silvers '54 Ph.D. Paul Sze '69 Ph.D. Denis Wharton '29Margaret Pittman '29 M.S. Mrs. Albert Simon '39 Tamara Tabb '41 M.S. Ph.D.Ph.D. Dorothea Rudnick '31 Ph.D. Elsie Taber '47 Ph.D. Seth Wharton '76 M.SRosemary Pittman '47 Ph.D. Joseph Simpson '67 Diane Takasugi '77 M.S. Robert Wheeler '42M.S. G. Olin Rulon '35 Ph.D. Ph.D. Sidney Tamm '66 Ph.D. Ph.D.James Plagge '40 Ph.D. Ernest Runyon '34 Ph. D. John Sinclair '66 Ph. D. Robert Tardiff '68 Jean Whelan '42 M.S.Mrs. Louis F. Plzak, Sr. tJames Russell '31 Ph. D. Ira Singer '53 Ph.D. Ph.D. Mrs. Howard White '45'59 M.S. Mrs. L. L. Russfield '43 Mrs. Richard Skahen '40 David Tartof '78 Ph.D. M.S.Richard Podolsky '52 Ph.D. Ph.D. Hazel Taylor '48 M.S. A. Geraldine WhitingPh.D. John Rust '56 Ph.D. Geraldine Skinner '49 Alvin Telser '68 Ph.D. '37 Ph.D.Kenneth Pompi '72 Ray Rutledge '30 Ph.D. M.S. Hessel Tenhave '29 M.S. Floyd Wiercinski '38Ph.D. Mrs. Laurence Sachs '43 Mrs. John Skinner '36 John Thieret '53 Ph.D. M.S.Ned Porte '38 M.S. M.S. Ph.D. Sydney Titelbaum '38 Violette Wiita '46 M.S.Ferol Potter '38 M.S. Robert Sager '61 Ph.D. Robert Sklar '79 Ph.D. Ph.D. Charlotte Wilkinson '62Albert Potts '38 Ph.D. Jimmy Salhany '74 Ph.D. Sadie Sklarsky '41 Ph. D. Ethel Todd '49 M.S. M.S.Richard Prairie '61 Ph. D. Melvin Salk '38 M.S. John Skok '41 Ph.D. Mrs. G. B. Tompkins '35 Lee Wilkoff '63 Ph. D.Helen Pulaski '42 M.S. Thaddeus Samorajski '56 Mrs. Irving Slutsky '46 M.S. Ned Williams '47 Ph.D.Parker Quammen '74 Ph.D. M.S. Benton Tong '78 Ph. D. Robert Williams '49M.S. Frederick Samson, Jr. '52 Lillian Smies '46 M.S. St. Joseph Toy '50 M.S. Ph.D.Richard Radmer '68 Ph.D. Ralph Smiley '29 M.S. Mary Wallace T reuhaft Catherine Wilson '29Ph.D. James San Antonio '51 Albert Smith '72 Ph. D. '72 Ph.D. M.S.Peggy Rae '71 Ph.D. Ph.D. Arthur Smith '31 M.S. Ilse Tribby '69 Ph.D. David Wilson '69 Ph. D.Peter Rae '70 Ph.D. Nils Sandstrom '71 M.S. Cornelia Smith '23 M.S. Benjamin Ming Wah Eva Donelson Wilson '34Herzl Ragins '57 Ph.D. Mrs. J. G. Sandza, Jr. '65 Ralph Smith '28 Ph. D. Tsui '77 Ph.D. Ph.D.Theodore Rail '52 Ph. D. M.S. Yashubi Snider '53 M.S. William Tuach '29 M.S. Gary Wilson '70 Ph. D.Oliver Rampersad '61 E. Sarmiento-Batterson Robert Sokal '52 Ph.D. Ruth Tucker '48 Ph.D. Erma Winston '44 M.S.Ph.D. '77 Ph.D. Alexander Sokoloff '54 Edith Turkington '65 Henry Wise '48 M.S.Mrs. Robert Ramsey '37 Dorothy Saxner '48 M.S. Ph.D. M.S. Herbert Wolfe '30 Ph.D.Ph.D. Frank Schabel '50 Ph.D. Sidney Solomon '52 Helen Turner '22 M.S. George Wolff '54 Ph. D.Ellen Rasch '50 Ph.D. Raymond Scharff '64 Ph.D. Paul Twining '38 Ph.D. Leonard Wolfson '51Robert Rasch '59 Ph.D. Ph.D. Frank Sonleitner '59 Robert Tyroler '65 Ph.D. M.S.Mrs. Gerald Reaven '54 Esther Schechter '65 Ph.D. Shigezo Udaka '55 M.S. Meyer Wolin '54 Ph.D.Ph.D. Ph.D. Patricia Spear '69 Ph. D. Robert Uretz '54 Ph. D. Mrs. Meyer Wolin '52Lois Reed '51 M.S. Rozella Scholtfeldt '47 Jack Spiegel '77 Ph. D. Marshall Urist '37 M.S. M.S.Joseph Reilly, Jr. '47 M.S. Aida Spieth '31 Ph. D. Edwin Uveki '53 Ph.D. Allen Wolman '67 M.S.Ph.D. Imogene Schneider '61 Mrs. John Spurbeck '34 Nader Vakili '53 M.S. Mrs. Lewis Woolsey '38Lvida Reitz '46 M.S. Ph.D. Ph.D. Charles VanCleave '28 M.S.Newton Ressler '49 M.S. Michael Schneider '65 Joseph Stambouly '77 Ph.D. Marie Worland '52 M.S.Albert Reynolds '41 Ph.D. M.S. Mrs. Peter Vandervoort George Wright, Jr. '41Ph.D. Frederick Schram '68 Gretory Stanton '74 '65 M.S. Ph.D.Ethel Reynolds '38 M.S. Ph.D. P .D. Roger Varney '42 Ph. D. Tsuneyuki Yamazaki '70Robin Reynolds '73 M.S. Jay Schreider '77 Ph. D. Nancy Stanton '72 A. Elizabeth Verder '28 Ph.D.Mrs. Joseph Rhine '23 Gould Schrock '64 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. Stanley Zahler '52 Ph.D.Ph.D. Gilbert Schrodt '33 M.S. Sigrid Steamer '46 Ph.D. Margriet Verdonck '78 Edward Zegarelli '42_ \Eloise Rice '40 M.S. Frank Schubel '34 M.S. Irvin Steinman '49 M.S. Ph.D. M.S.Earl Rich '54 Ph. D. Stephen Schwartz '73 Richard Sterner '76 Draga Vesselinovitch '62 Barbara Zehnbauer '79William Ricketts '50 Ph.D. Ph.D. M.S. Ph.D.Ph.D. David Scott '64 M.S. Alice McLean Stewart Murray Volk '48 M.S. Robert Zuck '43 Ph.D.Marguerite Riddick '39 John Scott '35 Ph. D. '42 M.S. Michael Wade '75 Ph. D. Leon Zuckerman '61 M.S.M.S. Martha Scott '29 M.S. George Stewart '39 M. S. Mrs. Percy Walburn '36John Riebesell '75 Ph.D. Paul Sears '22 Ph. D. Paul Stimson '66 M.S. M.S.Gladys Robinson '31 Mrs. Paul Sedgwick '22 Mrs. Richard Stoughton Joseph Wall '49 M.S.M.S. Ph.D. '54 Ph.D. Harry Wang '43 Ph.D.Mary Rooney '39 M.S. Milton Segalove '47 David Straus '60 Ph. D. Ronald Ward '55 Ph.D.Roscoe Root '61 M.S. Ph.D. Eugene Streicher '53 Mrs. Harold Warren '45Joseph Rosa '76 Ph.D. Ruth Sellers '39 M.S. Ph.D. M.S.Margaret Rosa '76 Ph.D. Heinz Seltmann '53 Alfred Strickholm '60 Kenneth Watt '54 Ph. D.Irwin Rose '52 Ph.D. Ph.D. Ph.D. Clarence Webb '31 M.S.Marcia Rosenthal '49 Mrs. Irving Sheft '42 Henry Strohecker '36 Eugene Weinberg '50Ph.D. M.S. Ph.D. Ph.D. tDeceased37Friends Present and former interns, residents, faculty members, and friends of the Medical CenterDr. Walter J. AagesenMr. Lester AbelsonDr. Ronald C. AblowDr. and Mrs. EmanuelAbramsDr. Kenji AdachiDr. Whitney W.AddingtonDr. Richard L. AdisDr. Charles Adwell, Jr.Dr. John E. AhlskogDr. T oshio AkiyamaDr. Louis AlpertDr. Stuart A. AltmannAmerican Association ofSenior PhysiciansDr. Joe G. D. AndersonDr. Roscoe B. AndersonDr. George J. AndrosDr. James S. ArnoldDr. Thomas B. ArnoldDr. Richard W. AshleyDr. Robert AuerbachDr. Maria BalkouraDr. Emmanuel BansaDr. William R. BarclayDr. Bartolo BaroneDr. Gregory BarthaDr. John L. BattyDr. Adnan B. BaydounMr. Robert N. BeckDr. Gerald S. BerensonDr. Morton P. BerensonDr. Doris E. BergerDr. Jacob D. BitranDr. Carol L. BleiMrs. William BloomDr. Robert J. BloorDr. Dorothy N.BogdanowDr. Kenneth J. BonifaceDr. and Mrs. Irving BortsMr and Mrs. S. PeterBourbakiDr. Paul BowersDr. George H. BoyceDr. Richard C. BozianDr. Joseph c. BremerDr. Wilson K. BrewerDr. Herbert 1. BrizelDr. Morris BrownDr. William R. BungeDr. Julian W. BuserDr. Ellen C. CalvaryDr. J. Edgar Campbell,Jr.Dr. Wing Chung ChanDr. Henry Ta-ShenChangDr. A. Max Chaumette,Jr.Mr. and Mrs. ThomasChenDr. PipitChiernrnongkoltipDr. Charat Chivapruk38 Dr. Eugene ChukudebeluDr. Warren Alan CoaxDr. Sarah B. CobbsDr. David CofrinDr. David G. CoganDr. Bruce E. CohanDr. Ben CohenDr. R. Catherine CohenDr. Hugh S. CollettDr. Maryann CollinsDr. Joaquin CotoMr. Charles L. CoulterRandall Crammond,D.D.S.Dr. Larry CrisafulliDr. Douglas CrowtherDr. M. Esther CushnieDr. Ralph Dado, Jr.Dr. Earle P. DaleMr. J.H. DannenmaierDr. Thomas DaoDr. Raphael R. DavidDr. John M. DavisDr. Domingo J. De LaFuenteDr. Edgar R. Del CastilloMr. and Mrs. Carl DevoeMr. Melvin DicksonDr. Jules L. DienstagDr. Paul R. DinsmoreDr. Charles J. DonnellyDr. Peter DorisDr. James DoughertyDr. Heratch O.DoumanianDr. Richard H. Driscoll,Jr.Dr. Sidney DruceMr. and Mrs. MitchellDudnikovMrs. Shirley DudnikovDr. Boniface DyDr. Werner R. DziadzkaMr. and Mrs. Fred J.Early, Jr.Dr. John David EckrichDr. John F. EggersDr. Kurt R. EisslerMr. and Mrs. IrvingEpsteinDr. Paul E. EpsteinDr. Wolfgang EpsteinDr. Seifollah EsfandiariDr. Marco T. EugenioDr. William FallerDr. Albert J. FarrellDr. Paul R. FarrellDr. Philip J. FeitelsonDr. David FeldMrs. Catherine FeldingDr. Stephen A. FernbachDr. Marianne FerraraDr. John L. FerryMr. Milton FisherFoley MedicalFoundation Dr. Judith H. ForgotsonDr. Egil FosslienDr. Nicholas A. FotiasDr. Meyer S. FoxDr. Paul S. FoxDr. Harry FozzardDr. Sidney W. FrankMrs. A. J. FreilerDr. Otto B. GagoDr. Pierce GardnerDr. Ronald GasterDr. Peter GearenDr. David A. GehlhoffDr. Clementina GeiserDr. Richard A. GelineDr. Arthur M. GerberDr. John P. GerberDr. Karl G. GerlachDr. Donald H. GildenDr. Seymour GlagovDr. Jeffrey J. GlassDr. James GlasserDr. Maurice E. GlockDr. B. GoldenDr. Melvin J. GoldsteinDr. Manuel R. GomezDr. Mehran GoulianDr. John A. GriepDr. Anna B. GulvnDr. Robert B. GunnDr. Ashvtosh GuptaDr. Thad C. HagenMr. George HamlinDr. Joseph HarasztiDr. John W. HartzDr. Richard A. HastingsDr. Elsie L. HaugDr. Noel HaydenDr. Frank D. HazlettDr. James HeckmanDr. Zolman HelfandDr. John A. HenkeDr. H. Close HesseltineDr. Waylund HicksMr. and Mrs. EdwinHirschMr. and Mrs. PhilipHofferDr. William K. HoffmanDr. Henry HolcombDr. John A. HoltDr. Carl HolzheimerDr. John HorneffDr. Te Shen HsheiDr. Charles B. HugginsDr. David HurwitzDr. Peter F.HuttenlocherMrs. Hilger P. JenkinsElwood V. Jensen, Ph.D.Dr. Mihailo M. jevticDr. Kimberly JohnsonDr. Herbert W. Jones, Jr.Dr. Richard JonesDr. Lawrence JurkowitzDr. Allen Kahn Dr. George KaganDr. Gary C. KanelDr. Soo San KangMr. and Mrs. EdwardKapelanskiDr. Robert D. KarlanDr. Irwin KasserDr. Gerald H. KatzmanDr. John KeaneDr. Leland E.Kellerhouse, Jr.Dr. Marie A. KellyDr. William C. Kenner,IIIDr. S. Bruce KephartDr. Charles D. KimballMrs. Thomas KindelDr. Steven KlausnerDr. Russell KnopeDr. G. C. KohlDr. Martin KohnMr. and Mrs. RichardKosobudDr. Lewis KramerDr. and Mrs. AveryKrashenMr. and Mrs. HisashiKubotaDr. Vijay KulkarniDr. Fangtsun KuoDr. James L. LambThe Lamport FoundationDr. Joseph LamerDr. Gerald S. LarosDr. Luis LarramendiDr. Thomas J. LaydenDr. Paul LeeDr. Soo K wang LeeDr. Joseph H. LeekDr. Stephen A. LernerDr. Joel D. LevinsonDr. Mark R. LevyDr. Henry J. LewisDr. Jack J. LewisDr. Peter R. LewyMr. David LillyDr. [ui-Kuang LinDr. Kau-Shan LinDr. Herbert A. LintsDr. Milly L. LiuLois LongDr. Enrique H. LonghiMrs. Clayton G. LoosliDr. Donald M. LoveDr. Harry LoweMiss Catherine LuthDr. Harvey LynnDr. Almon MacEwenMrs. M. MacphersonDr. Mahmood MahdaviDr. Samuel N. MaimonDr. Henry MankinDr. John A. MantleDr. Carl 1. MargolisDr. Frank S. MarinoDr. John S.T. Mark Dr. Mary H. MarkhamMartin Mathews, Ph.D.Dr. Charles D. MatthewsDr. Gregory J. MatzDr. Martin Hugh MaxDr. Mitchell B. MaxDr. AlvaroMayorga-CortesDr. Cesare MazzuccoDr. Charles J. McCarthyDr. James H. McCrearyDr. Mary L. McElweeDr. Gerald MclnerneyDr .. Thomas J.McNaughtonDr. Manuel MesirowDr. Earl B. MitchellDr. Frank MitrosMr. and Mrs. HarveyMittenthalDr. Abdool R. MoossaDr. Rudolph MoragneMr. Warner MorganShiro and Kiyoki MoriDr. Marilynn MorrisseyMrs. Herman MossbergDr. Charles MuddDr. Richard P. MullerDr. Francis C. NanceDr. Neal NathansonDr. Cornelius A. NavoriDr. Samuel NelsonDr. Sidney W. NelsonDr. Frank W. NewellMr. and Mrs. RichardNicholsDr. Eduardo NijensohnDr. Pearaylal OgraDr. Mary B. OlneyDr. Suzanne OparilDr. Philip R. OranburgDr. David OrbanDr. Allan OseroffDr. Francis J. OwensDr. Lawrence PacernickMario J. Parisi, D.D.S.Dr. Jung ParkDr. Frederick J. PashkowDr. Steven PaulDr. Cary S. PeabodyDr. Leroy S. PearceDr. Sarah A. PearlDr. Gary PeckDr. Carlos A. PellegriniDr. and Mrs. Leroy PeschCynthia S. PeterDr. Harlan R. PeterjohnDr. Vera PetrasMrs. Wallace PierceDr. K. Vijaya P. PillayDr. Anselmo PinedaDr. Rex A. PittengerMrs. Blanche PlzakDr. Valentin PopaIrene P. PorackyDr. Ronald B. PortDr. Manuel PorthDr. Edward PoserDr. George E. PoucherDr. James T. PoulosDr. Jerry PowellDr. William J. PowellMr. A.N. PritzkerDr. Leonard R. ProctorMrs. Astrid P. ProhaskaDr. James RaabMrs. Essie RaginsDr. Barry RamoDr. Pisit RangsithienchaiDr. David RansohoffDr. Christen e.RattenborgtArnold W. Ravin, Ph.D.Dr. Ronald R. RawittDr. A. RazaqDr. Avtar RazdanDr. Frank R. RealeDr. Allan B. ReiskinDr. George J. Reul, Jr.Dr. Teresa F. RhoadsDr. James RhodesDr. Fred A. RiceDr. John O. RiceMs. Dolores RichertDr. Jerry N. RingerDr. Herbert S. RipleyCorporationMatching GiftsDr. Kenneth E. RobinsonDr. Irma D. L. RodriguezDr. Leonard J. RolfesGenevieve RoscoeDr. Thomas E. RoseMrs. A. Louis RosiMrs. David RosmanDr. Donald RossDr. Weldon T. RossMr. and Mrs. JosephRostkerDr. Robert M. RussellDr. Emmett J. RyanDr. Stuart RyersonDr. Richard A. SachsonDr. Lawrence SamelsonDr. Alan SamuelsDr. Thomas SanchezDr. Phisit SaphyakhajonDr. Angelito e.SaquetonDr. Winston SatterleeDr. Andrew I. SchaferMr. Robert A. SchmidtDr. Howard A.SchneiderDr. William J. SchneiderDr. Melvin SchudmakDr. Gerald SchwartzDr. Leslie SchwartzDr. William B. SchwartzMiss Martha Scott Dr. e. M. SegoviaDr. Edward SenayMr. and Mrs. WilliamSenseDr. Charles SeversonDr. Raymond ShapiraDr. William SheehyDr. Yiu-Wah e. ShekDr. Richard K. SibleyDr. Jerome S. SiegelEric L. Simmons, Ph.D.Dr. Simon J. SimonianDr. George A. SimpsonDr. Ronald SingerDr. Robert SmithDr. William H. SmithDr. Joseph M. SmolevDr. Henrikas SolvsMr. Melvin SpecterDr. Samuel SpectorDr. Stanford D. SplitterMiss Elizabeth SteinDr. Henrik SteinerMr. and Mrs. HoustonStokesMrs. Lucia H. StokesMr. David StrandjordDr. James StuartSummitville Bank andT rust CompanyDr. Harold Sutton, Jr.Dr. Revathi Swaminathan Dr. David SwarnerDr. Peter J. T alsoDr. Alfonso TamayoDr. Edith S. TaylorDr. K. Stephens TaylorDr. M.e. ThirumoorthiMrs. Richard ThomasonDr. Sharon L. Thomsen'Dr. Thomas F.Thornton, Jr.Dr. Margaret A. TippleDr. Frank S. ToloneDr. Hernando TorresDr. Peeing Jau TsaiDr. Michio TsunooDr. Eric J. UdoffDr. Judd W. UhlDr. Eberhard H.UhlenhuthDr. Richard H. UlmerDr. John E. UltrnannDr. Albert L. Van NessDr. Daina VariakojisMr. Ferdinand VerdonckDr. Jacob VergheseDr. Gert VossMrs. Katherine WolcottWalkerDr. Sheldon WalkerMrs. Delferd R. WalserDr. Philip D. Walson Dr. Robert M. Walter,Jr.Dr. Long-Fong WangDr. Sherwyn E. WarrenDr. Richard WeinbergDr. Mark J. WeissDr. Alfred P. WestDr. Hendricks WhitmanDr. Robert J. WilkusDr. Dwight M. WilliamsDr. D.e. WirtzDr. Max WisgerhofWomens Auxiliary ofMuskegon, MichiganDr. G. WoodburyWoodlawn BeachAssociationDr. Emmett E.WoodwardMrs. Mabel WrightDr. Ralph M. WymerDr. Luis R. YarzagarayDr. Eugene YearginDr. William YehDr. e. Richard YoderDr. Chen Ying YuMrs. Joseph YuenDr. Richard ZimmermanDr. Sheldon ZinntDeceasedWe are grateful to the following companies which havematched contributions made by alumni of our Medical Center.Only gifts received in calendar year 1980 are reported.Amoco Foundation, IncorporatedBristol-Myers CompanyR.R. Donnelley and Sons CompanyHoffman-La Roche FoundationIllinois Bell Telephone CompanyInternational Harvester CompanyInternational Telephone and Telegraph CompanyKaiser Steel CompanyMinnesota Mining and Manufacturing FoundationMobile Foundation, IncorporatedPolaroid FoundationRichardson-Merrell, IncorporatedSandoz, IncorporatedSmithkline CorporationThe Upjohn CompanyWestern Electric FundXerox39In MemoriamJ. Roy Blayney 1889-1980The Founding Director of the Medical Cen­ter's Zoller Memorial Dental Clinic, Dr.James Roy Blayney, died on November22, 1980 at the age of 91.Among his many research endeavors,Dr. Blayney directed one of this nation'searly major community studies of the effectof fluoridated water on dental caries. Thistwo-decade study involved adding one partper million of fluoride to the water supplyof the city of Evanston in northeastern Illi­nois. The results were very encouraging inthat they demonstrated a 65% reduction inthe number of new cavities in the schoolchildren of this community of 65,000 dur­ing the mid-1950s.J. Roy Blayney was born in Alexis, Illi­nois on July 28, 1889. He attended Gales­burg, Illinois public school as well asKnox College and later received his dentaldegree from Northwestern University Den­tal School in 1913. In 1924, he received aB.S. degree from Lewis Institute (now theIllinois Institute of Technology). He earnedhis master's degree in Pathology from theUniversity of Chicago in 1928. On March18, 1914, he married Alice ElizabethCrain.From 1913-18, Dr. Blayney conducted aprivate general dental practice in Tallula,Illinois and in 1918 became an instructor atthe University of Illinois College of Dentis­try in Chicago. Later he advanced to pro­fessor, finally becoming department headof Materia Medica and Dental Therapeu-40 tics. From 1936-54 he served as Professorof Dental Surgery at the University of Chi­cago and Director of the Walter G. ZollerMemorial Dental Clinic (becoming Emer­itus Professor in 1954.) As the foundingDirector, he established several new dentalclinics and merged them all with the ori­ginal "University Dental Clinic" into onesignificant dental center. He was able todevelop many innovations in teaching andresearch at the graduate level. There weremany students who flocked to this site be­cause of Roy Blayney's presence as heorganized this multi-disciplinary clinic intoan institute of international prominence.Upon his retirement, a magnificent ban­quet was provided at the Quadrangle Clubon July 24, 1954. He received many giftsand approbations presented by representa­tives of the many organizations with whichhe had been affiliated. Roy and Alice thenmoved to Evanston where he continued onthe Evanston Fluoridation Study for severalmore years. Regrettably, Mrs. Blayneydied in 1964.For consummating the intensive and ex­tensive public health study on fluoridation,he attained considerable national prominen­ce. He was asked to speak about theseaccomplishments in many parts of thecountry and received several awards. Hisvarious honors included the Howard Rick­etts Prize in 1928, the Callahan A ward in1946, and the Trendley Dean Award fromthe International Association for Dental Re­search (IADR) in 1965. He was honoredby being elected President of the IllinoisState Dental Society (1941), the Interna­tional Association for Dental Research(1949), and the American Association ofOral Pathology (1950). In 1945 he becamethe Supreme President of Xi Psi PhiFraternity and was a member of Sigma Xiand the Omicron Kappa Upsilon DentalHonor Society. He was a past Chairman ofthe American Dental Association Councilon Dental Education. Roy Blayney alsowas well-known for authoring more thanone hundred research articles as well as thetextbook, Dental Materia Medica andP harmacolo gy .At age 80, he was invited back to Zollerfor a special luncheon in July, 1969. Hewas presented with a bound volume of let­ters from colleagues all over the worldwhich abundantly testified to his significantcontributions to the field of dentistry over along and productive lifetime. As he approached his 90th year, theISDS invited him to attend the Past­Presidents' Luncheon of their annual meet­ing of May 23, 1979. This was held at theMarriot Hotel in Lincolnshire-not very farfrom his residence (the Presbyterian Home)in Evanston. Upon entering the room, RoyBlayney received a standing ovation. In in­troducing him, I stated that if any Past­President ever had a good chance ofreaching 100, Roy was the best candidate.Dr. Blayney just smiled with a characteris­tic twinkle in his eye.James Roy Blayney continued to providean input to the profession in a number ofways until his death at age 91, making himone its outstanding leaders. A prestigiousmemorial service was held in Bond Chapelon December II, 1980.-Frank 1. Orland,D.D.S., PhD.Benjamin Harry Hager1892-1980Dr. Benjamin Harry Hager, alumnus andbenefactor of the Medical School, diedNovember 26 in Rancho Mirage, Califor­nia. A noted urologist and genito-urinarysurgeon, he was 88.Dr. Hager was a native of Montana anda graduate of both the College (,15) andthe Medical School (Rush' 17). While atthe University, he worked in Physiologywith A. J. Carlson, A. P. Mathews, andFrank Becht. He developed a close rela-tionship with Carlson, in whom he heldlifelong esteem.Dr. Hager served in the U.S. NavyMedical Corps during the First World War.He was stationed for a time on a battleshipand subsequently was placed in charge of ahospital in Santo Domingo. He received aletter of commendation from President Wil­son for heroism performed during his ser­vice. After the war, he was a fellow at theMayo Foundation in urology. He subse­quently organized a Department of Urologyat the University of Wisconsin in Madison,but returned after two years to Mayo as in­structor in the postgraduate school.In 1929, Dr. Hager moved west and setup a practice in urology in Los Angeleswith Dr. Peter Peterson. He was associatedwith the University of Southern CaliforniaMedical School for many years, where hewas Clinical Professor of Surgery, and wasalso Chief of Staff at California Hospital.In addition, he was on staff at St. Vin­cent's and Good Samaritan Hospitals.Dr. Hager retired in 1950. During hisyears of retirement, Dr. Hager served astrustee of a philanthropic foundation. Hetraveled extensively, making a number ofglobal circumnavigations. Dr. Hager's firstwife, Doris Petrola, died in 1951. He mar­ried his second wife, Marguerite Moase, afew years later.Dr. Hager's early ties to the Departmentof Physiology at the University provedabiding, and toward the end of his life hesought to give his devotion concrete form.He contributed regularly to the A. J. Carl­son Lecture Endowment Fund and in 1971he gave the Department of Pharmacologicaland Physiological Sciences a generous en­dowment in the form of a unitrust. Thiswas used to set up the Benjamin H. HagerEndowment Fund. This Fund has beenessential to the initial support of newyoung faculty prior to their obtaining sub­stantial public or private support, as wellas financing several new research ventures.Dr. Hager's gift to the Department of Phar­macological and Physiological Sciencescame at a particularly propitious time inthe Department's development. It hasserved to assist a major recruiting effort inthe Department to bring outstanding facultyin the areas of important physiological adv­ances to the University. The benefits real­ized through this fund serve as a fittingmemorial to Dr. Hager's long interest inPhysiology. His generosity to the Universi­ty will long be remembered.-Alfred Heller, M.D., '60 Dorothy Price1899-1980Dorothy Price, pioneer endocrinologist andProfessor Emeritus of Zoology, died in TheNetherlands on November 17, 1980. Sinceher retirement from The University of Chi­cago in 1965, she had served as BoerhaaveProfessor and later Research Professor atThe University of Leiden. She was activein research until a few months before herdeath. Her career in experimental endocrin­ology spanned the great period of funda­mental discoveries of the role of endocrineglands in the biology of sex. For more than50 years she contributed substantially tothis expanding field. Her greatest contribu­tions helped to formulate our understandingof the hormonal control of reproductionand sex differentiation. Modern methodsfor the control of human reproduction (thepill and fertility drugs) are an outcome ofthese investigations.After receiving her bachelor's degreefrom the University in 1922, Dorothy Pricewent to work as a technician for Frank R.Lillie, Chairman of Zoology and later Deanof the Division of Biological Sciences. Herannual salary of $1,000 was paid from a$1,500 research grant to Lillie from theRockefeller-financed Bureau of SocialHygiene. Not only were these funds part ofone of the first research grants received bythe University, they were specified to beused for studies on the biology of sex, ascientific discipline which in the 1920s wastinged with social as well as scientific con­troversy. The notorious Russian-bornFrench surgeon Veron off was claiming thataging men could be amazingly rejuvenated by transplanting monkey and goat testesinto them.By contrast, Lillie's classic paper on thefreemartin in cattle (the name for the sterilefemale when it is co-twinned with a male)described the fused fetal circulation of thetwo embryos, and was what Lillie termed"a natural experiment" to demonstrate theimportance of blood-borne factors directingthe differentiation of sexual characters.Dorothy Price was put to work making his­tological slides for Lillie and his formerstudent, then Assistant Professor of Zoolo­gy, Carl R. Moore, in attempts to demons­trate experimentally the postulated antagon­ism between male and female hormones.Over the next dozen years, DorothyPrice played an increasingly important rolein the studies from Moore's laboratory, tothe point where she was able to explain apuzzling series of seemingly conflicting re­sults of hormone antagonism by invokingan interaction between secretions both fromthe gonads and the pituitary gland. Thetheory that gonad-stimulating hormonescame from the pituitary cells provided aclue to seemingly contradictory findings,and helped in formulating specific experi­ments for the future.Moore, in 1930, went off to the Second,International Congress for Sex Research inLondon to present this "Moore-PriceLaw" to the world's endocrinologists. Thela w, although now more complex thanwhen first expounded, remains a classicalconcept in biology. It is probably the firstclear example of a feedback control sys­tem.Similar mechanisms have now been de­scribed in many cases of biological control.Endocrinologist Carl Hartman stated in arecently published reminiscence that in1933 this work prompted him to suggest toa pharmaceutical company that ovulation inhumans could probably be continuouslysuppressed by proper hormonal manipula­tion of the pituitary-ovary feedback system.The idea was not published at the time. Ittook another three decades for the Moore­Price studies, and the many others thatthey stimulated, to be utilized successfullyin formulating the contraceptive pill.Dorothy Price obtained her Ph.D. underMoore in 1935. She stayed as his researchassociate for another 12 years, publishingsome 12 collaborative papers, among themthe first paper to demonstrate the remark­able changes in cell structure of accessorysex glands that are rapidly induced by hor­mones. Along with many other findings,41these helped to define the nature of targettissues to hormone action, and to demons­trate the basic changes in the syntheticmachinery of cells when they are speci­fically activated to growth and secretion.This last area was the subject of her doc­toral dissertation, "Normal development ofthe prostate and seminal vesicles of the ratwith a study of experimental postnatalmodifications." Later studies concentratedon the role of hormones in the embryo, uti­lizing the organ culture as isolatedembryonic gonads and associated tissues towhich physiological levels of sex hormoneshave been added. Many of these were incollaboration with her long time associatesEvelina Ortiz and Johanna Zaaijer. Thesewere a logical extension of Lillie'sfreemartin studies, but under conditionswhere the levels of, by now, well charact­erized hormones could be precisely ex­perimentally controlled.The opportunity to hold an academic position finally came in 1947, whenDorothy Price was appointed Assistant Pro­fessor in the Zoology Department, fol­lowed by the post of Associate Professor in1950 and Professor in 1958. She was al­ways a popular teacher. Lectures to col­lege, graduate and medical students con­tained major ingredients of enthusiasm andhumor. Among her graduate students wereRichard Panna becker , now Professor ofBiology at Bluffton College, Samuel Horo­witz, Chairman of Cell Biology at theMichigan Cancer Foundation, and EvelinaOrtiz, Professor of Biology at the Universi­ty of Puerto Rico.After leaving Chicago, Dorothy Pricewas a Visiting Professor at Johns HopkinsUniversity in 1966, and the University ofPuerto Rico on several occasions, in addi­tion to her 14-year professorship at theUniversity of Leiden. She was departmenteditor of the Encyclopaedia Britannica from1958 (0 1969, and served on the editoral board of Physiological Zoology from 1956to 1976 and the Journal of General andComparative Endocrinology from 1961 to1969. She received the University ofLeiden Medal of Honor in 1967, and theUniversity of Chicago ProfessionalAchievement Award for Alumni in 1971.Her scientific career and her enthusiasm forresearch continued until her death. She wasa genuine and forthright person, direct andcompletely honest in her relations with stu­dents and colleagues, but the humor andwarmth were always there as well. Sheworked hard throughout her life, and ex­pected as much from her associates. Sheleaves a legacy of careful and perceptivescientific contributions, which in past de­cades helped to set the new and occasional­ly faltering science of the biology of sexon a sound course.-Hewson Swift, Ph.D.Alumni Deaths'21 Rush Raymond J. Harrington, Sep­tember 7, Sioux City, Iowa. Specialty: Inter­nal Medicine and Cardiovascular Diseases.'23 Rush Sung Tao Kwan (S.B. '20),November 9, Berkeley, California; age 84.Specialty: Orthopedic and General Surgery.Upon receiving his degree in 1923, Dr.K wan left for China to serve as the Headof the Surgery Department at BeijingMedical College, where he earned thereputation of "Father of Neurosurgery."He returned to the United States in 1949 tojoin the Kaiser-Permanente Group in Rich­mond, California. In 1973 he went back toChina to study acupuncture, which he prac­ticed in Berkeley upon his return. He issurvived by his wife, Florence; daughters,Verna Lee and Jeanne Fong; and son,Stephan.'24 Rush Nathan N. Crohn, December 1,Chicago, Illinois; age 80. Specialty: Gener­al Surgery.'24 Rush William J. Yonker, November19, West Palm Beach, Florida; age 87.Specialty: Internal Medicine.Dr. Yonker graduated from Rush Medi­cal College and served there as a clinicalassociate specializing in otolaryngology forseveral years.'26 Rush Wallace R. Greiner, August 11,Seattle, Washington; age 80. Specialty:Otorhinolaryngology and Ophthalmology.42 '29 Rush Victor Levine (S.B. '25),November 30, Chicago, Illinois; age 76.Specialty: Forensic Pathology.Dr. Levine had served as Chairman andProfessor in the Department of Pathologyat Chicago Medical School from 1942-46and served as chief pathologist for thecoroner of Cook County from 1957-59. Hewas very active as an attending pathologistfor many Chicago-area hospitals, and hadserved as past-president for the Associationfor the Study of Neoplastic Diseases. He issurvived by his daughter, Mrs. FrancesAbramson.'29 Rush Frederic R. Weedon, July 15,Chapel Hill, North Carolina; age 85. Spe­cialty: Pathology Research.'30 Rush Lawrence T. Brown, March 3,1980, Denver, Colorado. Specialty: Gener­al Practice.'32 Rush Marvin G. Flannery, Septem­ber 28, Coral Gables, Florida; age 75, Spe­cialty: Abdominal and General Surgery.Dr. Flannery had been a clinical profes­sor of anatomy at the University of MiamiMedical School, and had served on themedical school faculties of NorthwesternUniversity and University of Illinois. In1942, he organized the "Flannery Unit" of50 doctors and 90 nurses for the U. S.Army Air Corps, and later served as Chiefof Surgery at the Air Force Regional Hos­pital in Coral Gables. He is survived by hiswife, Virginia; and daughters VirginiaEmerson, Mary Budinger, and Ellen Saun­ders. '33 Rush Frederick Stenn (S.B. '28,A.M. '35), October 8, Highland Park, Illi­nois; age 71. Specialty: Internal Medicineand Gastroenterology.Dr. Stenn had recently retired as Associ­ate Professor of Medicine at NorthwesternUniversity. In addition to his academicpost, his special interest included ethicsand humanism in medicine, and the studyof ancient medicine. He is survived by hiswife, Harriet; daughter Andrea Stryer; andsons, Dr. Kurt and Dr. Peter.'34 Rush Benjamin F. Hart, May 14,Plantation, Florida. Specialty: Nutritionand Obstetrics and Gynecology.'35 Rush Robert A. Nason, December 21,Garrett, Indiana. Specialty: GeneralSurgery.'36 Joan Fleming, August II, Denver,Colorado; age 76. Specialty: Psychoanaly­tic Psychiatry.After graduating from the University,Dr. Fleming trained at the Chicago Insti­tute for Psychoanalysis, and later becameits Dean of Education. She moved to Den­ver in 1969 to join the faculty at Universityof Colorado School of Medicine and wasassociated with the Denver Institute ofPsychoanalysis. She is survived by a sister,Helen Summers; and a brother, Dr. RuddFleming.'37 Robert S. Teague (Ph.D. '39),September 23, Birmingham, Alabama.Specialty: Internal Medicine and HospitalAdministration.'38 David S. Pankratz, October 6, Ox­ford, Mississippi; age 81. Specialty:Psychiatry .After graduating from the University,Dr. Pankratz joined the faculty at the Uni­versity of Mississippi. He was named itsDean in 1946, and is credited with workingwith citizens and leaders in gaining approv­al and appropriations for the four-yearmedical school in 1955. Under his lead­ership, the school graduated four classes ofdoctors-the first ever trained entirely inMississippi. In 1961 Dr. Pankratz retiredfrom administrative work and entered aresidency program in psychiatry. He prac­ticed psychiatry in clinics around Tennes­see and Kansas until he retired for asecond time in 1972. David Pankratz waswell known for his work as a medical edu­cator. For his dedication, he was awardedthe 1952 Distinguished Service Awardfrom the University of Chicago MedicalAlumni Association. He is survived by hiswife, Ruth; and daughter, Mrs. HowardDuvall.'41 Owen C. Berg, September 14, Waco,Texas; age 66. Specialty: Urology.While in medical school, Dr. Berg par­ticipated in Dr. Charles Huggins' researchon prostate cancer. In 1952, in conjunctionwith Dr. David Allen, he devised a methodof doing excretory urography in childrenusing carbonated beverages. This methodbecame standard throughout the UnitedStates. Dr. Berg moved to Wichita Fallsafter graduation. He served as Chief ofUrology at Bethania Hospital in WichitaFalls before moving to Temple, Texas in1975. An active amateur photographer, hewas vice-president of the PhotographicSociety of America and was the first Texasphotographer awarded a fellowship by thatgroup. Surviving are his wife, Evelyn(A.B. '37); sons, Charles J. (A.B. '64),William (Ph.D. '75 Biochemistry), andJohn; and daughters, Ann Berg Turchickand Mary Berg.'47 Jesse Bedford Shelmire III, Decem­ber 8, Dallas, Texas; age 54. Specialty:Dermatology.A native of Dallas and third-generationdermatologist, Dr. Shelmire joined hisfather's dermatology practice in Dallas in1954. He was a Clinical Professor of Der­matology at Southwestern Medical School,and served as Division Chairman from1960 until 1964. The author of two best­selling books on dermatology, The Art ofLooking Younger (1973), and The Art ofBeing Beautiful (1975), Dr. Shelmire had planned on releasing a third book this year.He is survived by his wife, Karen; son,Jesse; and daughters, Susan and Laura.'64 Baruch M. Aaron, January 28, Chica­go, Illinois; age 41. Specialty: Dermatolo­gy and Emergency Medicine.Dr. Aaron was a resident at the Uni­versity from 1965-68, served in a medicalcorps in Vietnam, and later worked as anemergency room physician in Dyer, Indi­ana. However, a broken wrist suffered inan accident prevented him from performingcardiovascular-pulmonary resuscitation, andhe returned to the University as a Volun­tary Clinical Fellow in the Section of Der­matology, Department of Medicine.Divisional Alumni DeathsM. Dorisse Howe (Ph.D. '29 Botany),August 19, New Hartford, New York.Former Staff DeathsDr. David E. Kopans, (Obstetrics andGynecology Resident '42-'44), August 3,Sarasota, Florida. Specialty: Obstetrics andGynecology.After completion of his residency, Dr.Kopans was in private practice in obstetricsand gynecology until his retirement inNovember, 1977. He served on the staff ofthe Boston Hospital for Women, was aninstructor at Harvard Medical School, andan associate professor at Boston UniversitySchool of Medicine. He devoted manyyears to the Massachusetts Maternal Mor­tality Committee and to the achievement ofthe quality medical care for women. Amember of numerous medical specialtysocieties, Dr. Kopans was a founding fel­low of the American College of Obstetri­cians and Gynecologists, and received its1980 award for outstanding district ser­vices. He is survived by his wife, Edith.Dr. Ernest Kraft, (Radiology Resident'31-'32), October 21, New York City,New York; age 81. Specialty: Radiology.After obtaining his degree and finishingan internship in Berlin, Dr. Kraft emi­grated to the United States where he under­took radiology training at Michael ReeseHospital until 1924. He finished his re­sidency in radiology at Chicago, thenmoved to New York to become Director ofRadiology at the Northport Long IslandV A Hospital from 1957-68, and later,Director of St. Luke's School of Radiogra­phy. A student of Wilhelm Konrad Roent- gen, Dr. Kraft was fascinated with the lifeof his mentor and the factors leading to thediscovery of X-ray. His last few yearswere dedicated to researching this topicand working on a manuscript entitled"Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen, His Life andTimes." He is survived by his wife, Gerda,and daughter, Edith.Alumni NewsRush 1931Edward F. Steichen writes from Lenora,Kansas: "My 50th class anniversary lastMay, with a few remnants of the last classat Rush, was very enjoyable, but a verygrim reminder that time waits for no man,and that we live only by looking ahead forsomeone, also well educated, to take ourplace through our sponsorship. BenjaminRush has proved that point with a colossalUniversity of Chicago Medical School andClinics and Pritzker School of Medicine,way beyond his fondest dreams."Rush 1932Catherine L. Dobson has accepted a fulltime faculty position as Clinical Associatein the Department of Obstetrics and Gyne­cology at Chicago Lying-in Hospital. Priorto her appointment, Dr. Dobson had main­tained a private practice in gynecology inChicago.1937Charles H. Rammelkamp is ProfessorEmeritus in the Departments of Medicineand Preventive Medicine at Case WesternReserve. He has also joined the Depart­ment of Epidemiology at Case Western.Leo Rangell, Clinical Professor ofPsychiatry at UCLA and Clinical Professorof Psychiatry at University of California­San Francisco, has published The Mind ofWatergate: An Exploration of the Com­promise of Integrity (W. W. Norton &Company, 1980). The book focuses on thebehavior of man in a group, and the influ­ence of the group on the mental processes.Dr. Rangell is the past-president of theAmerican and International PsychoanalyticAssociations.431941:p. -,_-----­_---:�"'3Clarence V. Hodges retired from the Uni­versity of Oregon Health Sciences Centerin Portland, Oregon, after 31 years as Di­rector of the Urology program, andassumed a similar position as Professor ofSurgery and Chief of the Division of Urol­ogy at John Burns School of Medicine,University of Hawaii, Honolulu. He servedas president of the American Board ofUrology from 1975-76, and president ofthe Society of University Urologists from1979-80.Rush 1942John R. Tobin, Jr., the John W. ClarkeProfessor of Medicine and Chairman of theDepartment of Medicine at the StritchSchool of Medicine, Loyola University,was awarded the 1980 Stritch Medal onNovember 25, 1980. The Stritch Medal isawarded annually to honor individualsmaking outstanding contributions to themedical profession.1942Robert Ebert (S.B. '36) has been namedhead of the Presidential Selection Commit­tee for Barnard College, Columbia Univer­sity, New York. Dr. Ebert was an Associ­ate Professor in the Department of Medi­cine at the University of Chicago from1947-56. He served as Dean of the Har­vard Medical School from 1956--77, andhas been a member of the Board of Trus­tees at Barnard since 1977.44 1944James J. Pattee retired from his practiceof anesthesiology in Colorado Springs lastNovember.Cornelius Vander Laan is Chairman ofthe University of Chicago Medical Student!Alumni Host Program. Last November hepresided over the wine and cheese party forthe entering class, where students andalumni hosts met to socialize. The programis sponsored by the Medical Alumni Asso­ciation.1947Tom Tourlentes (S.B. '47) writes that heis still "executive director of a comprehen­sive community mental health center inRock Island, Illinois, which fulfills manyof the original federal ideals and concep­tual goals, successfully integrating publicand private service into a simple system oftreatment and care." He is also presidentof the American Association of PsychiatricAdministrators, and chairman of the Com­mittee on Certification of PsychiatricAdministrators of the American PsychiatricAssociation.1948Winslow G. Fox writes from Ann Arbor,Michigan: "Our fourth daughter has nowcompleted college. Two of our daughtersare in hospital work. Elizabeth and I enjoyliving in a Christian community, while theclock keeps track of the thirty-one plusyears in family practice." Ernst Jaffe writes from Tenafly, NewJersey: "1980 has been quite a year for ourfamily. Our daughter, Stephanie, a fourth­year medical student at the Albert EinsteinCollege of Medicine, married Dr. StephenJ. Green on June 14th. Her husband, whograduated from Tufts Medical School inMay, is an intern at North Shore Hospitalin the North Shore-Cornell University­Sloan-Kettering Memorial Hospital medicalresidency program. She is interested inpediatrics, and is in the process of lookingfor an appropriate internship in the NewYork area.On September 13th, our son, Richard,married Geraldine Carmelich. He graduatedfrom Lafayette College in 1978 and is cur­rently an assistant marketing representativefor IBM in Philadelphia. Gerry is an assis­tant branch manager for a suburban banknear Philadelphia. They met while bothwere attending college, and they now livein Devon, Pennsylvania.Naturally, we are extremely proud andpleased with both of our children. We lovetheir respective mates as much as our own,and we have now doubled our small fami­ly's next generation."1952Morris J. Levine is the 1980-81 presidentof the Pinellas County Medical Society. Its1,000 members reside in St. Petersburg,Clearwater, and Largo, Florida.1953Jean H. (Ph.B. '47, S.B. '50) and RobertPriest ('54) are on sabbatical leave at theUniversity of Auckland, Auckland, NewZealand. Bob is in the Department ofPathology and Jean is in the Department ofCommunity Health, Genetics Unit. Theywrite, "New Zealand is a beautiful coun­try!"1954Hugh Davis has joined the medical staff ofthe Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, as headof the Division of Hematology/Oncology.He was previously Professor of HumanOncology and Medicine at the Universityof Wisconsin-Madison.Edwin L. Stickney has been awardeddiplomate status by the American Board ofMedical Hypnosis. Dr. Stickney practicesin Miles City, Montana.1957Theodore J. Jacobs is practicingpsychoanalysis and psychotherapy in NewYork City and Scarsdale. He is alsoteaching as Associate Clinical Professor atAlbert Einstein College of Medicine, andhas just completed his term as secretary ofthe New York Psychoanalytic Institute.M. Barry Kirschenbaum was recentlypromoted to Associate Professor of ClinicalDermatology at Northwestern University.He is also president of the North SuburbanBranch of the Chicago Medical Society andpresident of the volunteer staff of the De­partment of Dermatology at NorthwesternUniversity.Richard H. Moy (A.B. '53, S.B. '54),Dean and Provost of Southern Illinois Uni­versity School of Medicine, was elected tothe Executive Council of the AmericanAssociation of Medical Colleges (AAMC)at the 91st annual meeting, October 25-30,in Washington, D.C.Julius Silberger, Jr ,; is the author ofMary Baker Eddy: An Interpretive Biogra­phy of the Founder of Christian Science(Little, Brown and Co., Boston.) Dr.Silberger practices psychiatry in Brookline,Massachusetts.1958Jim Survis is now practicing pathology atthe University of Edinburgh MedicalSchool, Scotland.1959E. H. Given has accepted the position ofAssistant Medical Director of Standard OilCompany (Indiana), Minerals Division,Denver, Colorado, to start in early April.He is currently Medical director of KaiserSteel Corporation, Steel Manufacturing Di­vision, Fontana, California.1960Allen Dekelboum, Associate Clinical Pro­fessor in the Department of Otolaryngology at the University of California School ofMedicine-San Francisco, received the 1980Outstanding Teacher Award given by thesenior residents of the Department of Oto­laryngology. He is the third recipient ofthis award since its inception 10 years ago.1961Ivan Diamond (A.B. '56, S.B. '57, Ph.D.'67 Anatomy) has been promoted to Pro­fessor in the Departments of Neurology,Pediatrics and Pharmacology at the Uni­versity of California-San Francisco.1963Howard Schachter (S.B. '59) was recent­ly promoted to Associate Professor of Clin­ical Medicine at Northwestern MedicalSchool, and has been elected to fellowshipin the American College of Physicians. Herecently co-authored a book, with Dr.Joseph B. Kirsner, Louis Block Distin­guished Service Professor of Medicine, en­titled Crohn's Disease of the Gastrointes­tinal Tract (John Wiley and Sons, NewYork).1964Charles Ellenbogen is now Associate Pro­fessor in the Department of Medicine atDuke University Medical School andDirector of Internal Medicine for the Fami­ly Practice Residency at the FayettevilleArea Health Education Foundation, Fayet­teville, North Carolina. He has remainedactive in the Air Force reserves, serving asconsultant to the Surgeon General in infec­tious diseases for the Air Force medicaltraining programs.1966Ronald J. Krone was recently appointedAssociate Professor of Medicine atWashington University in St. Louis. He re­mains Director of the Cardiac Catheteriza­tion Laboratory at the Jewish Hospital ofSI. Louis.Julian Rimpila, class chairman for theclass of 1966, was recently cited in Chica­go Medicine (83:20) for his volunteerefforts as cubmaster and assistant scoutmas­ter in Westchester, Illinois. Although heserves on the staffs of Grant, Henrotin, andGottleib Memorial Hospitals in Chicago, he says his work with the Scouts is almostequal in importance to his work in medi­cine. "I am a better physician because ofmy volunteer work. It would be wonderfulfor more physicians and their families toparticipate," he. says. "It gives the chil­dren a sense of identity and responsibil­ity. "1967Jon and Dorothy Gockerman and theirsons, Brian, Matthew, and Peter, havemoved to Birmingham, Alabama where Jonis the director of the newly instituted bonemarrow transplant program at the Universi­ty of Alabama Medical Center.William K. Stell (Ph.D. '66 Anatomy)left the Jules Stein Eye Institute-UCLA,where he was the recipient of the 1979William and Mary Greve International Re­search Scholarship Award, to become Pro­fessor and Head of the Department ofAnatomy at the University of CalgaryFaculty of Medicine. He is also the direc­tor of the Lions' Sight Centre and FacultyElectron Microscopy Unit and is actively"recruiting funds and people to bolster eyeresearch efforts."Nada Logan Stotland is now an attendingphysician in the Department of Psychiatryat Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago. Shedoes consultation/liaison work with the De­partment of Obstetrics and Gynecology,sees private patients, and teaches behavior­al science in the family practice program atCook County Hospital. The Stotlands andtheir four daughters still live in Hyde Park,and would enjoy seeing visiting classmates.1968Elliot Bruce Hochman has joined thefaculty of Charles R. Drew PostgraduateMedical School-Los Angeles, as AssistantProfessor of Pediatrics. He holds the sameposition in the Department of Pediatrics atUCLA. He has recently published "RectalGonorrhea in Men: Diagnosis andTreatment;" Annals of Internal Medicine,April 1980.Franklin Kozin tells us he is spending the1980-81 year doing research at Scripp' sClinic and Research Foundation in SanDiego, California.451971Harlan D. Alpern has completed a res­idency in pathology at Strong MemorialHospital of the University of Rochester. Heis now Pathologist-in-Chief at the MaryImogene Bassett Hospital in Cooperstown,New York, and is Assistant Clinical Pro­fessor of Pathology at Columbia Universi­ty. He and his wife, Sandee, a spinner andweaver, have two children, Micha, agefive, and Rebecca, age two.Kenneth Begelman has left the Navy andis now a senior staff cardiac surgeon at theGuthrie Clinic in Sayre, Pennsylvania. He,his wife, and their two children live inElmira, New York.1972Elliot M. Landaw has received a Ph.D. inbiomathematics from the University ofCalifornia-Los Angeles, and has beenappointed Assistant Professor of Biomathe­matics and Pediatrics at UCLA School ofMedicine.Louis B. Smolen sky writes: "I am now inmy third year of pediatric practice with theHawthorne Community Medical Group, asmall, but growing HMO in the LosAngeles area. My wife, Doris, is finishingher last year of a hematology/oncology fel­lowship at the University of Southern Cali­fornia Medical Center. Our son, Aaron,four years old, and daughter, Nicole, sixmonths old, never cease to amaze us."1973Richard W. Furlanetto (Ph. D. ' 72Biochemistry) has recently been promotedto Associate Professor of Pediatrics at theUniversity of Texas Medical Branch inGalveston. He holds a joint appointment inthe Department of Human BiologicalChemistry and Genetics.Richard F. Gaeke, class chairman forthe class of 1973, has been elected to fel­lowship in the 50,000 member AmericanCollege of Physicians. Dr. Gaeke washonored during the Convocation ceremonyat the College's Annual Session in KansasCity, April 6-9. Dr. Gaeke is one of14,000 physicians to be honored with Fel­lowship in the College, 669 having beenelected this year. Richard and his wife,Mary Ellen, M.D. '75, have been residents46 of Middletown, Ohio since July 1980. Hewas previously an Assistant Professor inthe Department of Medicine at the Uni­versity of Chicago, and is now on the staffof Middletown Hospital, Ohio.Mary Highley (formerly Pretzer) and hus­band Kenneth Cogen (Resident, InternalMedicine '76) have opened private practicein Bremerton, Washington. Mary com­pleted her training in endocrinology at theUniversity of Wisconsin, and Kennethtrained in nephrology at Stanford. He hasrecently opened a dialysis unit inBremerton. They write: "We have twodaughters, age one and two, who are plan­ning to go to law school."1974Hector Luiz Conceicao is a part-timepediatrician in the Department of InfectiousDiseases at San Sebastian Hospital in Riode Janeiro, in addition to maintaining hisown private clinic in Rio de Janeiro.Edwin C. Douglas, after three years in thepediatric oncology branch of the NationalCancer Institute, has moved to Tampa,Florida. He is now Assistant Professor ofPediatrics, Division of Hematology/Oncol­ogy, at the University of South FloridaSchool of Medicine.Nathan M. Szajnberg (A.B. '74) hasbeen appointed Clinical Director of thePsychodynamic unit of Barclay Hospital inChicago. The unit is devoted to providingpsychodynamically-oriented long-term carefor adults and adolescents. Consults in­clude Peter Giovacchini '43, and BrunoBettelheim, Professor Emeritus in the De­partment of Psychiatry.1975Brian B. Berger completed his ophthal­mology residency at the Illinois Eye andEar Infirmary of the University of Illinois in1979. He then completed a one-year fel­lowship in diseases and surgery of thevitreous and retina with Dr. ThomasAaberg at the Medical College of Wiscon­sin in Milwaukee. This past summer, hemarried Michelle A. Hayes, a seniormedical student at the Medical College ofWisconsin who is also planning to pursue acareer in ophthalmology. Brian has recent­ly taken a joint appointment as head of theretina section in the Division of Ophthal- mology of Scott and White Clinic of theTexas A&M University School of Medi­cine in Temple, Texas. He has authored achapter entitled, "Lens, Cataract and ItsManagement," which will be published inPrinciples and Practice of Ophthalmologyby Peyman, Saunders.Maga Jackson, class chairman for theclass of 1975, has moved from LosAngeles and opened private practice inOceanside, California.Jennifer Leaning Link is working as astaff physician in the emergency depart­ment of Mount Auburn Hospital, Cam­bridge, Massachusetts, and serves as amember of the executive committee ofPhysicians for Social Responsibility.Mary Pat Pauly has completed her res­idency and fellowship in critical care/inter­nal medicine at the University of Califor­nia-Davis, and has earned her board cer­tification in internal medicine. She hasstarted her first job as an internist withGroup Health in Seattle. Mary Pat, herhusband, Ronald Petrich, and sonsMichael, aged three, and Matthew, agedone and a half, live in Bellevue, Washing­ton.Rod Perry and his wife, Donnis S. Hob­son ('74) have moved to Oakland, Califor­nia, from Elgin, Illinois.Reed A. Wendel has completed a generalsurgery residency at Virginia Mason Hos­pital in Seattle, and has opened a privatepractice in general and vascular surgery inPort Angeles, Washington.1976Leslie R. Cohen became a diplomate ofthe American Board of Radiology in June1980. He has joined the practice of X-rayConsultants P.c. of Flint, Michigan in di­agnostic radiology and primarily practicesat St. Joseph Hospital-University AffiliatedHospitals of Michigan, Michigan StateUniversity, where he is Assistant ClinicalProfessor.Jim Goldstein reports that he is pre­sently "taking it easy in California and isfinishing a Clinical Fellowship in Cardiolo­gy at University of California-San Francis­co after two years of cardiovascular re­search. It's a long way from Hyde Parkand Harper Square!"Siegfried Loghar Hausladen is com­pleting his otolaryngology residency atBarnes Hospital, St. Louis, and hasaccepted a fellowship in pediatric otolaryn­gology at the University of Cincinnati.Lee Katz completed his residency in in­ternal medicine at Yale, and is currentlythere as a nephrology fellow. He and hiswife, Lauragene, a law student at the Uni­versity of Connecticut, live about 15 milesfrom New Haven, and report that "besidesan annual hurricane scare, the life here isfantastic. "Steve Marioni is completing a radiologyresidency at Yale.Thomas J. McKearn (Ph.D. '74Pathology) is co-author of MonoclonalAntibodies (Plenum Press, 1980). Dr.McKearn is currently Assistant Professor ofPathology at the University of Pennsylva­nia Medical School.David S. Strayer (Ph.D. '74 Pathology)writes: "I have completed a residency inpathology and fellowship in surgicalpathology at Barnes Hospital, St. Louis. InJuly, I assumed a position at the Universityof California-San Diego, with combinedresponsibilities in service (surgical patholo­gy) and laboratory research in immunolo­gy. My wife, Frances, and our two chil­dren, Reuben and Rebecca, have adaptedto the city and its environs, and have madethem our home. ' ,Robert Wolfe (A.B. '72) has transferredto family medicine at West Suburban Hos­pital in Oak Park, Illinois, after two yearsin the Department of Pathology at North­western University. He has accepted a jobas full-time emergency room physician atthe Baptiste Medical Center in Springfield,Massachusetts (affiliated with Tufts Medi­cal School), starting July 1981. Rob andhis wife, Marilyn, have two children,Noah, age three and Chana, age one.1977Barry Foster Atlas is finishing hisophthalmology residency at NorthwesternUniversity. In July he will begin a oneyear fellowship in anterior segmentophthalmic surgery at the University ofConnecticut, Farmington.Laurence Kanter finished his residencyin anesthesia at Case Western Reserve in Cleveland, and has started a fellowship incardiac anesthesiology (intensive care) atNorthwestern University School of Medi­cine, Chicago.James A. Magner has completed an in­ternship and residency in internal medicineat the University of Texas-San Antonio,and is now a clinical associate in endocri­nology at the National Institute of Health,Bethesda, Maryland.John A. Scarlett has completed his res­idency in internal medicine at the Hospitalof the University of Pennsylvania and isnow an endocrinology fellow at the Uni­versity of Colorado in Denver. He andSusan have a three-year-old daughter,Jessica.Richard K. Williams is completing hissecond year in the National Health Service,practicing in Immokalee and EvergladesCity, Florida. He will be entering a thirdyear of residency in internal medicine atthe University of Minnesota, Minneapolisin July.1978Ralph Smathers is a third-year resident inradiology at the University of Virginia,Charlottesville, Virginia.1980Thomas W. Lukens (Ph.D. '78 Patholo­gy) and his wife, Nancy, are the parents ofAdam Daniel, their first child, born August28, 1980. The new family lives in Phila­delphia, Pennsylvania. Divisional AlumniNews1925Dr. Frederic T. Jung (Ph.D. '25 Physiol­ogy) was awarded the first AmericanMedical Writers Association (AMW A) LifeMembership in recognition of his manyaccomplishments and contributions in thefield of medical communications. He washonored at the December meeting of theAMW A in Chicago. Dr. Jung received hisM.D. from Northwestern UniversityMedical School, where he later joined thefaculty. He also served as assistant editorof JAMA from 1956--63.1948Lloyd M. Kozloff (B.S. '43, Ph.D. '48Biochemistry) is Dean of the Graduate Di­vison and Professor in the Department ofMicrobiology at the University of Califor­nia-San Francisco. He was formerly Pro­fessor of Microbiology at the University ofColorado Medical School in Denver.1973William J. Gonyea (Ph.D. '73 Anatomy)has been promoted to Professor of CellBiology at the University of Texas HealthScience Center. He has also been electedto the School Board of the Alvarado Inde­pendent School District, Alvarado, Texas,where he resides with his wife, Francine,and two sons, Michael Ross, aged two andWilliam Joseph Jr., aged one.Dr. 1. Alfred Rider (S.B. '42, M.D. '44, PhD. '51) and Mrs. Rider greet President andMrs. Ronald Reagan at a pre-inaugural gathering in California.47Former Staff NewsGeoffrey L. Braden (Intern and Resident,Internal Medicine '78) has completed a fel­lowship at Peter Brent Brigham Hospital.He has joined practice with Julian Katz '62in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. Dr. Katz isClinical Professor of Medicine in the Divi­sion of Gastroenterology, and lecturer inBiochemistry and Physiology at the Medic­al College at Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.Joseph S. Haraszti (Resident, Psychiatry'75) has opened psychiatric private practicein the Chicago area, jointly with his wife,Csilla M. Stanzel, M.D. Their practice islimited to general adult psychiatry, geriat­ric psychiatry, mood disorders, and specialproblems of psychopharmacology.Ronald J. Kallen, M.D. (Associate Pro­fessor, Department of Pediatrics, La Rabi­da Children's Hospital and Research Hos­pital '70-'75), has joined the staff of Mt.Sinai Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio, asAssistant Director in the Department ofPediatrics, and a consultant in pediatricnephrology. Dr. Kallen served his in­ternship and residency at Michael ReeseHospital, Chicago, where he was a post­doctoral fellow in pediatric nephrology. Helater did pediatric research for Johns Hop­kins Hospital with its cholera unit in Cal­cutta, India. He received the Golden Kid­ney Teaching Award from the Division ofHypertension and Nephrology at ClevelandClinic, where he was on the staff from1975 until his recent appointment at Mt.Sinai. An active member of the KidneyFoundation of Ohio, Dr. Kallen is consul­tant to the Interhospital Television Networkof the Greater Cleveland Hospital Associa­tion.Gerasim Tikoff (Resident and Intern, In­ternal Medicine ' 62) is now Chief ofMedical Service, Professor and AssociateChairman of the Department of InternalMedicine at the Medical College of Vir­ginia in Richmond. He had previously beenProfessor of Medicine at the University ofUtah College of Medicine, where he hadbeen the recipient of outstanding teacherawards given by the senior class for thelast nine years. He also served as Chief ofMedical Service at Salt Lake VA Hospitalsince 1970.48 Irwin M. Weinstein (Resident '51-'54,Associate Professor '54, Internal Medicine)was elected to the Institute of Medicine ofthe National Academy of Sciences for afive-year term that began January 1. Dr.Weinstein is now Clinical Professor ofMedicine, University of California-LosAngeles, Center for Health Sciences, andhas a private practice in Los Angeles. Hewas cited for "outstanding contributions tothe field of health. "Departmental NewsAnatomyMichael LaBarbera, Assistant Professorin the Department of Anatomy, the Col­lege, and Committee on Evolutionary Biol­ogy, lectured at the University of Alberta -Edmonton, Canada, in the Zoology Depart­ment Visiting Professor Program last De­cember. He presented four lectures entitled:"The Design of Circulatory Systems,""The Architecture of Vertebral Columns,""A Mechanistic Approach to SuspensionFeeders: Aerosol Models and Real Anim­als," and" Applying Functional Models: AField Study on the Ecology of Six Speciesof (extinct) Bivalves."BiologyAron A. Moscona, Louis Block Professorin the Departments of Biology and Patholo­gy, the College, and Committees on De­velopmental Biology, Genetics, Immunolo­gy, and Neurobiology, was recently electedas a Foreign Member of the Instituto Lom­bardo, Accademia di Scienza e Lettere, the oldest and most venerable Italian scienceacademy. His research concerns the proces­ses of recognition and determination inembryonic neural tissue during early de­velopment.Emergency MedicineThree faculty members participated in theAmerican College of Emergency Physi­cians National Scientific Assembly in LasVegas on September 13-20. Dr. Ann Har­wood, Assistant Professor in the Depart­ment and Director of the Emergency Medi­cine Residency Program, presented a three­hour post-graduate course on "UrologicEmergencies." Dr. Frank Baker II,Associate Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Emergency Medicine andAssociate Professor in the Department ofMedicine, was a member of the faculty fora postgraduate course entitled "RespiratoryFailure-The First Thirty Minutes." Dr.John Lumpkin, Assistant Professor in thedepartment, presented a paper during a sci­entific session on "T's and Blues: A NewDrug Abuse," authored by Drs. Lumpkin,Baker, Ardena Flippin, Resident in the De­partment, and Robert Rothstein, formerAssistant Professor in the Department.Dr. David Aronow, Assistant Professorin the Department of Emergency Medicine,was a special consultant to the AmericanCollege of Emergency Physicians NationalScientific Assembly Planning Committee inLas Vegas, and developed exhibits of com­puter-managed continuing medicine educa­tion systems.Dr. Jack Franaszek, Assistant Profes­sor and Associate Chairman of the Depart­ment of Emergency Medicine, Dr. FrankBaker II, and Dr. John Lumpkin have pas­sed the new certification examination, andare now diplomates of the American Boardof Emergency Medicine. Dr. Lumpkin wasalso selected to serve on the Council ofGovernment Affairs of the Illinois StateMedical Society. He will serve on theCouncil for one year, aiding the IllinoisState Medical Society in its legislativeefforts.Dr. Ann Harwood, participated on theDelphi Panel on Emergency Medicine forthe Graduate Medical Education NationalAdvisory Council in Washington, D.C.The Delphi Panel studied the manpower re­quirements of physicians for emergencymedicine.MedicineAppointments:Dr. G. Jelami Dhar-Clinical Associate(Associate Professor) (Gastroenterology)Dr. Helen M. Emery-Assistant ProfessorDr. Mukesh C. Jain--Assistant Professor(Michael Reese Hospital)Dr. Govindarajan Padmanaban-Visit­ing Associate ProfessorDr. Leslie J. DeGroot, Professor in theDepartments of Medicine and Radiology,and Head of the Endocrine Section, wasnamed President-Elect of the AmericanThyroid Association. He will assume thefull responsibilities of this office inSeptember. Dr. DeGroot also attended theAnnual Meeting of the American ThyroidAssociation in San Diego, and presentedresults of his recent research on"Triiodothyronine- Induced Alterations inLiver Phosphokinase Activity."Dr. Joseph B. Kirsner, Louis BlockDistinguished Service Professor in the De­partment of Medicine, presented a lectureon gastrointestinal problems at the Cleve­land Clinic in November. He also partici­pated in a symposium of the National Insti­tute of Health in Reston, Virginia, ongrowth retardation; and delivered theSamuel Gross lecture at the University ofLouisville. Dr. Kirsner is co-author, withDr. Howard Schacter (S.B. '59, M.D.'63), now at Northwestern University, ofCrohn's Disease of the GastrointestinalTract (John Wiley and Sons, Inc., NewYork, 1980).Dr. Janet Rowley, Professor in the De­partment of Medicine, was a speaker at asymposium on "Human Genetics: The In­herited Challenge," sponsored by theBoard of Directors of Chicago Lying-inHospital on November 5 in Chicago. Shespoke on the role of genes in several hu­man diseases.Dr. Alvin R. Tarlov, Professor in theDepartment of Medicine, has been electeda member of the Institute of Medicine ofthe National Academy of Science,Washington, D.C. Konrad E. Bloch,Nobel laureate and former faculty member('46-'54), was elected to senior mem­bership.The Endocrine Services offered a con­tinuing medical education seminar devotedto contemporary practice of endocrinology,entitled "Clinical Endocrinology for1980." The participating faculty and theirlecture topics were: Dr. Leslie DeGroot,Professor in the Departments of Medicine and Radiology, "Some Views on CurrentEndocrine Tests;" Dr. Jonathan Jaspan,Assistant Professor in the Department ofMedicine, "Importance of and Methods forImproving Diabetes Control;" Dr.Richard Landau, Professor in the Depart­ment of Medicine and the College, andChairman of the Clinical InvestigationCommittee, "Estrogens and Cancer;" Dr.George Maroulis, Associate Professor inthe Department of Obstetrics and Gynecol­ogy, and Chief of the Reproductive Endo­crinology and Infertility sections, "Dysfunc­tional Uterine Bleeding;" Dr. SamuelRefetoff, Professor in the Department ofMedicine and Director of the ThyroidFunction Lab, "Causes of Thyrotox­icosis;" Dr. Gary Robertson, Professor inthe Department of Medicine and Co­Director of the Clinical Research Center,"Diabetes Insipidus;" and Dr. ArthurRubenstein, Chairman and Professor in theDepartment of Medicine, Director of theDiabetes Research and Training Center,"Hypoglycemia." The seminar was heldNovember I at the Medical Center.Obstetrics andGynecologyDr. Marluce Bibbo, Associate Professorin the Department of Obstetrics and Gyne­cology and Pathology, and AssociateDirector of the Cytology Laboratory, waselected vice-president of the AmericanSociety of Cytology at its meeting in Bos­ton last November. She also presented apaper on a new tissue aspiration techniquefor the cytological detection of endometrialcancer.OphthalmologyThe Department of Ophthalmology held itsAnnual Alumni Day Wednesday, March 4.The guest speaker was Irving H. Leopold,M.D., Ph.D., Professor and Chairman ofthe Department of Ophthalmology at theUniversity of California, Irvine.Dr. Frank W. Newell, James and AnnaLouise Raymond Professor and Chairmanof the Department of Ophthalmology, wasnamed President-elect of the Pan AmericanAssociation of Ophthalmology. He willassume office at its congress in Mexico inMay.Dr. Ramesh C. Tripathi, Professor inthe Department of Ophthalmology and theCollege, and Dr. Brenda J. Tripathi, Re­search Associate (Assistant Professor) in the Department and Lecturer in the Col­lege, were invited speakers at the FourthInternational Congress for Eye Researchheld in New York, September 27--October4, 1980. They presented papers on "Hu­man Cadaver Eyes as a Source of RetinalVessels for Tissue Culture" and "Role ofLids in Soft Contact Lens Spoilage." Dr.Ramesh Tripathi also organized a sympo­sium on "Biomechanics of Blinking andContact Lenses" and was a discussant ofthe symposium on "Cell Biology of theTrabecular Meshwork."PediatricsAppointments:Dr. Lucille A. Lester ('72)-AssistantProfessorDr. Lawrence Gartner, Professor andChairman in the Department of pediatrics,was a guest lecturer at the Great LakesPerinatal Society Annual Meeting held inWoodstock, Illinois in September. Thetopic of his lecture was "Bilirubin Metab­olism Research."Dr. Kwang-sun Lee, Associate Profes­sor in the Department of Pediatrics and Co­Director of the Perinatal Center, also pre­sented a paper on "Perinatal Epidemiolo­gy" at the Great Lakes Perinatal SocietyAnnual Meeting. The focus of the paperwas on the measurement of neonatal mor­tality in different communities around theworld.Dr. John W. Moohr, Associate Profes­sor in the Department of Pediatrics, was aguest speaker at the International Sympo­sium on Comparative Clinical Aspects ofSickle Cell Disease held at the University'SCenter for Continuing Education in Octo­ber. He spoke on "Nervous System Com­plications of Sickle Cell Disease."Pharmacological andPhysiological SciencesPaul Meier, Ralph and Mary Otis IshamProfessor in the Department of Statisticsand the Department of Pharmacologicaland Physiological Sciences, served as apanel member at the "Consensus Confer­ence on Coronary Artery Bypass Surgery"last December, sponsored by the NationalInstitutes of Health. The panel membersconcluded that surgery has been shown tooffer improved survival in a limited num­ber of cases, and a marked remission insymptoms for a larger group. However, re­ported the panel, the proper role of surgeryin many categories of patients remainsunclear.49PsychiatryAppointments:Dr. Paul M. Schyve--Assistant ProfessorDr. Daniel X. Freedman, Chairman andLouis Block Professor in the Department ofPsychiatry, was elected President of theAmerican Psychiatric Association and willtake office in May. Earlier, he was alsonamed chairman of the American Associa­tion of Chairmen of Departments ofPsychiatry for the Council of AcademicSocieties.Dr. Herbert Y. Meltzer, Professor inthe Department of Psychiatry, was awardedthe Daniel Efron Prize of the AmericanCollege of Neuropsychopharmacology inDecember at a meeting in Puerto Rico. Theprize is awarded annually to an "outstand­ing neuropsychopharmacologist under theage of 45." Dr. Meltzer has been head ofthe University of Chicago Research Centerfor the Study of the Major Psychoses since1977.Charles R. Schuster, Professor in theDepartment of Psychiatry and Pharmacolo­gical and Physiological Sciences, and C.E. Johanson, Research Associate in theDepartment of Psychiatry, were invitedspeakers at the International Symposium onAnorectic Agents, Mechanisms of Actionsand of Tolerance, in Milan, Italy, October6-7, 1980. They presented "Environmental Variables Affecting the Development ofTolerance to Anorectic Drugs."RadiologyDr. Mortimer Elkind, Professor in theDepartment of Radiology and Senior Scien­tist in the Biological and Medical ResearchDivision at Argonne National Laboratories,was the Arthur W. Erskine Lecturer at theRadiological Society of North Americameeting held in Dallas, Texas. The lecture,presented on November 19, was entitled"Low to High Dose Radiobiology in Di­agnosis and Therapy." The Erskine Lec­ture is presented in memory of Dr. ArthurW. Erskine, President of the RadiologicalSociety of North America in 1925.Dr. Dieudonne J. Mewissen, Professorin the Department of Radiology, receivedthe 1980 Dag Hammarskjold Grand Collarof Merit in the science category in Brus­sels, Belgium on October 3. The annual awardis given in recognition of "exceptionalservices to peace and international solidar­ity by an international committee." Dr.Mewissen is honored for his research onthe delayed biological effects of low-doseradiation, particularly tritium. SurgeryAppointments:Dr. Kambiz Dowlatshahi-VisitingAssociate ProfessorDr. George J. Dohrmann, III, AssistantProfessor in the Department of Surgery(Neurosurgery), has been appointed to theeditorial board on the Journal 0/ SurgicalNeurology.John Heggers, Research Associate inthe Department of Surgery, has beenelected Secretary of the American MedicalTechnologists for 1980-81.Dr. Beverley L. Ketel (B.S. '70, M.D.'74, Resident '79), Research Fellow in theDepartment of Surgery, was awarded theCharles E. Culpeper Foundation Fellowshipby Dean Robert B. Urtez, Vice-Presidentfor the Medical Center. During her fel­lowship, Dr. Ketel will continue her re­search on the immunology of graft rejec­tion. She is currently conducting researchof this nature under the supervision of Dr.Frank Stuart, Professor in the Departmentof Surgery and the Committee on Im­munology.Dr. David B. Skinner, the Dallas E.Phemister Professor and Chairman of theDepartment of Surgery, served as theDonald Church Balfour Visiting Professorat the Mayo Medical School. Dr. Skinnergave the 19th Balfour lecture, "Pathophy­siology of Benign Esophageal Diseases,"at the Mayo Clinic on October 9-11, 1980.50Dr. Diedonne J. Mewissen was presented with the Dag Hammarskjold International Peace Award/or Scientific Achievement in Brussels.News BriefsRusse named Dean atRushHenry R. Russe, M.D. '57, Resident '57-60, has been named Vice-President forMedical Affairs and Dean of Rush MedicalCollege of Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke'sMedical Center in Chicago. Dr. Russe be­comes the twelfth head of Rush MedicalCollege, chartered in 1837 as the first col­lege of medicine in Illinois.Since August 1979, Dr. Russe had beenAssistant Vice-President for MedicalAffairs and Associate Dean, Medical Sci­ences and Services, at the Medical Center.He went to Rush from the University ofChicago, where he was Associate Vice­President (Medical Services) and Chief ofStaff, and Professor in the Department ofMedicine ('63-'79).James A. Campbell, M.D., President ofthe Rush Medical Center, announced Dr.Russe's selection for the positions upon re­commendations of a Special AdvisoryCommittee, the appropriate medical staff,and faculty bodies. Dr. Russe succeedsRobert S. Blacklow, M. D., who resignedthe positions in November, 1980 to resumehis faculty position and clinical activities.Dr. Russe, a past president of theMedical Alumni Association Council,1975-76, is a former vice-president andformer chairman, Department of Medicine,of Columbus-Cuneo-Cabrini Medical Cen­ter in Chicago. He has also held facultypositions at Northwestern and Loyola Uni­versities. Borden honorariumdonated to MedicalAlumni Loan FundDr. Donald Steiner (,56), A.N. PritzkerProfessor in the Department of Biochemis­try and Professor in the Department ofMedicine, and recipient of the 1980 Bor­den Award of the Association of AmericanMedical Colleges, has, with his laboratoryteam, donated the $1,000 honorarium fromthe award to the Medical Alumni LoanFund to be matched by the Kaiser Chal­lenge Grant. Last October, Dr. Steineraccepted the award in Washington, sharingit with his colleagues involved in the coop­erative research effort: S. 1. Chan, Re­search Associate in the Department ofBiochemistry; Dr. Arthur Rubenstein, Pro­fessor and Associate Chairman in the De­partment of Medicine and Director of theDiabetes Research and Training Center;Howard Tager, Assistant Professor in theDepartment of Biochemistry; and, Dr.Susan Terris (A.B. '67, M.D. '76, Ph.D.'76), Fellow in the Department of Medi­cine.New laser to be used ingynecologic surgeryPhysicians at the University of ChicagoMedical Center recently acquired a surgicallaser designed especially for the treatmentof pre-cancerous gynecological conditions."Laser treatment in gynecology is stillrelatively new," said Dr. Robert C. Step­to, Professor in the Department of Obstet­rics and Gynecology at Chicago Lying-inHospital. "However, early studies alreadyshow that approximately 90 percent of thepatients treated with the laser are cured forat least two years following treatment."Traditionally, treatment for pre­cancerous gynecological lesions involvesone of two methods--cryosurgery or ther­mocautery. The surgical laser offers severaladvantages over traditional treatmentmethods. A simple, noninvasive surgicaltreatment, the laser causes no pain. Its pre­cision allows the surgeon to pinpoint thetreatment area, minimizing tissue destruc­tion to the area surrounding the lesion.Furthermore, use of the laser in treating pre-cancerous lesions can reduce hospitalcosts, as the procedure can often be per­formed on an outpatient basis."It is premature at this point to say thesurgical laser will replace cryosurgery orthermocautery in treatment of these le­sions," Dr. Stepto said. "Both of thosemethods have been used for a long time,with years of positive treatment results toback them up. We are very pleased,however, with the early results of the sur­gical laser and think it will at least supple­ment the other two methods very soon."-Barbra ArmaroliNCI funds U of Cgastric and pancreaticcancer studyA five-year, $800,000 contract from theNational Cancer Institute (NCI) to treat andstudy patients with advanced gastric andpancreatic cancer was awarded to the Uni­versity of Chicago on October I. The Uni­versity is one of six medical centers in thenation to receive the federal funds adminis­tered through the NCr s Gastro- IntestinalStudy Group, under the auspices of the Di­vision of Cancer Treatment."This funding will enhance what we canoffer our patients in terms of modern treat­ment of these two very important anddreaded cancers," said the principle inves­tigator of the study, Dr. Bernard Levin,Associate Professor in the Department ofMedicine and Director of the Gastro­Intestinal Oncology Clinic. "We will beusing new drugs and new combinations ofdrugs, along with radiation therapy to com­bat these tumors. Some of the new drugshave proven successful in treating othertypes of caricers, and treatment protocolsdeveloped by the Gastro- Intestinal StudyGroup will be used in administering ther­apy to patients. Patients will therefore ben­efit from the collaboration of gastric andpancreatic cancer experts across the coun-try."More than 1,100 cancer patients are seenin the Medical Center each year; about 250of those suffer from cancer of the digestiveorgans. The contract also provides forcooperative work with physicians caringfor patients with pancreatic and gastric can­cer at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago.51About 23,000 people in the United Statesdevelop pancreatic cancer each year, andanother 14,000 develop stomach cancer.These cancers most commonly occur in pa­tients aged fifty to sixty years. Because ofthe late appearance of symptoms, the five­year survival rate is extremely low. Earlydiagnosis of both gastric and pancreaticcancer is unlikely, not only because of thelate appearance of symptoms, but also be­cause there is no easy or practical methodof testing for these cancers."Researchers are currently working ondeveloping an early detection method forthese cancers," said Dr. Levin. "In themeantime, our work, funded by the NCI,will concentrate on finding better and moreeffective methods of treating patients withadvanced tumors due to gastric or pancre­atic cancer."-Deborah MacFarlaneMhoon AppointedAssistant Deanof StudentsDr. Ernest Mhoon, M.D. '73, AssistantProfessor in the Department of Surgery(Otolaryngology) was named AssistantDean of Students for The Pritzker School ofMedicine and the Division of BiologicalSciences by Robert B. Uretz, Vice­President for the Medical Center and Deanof the Division of Biological Sciences andThe Pritzker School of Medicine.As Assistant Dean of Students, Dr.Mhoon will be responsible for minoritystudent affairs and will work closely withJoseph CeithamJ, Dean of Students for theDivision of Biological Sciences and ThePritzker School of Medicine.52 In making the appointment, Dean Uretzsaid, "The University is committed to re­cruiting qualified minority students to ThePritzker School of Medicine and to the Di­vision of Biological Sciences. Dr. Mhoonwill assume, as part of his responsibilities,the direction of these efforts as well asother areas concerned with minority studentaffairs. He will also have additional re­sponsibilites as Assistant Dean of Stu­dents. "Dr. Mhoon has been active in theSchool's effort to recruit minority studentsfor the past several years. This work hasincluded personal visits to high schools andcolleges to encourage minority students toinvestigate the opportunities available tothem at The Pritzker School of Medicine.-Deborah MacFarlaneNationwide medicalschool enrollmentincreases slightlyThe annual Association of AmericanMedical Colleges (AAMC) survey of allUnited States medical schools reveals anall-time high enrollment of 65,189 medicalstudents this year, up 2.2 percent from1979-80. This is the smallest rise in thelast five years. Enrollment in the first-yearclass increased 1.5 percent, from 16,930 to17,186.Of greater importance are the trendsamong various demographic categories.First-year enrollment of males is almost ex­actly level (12,220 this year vs. 12,217 lastyear), whereas enrollment of females hasincreased by 5.4 percent (4,966 this yearvs. 4,713 last year). The increases in en­rollment of first-year women are registeredin every major racial/ethnic category of thesurvey: whites, 3.9 percent; minorities(Blacks, American Indians or Alaskan na­tives, Mexican Americans/Chicanos, main­land Puerto Ricans), 6.8 percent; and otherU.S. minorities (Asian or Pacific Islanders,Commonwealth Puerto Ricans, other His­panics), 9.7 percent.Among first-year males, enrollment de­clined for whites (down 1.4 percent) andfor minorities (down 4.4 percent), but in­creased for other minorities (up 14.9 per­cent). Among male minorities, the declineis largely attributable to a decrease in theenrollment of Mexican American/Chicanomales (down 17. I percent). This latterfigure should be interpreted with some cau- tion because of possible differences in re­porting policies for certain schools. Inother categories of male minorities, enroll­ment is practically level (Blacks, mainlandPuerto Ricans) or slightly less (AmericanIndians or Alaskan natives) compared tolast year's enrollment.-Kathe CrowleyStudy to evaluate"Primary Care"training programsThe University of Chicago has received a$500,000 grant from the Robert WoodJohnson Foundation to support a twenty­two month study evaluating "primarycare" training programs in general internalmedicine. The study will compare conven­tional training in internal medicine with"primary care training programs" estab­lished in the late 1970's. The 1976 HealthProfessions Educational Assistance Act cre­ated these specific training programs ingeneral internal medicine, general pedia­trics and family medicine. The first resi­dents completed these programs in 1979."To evaluate the effectiveness of thedifferent training programs," said Dr.Alvin Tarlov (,56), Professor in the De­partment of Medicine, "we are developinga log diary. The diary will be extensive inscope, examining in detail each encounterthat the physician has with each patientover three successive days."The diaries will be completed by physi­cians who have been in practice at leasttwo years and have graduated from spe­cified primary care training programs orconventional programs. The study will in­clude approximately 450 physicians andyield information on more than 10,000doctor-patient encounters, including officevisits, emergency room, and nursing homesencounters.Collaborating with Dr. Tarlov in the re­search will be the study director, PeterWeil, Research Associate (Assistant Pro­fessor) in the Department of Medicine andCenter for Health Administration Studies,and assistant study director, Mary KaySchleiter, Research Associate in the De­partment of Medicine. The survey workwill be conducted by the National OpinionResearch Center at the University ofChicago.-Deborah MacFarlaneDouglas N. BuchananRetiresDouglas N. Buchanan, Professor Emeritusin the Departments of Pediatrics andNeurology, formally retired at the close of1980. Although he is still seeing patients,this is his second retirement from theacademic practice of medicine. On Septem­ber 24, Dr. Buchanan was honored by aninformal party, sponsored by the Depart­ment of Neurology, held in the DouglasBuchanan Neurological Library of the Uni­versity of Chicago Medical Center. Dr.Buchanan donated his personal library tothe University, many books of which werepurchased with donations from former pa­tients and their families, starting with aninitial gift of $1,000 from the parents of agirl whose convulsions Dr. Buchanan hadcured.Dr. Buchanan joined the University in1931, and served as Professor in the De­partment of Pediatrics until his first retire­ment in 1974. He returned in 1975 to orga­nize the present Department of Neurology,which had previously been a section in theDepartment of Medicine. He served as itschairman until 1976, when he was suc­ceeded by Dr. Barry Amason. Dr. "Buchanan also served as president ofthe Medical Alumni Association in 1968-69, and was honored with the Gold KeyAward in 1970. An expert in the history ofthe Hippocratic Oath, he has traditionallyread the oath to each year's graduatingmedical students.Upon retiring, Dr. Buchanan plans to re­turn to England and start a second careeras an Egyptologist. He has always enjoyedstudying the history of medicine, andwould like to seek out old papyri collec­tions to find a better copy of the EdwinSmith Surgical Papyrus text. This papyrusis the first known medical treatise, writtenin Egypt around 2500 B.C. It contains thefirst known mention of the brain - des­cribing localization of function of the rightand left sides of the brain and containssome of the earliest known anatomical,physiological, and pathological descrip­tions.Considered the "Dean of PediatricNeurology," Dr. Buchanan received theJohn B. Hower Award of the ChildNeurology Society and many other honorsfor his lifelong devotion to neurologicaldiseases of children and for his studies ofthe physiology and pathology of the brain.-Kathe Crowley AlumniUpdateKeep us informed of your where­abouts!New address:Name Graduation YearHome AddressCity, State, ZipBusiness AddressCity, State, ZipTitleNew position?New medical practice?New civic or professional honor?New book?Mail to: The University of ChicagoMedical Alumni Association, Culver HallRoom 400, 1025 East 57th StreetChicago, Illinois 606375354 The Human FabricA current exhibit in the University's JosephRegenstein Library displays medical illustrationsfrom books that were printed before the advent ofphotography. The name of the exhibit, "TheHuman Fabric," is taken from Andreas Vesalius'1543 work on anatomy.The books come chiefly from the collection ofDr. Mortimer Frank (1874-1919), a Chicagophysician and former civil engineer. A specialist ineye diseases and surgery, he became secretary in1915 to the Chicago Society of Medical History andeditor of its Bulletin. About the same time he beganhis translation of Ludwig Choulant's Geschichte andBiobliographie Anatomischen Abbildung (Leipzig,1852), a history of anatomical illustrations,published by the University of Chicago Press (1919)shortly after Frank's death. It remains a standardbook to this day.The Frank Collection of more than 500 volumeswas the first substantial medical and scientifichistory collection acquired by the UniversityLibrary.The exhibit will continue through April 30 in theSpecial Collections Department of RegensteinLibrary.Alumni MinutesNovember 12 ExecutiveCommittee MeetingThe Medical Alumni Council met on November 12, 1980, at theQuadrangle Club. Present were: Louis Cohen, M.D., president;Sumner Kraft, M.D., president-elect; Robert Schmitz, M.D., vice­president; Randolph Seed, M.D., secretary; Kathy Walker, execu­tive director; council members: Robin Powell, M.D., DavidOstrow, M.D., Francis Straus, M.D., Peter Wolkonsky, M.D.,Frank Fitch, M.D. and Robert Wissler, M.D.Dr. Kraft presented the report of the Awards Committee. Thefollowing nominees were approved for Distinguished ServiceAwards: Ernst R. Jaffe, M.D. '48, Albert M. Potts, M.D. Ph.D.'38, Joseph Ransohoff, M.D. '41, Paul E. Carson S.B. '44. ForHumanitarian Awards: Abraham Kauvar, M.D. '39, 'and JulesStein, M.D. '21. Four nominees were approved for Gold Key Awards: Albert Dorfman, M.D. '44, Paul Harper, M.D., John O.Hutchens, and Frank W. Newell, M.D. The recipients will receivetheir awards at the May 14 reunion activities.In the absence of Jerry Seidel, chairman of the NominatingCommittee, David Ostrow, committee member, presented the slatefor the 1981 Medical Alumni Association ExecuHy,&: t-: Council:president-elect: Robert Schmitz, M.D. '38; vice-president, Ran­dolph W. Seed, M.D. '60; secretary, Herbert Greenlee, M.D. '55;council members: Mary Carroll, M.D. '49 and Ann Ward, M.D.'74.Drs. Wolkonsky and Seed, co-chairmen of the 1981 ReunionCommittee, presented a schedule of Reunion Week activities.(For further details on Reunion activities. see article on page 4.)55Medicine on the MidwayThe University of ChicagoThe Medical Alumni Association1025 East 57th StreetChicago, IL 60637Pili_<c::::z::--- oiil;�.I'_-:.#.-:�56 CalendarApril 28Alumni ReceptionAmerican College of Obstetriciansand GynecologistsLas Vegas Hilton5:30-7:00 p.m.Las Vegas, NevadaMay 7-9*Current Concepts in Gynecologic OncologyUniversity of Chicago CampusMay 12-14Medical Center Alumni ReunionsUniversity of Chicago CampusMay 13New Frontiers of Medicine: Perinatal ProblemsLawrence M. Gartner, M.D., Program DirectorUniversity of Chicago Campus NON-PROAT ORG.U.S. POSTAGEPAIDPERMIT NO. 9666CHICAGO, ILL.May 15-16Reunion '81University of Chicago Alumni ReunionsJune 11Graduation Banquet for the Class of 1981Palmer House6:30 p.m.Chicago, IllinoisJune ]7*New Frontiers of Medicine: Progress in Car­diologyLeon Resnekov, M. D., Program DirectorUniversity of Chicago Campus*For additional information, contact the Con­tinuing Medical Education Office (312/947-5646).