Full text of "Scarab"
D*m&®azsLW
Official Orgat
of the
Alumni Associate
Medical Collej
of
Virginia
:-T7\
Construction Progress on the New Addition to Sanger Hall
The
Scarab
Official Organ of the
Alumni Association of the Medical College of Virginia
Published by the Alumni Association of the Medical College
of Virginia in February, May, August, and November
Editorial Committee
James T. Tucker, M'27, editor-in-chief and chairman
Dr. W. C. Henderson, D'37
Mrs. Frances W. Kay, N'59
Dr. Francis H. McMullan, M'Sl
Mr. Harvey B. Morgan, P'55
Officers
Dr. Earle W. Strickland, D'43D, president
Zuni, Virginia
Dr. Philip L. A. Minor, M'47, immediate past president
3536 Grove Avenue, Richmond, Virginia
Dr. Rufus P. Ellett, Jr., M'44, president-elect
P. O. Box 8187, Roanoke, Virginia
Dr. Walter F. Green III, M'57, vice president
1031 South Main Street, Harrisonburg, Virginia
Dr. P. D. Miller, D'36, vice president
Blacksburg, Virginia
Mr. R. Reginald Rooke, P'21, vice president
3105 Hawthorne Avenue, Richmond, Virginia
Miss Mae Belle Lee, N'51, vice president
301 North Thompson Street, Apt. 302, Richmond, Virginia
Mr. John H. Tobin, Jr., HA'59, vice president
Johnston-Willis Hospital, 2908 Kensington Avenue, Richmond, Virginia
Dr. Rudolph C. Thomason, M'29, secretary
Tuckahoe Apartments, 5621 Cary Street Road, Richmond, Virginia
Dr. James T. Tucker, M'27, treasurer
1312 Lock Lomond Lane, Richmond, Virginia
Trustees
Term Expires December 31, 1973
Dr. Woodrow C. Henderson, D'37
100 Westham Parkway
Richmond, Virginia
Dr. Frederick W. Hines, D'42
3801 North Fairfax Drive
Arlington, Virginia
Dr. Carolyn M. McCue, M'41
Dr. Henderson P. Graham, D'54 Box 272, MCV Station
Richmond, Virginia
Mr. Floyd A. Robertson, Jr.,
P'43 M
1374 Timberlake
Lynchburg, Virginia
3aret B. Stokes, N'44
14 Rolfe Road
P'51
C^ Allen, Jr., M'41
ofessional Bldg.
Texas Medical Center
Houston, Texas
Mr. Harry W. Brown, J:
315 Yadkin Street
Raleigh, North Caroli
ter Building
Marion, Virginia
Ota T. Graham, Jr., M'53
714 North Boulevard
Richmond, Virginia
Williamsburg, Virginia
Term Expires December 31, 1974
ir. Warner J. Ball, D'43M
Kenbridge, Virginia
Mrs. Carol B. Cantrell, N'57
4460 Cheyenne Road
Richmond, Virginia
r. Curtis A. Clayton, HA'61
c/o Circle Terrace Hospital
904 Circle Terrace Drive
Alexandria, Virginia
Mr. Harvi
Gloucest
379 South Cox Street
Asheboro, North Carolii
Mr. Robert Page Ken'
219 Church Stre
Rocky Mount, Virg
Francis H. McMullan
1812 Monument Avenu
Richmond, Virginia
B. Morgan, P'55
Virginia
M'50
r, P'43M
, M'51
Term Expires December 31, 1975
Mr. Carl E. Bain. P'51
109 Maple Avenue
Richmond, Virginia
Raymond S. Brown, M'45
Gloucester, Virginia
Dr. John A. Byrd, M'47
809 Medical Tower
Norfolk, Virginia
, Jr., M'44
Dr. Carlton E.
P. O.
Ro
8187
noke, Virgini;
irth Staffo
Arlingt'
t. W. Robert Irby
6421 Roselawn Ri
Richmond, Virgil
s. Frances W. Ka
10311 Apache Ro
Richmond, Virgil
William W. Kers
D'51
Street, Suite 302
Virginia
Dr. Marvin F. \
1306 Mount Ver
Williamsburg,
Chapter Officers
Delaware Valley Chapter
President — Dr. Mary T. Kavanaugh, M'49
208 Foulke Lane, Springfield, Pennsylvania
Secretary-Treasurer — Dr. Donald L. Baxter, M'54
Florida Chapter
President — Mr. Salvatore E. DlFede, Jr., PT'53
10515 S. W. 43rd Terrace, Miami, Florida
President-elect — Mr. Sidney Goldin, HA'62
Secretary — Mrs. Mae Belle Condit, N'36
Kanawha Valley Chapter
President — Dr. George L. Grubb, M'43M
1324 Virginia Street East, Charleston, West Virginia
Vice President — Dr. Robert E. Gibson, M'46
Secretary-treasurer — Dr. William Alva Deardorff, M'56
New York Chapter
President — Dr. Robert E. Barrett, M'57
N. Y. Neurological Institute, 710 West 168th Street, New York, N. Y.
Vice-President — Dr. Maxwell J. Marder, M'42
North Carolina Dental Chapter
President — Dr. Charles Robert Helsabeck, Jr., D'40
Box 38, Rural Hall, North Carolina
North Carolina Medical Chapter
President — Dr. Lockert B. Mason, M'45
1224 Country Club Boulevard, Wilmington, North Carolina
President-elect — Dr. John W. Watson, M'53
Secretary-treasurer — Dr. William H. Shaia, M'45
Northern Virginia, Washington and Southern Maryland Chapter
President — Dr. C. Kenneth Glover, M'56
109 Woodland Drive, Fredericksburg, Virginia
Secretary-treasurer — Dr. Richard C. Fisher, Jr., D'53
Peninsula Chapter
Vice-President — Dr. Roland G. Garrett, Jr., P'54, M'58
Secretary-Treasurer — Mr. John D. Cowley, Jr., P'57
Puerto Rico Chapter
President — Dr. Hilda Garcia de la Noceda, M'49
108 Betances Street, Hato Rey, Puerto Rico
Secretary-Treasurer — Dr. Delores Mendez-Cashion, M'37
Richmond Chapter
President — Dr. Philip L. A. Minor, M'47
3536 Grove Avenue, Richmond, Virginia
President-elect — Mr. James E. Smith, P'47
Secretary — Miss Mae Belle Lee, N'51
Treasurer — Miss Marguerite Nicholson, N'34
Roanoke Chapter
President — Mr. James G. Williams, P'53
5114 Glen Heather Drive, S. W., Roanoke, Virginia
President-elect — Dr. James C. Garst, D'55
Secretary-treasurer — Mrs. Elizabeth L. Wellford, N'49
South Carolina Dental Chapter
President — Dr. Charles B. Barnett, D'56
Calhoun Towers, Greenville, South Carolina
Secretary-treasurer — Dr. N. Carl Wessinger, D'58
Tidewater Chapter
President — Mr. Robert W. Clyburn, P'53
6312 Howell Place, Virginia Beach, Virginia
President-elect — Dr. Frederick T. Given, Jr., M'53
Secretary-Treasurer — Dr. Bernard B. Batleman, D'41
Valley Chapter
President — Mr. Carl S. Napps, HA'56
1413 Handley Avenue, Winchester, Virginia
Vice President — Dr. Hunter M. Gaunt, Jr. (M'57)
Secretary — Mrs. Lillian F. Hoover, (N'35)
West Virginia Chapter
President — Dr. Roland S. Birckhead
Box 307, Gauley Bridge, West Virginia
Copyright © 1973 by Alumni Association of the Medical College of Virginia.
A New Hospital For Virginians
at
The Medical College of Virginia
of
Virginia Commonwealth University
The following was submitted by the
VCU Development Office.
After several years of planning
effort, Virginia Commonwealth Uni-
versity is proposing to build a new
hospital at the Medical College of
Virginia and to renovate other out-
moded hospital facilities to provide
1058 modern patient beds and sup-
portive health-care services.
The project is proposed at a time
when Virginia, in keeping with the
rest of the nation, faces increased de-
mands upon its health-care delivery
system. The prime factors motivating
the proposal are the need for more
modern and efficient health-care fa-
cilities and to meet the demand for
more trained health-care professionals.
In-Depth Planning Completed
The planning process for the new
hospital began in 1966 when the Gen-
eral Assembly made its first appropria-
tion for the project. Since that time,
with the support of the legislature and
with the aid of planning consultants,
Virginia Commonwealth University has
completed the primary planning effort.
The plan approach has included
these increments:
The Need. .February, 1970
(Perkins and Will)
The Concept. . .June, 1970
(The VCU Master Site Plan)
(Llewelyn Davies, Associates)
Design Objectives April, 1972
Financial Feasibility
November, 1972
The General Assembly of Virginia
has assisted with planning money for
the entire MCV campus appropriated
in these years:
1966 $ 80,000
1968 $600,000
1972 $500,000
FEBRUARY, 1973
The research conducted by the
planners indicated that the hospital
was severely needed, and that it would
be financed with only modest direct
cost to the taxpayers of Virginia. The
findings also indicate that not to im-
plement the plan would cost the Com-
monwealth more than would the
completion of the project.
MCV Hospitals Serve Virginians
Even though the facilities at the
Medical College of Virginia Hospitals
are largely outmoded and in need of
replacement, the volume of health care
delivered is impressive. For example,
in the past year:
Patients from almost every county
and town in Virginia were ad-
mitted to MCV Hospitals
262,000 days of patient care ex-
perienced
4,800 Virginians were born
212,612 out-patient visits were
made
367 housestaff — interns and resi-
dents— received advanced train-
ing and education at MCV Hos-
pitals
At the Medical College of Virginia
Hospitals last year, seven days a
week, 24 hours a day:
— An admission occurred every
20 minutes
— A surgical procedure was per-
formed every 40 minutes
— A baby delivered every 90
minutes
— An emergency room admission
occurred every 10 minutes
— A clinic visit was made every
three minutes
— A prescription was filled every
minute
Modern Hospital Facilities
Supportive of Research
Last year, MCV was awarded more
than six million dollars in non-state
funds for medical research. Modern
hospital facilities are necessary for
effective teaching and improved re-
search in disease and health care. Here
are some of the areas in which this
money was spent on research:
Cancer $ 744,584
Surgery ... 1,117,000
Coronary 350,000
Respiratory .... 204,774
Family Practice 282,239
Inadequacies at MCVH Impede
Quality and Economy of Service
Although MCV Hospitals have
demonstrated a remarkable record of
health-care delivery to Virginians,
such service cannot continue with a
physical plant largely outmoded by
time and use. Here is the current
situation at the Medical College of
Virginia as recorded by the consul-
tants:
Hospital
Built
Beds
Condition
MCV South
1903
43
Unacceptable
MCV East
1920
110
Unacceptable
MCV West
1940
481
Deficient
MCV North
1956
348
Fair
*Nelson Clinic
1967
60
Excellent
McFarland Hall
12
(Clinical Transplant
Beds)
1054
' Special Self-Care Beds
Please turn to page 15
Candidates For The Board Of Trustees
FOR THE THREE-YEAR TERM
MAIL BALLOTS FOR THESE CANDIDATES WILL BE SENT TO THE VOTING MEMBERS FOR
Herbert C. Allen, Jr. Robert Edward Barrett
VOTE FOR ONE
Herbert Clifton Allen, Jr.
Born: Richmond, Virginia, and now
a resident of Houston, Texas.
Schools and colleges attended: Uni-
versity of Richmond, '37; MCV,
school of medicine, class of 1941.
Professional data: Director: depart-
ment of nuclear medicine, Hermann
Hospital; Nuclear Medicine Labora-
tories of Texas; and Atomic Energy
Industrial Laboratories of the South-
west. Private practice limited to nu-
clear medicine; assistant professor of
medicine, Baylor University College of
Medicine.
Professional memberships: AM A;
Texas Medical Assoc; Harris County
Medical Society; Southwest Chapter,
Society of Nuclear Medicine; Central
Society Clinical Research; Assoc, of
American Physicians and Surgeons;
American Goiter Association.
Hobbies and club memberships: AOA,
Sigma Xi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Phi
Delta Omega, Phi Chi.
Honors received: Listed in American
Men of Science, Leaders in American
Science, Who's Who in Atoms, and
Who's Who in Texas, World Nuclear
Directory. Published over 28 papers;
exhibitor with the Southeastern So-
ciety of Nuclear Medicine and Texas
Medical Association.
Robert Edward Barrett
Born: Taunton, Massachusetts, and
practices in New York City.
Schools and colleges attended: College
of William and Mary, B.S. '53; MCV,
school of medicine, class of 1957.
Professional data: Associate professor
of neurology, College of Physicians and
Surgeons, Columbia University; as-
sistant attending neurologist: Presby-
terian Hospital, Neurological Institute;
assistant adjunct, neurology, Lennox
Hill Hospital; and consultant in neu-
rology, Vassar Brother Hospital.
Professional memberships: Diplomate,
American Board of Psychiatry and
Neurology (Neurology, 1968); Ameri-
can Medical Association; New York
County Medical Society; New York
State Medical Society; Philadelphia
Neurological Society; New York Neu-
rological Society; Association for Re-
search in Nervous and Mental Disease;
American Academy of Neurology;
Sigma Xi — honorary research society;
Society for Neuroscience.
Honors received: Thirty-five publica-
tions.
Schools and colleges attended: MCV,
school of pharmacy, '43-'44; Univer-
sity of Virginia, '46-'49, B.A.; MCV,
school of medicine, class of 1953.
Professional data: General practice of
medicine in association with Dr. John
R. Freeman, Richmond, Virginia.
Professional memberships: A.A.F.P.,
Va. A.A.F.P., Southern Medical As-
sociation, Virginia Diabetes Associa-
tion, Medical Society of Virginia, Sea-
board Coastline R.R. Association.
Hobbies and club memberships: West
Richmond Optimist Club (former
president), Tuckahoe Y.M.C.A., Bull
and Bear and Executive Clubs. Hob-
bies: sailing and gardening.
Honors received: Fellow of A.A.F.P.
Board.
Sigsby Warren Gayle Ota T. Graha
VOTE FOR ONE
Sigsby Warren Gayle
Born: Roanoke Rapids, North Caro-
lina, and now a resident of Richmond,
Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: Uni-
versity of Richmond; MCV, school of
medicine, class of 1965.
Professional data: Medical residency
at MCV; private practice of medicine
in Richmond, Virginia; instructor, de-
partment of medicine, MCV.
Professional memberships: AMA,
Richmond Academy of Medicine,
Richmond Society of Internal Medi-
cine, Medical Society of Virginia.
Hobbies and club memberships: Hunt-
ing and fishing.
Ota Treville Graham, Jr.
Born: Richmond, Virginia, and still
a resident.
Carolyn Moore McCue Henry S. Spencer
VOTE FOR ONE
Carolyn Moore McCue
Born: Richmond, Virginia, and still a
resident.
Schools and colleges attended: Stan-
ford University, A.B.; MCV, school of
medicine, class of 1941.
Professional data: Private practice of
pediatrics and pediatric cardiology,
'47-'58; interim chairman, dept. of
pediatrics, MCV, '58-'61; director,
pediatric cardiology, professor of pedi-
atrics, MCV, '61 to present.
Professional memberships: Fellow,
American Academy of Pediatrics
(FAAP), American College of Phy-
sicians and Cardiology Section (FACP),
American College of Cardiology
(FACC); member, Richmond Acad-
emy of Medicine, Medical Society of
Virginia, Richmond and Virginia Pedi-
atric Societies, AMA, and American
Heart Association.
THE SCARAB
of the Alumni Association of MCV
BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 1974.
1972 IN FEBRUARY. PLEASE SAVE THIS SCARAB FOR DATA CONCERNING THE CANDIDATES.
Hobbies and club memberships: Coun-
try Club of Virginia and Fishing Bay
Yacht Club.
Honors received: Phi Beta Kappa and
AOA.
Henry Sumpter Spencer
Born: Jonesville, Virginia, and now a
resident of Mechanicsville, Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: Lincoln
Memorial University, B.S., 1947;
MCV, school of medicine, class of
1953.
Professional data: President and chair-
man of the Board of McGuire Clinic,
Inc., Richmond, Virginia, chairman of
the Board of St. Luke's Hospital Corp. ;
chairman, department of radiology, St.
Luke's Hospital, McGuire Clinic, Im-
perial Hospital, Inc., Westbrook Psy-
chiatric Hospital, Inc.; chairman of the
Board of Christchurch School, Christ-
church, Virginia.
Professional memberships: Richmond
Academy of Medicine, Medical So-
ciety of Virginia, American College of
Radiology.
Hobbies and club memberships: Gar-
dening and picture framing; member,
Commonwealth Club.
Henderson P. Graham John Gibbons Wall
VOTE FOR ONE
Henderson Patton Graham
Born: Pennington Gap, Virginia, and
now a resident of Marion, Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: Public
school, Lee County; Lincoln Memorial
University, B.S.; MCV, school of
dentistry, class of 1954.
Professional data: General practice of
dentistry, '54 to present; member, Va.
Comprehensive Health Planning Coun-
cil; secretary, Va. Regional Health
Planning Council; advisory board,
FEBRUARY, 1973
Smyth County Practical Nursing
School; consultant, Smyth County
Head Start Program; president and
staff, Smyth County Community Hos-
pital; regional director and executive
committee, Virginia Dental Service
Planning Corporation.
Professional memberships: S.W. Vir-
ginia Dental Society (past president),
Virginia State Dental Association,
ADA, Alumni Association-MCV, Vir-
ginia State Board of Dental Examiners,
American Association of Dental Ex-
aminers, Virginia and National Re-
habilitation Association.
Hobbies and club memberships: Golf
and fishing; Rotary Club; Holstan
Hills Country Club; Chamber of Com-
merce; Ex. Bd., BSA Blue Ridge
Council; Carolina Caribbean Club;
Community Chest.
Honors received: Marion's "Outstand-
ing Young Man of the Year" award
in 1958 and 1963. "Sidney D. Peck"
award for outstanding local president,
Va. Junior Chamber of Commerce,
'59; life membership: Delta Sigma
Delta fraternity; director, Wytheville
Community College; Who's Who in
South and Southwest, '62. Fellow,
American College of Dentists, Virginia
State Dental Association.
John Gibbons Wall
Born: South Hill, Virginia, and now
a resident of Charlottesville, Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: College
of William and Mary, B.S.; MCV,
school of dentistry, class of 1941.
Professional data: Dental Corps, U. S.
Army, '41-'45, captain; general prac-
tice, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1945-to
date.
Professional memberships: Shenandoah
Valley Dental Association, Virginia
State Dental Association, American
Dental Association.
Hobbies and club memberships: Golf,
fishing, and swimming. Farmington
Country Club, Boar's Head Club,
Wesley Methodist Church, and Rotary
Club.
Honors received: Past president, Char-
lottesville Rotary Club, Shenandoah
Valley Dental Assoc, and Virginia
State Dental Assoc; past member,
Charlottesville School Board; fellow,
Virginia State Dental Assoc, and
American Dental Assoc; fraternities,
Kappa Alpha, Psi Omega, and Omi-
cron Kappa Upsilon.
John Donforth Beall Julian C. Metts, Jr.
VOTE FOR ONE
John Danforth Beall
Born: Richmond, Virginia, and still a
resident.
Schools and colleges attended: Hamp-
den-Sydney College; MCV, school of
dentistry, class of 1948.
Professional data: General practice of
dentistry and assistant clinical profes-
sor of restorative dentistry, MCV
(part time).
Professional memberships: Richmond
Dental Society, Virginia Dental Assoc,
American Dental Assoc, and Virginia
Association of Professions. Omicron
Kappa Upsilon, honorary dental fra-
ternity.
Hobbies and club memberships: Golf
and boating. Member, Country Club
of Virginia
Honors received: Secretary-treasurer,
'63-'64, president, '67-'68, Richmond
Dental Society; secretary, Virginia
Assoc, of Professions, '70-'72.
Julian Cabell Metts, Jr.
Born: Richmond, Virginia, and still a
resident.
Schools and colleges attended: Uni-
versity of Richmond; MCV, school of
dentistry, class of 1963.
Professional data: Orthodontist.
Professional memberships: American
Dental Association, American Ortho-
dontic Association, Virginia Orthodon-
tic Association.
Hobbies: Flying, hunting, and farming.
S. W. Crickenberger
VOTE FOR ONE
Samuel Wilson Crickenberger
Born: Charlottesville, Virginia, and
still a resident.
Schools and colleges attended: Lane
High School, Charlottesville; Univer-
sity of Virginia, B.S., 1952; MCV,
school of pharmacy, class of 1957.
Professional data: Pharmacist, S. C.
Chancellor Co., Inc., Charlottesville,
Virginia, 1957-'60; pharmacist and
manager, Monticello Drug Co., Char-
lottesville, 1960-'65; pharmacist and
manager, S. C. Chancellor Co., Inc.,
Charlottesville, 1965 to present.
Professional memberships: A. Ph. A.;
American Academy of General Phar-
macy Practice; V. Ph. A.; past presi-
dent, Charlottesville-Albemarle Pharm.
Assoc, and Valley District Pharm.
Assoc; Virginia State Board of Health.
Honors received: President-elect,
American Cancer Society Board of
Charlottesville; vice chairman. Central
Virginia Regional Drug Council; Char-
lottesville School Board Study Com-
mittee.
Thomas Wise Rorrer, Jr.
Bom: War, West Virginia, and now
a resident of Waynesboro, Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: Coe-
burn High School (Virginia), MCV,
school of pharmacy, class of 1952.
Professional data: President, Virginia
Pharmaceutical Assoc; past president,
Waynesboro Kiwanis Club, Waynes-
boro Retail Merchants Assoc.
Professional memberships: American
Pharmaceutical Assoc, Virginia Phar-
maceutical Assoc, National Assoc, of
Retail Druggists, and Va. Assoc, of
Professions.
Hobbies and club memberships:
Waynesboro Kiwanis Club, Waynes-
boro Country Club. Mason and
Shriner.
Honors received: Bowl of Hygeia
Award, 1968.
Richard Baylor Rice Floyd A. Robertson, Jr.
VOTE FOR ONE
Richard Baylor Rice
Bom: Richmond, Virginia, and still a
resident.
Schools and colleges attended: John
Marshall High School, Richmond;
MCV, school of pharmacy, class of
1958.
Professional data: Owner and operator
of Manchester Drug-Way in Rich-
mond, Va.
Professional memberships: Richmond
Pharmaceutical Assoc, Virginia Phar-
maceutical Assoc, National Assoc, of
Retail Druggists, MCV Alumni Asso-
ciation.
Hobbies and club memberships: Fish-
ing and spending time with family,
traveling. Salisbury Country Club.
Floyd Archer Robertson, Jr.
Born: Lynchburg, Virginia, and still a
resident.
Schools and colleges attended: MCV,
school of pharmacy, class of 1943,
March.
Professional data: Practiced pharmacy
in Army at Station Hospitals in D.C.
and Pa. during WW II; now practicing
in Lynchburg and secretary of five
Lynchburg area retail pharmacy in-
corporations; pharmaceutical consul-
tant for two Lynchburg area nursing
homes.
Professional memberships: Member,
Upjohn Pharmacy Consultant Panel;
member. City of Lynchburg Drug
Abuse Task Force; director, Central
Virginia Health Planning Council,
Inc.; member, A.Ph.A., '"N.A.R.D.,
V. Ph. A. (past president) and now
member of the Bd. of Trustees; A.S.
H.P.; V.S.H.P.; Lynchburg Pharm.
Assoc; Lynchburg Mental Health
Assoc; V.A.P.; Friends of Historical
Pharmacy; Alumni Assoc, of MCV;
Academy Gen. Practice of Pharmacy;
Va. R.M.A.; Lynchburg R.M.A.; Va.
State Chamber of Commerce; director,
Lynchburg Area Development Coun-
cil; Adv. Bd. Dir., First and Merchants
Lynchburg Branch, Lynchburg Fed-
eral Savings and Loan, First Common-
wealth Corp.
Hobbies and club memberships: Hunt-
ing and fishing. Charter member and
president of the Brookville-Timber-
lake Lions Club. Member, B.P.O.E.,
Izaak Walton League, Colonial Hills
Dance Club, American Legion, TPA,
AAA, Brookville H.S. Boosters, Fer-
rum College Panther Boosters.
Honors received: Virginia Pharmacist
of the Year Award, 1970; Life Mem-
ber Award V. Ph.A., 1971; Citation
Award for Subdivision Planning and
Development by Va. Planning Assoc.
Barbara L. Hendricks Fay Thomas Vaden
VOTE FOR ONE
Barbara Lightner Hendricks
Born: Staunton, Virginia, and now a
resident of Martinsburg, West Virginia.
Schools and colleges attended: Wilson
Memorial H.S., Fishersville, Virginia;
MCV, school of nursing, class of 1957.
Professional data: Cancer research
nurse at Memorial Center, N.Y.C.,
1957-'58; newborn and premature
nurseries at Richmond Memorial Hos-
pital, Richmond, Va., 1958-'59; car-
diac catheterization lab at MCV, 1959-
'62.
Professional memberships: A.N. A.
Hobbies and club memberships: Sew-
ing and gardening. Member, Alumni
Assoc, of MCV, West Va. Garden
Club, Officers' Wives Club of Ft. Gor-
don, Georgia, '67-'69; registered as
an adult girl scout, 1963-'67; chair-
man, heart fund, Shepherdstown, West
Virginia, 1963; vice president, Eastern
Panhandle (of W. Va.) Medical Aux-
iliary, 1966-'67; president, 1968;
president-elect, 1970-'72; and presi-
dent, 1972.
Honors received: Sigma Zeta at MCV.
Fay Thomas Vaden
Bom: Concord, Virginia, and now a
resident of Keysville, Virginia.
THE SCARAB
Schools and colleges attended: Lynch-
burg College, B.A.; MCV, school of
nursing, class of 1937; extension
courses and summer school in nursing
education, University of Virginia.
Professional data: Clinical instructor
and supervisor of surgical nursing,
MCV and University of Va. schools
of nursing; assistant educational di-
rector, Baptist Hospital school of
nursing, Knoxville, Tennessee; direc-
tor of nurses, Raiford Hospital, Frank-
lin, Virginia; It., Army Nurse Corps;
public health nurse, Charlotte County.
Professional memberships: Alumni
Assoc, of MCV.
Hobbies and club memberships: Golf
and bridge. Charter member and past
president, Keysville Garden Club; past
president, Keysville Woman's Club;
past district chairman (Alice Kyle Dis-
trict), Va. Federation of Women's
Clubs.
Glass 72
ass fceivs
1917 Claudius MacGowan (M) of Plymouth,
North Carolina, has retired from the prac-
tice of medicine.
1922 Charles M. Caravati (M) of Richmond,
Virginia, was the recipient of the 1972
Southern Medical Association's distinguished
service award at their recent meeting in
New Orleans. This award was given for his
pioneer effort in the fields of the teaching
of gastroenterology, of clinical practice, and
of administration and for his years of serv-
ice to the Southern Medical Association as
councilor, chairman of the section on gastro-
enterology, and chairman of important com-
mittees.
1923 W. P. Bittinger (M) of Oak Hill, West
Virginia, is president of the Fayette County
Medical Society. He was made a charter
fellow of the AAFP in New York in Sep-
tember.
Harry Lyons (D) of Richmond, Virginia,
was named chairman of the history com-
mittee of the Virginia Dental Association.
1924 O. R. Hodgin (D) and his wife of
Thomasville, North Carolina, celebrated
their 45th wedding anniversary with a trip
behind the Iron Curtain.
H. H. Shiner (P) of Petersburg, Virginia, has
retired after 60 years in the drug business in
Virginia.
1927 J. Warren Hundley (M) of Phila-
delphia, Pennsylvania, retired from active
practice on December 15.
1929 William L. Cooke (M) of Charleston,
West Virginia, has been appointed director
of the West Virginia Health Department's
Division of Disease Control.
1932 R. Lee Clark Jr., (M) of Houston,
Texas, president of the University of Texas
M. D. Anderson Hospital and Tumor In-
stitute, was the cover-story subject of the
October 30 issue of Modern Medicine. "Doc-
tor Clark, selected by the editors as their
'Contemporary' for the current issue, 'has
spent his nearly 40 years of professional life
fighting cancer as a surgeon, researcher, and
teacher and as the first and only president of
the (Houston Institute),' stated the article.
'As one of the three physicians appointed to
the President's Cancer Panel, Doctor Clark
feels he is in an excellent position to work
for the accomplishment of his greatest ambi-
tion— the conquest of cancer.' "
1933 William M. Bickers (M) of Beirut,
Lebanon, was the subject of an article in the
William and Mary Alumni Gazette about
his dual offices, one in Beirut and one in
Richmond, Virginia.
1934 Elam C. Toone, Jr. (M), of Richmond,
Virginia, professor of medicine and chair-
man of the division of connective tissue
disease, is listed in the 1972 edition of Who's
Who in America.
1935 D. Blanton Allen (D) of Berryville,
Virginia, is chairman of the financial invest-
ments committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
A. J. Villani (M) of Welch, West Virginia,
is chairman of the maternal and perinatal
fetal welfare and the medio-legal committees
of the West Virginia State Medical Asso-
ciation.
1937 John A. B. Holt (M) of Charleston,
West Virginia, is chairman of the medical
emergencies and civil defense committee of
the West Virginia State Medical Association.
1938 William H. Traynham, Jr. (D), of
Hampton, Virginia, was named chairman of
the advisory committee and the constitution
and bylaws committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
1939 Buford W. McNeer (M) of Hinton,
West Virginia, is chairman of the rehabilita-
tion committee of the West Virginia State
Medical Association.
1940 E. Y. Lovelace, Jr. (D), of Bedford,
Virginia, is chairman of the relief committee
of the Virginia Dental Association.
1941 Bradford S. Bennett (M) formerly of
Manassas, Virginia, has been named director
of the State Health Department's Middle
Peninsula Health District, which includes
Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Mathews,
and Middlesex counties.
Howard M. McCue, Jr. (M), of Richmond,
Virginia, has been promoted to senior vice
president and medical director of the Life
Insurance Co. of Virginia.
1943M Andrew M. Lang (M) and his wife
of Morgantown, North Carolina, spent
March and April in Africa. The first two
weeks were spent on a medical tour in
Morocco and Kenya. The last five weeks
Doctor Lang spent in Nigeria where he
worked in a hospital to relieve a much over-
worked, full-time missionary doctor. The
hospital, Evangel, operated by the Sudan
Interior Mission, is in the city of los, capital
of one of the 12 states of Nigeria. There are
60 beds in the hospital, and an outpatient
clinic that serves from 350 to 400 patients
daily. The variety and type of medical prob-
lems were new and fascinating. The program
under which the Langs worked is a new
plan for volunteer, short-term substitutions
(expenses tax deductible). Anyone interested
in a similar, rewarding experience and travel
in a country unspoiled by tourism, may con-
tact Doctor Lang.
Leroy S. Safian (M) of New York City, was
recently appointed assistant radiologist of
Francis Delafield Hospital, of the College
of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia
University, New York City.
1944 George W. Burke, Jr. (D), of Rich-
mond, Virginia, was chosen as editor of the
Journal of the Virginia Dental Association.
Gloria M. Diggs (N) of Fort Eustis, Vir-
ginia, serves as president of the Virginia
Nurses Association.
Eugene G. Peek, Jr. (M), of Ocala, Florida,
was the recipient of the Florida Public
Health Association's Meritorious Service
Award for 1972. It stated: "He has for over
twenty years thrown the weight of his im-
mense intelligence and personality behind
all of the many programs and projects with
which we have tried to solve the problems of
public health. He takes his duties as Presi-
dent of the Advisory Council to the Division
of Health very seriously, studying the mat-
ters which come to the Council's table care-
fully and in depth. He has been supportive
and helpful in developing and carrying on
the Public Health Program of the state. As
a member of the Board of Governors of the
Florida Medical Association he has served
most ably and tirelessly as an effective
liaison with the medical profession. He has
been one of the state's busiest and most
effective public health workers — and on his
own time."
1945 C. Cooper Bell, Jr. (M), of Richmond,
Virginia, was the coauthor of a paper on
"Relationship of Bile Acid Pool Size to
Biliary Lipid Excretion and the Formation
of Gallstones in Man" presented at the 9th
International Congress on Gastroenterology
in Paris. Doctor Bell also held Grand
Rounds on "Etiology and Treatment of
Cholesterol in Man" at St. Bartholomews
Hospital in London.
1946 Gladstone M. Hill (D) of Portsmouth.
Virginia, was appointed chairman of the
cancer committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
1947 R. David Anderson (P) of Waynesboro,
Virginia, was the winner of the American
Society of Hospital Pharmacists' Research
and Education Foundation Award for
achievement in the professional practice of
hospital pharmacy. This award is for the
most significant contribution to the litera-
ture in the professional practice of hospital
pharmacy. Mr. Anderson, who is director of
pharmacy services, Waynesboro Community
Hospital, titled his article "The Physician's
Contribution to Hospital Medication Er-
rors."
M. Bruce Martin (M) of Huntington, West
Virginia, was elected a councilor of the
Southern Medical Association. He served
as chairman of the Section on Pediatrics
for this year.
Walter S. Newman, Jr. (M), of Bedford, Vir-
ginia, was elected president of the Rock-
bridge County Medical Society.
Joseph R. Suggs (D) of Asheboro, North
Carolina, was installed as president of the
Third District Dental Society in October.
He continues to serve as chairman of the
Randolph County Board of Health.
1948 Roy A. Edwards, Jr. (M), of Hunting-
ton, West Virginia, is chairman of the mental
health committee of the West Virginia State
Medical Association.
1950 Hugh Fitzparrick HI (M) of Asheboro,
North Carolina, has closed his practice of
family medicine and is working in the
emergency department in High Point, North
Carolina, as well as serving part time as
health director for Randolph County.
Max D. Largent (D) formerly professor and
chairman of the department of dentistry for
children at MCV, has been appointed as-
sistant dean of the Baylor College of
Dentistry, Dallas, Texas.
Virgil H. Marshall (D) of Charlottesville,
Virginia, was named chairman of the legis-
lative committee of the Virginia Dental As-
sociation.
Woodrow W. Poss (D) of Gordonsville. Vir-
ginia, serves as chairman of the dental
Please turn to page 16
FEBRUARY, 1973
Ikank Mou O0el $yO uluck
jot MoWi Qnte>ied Qn, (soobelation Qn, avib ^ubbohi
ok ilia
Qiumnl Qssociation ok the ITlebical Uolleae ok Vilcima
Members to September 15 were published in the November, 1972, Scarab.
This is the supplemental list through December 31, 1972.
*Deceased
1931
1932
1934
1937
1908
MEDICINE
MEDICINE
MEDICINE
MEDICINE
MEDICINE (UCM)
Harold I. Araory
Euston S.
Rober:
:son
W. Fredri
,c Delp
*Louis Lipman
DENTISTRY
Frederick N. Thompson
E. P. Whelan
PHARMACY
John H. Murphy
L. H. Goldman
1935
1911
DENTISTRY
NURSING
MEDICINE
B. W. Tucker
MEDICINE (UCM)
1938
J. W. Ames
Addie H.
Gale
Washingtc
»n C. Winn
J. Henry Cutchin
MEDICINE
1914
Walter Glenn Lewis
Paul C. Soulsby
NURSING
Membersl
lip
Statistics
Annie Louise Wilkerson
Isabelle S. McGlll
1971
Jr
1972
1939
1917
Total
Total
Increase
DENTISTRY
MEDICINE
Living
Alumni
Living
Alumni
Decrease
D. Mason Jones, Jr.
Douglas S. Divers
With
%of
With
%of
1940
Known
Mem-
Mem-
Known
Mem-
Mem-
Decrease
1921
Addresses bers
bers
Addresse
s bers
bers
in( )
MEDICINE
3729
1837
49%
3833
1830
48%
(7)
C, Bemis Hall
1967
680
35%
2040
696
34%
16
Francisco Jose Casalduc Pharmacy
1583
408
26%
1639
409
25%
1
Nursing
1915
421
22%
2012
413
21%
(8)
John W. Payne, Jr.
1923
Graduate School
145
33
23%
193
37
19%
4
MEDICINE
Hospital Admin.. . .
Medical Technology.
287
490
192
37
67%
8%
319
525
220
38
69%
7%
28
1
NURSING
W. P. Bittinger
Physical Therapy. . .
650
52
8%
675
42
6%
(10)
Edith L. McLendon
Total
10,766
3660
34%
11,236
3685
33%
25
1942
1924
Dental Auxiliary. . .
13
184
73
0
8
4
16
179
71
2
5
5
13%
3%
7%
2
(3)
1
PHARMACY
MEDICINE
X-Ray Technology..
John Joseph Schooley
William E. Geiger
Tota!
Non-alumni Board
11,036
3672
11,502
3697
25
NURSING
of Visitors
1
0
(1)
Elizabeth Todd Topping
Non-alumni Faculty.
36
42
1943 — March
NURSING
Staff
40
28
(12)
MEDICINE
Fleda H. Colvard
Dental Affiliates. . .
Nursing Affiliates...
5
1
3
1
(2)
Robert H. Putney, Jr.
1927
Pharmacy Affiliates
4
8
3
11
(1)
3
MEDICINE
DENTISTRY
M. S. Stinnett
Total
3767
3785
18
A. J. Fressola
THE SCARAB
1943-
— December
1951
MEDICINE
MEDICINE
Margaret B.
Obenschain
Luther J. Hamlett
Pamela R. Moore
DENTISTRY
PHARMACY
R. L. Holle
Morris Robin
son
T. H. Holland
Thomas J. Robertson
1944
1953
MEDICINE
MEDICINE
Walter A. Eskrldge
E. C. Garber, Jr.
1945
DENTISTRY
William B. Harris
Fred C. Jones
Paul A. Stroup, Jr.
1946
MEDICINE
John C. W. Campbell
1947
MEDICINE
Stuart H. Light
1948
MEDICINE
Arthur K. Black
Conley L. Edwards, Jr.
Robert K. Williams
DENTISTRY
John D. Beall
1949
MEDICINE
Stanley Simon
Robert G. Stineman
1950
MEDICINE
Nicholas I. Ardan, II
Hugh Fitzpatrick, III
Matthew E. O'Keefe
George G. Ritchie, Jr.
Allan M. Unger
PHARMACY
M. Lee Baker
Roy A. Moon
M. C. C. Costas
Robert 0. Hudgens
Paul Burbank, Jr.
Clyde E. Godbold
1954
MEDICINE
Joseph A. Vance, III
DENTISTRY
B. I. Einhom
NURSING
Elizabeth A. Boyer
1955
MEDICINE
Steven J. Abramedis
Alden Mayer
Robert E. Barrett
John M. Quarles
PHARMACY
Sam W. Crickenberger
HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION
Benjamin L. Underwood
1958
MEDICINE
Donald R. Bailey
John A. Mathews
Marion J. Murray, Jr.
E. Marvin Sokol
Marvin L. Weger
DENTISTRY
N. Carl Wesslnger
NURSING
Ann B. Murray
1959
MEDICINE
William L. Bekenstein
Joseph C. Campbell
1962
DENTISTRY
E. Clyde Hoelzer
James A. Robertso
PHARMACY
Philip C. Spiggle
1963
MEDICINE
Anthony C. Livingstone
PJURMACY
C. Gene Morelock
1960
MEDICINE
0. Christian Bredrup, Jr
Arthur W. Burke, Jr.
Donald E. Morel
W. Peter Reyelt, Jr.
B. Keith Haley, Jr
John F. Hunt, III
Charles N. Lukhard, Jr
Evelyn H. Nock
David L. Scott
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY
Sue W. Horger
PHYSICAL THERAPY
Jewell Williams
1961
MEDICINE
Rodney G. Elliott
Walter J. O'Donohue, Ji
Ramon N. Redford, Jr.
Norman A. Templon, Jr.
Rufus H. Warren
Hong Y. Woo
DENTISTRY
Wallace W. Edens
Samuel E. McLin
DENTISTRY
Charles B. Hayes
Julian C. Metts, Jr.
Margaret R. Abernathy
Henry W. Neale
Martin C. Shargel
DENTISTRY
Curtis G. Bennett
James K. Metz
Lawrence D. Schwartz
Wyatt W. Thompson
NURSING (AD)
Dorothy F. Martin
1965
DENTISTRY
William P. Kennedy
NURSING
Joan Irwin Mercer
Martha K. Perry
1966
MEDICINE
Samuel L. Kerneklian
Donald M. Poretz
DENTISTRY
Charles E. Clough, Jr.
H. Lee Parrish, Jr.
NURSING
Anne M. Layman
1967
DENTISTRY
Gary R. Bang
PHARMACY
Gordon B. Eubank, Jr.
1968
MEDICINE
Richard L. Atkinson, Ji
Earl W. Fuller, Jr.
Harvey 0. Sargent, III
Elmer J. Vaught, Jr.
enneth R. King
etty Y. William
William M. Blaylock
DENTISTRY
James C. Burns
Robert J. Goral
Martin A. Hoard
Thomas R. McLaughlin
James A. Pollard
PHARMACY
Carrington L. Booth, Jr
NURSING
Chloe A. Clark
Carol Ann Lucki
GRADUATE STUDIES
Yvonne M. Balducci
HOUSE STAFF
Garry F. Fitzpatrick
FACULTY
S. Elmer Bear
htUNlON, 13~Juns 1-2-3- You aucomE&Rckl
FEBRUARY, 1973
bntfiaducLnej, Do- tyou, Oht flew* Abba-eLcute, PAa^edAo-M at
YYtfLVj Who- Uame Eem Appointed fry, JAe RoaAcL a$
UtiLtaML ^hjom, tttpUtrikeA, 1971 , to- tfeptetribeb, 1972.
I. Kelman Cohen
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Troy, New York, married, and has two children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., Columbia University, New York, New York, 1959.
M.D., University of North Carolina School of Medicine,
1963.
General surgical residency, North Carolina Memorial
Hospital, 1964-1968.
Clinical fellowship, American Cancer Society, 1965-1966.
Internship, The Mary Hitchcock Hospital, Hanover,
New Hampshire, 1965-1966.
Chief resident and part-time instructor, department of
surgery, University of North Carolina School of Medi-
cine, 1967-1968.
Plastic surgery residency, The Johns Hopkins Hospital,
Baltimore, Maryland, 1968-1970.
FORMER POSITIONS:
H.E.W. senior clinical cancer fellow, 1969-1970.
Postdoctoral research fellow, NIH, September, 1970.
Plastic and reconstructive surgeon, National Cancer In-
stitute, 1970-1972.
POSITION AT MCV:
Chairman, division of plastic and reconstructive surgery
and associate professor of surgery.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Candidate member, American College of Surgeons, 1968,
and Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery,
1970.
Member American Burn Association, The Johns Hopkins
Medical and Surgical Society, and The Association of
Academic Surgeons.
Numerous publications.
Andrew Epes Harris, Jr.
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Blackstone, Virginia, married, and has three chil-
dren.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., Hampden-Sydney College, 1947
M.D., MCV, 1951.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Practicing physician in Blackstone, Virginia area, 1952-
'72.
Codirector for Rural Stroke Program (VPMP), 1970-'72.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate clinical professor of family practice.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Past president (1970); chairman, Task Force Commit-
tee commissioner, PR & LEG & PP Committee; Vir-
ginia Academy of Family, Practice.
American Academy of General Practice, alternate dele-
gate to Congress of Delegates.
Past president: 4th District Medical Society, Southside
Academy of General Practice, Rotary Club.
Board of Directors, Citizens Bank and Trust Company.
President, Nottoway River Country Club, 1971-'72.
Elder, Blackstone Presbyterian Church.
Pauline H. Hord
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, married, and has three
children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
Diploma, Mercy Hospital School of Nursing, Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania.
B.S.N.E., University of Pittsburgh.
Kelman Cohen
Pauline H. Hord
Andrew Epes Harris, Jr.
THE SCARAB
Master of public health, (major, public health admin-
istration), University of Minnesota.
Post master-public health administration, University of
Michigan.
FORMER POSITIONS-
Supervising public health nurse, regional public health
administrator, Pennsylvania Department of Health.
ths-health and science teacher project for disadvantaged
children.
Coordinator and associate professor of community health
nursing, Pennsylvania State University.
Nursing education advisor, State Board of Nursing of
Pennsylvania.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of community health nursing.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Chairman, Virginia Black Caucus of Public Health Pro-
fessionals; fellow, American Public Health Associa-
tion; nurse-week speaker for national nurse sorority,
Chi Eta Phi; holds contract to offer consultation in
nursing and administration of new health maintenance
organizations.
James Edward Kennedy
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Troy, New York, married, and has three children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., Union College, Schenectady, New York, 1958.
D.D.S., University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Penn-
sylvania, 1962.
Intern, Martin Army Hospital, Fort Benning, Georgia,
1962-1963.
Graduate student, periodontology, Eastman Dental Cen-
ter, Rochester, New York, 1966-1969.
M.S., University of Rochester School of Medicine and
Dentistry, Rochester, New York, 1966-1969.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Trainee-teacher research training grant, NIDR, 1966-
1969.
Research and clinical associate, department of periodon-
tics, Eastman Dental Center, 1969-1972.
Adjunct professor of oral hygiene, Monroe Community
College, Rochester, New York, 1970-1972.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor and chairman, department of pe-
riodontics.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member, public and professional relations committee,
Orban prize committee, American Academy of Pe-
riodontology.
International Association for Dental Research, president,
Richmond Section.
ADA
Editoral board, Journal of Periodontal Research; numer-
ous publications.
R. Alan Mackintosh
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Belfast, North Ireland, married, and has four chil-
dren.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
M.B., B. Ch., BAO, Queen's University, Belfast, Ireland,
1954.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Practiced after internship for three years, emigrated to
Virginia, 1958, U. S. citizenship, 1965.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of family practice; also director of
Fairfax Family Practice Center; appointments as well
in department of internal medicine, Georgetown Uni-
versity School of Medicine and division of family prac-
tice, University of Virginia.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
President: Virginia Academy of Family Physicians, Fair-
fax County Medical Society. Chairman, review and
evaluation committee, member RAG, VRMP. Mem-
ber, Society of Teachers of Family Medicine.
Elizabeth J. Mason
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Uniontown, Pennsylvania, and single.
James Edward Kennedy
FEBRUARY, 1973
R. Alan Mackintosh
Elizabeth J. Mason
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
R.N., Presbyterian Hospital School of Nursing, Pitts-
burgh, Pennsylvania, 1956.
B.S., nursing, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Penn-
sylvania, 1959.
M.S., nursing, with major in clinical nursing and clinical
teaching, Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan,
1962.
Ph.D., educational psychology; major area, learning;
minors, educational administration, measurement re-
search, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 1972.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Staff nurse, Eye and Ear Hospital, Pittsburgh, Penn-
sylvania, 1956-1959.
Instructor in anatomy and medical-surgical nursing, Pres-
byterian Hospital School of Nursing, 1959-1961.
Instructor, medical-surgical nursing, University of Pitts-
burgh, 1962-1966.
Assistant professor, medical-surgical nursing, University
of Wisconsin, 1966-1970.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor, medical-surgical nursing, graduate
program.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member: Sigma Theta Tau, national nursing honor so-
ciety; Pi Lambda Theta, national women's educational
honor society.
Articles published in Nursing Outlook and Second Na-
tional Nurse Scientist Conference Review.
George Stanley Mitchell, Jr.
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Fairbury, Nebraska, now a resident of Newport News,
Virginia, married, and has three children
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
A.B., chemistry, Duke University, 1950.
M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1954.
Interned, U. S. Naval Hospital, Portsmouth, Virginia.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Private practice, 1955-1971.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate clinical professor, department of family prac-
tice.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Director of family practice, Riverside Hospital, Newport
News, Virginia, and director of patient services, New-
port News Health Center.
Board certified, family practice, 1970.
Orhan Muren
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Mulga, Turkey, and married.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
Pertevniyal High School, Istanbul, Turkey, 1936-1939.
Medical School of Istanbul, Turkey, 1939-1945.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Medical officer, Turkish Army, 1945-1947.
General practice, Aydin, Turkey, 1947-1952.
Intern, Elizabeth General Hospital, Elizabeth, New Jer-
sey, 1952-1953.
Resident in medicine, 1955-1957, chief resident in medi-
cine, 1955-1956, Lincoln Hospital, New York, New
York.
Fellow, pulmonary diseases, Bronx Municipal Hospital,
New York City, 1956-1957.
Fellow, cardiovascular diseases, Freedman's Hospital,
Washington, D.C., 1957-1958.
Staff physician, E. G. Williams Hospital, MCV, 1959-
1965.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of medicine, 1963 to present.
Associate professor of anesthesiology, 1972.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
Fellow, American College of Chest Physicians; diplomate,
American Board of Internal Medicine; Golden Apple
Award, MCV, Student American Medical Association,
1971 and 1972; outstanding teaching award, M'73
class. Member Richmond Academy of Medicine, Medi-
:
George Stanley Mitchell, Jr.
10
David B. Propert
THE SCARAB
cal Society of Virginia, AMA, American College of
Physicians, American Thoracic Society, Virginia Tho-
racic Society. Consultant, Richmond Tuberculosis and
Respiratory Disease Association. Numerous publica-
tions.
David B. Propert
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, raised in Richmond,
Virginia, married, and has two children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., chemistry, University of Richmond, Richmond,
Virginia, 1954.
M.D., Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Penn-
sylvania, 1958.
Internship and internal medicine residency, Washington
Hospital Center, Washington, D.C.
Resident, cardiovascular diseases, 1964-1965, research
associate, 1965-1967, Veterans Administration Hospi-
tal, Richmond, Virginia.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Chief of the cardiovascular laboratory, chief of the car-
diovascular section of the medical service, Veterans
Administration Hospital, Richmond, Virginia.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of medicine and associate director of
the ECG-VCG Laboratory, my special areas of interest
will be in vectorcardiography and development of this
technique for further diagnostic value. In addition, I
will coordinate the undergraduate teaching program
within the cardiovascular division specifically aiding
in the development of utilization of teaching aids and
self-instructional materials of cardiovascular disease.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member, Council on Clinical Cardiology, American
Heart Association; Board of Directors, Richmond
Heart Association; committee for Standard III, Edu-
cational Program University Self-Study Program.
Numerous publications.
Robert K. Quinnell
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Denver, Colorado, now a resident of Vienna, Vir-
ginia, married, and has four children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., University of North Carolina, 1944.
M.D., Cornell University Medical College, 1946.
M.P.H., Harvard University School of Public Health,
1955.
Certified, American Board of Preventive Medicine, 1958.
FORMER POSITIONS:
First lieutenant to colonel, U.S. Air Force, 1947-1967.
Assistant clinical professor, Georgetown University, de-
partment of community medicine, 1968-1970.
Assistant vice president and medical director, Phar-
maceutical Manufacturers Association, 1967-1971.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate clinical professor of family practice and as-
sistant director, Fairfax Family Practice Center.
Richard R. Ranney
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Atlanta, Georgia, married, and has three children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
University of Iowa, College of Liberal Arts, 1957-1959,
College of Dentistry, 1959-1963, Iowa City, Iowa.
USPHS internship, 1963-1964.
Certificate, periodontology, Eastman Dental Center,
1969.
University of Rochester, School of Medicine and Den-
tistry, Rochester, New York, 1966-1969.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Chief dental officer, USPHS outpatient clinic, Cincin-
nati, Ohio, 1964-1966.
Trainee-teacher research training grant, NIH, NIDR,
1966-1969.
Assistant professor, department of periodontology, Uni-
versity of Oregon Dental School, 1969-1972.
Assistant professor of dentistry, University of Oregon
Medical School, 1970-1972.
Robert K. Quinnel
FEBRUARY, 1973
Richard R. Ranney
Kurt T. Schmidt
11
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor and director of graduate periodon-
tics, department of periodontics.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member: American Academy of Periodontology, Inter-
national Association for Dental Research (Periodontal
Research Group, Richmond Section), ADA, Oregon
Dental Association, Multnomah County Dental So-
ciety, Psi Omega, Oregon Society of Periodontists,
Society of the Sigma Xi, Omicron Kappa Upsilon, Phi
Eta Sigma.
Special award, Balint Orban Prize, American Academy
of Periodontology, 1969.
Numerous publications and continuing education presen-
tations.
Kurt T. Schmidt
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Gunzenhausen, Bavaria, Germany, emigrated to
U.S.A. in 1952, U. S. citizen, 1958, married, and has
one child.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
M.D., University of Munich Medical School, 1946.
Interned, 1952-1953, medical residency, 1953-1954, St.
Thomas Hospital, Nashville, Tennessee.
Psychiatric residency, Vanderbilt University Hospital,
1954-1957.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Clinical director, Western State Hospital, Hopkinsville,
Kentucky, 1957-1958.
Clinical director, 1958-1965, assistant superintendent,
clinical, 1965-1972, Eastern State Hospital, Williams-
burg, Virginia.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of clinical psychiatry. Also full-time
director of Eastern State Hospital since February 9,
1972.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS:
Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry, 1960; fellow,
American Psychiatric Association, 1962; lecturer in
psychology, College of William and Mary.
Author of various scientific papers.
Past president of the Williamsburg-James City County
Medical Society.
Shirley Jean Thompson
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Danville, Virginia, and single.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
B.S., nursing, Medical College of Virginia.
M.S.; Ph.D., epidemiology, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Clinical instructor, medical-surgical nursing, Roanoke
Memorial Hospital, Roanoke, Virginia.
Staff nurse and acting supervisor, Instructive Visiting
Nurse Association-City Nursing Service of Richmond.
Assistant professor of nursing, MCV.
Research associate of epidemiology, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor, program on community health nurs-
ing, School of Nursing.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member ANA, APHA, Society for Epidemiological Re-
search, and Royal Society of Health. Served on various
committees.
Member Sigma Theta Tau and Delta Omega (honorary
societies).
Several published articles.
Stuart Bruce White
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Blackstone, Virginia, still a resident, married, and
has four children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
Blackstone High School, 1949.
Hampden-Sydney College, 1953.
M.D., Medical College of Virginia, 1957.
Internship, MCV, 1958.
Residency, McGuire Veterans Hospital, 1958.
Shirley Jean Thompson
Harold F. Young
12
Orestes S. Zalis
THE SCARAB
FORMER POSITIONS:
General practice in Blackstone, Virginia, since 1958.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of family practice.
Harold F. Young
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Tiffin, Ohio, married, and has three children.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
M.D., Ohio State, 1963.
Internship, residency in neurosurgery, University Hos-
pitals of Cleveland.
Special fellowship in neurological sciences, NIH, NSRA,
1967-1968.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Chief, neurosurgery service, Fitzsimons General Hospital,
Denver, Colorado, 1970-1971.
Assistant professor of neurological surgery, Case West-
ern Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, 1971-1972.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of neurological surgery.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Member: AMA, International College of Angiology,
American Association for Academic Surgery, Amer-
ican Federation of Clinical Research, Congress of
Neurological Surgeons, Research Society of Neuro-
logical Surgeons.
Orestes S. Zalis
BRIEF BIOGRAPHY:
Born Iasi, Romania, and married.
EDUCATIONAL HISTORY:
Premedical, University of London, United Kingdom,
1947, University of Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France,
1950.
M.D., University of Paris, Paris, France, 1958.
Internship, Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, 1958-
1959.
Psychiatric residency, University of Illinois, Chicago,
1959-1962.
FORMER POSITIONS:
Instructor, 1962-1965, assistant clinical professor, de-
partment of psychiatry, 1965-1971, University of
Illinois.
Associate attending physician, Michael Reese Hospital,
1963-1971.
Attending physician and department chairman, MacNeal
Memorial Hospital, Illinois, 1965-1971.
Consultant, Board of Health, Chicago, 1962-1964; Du-
Page County mental health, Illinois, 1970-1971.
POSITION AT MCV:
Associate professor of psychiatry.
ACCOMPLISHMENTS :
Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology,
1970.
Major research interest, clinical research in adolescents
and inprinting-animal studies.
Numerous publications.
Drs. Edward Lee Alexander, Jr., James Selden
Harris, Talmadge R. Howell, Ruth Virginia Moran,
and Eugene Toker were written to be included in
this group of new associate professors and no reply
was received.
BRIEFINGS-MCV
Each dean has a standing invitation
to contribute to this column in every
issue.
School of Medicine
The Medical College of Virginia-
Virginia Commonwealth University
will be getting a new "lease on life" if
the General Assembly approves an ex-
tensive, approximately $90 million
plan to renovate and replace hospital
facilities over the next nine years. The
plan provides for the modernization of
all patient-care treatment facilities at
the Medical College of Virginia Hospi-
tals and will improve facilities for
health sciences education. Proposed
financing through $82.5 million in rev-
enue bonds will enable a new 558-bed
hospital to be built along the north side
FEBRUARY, 1973
of Marshall Street and spanning 12th
Street with extensive renovations to
MCV West and MCV North Hospitals.
Upon completion of this total project
in 1981, the MCV complex will con-
tain 1,058 beds, four beds over our
present total of 1,054.
Utilizing planning money provided
by the General Assembly over the past
four years, a plan for a new base hos-
pital plus extensive renovations using
present facilities has been developed.
The counsulting firm of Booz, Allen
and Hamilton has declared this pro-
posal fiscally feasible for revenue
bonds and of major importance to the
Richmond community and the state as
a whole. Problems leading to this
major undertaking have been throughly
reviewed by MCV-VCU administra-
tion and do consist of some noteworthy
ones. Presently, major patient care
facilities are located in six buildings,
only two of which are directly con-
nected, making it necessary for pa-
tients, staff, and personnel to move or
be moved from one building to another
in their daily activities. This movement
is possible only via city streets or
steampipe service tunnels. MCV West
and North Hospitals are overcrowded
and West Hospital does not meet fire
codes. Expanded major diagnostic
X-ray and major operating room facili-
ties are most desirable along with the
elimination of overcrowded emergency
rooms and archaic and outmoded
ward-type facilities. Numbers of health
students in all categories have in-
creased sharply, as have our patient-
care responsibilities to the community
and to the state.
Under the nine-year plan, all 1,058
beds would be concentrated in four
connected buildings: the new hospital
(558 beds), North Hospital (240
beds), West Hospital (200 beds), and
the Nelson Clinical Center (60 beds).
The new hospital will provide one cen-
tral operating room area, a new em-
ergency area with one entrance and one
T3
central diagnostic X-ray area. Obstet-
rics and gynecology facilities will be
consolidated and expanded in this fa-
cility also. The new emergency en-
trance will be from Marshall, between
11th and 12th Streets. Using Clay
Street as the main public entrance, the
new hospital will extend across and
block 12th Street and will be on sites
presently occupied by the Skull and
Bones Restaurant, the building form-
erly occupied by the chief medical ex-
aminer's office, Hunton Hall, McFar-
land Hall, and the linen department
building.
MCV West Hospital will be utilized,
after renovation, to house expanded
outpatient clinics on the lower floors;
expanded clinical laboratories on the
sixth floor; needed space for the dietary
kitchen to receive and store daily sup-
plies; and improved patient care areas.
Pedestrian traffic corridors with bridges
over city streets to the new hospital
will be provided from MCV West,
MCV North, and the Nelson Clinical
Center building. The total project also
calls for a new supply center for the
Health Sciences Division to be located
east of 13th Street and immediately
north of the new hospital.
Site work demolition for the new
hospital will begin later this year with
completion of its total construction
scheduled for mid- 1978. Renovations
of MCV North and West Hospitals will
take place primarily in the 1978-1981
period.
With the future of MCV-VCU at
stake, I urge your support of the rev-
enue bond proposal which will provide
our much needed new facilities with-
out tax-dollar appropriations. The
Medical College of Virginia Hospitals
require modern facilities in order to
maintain the superior level of treatment
and technology necessary to meet their
responsibilities to Virginia and the na-
tion as a whole in the fields of medical
education, patient care, community
service, and research.
Warren H. Pearse, dean
School of Allied Health
Professions
With this issue of The Scarab we
hope to inaugurate a series of special
reports for the alumni composed by
the respective chairmen of the various
departments in the School. The first in
the series is written by Professor
Susanne Hirt, the chairman of our
Department of Physical Therapy.
As Professor Hirt reports, we have
changed the title of some of the former
teaching programs. The other aca-
demic programs in Allied Health
similarly affected by the change are
as follows:
School of Medical Technology to
Department of Medical Technology.
School of Radiologic Technology to
Department of Radiation Sciences.
School of Hospital Administration
to Department of Hospital and Health
Administration.
Mercedes-Benz
Star Salesmen Guild
ROBERT M. STAPLES
"A Professional For Professionals"
David R. McGeorge Car Co., Inc.
520 W. Broad St.
Richmond, Va. 23220
(703) 649-0593
14
School of Nurse Anesthetists to De-
partment of Nurse Anesthesia.
School of Occupational Therapy to
Department of Occupational Therapy.
Program of Patient Counselors to
Program of Patient Counseling.
We look forward to bringing you
up to date on the affairs of the
"School" in this manner in the
months ahead.
In the meantime from all of us to
all of you, our sincerest best wishes
for the holiday season.
Thomas C. Barker, dean
Department of Physical Therapy
School of Allied Health
Professions
The "School of Physical Therapy"
has officially become the Department
of Physical Therapy-School of Allied
Health Professions. We expect a few
mix-ups here and there since our
clinical department also calls itself the
Department of Physical Therapy.
During the 1972-73 school year we
have enrolled 31 senior and 34 junior
students. Our curriculum has taken on
a new look which seems to please both
the students and the faculty. Some of
the major innovations are an early
exposure of our junior students to the
practice of physical therapy starting
during their first week. This is fol-
lowed by visits to normal and disabled
child facilities in the Richmond area
and home-care visits with Public
Health nurses. Following this the stu-
dents return to physical therapy clinics
with an increasing opportunity for par-
ticipation in patient care. The six-week
junior affiliation has been eliminated.
In the new curriculum clinical ex-
periences are designed to support
academic learning and thus make it
more meaningful for the student. Our
senior students are spending two eight-
month periods in clinics and are re-
turning for a five-week period of
advanced learning between those two
periods. This proved very interesting
last year and served to further inte-
grate the academic and clinical learn-
ing.
We welcome a new faculty member,
Miss Susan MacQueen, who received
her M.S. from Boston University, and
came to us from the University of
Michigan. Susan has had a great deal
of experience in the clinical practice
THE SCARAB
of physical therapy as well as in the
supervision of students and the de-
velopment of student clinical educa-
tion programs. Susan is in charge of
our clinical education program for
both our junior and senior students.
She replaces Bob Lamb who is grad-
ually increasing his participation in
the graduate program. Susan has
brought to us many new and exciting
ideas. Several projects are now under
way that promise to enhance both our
academic and clinical programs.
Two of our faculty members re-
turned to school this year. Jane Rat-
cliff has become a candidate for a
master's degree in our own graduate
program and Sandy Orton is pursuing
a program in fine arts while at the
same time still teaching part time in
our department.
Our graduate program which began
with the admission of one student in
1968 is growing by leaps and bounds.
The first student to graduate received
her master of science degree with a
major in physical therapy in 1970. One
student graduated in 1971 and two
students will have completed their
work during 1972. At the present
time there are ten graduate students
enrolled in our department and it is
anticipated that four of them will ful-
fill the requirements for their degree
during the 1973 school year. We are
very proud of the progress our gradu-
ate program has made during its brief
existence. Under the guidance of Dr.
Otto Payton. We are recognizing the
benefits which it provides both for the
faculty as well as the undergraduate
students.
The purpose of our graduate pro-
gram is to allow physical therapists
who have completed their basic train-
ing and usually have had some ex-
perience in the clinical field to deepen
and/or broaden their knowledge and
skills. Each student's program is de-
signed carefully on an individual basis
to meet the student's interests and
needs and to fit his particular back-
ground. Typical goals students may
work towards are specialization as a
clinician, an educator and a research
worker, a consultant in physical
therapy, or an administrator with ex-
pertise in a basic science or a clinical
specialty. To date most students have
expressed interest in preparing them-
selves for faculty positions in basic
physical therapy programs for which
there is a strong national market at
the present time.
We would welcome any of our
alumni from past years who might
be interested in pursuing graduate
studies to contact us and discuss their
plans and goals with us.
We wish all of you a pleasant holi-
day season and hope you will have
an opportunity to come to Richmond
and visit with us sometime in the
future.
Susanne Hirt, chairman
A New Hospital
(Continued from page 1)
In addition to facilities which are
outmoded, the consultants reported
surgery rooms overcrowded; insuffi-
cient fire escape protection in West
Hospital; difficulty in moving patients
and supplies from one hospital to
another, since only two of the six
hospitals are connected; a high num-
ber of ward-type beds which deny
the patient dignity and privacy; and
severe inadequacies in nursing space
and toilet facilities.
TUCKER HOSPITAL, Inc
212 West Franklin Street
Richmond, Virginia 23220
A private hospital for diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric
and neurological disorders. Hospital and out-patient services.
Outpatients seen by appointment
Hospital visiting hours 2 P.M.— 8 P.M., Daily
James Asa Shield, M.D.
James Asa Shield, Jr., M.D.
Weir M. Tucker, M.D.
George S. Fultz, Jr., M.D.
Catherine T. Ray, M.D.
FEBRUARY, 1973
15
A Plan to Correct Inadequacies
and Provide Better Patient Care
The plan for construction and ren-
ovation at the Medical College of Vir-
ginia Hospitals of Virginia Common-
wealth University provides for modern
facilities for the care of the sick, and
for the education of medical care pro-
fessionals.
At the same time the new facilities
will provide for more efficient utiliza-
tion of employees and even reduce
staffing ratios for in-patient service by
an estimated eight per cent. Presently
at MCV Hospitals, 3.47 employees
are required to serve each bed pa-
tient; when the project is completed,
this figure will be reduced to 3.18 per
patient, which figure is considered ex-
cellent within the industry.
The proposal calls for the providing
of 1058 beds. However, the bed pro-
jection will ultimately relate to trends
in hospital care, to a projected reduc-
tion in the number of indigent patients,
and to the fact the plan will eliminate
ward-type facilities.
The consultants also reported:
Per diem costs should be lowered
through increased utilization of
bed space and improved pro-
ductivity.
A better balance between private
and indigent patients is projected.
State reimbursement of MCVH
for care of the poor as a per-
centage of the total cost of opera-
tion will be reduced from 28%
in 1973 to 18.9% in 1983.
Occupancy of the 1058 bed hos-
pital complex is expected to reach
81.8% by 1983 and to continue
increasing slowly thereafter.
Additional beds can be added if
future educational and patient
care needs justify expansion.
Financing the New Hospital
The plan for financing the new hos-
pital calls for debt-service requirements
to be met out of operating revenue
over a 30-year period. Net cash in-
come is expected to adequately cover
debt service, and all Federal programs
recognize debt service as a legitimate
operational cost.
Total cost of entire project
$89.7 million
16
Cost of construction
$82.4 million
(includes cost of demolition
and renovation)
To be financed in this manner:
Revenue bonds backed by
the Commonwealth
$78.8 million
July 1, 1975 $58.2 million
July 1, 1977 $20.6 million
$78.8 million
Legislative appropriations for
renovations through 1981
$10.9 million
Total $89.7 million
Alumni Board Action
A called meeting of the Board of
Trustees of the Alumni Association of
MCV was held on Sunday, December
17, 1972. A motion was made that the
Board of Trustees of the Alumni As-
sociation of the Medical College of
Virginia go on record as vigorously
supporting and endorsing the proposal
for the hospital improvement project
which has been presented to the Gov-
ernor for submission to the General
Assembly. The motion was seconded
and passed unanimously. A motion was
also made that the Board of Trustees
of the Alumni Association of MCV
endorse and recommend continued
planning money necessary for the work
now in progress on an allied health
science building needed by the schools
of pharmacy, nursing, and allied health
professions for teaching and advance-
ment necessary for all of these schools
and professions and their future at
MCV. The motion was seconded and
passed unanimously.
The Board of Trustees of the Alumni
Association of the Medical College of
Virginia passed a resolution that if and
when the Richmond Academy of Medi-
cine is for sale, we would consider try-
ing to purchase it.
Class News
(Continued from page 5)
education committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
1951 H. Marvin Midkiff (D) of Martinsville,
Virginia, was appointed as chairman of the
necrology committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
John J. Salley (D) of Baltimore, Maryland,
has been elected vice president and a mem-
ber of the Board of Directors of the Ameri-
can Fund for Dental Education. Doctor
Salley, who is dean of dentistry at the Uni-
versity of Maryland, is consultant for the
World Health Organization to San Marcos
University Faculty of Dentistry, Lima, Peru,
and consultant for Health Sciences Cur-
riculum Development at Universidad Peru-
ana Cayetano Heredia, Peru. He is also
dental consultant and member of the Hos-
pital Advisory Committee at the U.S. Public
Health Service Hospital in Baltimore. His
statewide activities include membership on
the Committee on Health Manpower Ad-
visory Council for Higher Education, State
of Maryland, and membership on the Ad-
visory Council on Preventive Medicine of
the Maryland State Health Department. He
is also a member of Maryland's Advisory
Council on Comprehensive Health Planning.
Doctor Salley has just completed a term as
president of the American Association of
Dental Schools and has also served as presi-
dent of the Southern Conference of Dental
Deans and Examiners. He is a dental con-
sultant to the U.S. Naval Dental School in
Bethesda, Maryland, and member of the
Advisory Committee on Dental Student
Training, Division of Dental Health, U.S.
Public Health Service. He also lectures on
public health administration at Johns Hop-
kins University.
1952 Gene E. Clapsaddle (M) of Vinton,
Virginia, presided at the "Panel on Practical
Respiratory Care" at the meeting of the
Medical Society of Virginia.
Charles F. Fletcher (D) of Alexandria, Vir-
ginia, serves as chairman of the annual meet-
ing committee of the Virginia Dental Asso-
ciation.
John S. Young (D) of Lynchburg, Virginia,
was appointed chairman of the dental trade
and laboratory relations committee of the
Virginia Dental Association.
1953 William R. Maynard, Jr. (P), of Rich-
mond, Virginia, was reappointed to the State
Board of Pharmacy for a second term by the
Governor of Virginia.
A. Thomas McCoy II (M) of Charleston,
West Virginia, president-elect of the West
Virginia State Medical Association, is chair-
man of its program committee.
1954 Edward A. Barham, Jr. (M), of Ports-
mouth, Virginia, serves as president of the
Portsmouth Academy of Medicine.
1955 Fitzhugh Mayo (M) of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, was a leader in the discussion on the
family practice programs at the meeting of
the Medical Society of Virginia.
Harvey B. Morgan (P) of Gloucester. Vir-
ginia, was appointed by the Governor of
Virginia to the State Drug Abuse Control
Council.
1956 W. Alva Deardorff (M) of Charleston.
West Virginia, serves as chairman of the
medical economics committee of the West
Virginia State Medical Association.
Robert B. Whitmore, Jr. (D), of Norfolk,
Virginia, was selected chairman of the hos-
pital dental service committee of the Vir-
ginia Dental Association.
1957 Fred G. Alouf, Jr. (D). of Roanoke.
Virginia, is chairman of the continuing edu-
THE SCARAB
cation committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
John T. W. Read H. (D) of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, was selected as chairman of the State
Institutions committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
Irvin N. Sporn (M) of Richmond, Virginia,
was made a fellow of the American College
of Surgeons.
1958 Marshall C. England (D, MS '67) of
Richmond, Virginia, has been appointed as-
sociate professor and acting chairman of
endodontics at MCV. Doctor England has
recently received a certificate in endodontics
from the University of Pittsburgh.
Norman P. Moore (D) of Norfolk, Virginia,
was appointed chairman of the insurance
committee of the Virginia Dental Associa-
tion.
E. Marvin Sokol (M) of Huntington, New
York, has been appointed associate clinical
professor of medicine at New York State
College of Medicine at Stoney Brook.
1959 Robert B. Allen (D) of Hampton, Vir-
ginia, is chairman of the dental care pro-
grams committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
Robert L. Beamer (Ph.D., P'55) of Col-
lumbia, South Carolina, has been appointed
associate dean of the College of Pharmacy
of the University of South Carolina. He has
been connected with the College since 1959.
Gall Fallon Neal (PT) of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, was chosen the Richmond News
Leader's clubwoman of the year. The article
stated her involvement in some 23 organiza-
tions.
Madison R. Price (D) of Newport News.
Virginia, an assistant clinical professor of
pedodontics at MCV and in private practice,
has been made a fellow of the Academy of
General Dentistry. He was elected to the
executive council of the Virginia Dental
Association and as president of the Vir-
ginia Society of Dentistry for Children.
John H. Tobin, Jr. (HA), of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, administrator of Johnston-Willis Hos-
pital, has been named a regional administra-
tor of Hospital Corporation of America.
1960 John W. Duncan (D) of Richmond,
Virginia, was named chairman of the public
information committee of the Virginia Den-
tal Association.
1964 S. Harold Horwitz (D) of Richmond.
Virginia, was named chairman of the dental
health committee of the Virginia Dental
Association.
W. Wayne Key, Jr. (M), of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, has been inducted into the American
College of Surgeons.
1966 Jan Hart Feazell (HA) of Richmond,
Virginia, has been appointed assistant pro-
fessor of health care management, School
of Allied Health Professions, at MCV. Mrs.
Feazell has worked with the envolving
gerontology and health care management
program since 1968. Since 1970, she has
served as training coordinator for short-
term courses in this area.
Herman L. Mullins (HA) of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, was named assistant chairman of the
department of hospital and health adminis-
tration at MCV.
1967 James A. Bailey, Jr. (P), of Peters-
burg, Virginia, serves as vice president of the
Fourth District Pharmaceutical Association.
Jamison H. Farmer (N) and her husband.
Evan, announce the birth of their second
child, Evan Ragland, Jr., on July 28, in
Asmara, Ethiopia. Doctor Farmer is a physi-
cian with the Army serving two years in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Mrs. Farmer has
been teaching part time at the Ethiopian
Imperial Armed Forces Hospital School of
Nursing there.
Stewart R. Masters (P) of Winchester, Vir-
ginia, is the current president of the North-
ern Virginia Pharmaceutical Association.
1968 Steven L. Scarborough (P) of Chester,
Virginia, was installed as president of the
Fourth District Pharmaceutical Association.
1969 Augustine Warner Lewis JU (M) of
Climax, Colorado, was married to Bonnie
Lee Newman of Denver, Colorado, on
September 30.
1971 Jan Milner Line (DH) of Richmond,
Virginia, is an instructor in dental hygiene
at MCV and at Crippled Children's Hospital.
John E. Owens (M) is in a surgery resi-
dency at MCV preparing for pediatric
(academic) surgery.
Peter M. Pardoll (M) of Miami, Florida, is
continuing his medical residency with a
probable GI subspecialty. He then plans to
enter private practice.
Randall W. Powell (M) began a four-year
general surgery residency at the Naval
Hospital, San Diego, California, on Au-
gust 1.
Robert W. Rhodes (P) of Winchester. Vir-
ginia, serves as vice president of the North-
ern Virginia Pharmaceutical Association.
Charles H. Robertson, Jr. (M), of Dallas,
Texas, plans a residency in medicine, his
subspecialty fellowship will be in pulmo-
nary disease.
Margaret Tiemann Steinbach (N) has com-
pleted her basic training at the Brooke
Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston,
Texas.
James Reid Sterrett (M) of Little Falls,
New Jersey, is in his first year of a medi-
cal residency at St. Vincent's Hospital, New
York City.
William Michael Waring (M) is stationed
at the USAF Hospital, Lockbourne AFB,
Ohio. He plans an aerospace medicine resi-
dency followed by a career as a flight
surgeon.
Lynn Plunkett Wright (MT) and her hus-
band, Lt. James B. Wright, are stationed in
Germany.
1972 Charles F. Bahen, Jr. (D), has opened
his practice in Cape Charles, Virginia.
Patricia S. Dowdy (N), formerly of Rich-
mond, Virginia, and Mary J. Schiller (N),
formerly of Petersburg, Virginia, com-
pleted their basic training at Brooke Army
Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
Samuel C. Patteson, Jr. (D), of Farm-
ville, Virginia, has recently completed his
basic training at the Medical Field Service
School, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort
Sam Houston, Texas.
' Kounb ike Uilcu.t
Kanawha Valley Chapter
What a lovely evening it was at
the attractive home of the Carl J. Ron-
cagliones in Charleston, West Virginia.
Doctor Roncaglione was president of
i f .
Mrs. W. Alva DeardorfF, Dr. Joseph
A. Smith, and Dr. and Mrs. Carl J.
Roncaglione.
the Chapter. A goodly number of the
Kanawha Valley alumni were present
to enjoy the festivities. A delicious
buffet followed an enjoyable cocktail
party. Dr. Philip L. A. Minor, presi-
Please turn to page IS
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MLS
MEMBERS OF:
All Points Relocation Service
FEBRUARY, 1973
17
Zest We J or get
1905 Heber P. Newman (M) of Bartow,
Florida, died on October 29. Doctor New-
man practiced in Bartow from 1908 until
his retirement in 1958. He was a veteran of
World War I.
1906 James Coleman Motley (M) of Abing-
don, Virginia, died on July 31. From 1909
to 1911, Doctor Motley practiced in Hinton,
West Virginia, and then moved to Abingdon,
Virginia, in 1912. He was affiliated with the
George Ben Johnston Hospital there until
1949 when he retired. Doctor Motley served
in World War I as a major in the U. S.
Army Medical Corps.
1908 Guy Munsey Naff (M) of Emporia.
Virginia, died on September 29. Doctor Naff
served as Greensville County medical ex-
aminer for thirty-five years. He was on the
Board of Directors of the Emporia Bank and
its first president.
1909 UCM C. Lydon Harrell (M) of Nor-
folk, Virginia, died on November 13. He
retired in 1965. Doctor Harrell was a past
president of the Alumni Association of
MCV. He was a past president of the Nor-
folk County Medical Society and Seaboard
Medical Society, a director of the Tidewater
Red Cross Blood Center, and a past presi-
dent of the Medical Society of Virginia. His
activities included medical director of the
Tidewater Victory Memorial Hospital, 1937-
41; head of the Tuberculosis Division of
Norfolk General Hospital; a consultant on
diseases of the chest of Portsmouth Naval
Hospital, membership on the World War I
Draft Board, a member of World War II
Draft Board, and an adviser for the Third
Selective Service.
1911 Charles J. Crews (D) of Radford, Vir-
ginia, died on August 10.
1913 Isaac Harry Goldman (M) of Rich-
mond, Virginia, died on June 2. Doctor
Goldman had been chief anesthesiologist
at Johnston-Willis Hospital for half a cen-
tury.
1913 UCM Clara L. Gardner (N) of Miami,
Florida, died on February 15.
1914 Fred E. Hamlin (M) of Roanoke, Vir-
ginia, an ear, nose, and throat specialist,
died on June 15. He did postgraduate work
at the University of Pennsylvania, practiced
in Staunton, Virginia until 1923, and moved
to Roanoke in 1925. Doctor Hamlin was
president of his medical class, a past presi-
dent of the Roanoke Chapter, Virginia
Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology Society,
and the Roanoke Academy of Medicine. He
had been a lieutenant governor of the Ki-
wanis Capital District.
1915 Samuel Alberrus Rhyme (M) of States-
ville. North Carolina, died on May 26.
1917 J. O'Keefe Peery (P) of Tazewell,
Virginia, died on November 14.
Karan Mock Yokeley (D) of Winston-Salem,
North Carolina, died on August 26. He was
a life member of the ADA, the North
Carolina Second District, and the Forsyth-
Stokes County Dental Associations.
1918 William Archer Bagley (D) of Rich-
mond, Virginia, died on August 19.
DuVall Quinn Hicks (D) of Fredericksburg,
Virginia, died on March 25.
1923 Rowland Hill Edwards (M) of Welch,
West Virginia, died on July 22. He was chief
of surgery at Stevens Clinic Hospital until
his retirement on January 1. Doctor Edwards
was a fellow of the American College of
Surgeons and the International College of
Surgeons and for fourteen years was an
18
associate editor of the Journal of the West
Virginia Medical Association.
George H. Snead (D) of Danville, Virginia,
died on March 14.
1924 Harry Ruth (D) of Richmond, Vir-
ginia, died on October 9. Doctor Ruth was
retired from the practice of dentistry.
1925 Ashby G. Martin (M) of Pelham, New
York, died on December 12, 1971.
Dana T. Moore (M) of Southmont, North
Carolina, died on October 15. 1971.
1926 William Ralph Counts (M), who prac-
ticed in Welch, West Virginia until his re-
tirement in 1963, died on June 2 in Light-
house, Florida. He was a former president
of the McDowell County Medical Society.
His specialty was industrial medicine. Doctor
Counts was a veteran of both World War I
and II. He served as an Army private in
World War I and was a Navy flight surgeon
in World War II.
1929 Jesse Thomas Barnes (M) of Asheboro,
North Carolina, died on July 24. He was a
past president of the Randolph Hospital
medical staff and past director of the Ran-
dolph County Health Department. Doctor
Barnes had retired in October, '71.
Herbert Rudolph Hartewell (M) of Radford,
Virginia, died on June 7.
Charles Lipshutz (M) of Bayonne, New
Jersey, died on June 29, 1971. He was an
eye, ear, nose, and throat specialist. Doctor
Lipshutz served in World War II with serv-
ice in England. North Africa, and in the
India-Burma Air Service Command.
1933 Willis Fiske Evans (M) of Warrington,
Florida, died on August 14.
Moses H. McClintic (M) of Hot Springs,
Virginia, died on July 3. Doctor McClintic
practiced in Danville, Virginia, from 1946-
1970 when he retired.
1937 Marvin S. Cashion (M) of San Juan,
Puerto Rico, died on March 30. He was the
medical officer in charge for Puerto Rico
and the U. S. Virgin Islands. Doctor
Cashion, a native of Moorefield, North
Carolina, is survived by his wife, Delores
Mendez Cashion CM'37).
1940 Robert S. Gatherum, Jr. (M), of Blue-
field, West Virginia, died on June 6. Doctor
Gatherum had been surgeon at Bluefield
Sanatarium since 1946. He had devoted
much time to the medical needs of the Sal-
vation Army's Camp Joy and was the team
physician for Beaver High School for 25
years. An annual award was recently estab-
lished in his honor by the school to be given
to the senior athlete who best exemplified
his characteristics.
1941 Walter Jones McLendon (M) of Oak-
boro, North Carolina, died on September 9.
He interned at Memorial Hospital, Charlotte,
after which he became city physician in
Roanoke, Virginia. He moved to Oakboro
in 1946 and was on the medical staff of
Stanly County Hospital.
1947 Arthur L. Conner (D) of Richmond,
Virginia, died on July 13. He was a retired
lieutenant commander in the U. S. Naval
Reserve.
1951 Ralph W. Deaton (P) of Pulaski, Vir-
ginia, died on November 10. He had served
on the Board of Trustees of the Alumni
Association of MCV. He was the owner of
Pulaski Drug Company. Mr. Deaton served
as secretary of the Virginia Pharmaceutical
Association for two terms as well as having
been president of his district pharmaceutical
association. He served this year as a prac-
titioner-teacher in the school of pharmacy
program.
1955 Frank Dargan McKenney, Jr. (M) of
Williamsburg, Virginia, drowned in the York
River on July 4. He had been appointed on
July 2 to assistant director of clinical serv-
ices at Eastern State Hospital, Williamsburg.
Doctor McKenney practiced for ten years in
Salem before beginning his psychiatric resi-
dency at Eastern State.
1956 Sidney A. Krukin (PT) of Norfolk,
Virginia, died on December 3.
1962 Donald L. Martin (M) of Richmond,
Virginia, died on November 9. Doctor Mar-
tin, an obstetrician, was chief of the ob-
stetrics and gynecology department of Rich-
mond Memorial Hospital. He was a clinical
instructor at MCV and on the staffs of
Stuart Circle and St. Marys. He was a
diplomate of the American Board of Ob-
stetrics and Gynecology.
1969 George Adams Noe (P) of Virginia
Beach, Virginia, died on October 9, 1972.
'Round the Circuit
(Continued from page 17)
Dr. Philip L. A. Minor, Dr. Carl J.
Roncaglione, and Miss Minnie M.
Franck.
dent of the Association, had slides to
show and gave a brief talk on the
Association. Miss Minnie M. Franck,
executive secretary, was also there.
Dr. John A. B. Holt, Dr. William L.
Claiborne, Dr. Marion F. Jarrett, and
Dr. Thomas G. Potterfield.
The new officers are Dr. George L.
Grubb (M'43M), president; Dr. Rob-
ert E. Gibson (M'46), vice president;
and Dr. W. Alva Deardorff (M'56),
secretary-treasurer.
THE SCARAB
Mrs. W. Alva DeardorfF, Dr. Joseph
A. Smith, and Dr. DeardorfF.
VPhA Meeting
The Alumni Association was pleased
to have had a cocktail party on
June 20 at the Sheraton Motor Lodge
in Fredericksburg in connection with
the meeting of the Virginia Pharma-
ceutical Association. It was pleasant
to be able to renew acquaintances with
so many old friends. Dr. Philip L. A.
Minor, president of the Alumni Asso-
ciation, Mrs. Minor, and Miss Minnie
M. Franck, executive secretary, were
there to welcome the alumni.
West Virginia Chapter
The West Virginia Chapter met on
August 24 at the Old White Club at
Mrs. Philip L. Minor and Dr. Minor.
Mrs. Roy T. Parker, Dr. and Mrs. A. J.
Villani, and Dr. Parker
The Greenbrier. Dr. Roland G. Birch-
head (M'52), who was unable to be
present, had planned a delightful affair.
Present to bring news of the Col-
lege was Dr. Kinloch Nelson and the
president of the Alumni Association
Dr. Philip L. Minor, was there to tell
the group about the Association. Miss
Minnie M. Franck, executive secretary,
was also there plugging Doctor Sang-
er's book. The group was great and as
always it was a most enjoyable get-
together.
Psychiatric Hospital, Inc.
Richmond, Virginia
FOUNDED 1911
PSYCHIATRY
REX BLAN KINSHIP, M. D.
Chairman, Advisory Group
JOHN R. SAUNDERS, M. D.
Medical Director
THOMAS F. COATES, JR., M. D.
Assistant Medical Director
OWEN W. BRODIE, M. D.
Associate in Psychiatry
M. M. VITOLS, M. D.
Associate in Psychiatry
NEUROLOGY
GERALD W. ATKINSON, M. D.
Associate in Neurology
CHILD PSYCHIATRY
GILBERT SILVERMAN, M. D.
Associate in Child Psychiatry
ADMINISTRATION
H. R. WOODALL
Administrator
FEBRUARY, 1973
19
New York Chapter
The New York Chapter met on Oc-
tober 24 at Cheer's Restaurant for an
enjoyable dinner which had been ar-
ranged by Dr. Robert E. Barrett, pres-
ident, and Dr. Maxwell J. Marder. Dr.
Philip L. Minor, president of the
Alumni Association, Dr. M. Pinson
Neal, assistant vice president of MCV,
and Miss Minnie M. Franck, execu-
tive secretary, brought the alumni up
to date on MCV and its alumni asso-
ciation. The new officers are: Dr.
Robert E. Barrett, M'57, president,
and Dr. Maxwell J. Marder, M'42,
vice president.
BL
w
5^
i
F
yr*t«i
7:
Dr. Philip
L. Minor and
Wardell
Dr. Louis
Dr. Robert E. Barrett, Dr. and Mrs.
Bernard Disick, Mrs. Louis Wardell.
Delaware Valley Chapter
The Delaware Valley alumni had
their annual meeting at the Naval Of-
ficers Club on October 25, where Mrs.
Emily H. Baxter, president, graciously
presided. The highlight of the meeting
was the presentation of an MCV chair
to Dr. J. Warren Hundley, retiring
secretary of the Chapter. Doctor Hund-
ley has worked diligently over the years
to keep this group together. Dr. Philip
L. Minor, president of the Alumni As-
sociation of MCV, Dr. M. Pinson Neal,
assistant vice president of MCV, and
Mrs. Emily H. Baxter, Dr. and Mrs. J.
Warren Hundley.
Laquer, Drs.
and Donald L,
Mary T.
Baxter.
Medical College of Virginia
Health Sciences Division of
Virginia Commonwealth University
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA
HOSPITALS
(Paid by Medical College of Virginia Foundation)
20
THE SCARAB
Drs. M. Pinson Neal and Dr. Philip L.
Minor
Miss Minnie M. Franck, executive sec-
retary, were present to bring news of
alma mater. The new officers elected
were: Dr. Mary T. Kavanaugh, M'49,
president, and Dr. Donald L. Baxter,
M'54, secretary-treasurer.
Peninsula Chapter
The Peninsula Chapter alumni had
a cocktail party on September 28 at
the Holiday Inn in Hampton. Dr.
Drs. Roland G. Garrett, Jr., Elmer O.
Fisher, Jr., and Paul Hogg.
Mrs. Paul Hogg, Drs. Robert H. Arm-
strong, Philip L. Minor, Thomas W.
Sale, Jr.
FEBRUARY, 1973
Elmer O. Fisher, Jr. president, ar-
ranged the party. Dr. Philip L. Minor,
president of the Alumni Association;
Dr. Warren H. Pearse, dean of medi-
cine; and Miss Minnie M. Franck, ex-
ecutive secretary, were there to greet
the alumni of that area. The new of-
ficers are: Dr. Roland G. Garrett, Jr.,
P'54, M'58, vice president, and Mr.
John D. Cowley, Jr., P'57, secretary-
treasurer.
Medical Society of Virginia
The alumni of MCV who were at-
tending the Medical Society of Virginia
meeting gathered for cocktails and din-
ner on November 7 at the Williams-
burg Conference Center. It really was
a delightful evening. Dr. Wyndham B.
Blanton, Jr., rector of the Board of
Visitors of VCU; Dr. Warren H.
Pearse, dean of medicine; Dr. John R.
Jones, associate dean of medicine; Dr.
M. Pinson Neal, assistant vice presi-
dent of MCV; Dr. Kinloch Nelson,
former dean of medicine of MCV; and
Dr. Philip L. Minor, were the dignita-
ries at the speaker's table.
Dr. Wyndham B. Blanton, Jr., Dr. and
Mrs. Kinloch Nelson, Mrs. Blanton,
and Dr. Philip L. Minor.
Dr. Philip L. Minor, Mrs. Minor, Drs. M.
Pinson Neal, and Warren H. Pearse.
Chances are,
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21
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C. O. ALLEY
TRAVEL AGENCY
708 E. Grace
643-0126
Southern Medical
In New Orleans, on November 13,
the alumni who were attending the
Southern Medical meeting got together
for cocktails in the Iberville room of
the Marriott. Friendship abounded as
old and new friends reminisced about
MCV. Dr. Philip L. Minor, president
of the Alumni Association and Miss
Minnie M. Franck were there to wel-
come those who came. Dr. M. Pinson
Neal, Jr. represented MCV. It was a
good party.
Valley Chapter
Drs. Phili
and
p L. Minor, James E. Poteet,
Walter J. O'Donohue.
Dr. R. Douglas Neal, Dr. Charles M.
Caravati, Mrs. Neal, and Mrs. Cara-
vati.
Dr. Eugene Evans and Dr. and Mrs.
Henry A. Hornthal.
22
Drs. D. Ewell Hendricks, E. Walter
Rice, and Philip L. Minor.
On July 20, the Valley Chapter of
the Alumni Association of MCV met
for cocktails, dinner, and the play,
"Tartusse," at the Wayside Inn in
Middletown, Virginia. Dr. D. Ewell
Hendricks (M'57), and his wife, Bar-
bara, had arranged this enjoyable
affair. There from Richmond to greet
the alumni were Dr. Philip L. Minor,
president of the Alumni Association
of MCV, and Miss Minnie M. Franck.
Elected to office were: Mr. Carl S.
Napps (HA'56), president; Dr. Hunter
M. Gaunt, Jr. (M'57), vice president;
and Mrs. Lillian F. Hoover (N'35),
secretary.
HELP: LOST SHEEP
Addresses furnished would be most
appreciated.
Mrs. Sarah C. Bradford, MS'39
Mrs. Margaret B. Brown, PT'56
Dr. S. T. Childers, D'63
Miss Margaret Davis, MT'36
Dr. Kenneth L. Dwyer, M'66
Mrs. Mary C. Kalinchak, N'38
Miss E. M. Kraus, P'25
Mrs. Doris B. Lemon, MT'53
Miss Florine Logue, PT'47
Miss Ann May, HA'57
Miss Katherine H. Maynard, N'43M
Miss Nancye S. Minton, PT'68
Mr. Paul Camp Moreland, P'21
Mrs. Marjorie Y. Psioda, N'43M
Mrs. Veda B. Reddy, N'21
Send to
Alumni Association of MCV
1105 East Clay Street
Richmond, Virginia
Telephone #: 703-770-4566
THE SCARAB
Vs
Dr. W. T. Sanger's New Book
Medical College of Virginia
Before 1925
University College of Medicine
1893-1913
published by the Medical College of Virginia Foundation
hard back, 144 pages, 20 illustrations, $5 per copy in-
cluding tax, $5.50 per copy including tax, if mailed.
For copies to be mailed, address orders to:
MCV Foundation
Box 234
MCV Station
Richmond, Virginia 23298
g Copies to be picked up in Richmond will be found at the H
jj MCV Foundation Office, Room 142 Sanger Hall g
g Alumni Association of the Medical College of Va., 1105 g
H East Clay Street H
H Alumni Activities Office, Virginia Commonwealth Univer- H
g sity, 828 West Franklin Street g
llltlilllllllllililililllllllllilllilllliilllllllilililllilililllllllilillllliltlillW
FEBRUARY, 1973 23
Miss Minnie is begging again!
This time for news of your activities-
Please send some to us.
Name
-School .
Address-
.Yr. ofGrad.
Please send to: Alumni Association of MCV , 1 105 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia.
24
THE SCARAB
IN ASTHMA
IN EMPHYSEMA
optional
therapy
All Mudranes are bronchodilator-mucolytic in action, and
are indicated for symptomatic relief of bronchial asthma,
emphysema, bronchiectasis and chronic bronchitis. MU-
DRANE tablets contain 195 mg. potassium iodide; 130 mg.
aminophylline; 21 mg. phenobarbital (Warning: may be
habit-forming); 16 mg. ephedrine HC1. Dosage is one tablet
with full glass of water, 3 or 4 times a day. Precautions are
those for aminophylline-phenobarbital-ephedrine combina-
ations. Iodide side-effects: May cause nausea. Very long
use may cause goiter. Discontinue if symptoms of iodism
develop. Iodide contraindications: Tuberculosis; preg-
nancy (to protect the fetus against possible depression of
thyroid activity). MUDRANE-2 tablets contain 195 mg.
potassium iodide; 130 mg. aminophylline. Dosage is one tablet
with full glass of water, 3 or 4 times a day. Precautions are
those for aminophylline. Iodide side-effects and contra-
indications are listed above. MUDRANE GG tablets
contain 100 mg. glyceryl guaiacolate; 130 mg. aminophylline;
21 mg. phenobarbital (Warning: may be habit-forming);
16 mg. ephedrine HC1. Dosage is one tablet with full glass of
water, 3 or 4 times a day. Precautions are those for amino-
phylline-phenobarbital-ephedrine combinations. MUDRANE
GG-2 tablets contain 100 mg. glyceryl guaiacolate; 130 mg.
aminophylline. Dosage is one tablet with full glass of water,
3 or 4 times a day. Precautions: Those for aminophylline.
MUDRANE GG Elixir. Each teaspoonful (5 cc) contains
26 mg. glyceryl guaiacolate; 20 mg. theophylline; 5.4 mg.
phenobarbital (Warning: may be habit-forming); 4 mg. ephe-
drine HC1. Dosage: Children, 1 cc for each 10 lbs. of body
weight; one teaspoonful (5 cc) for a 50 lb. child. Dose may
be repeated 3 or 4 times a day. Adult, one tablespoonful, 4
times daily. All doses should be followed with lA to full glass
of water. Precautions: See those listed above for Mudrane
GG tablets.
MUDRANE— original formula
First choice
MUDRANE-2
When ephedrine is too exciting
or is contraindicated
MUDRANE GG
During pregnancy or when K.I. is
contraindicated or not tolerated
MUDRANE GG-2
A counterpart for Mudrane-2
MUDRANE GG ELIXIR
For pediatric use
or where liquids are preferred
Clinical specimens
available to physicians.
WILLIAM P. POYTHRESS & COMPANY, INC , RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 23217
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA
Address Correction Requested
FOR
YOU
OR
THE
JUNE
-f- GRADUATE
NON-PROF. ORG.
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
Richmond, Virginia
Permit No. 761
Ml
WE HAVE FOR SALE
I Remember, Dr. W. T. Sanger
(Includes tax and postage)
YOU'LL CHERISH THEM!
GLASSES WITH MCV SEAL ETCHED (sold only in dozens)
_4Vi oz. Stem Cocktail Glasses
(also suitable for wine)
_7'/z oz. Old Fashion Glasses
_10'/2 oz. Highball Glasses
_5'/2 oz. Brandy Snifters.
.Egyptian Building, China
('/2 doz. $25.00)
-Side Ch
(Side Ch
$11.00
6.75
6.75
11.00
air. Black with MCV Seal i
i Gold 28.00
lair Discontinued after Febn
ary 15)
air, Black with MCV Seal i
n Gold 45.00
with Cherry arms)
46.00
Rocker
36.00
Name
Address
Order from The Alumni Association of MCV
1 105 East Clay Street, Richmond, Virginia
$1.50 charge for postage for each dozen glasses and
plates. Chair is shipped freight collect. See page
23 for further information on chairs.
4% Tax on all items delivered in Virgil
You may send a gift card to be enclosed or we will do that, too!