| Title | School of Medicine Yearbook - 1957 |
| Note | The University of Utah has made former and current yearbooks from various campus entities available in print and via its digital library archive. These documents contain facts and milestones about the history of the University of Utah. In some cases, these publications contain insensitive and offensive language and imagery that does not represent the views or values of the University of Utah. Insensitive and offensive portrayals of race and gender were wrong at the time these publications were originally printed, and they are wrong today. The yearbooks are presented as they were originally created and have not been edited or censored to ensure documented historical evidence of discrimination are not forgotten or repeated. |
| Subject | Students, Medical; Schools, Medical; Anniversaries and Special Events; Universities; Utah; Portraits as Topic; Yearbooks |
| Description | Annual record of the activities of the graduating class of the University of Utah School of Medicine. |
| Publisher | Yearbook Editorial Board, School of Medicine, University of Utah |
| Date | 1957 |
| Type | Text |
| Format | application/pdf |
| Source | W 19.2 AU8 1957 |
| Language | eng |
| Coverage | 1956-1957 |
| Rights | |
| Holding Institution | Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah |
| ARK | ark:/87278/s6cr61v3 |
| Setname | ehsl_som_mmyb |
| ID | 2429543 |
| OCR Text | Show MEDICINE MAN 1951 EDITOR . . . . . . Marvin L. Rallison BUSINESS MGR. . . . Richard R. Kendrick EDITORIAL STAFF . . . Robert T. Swenson Paul M. Williams Larry J. Otterness George S. Tanner ART WORK. . BUSINESS STAFF . . . Paul M. Williams . Hal Bourne Dean Packard PHOTOGRAPHY . . . Julian Maack Howard Tribe Robert Hales Broadway Published Studio by SENIOR MEDICAL CLASS UNIVERSITY OF UTAH COLLEGE OF MEDICINE l An award presented by Davis & Geck for Dr. Price's contribution to the Cine' Cline Program of the American College of Surgeons for his teaching motion picture film on "The Breast and Its Diseases." 2 ADMINIITRATID Philip B. Price Dean, College of Medicine Florence Strong Assistant to the Students Clarence N. Stover Assistant to the Dean 3 ANATOMY Never Lower Tillie's Pants, Mother Might Come ... Everybody remembers the nonogram, but nobody remembers the names of the bones. But though a histiocyte .,\~\\)\\\ ~)\\\ still I \\ ~ -- ~ ~D Thomas F. Dougherty Professor of Anatomy And this little structure is known as the "t ______ y." I 4 ~~7 - \ l~~t::~~;~;!;~ the adrenal cortex 1s to to keep the medulla warm. Hyperplasia ? Two dead heads are better than one. Smoke gets in your eyes. 5 8/0CNEM/fTRY In the attic of the medical school we found stomach tubes, Murphy's reagent, hippuric acid, Marge, alloxanized rats, and cook books. Every lab was like Macey's bargain basement ... but then, as long as the neighbors didn't mind Benedict's reagent stains down the back of their shirts ... Leo T. Samuels Professor of Biochemistry . . .. .... ...-: .,'.,..·:' ... • ♦ • :♦ ../J I I J J Got a new shipment of Murphy's Reagent, Gordon ? 6 Great Scott, Emil, you know better than that ! It still tastes like urine to me ! Well, no, it doesn't restore hair. 7 lR/DlDfJY Notice: All rabid dogs should have heads severed, placed in a tin can, packed with sawdust and dry ice, and sent to Public Health Department ! If you can't see it, culture it. If you can't culture it, smear it. If you can't smear. it, ·shove it. Louis P. Gebhardt Professor of Bacteriology ---- e_ .. Can I play with it for a while ? 8 Cultured ! There are too red snappers ! Look for yourself. Th·e one in the middle is the monkey. 9 PHARMACDLD Convulsing rats, vomiting cats, twitching frogs, sleeping dogs, chain smokers, ping pong, cathartics, digitalis and the longest, complicated somnifacient lectures in medical school are the copyrighted treasures of the Pharmacology Department. Louis S. Goodman Professor of Pharmacology - .. I distilled it myself. 10 It looks more like a tooth to me. Smoking is not habit forming. Alright, alright ... but wait 'till I finish this chapter of Goodman and Gilman ! ,4#;,• "' ~-\ I " \ I ,' /I/ , I . l / I I - •. ,I i / PATHDlDfJY ,. ~~ Richard H. Follis Professor of Pathology )' /~ Organ recital. 12 -- Dr. Follis organized our thoughts, Dr. Cochoran blew cigar smoke, and Dr. Jones demoralized us with his oral examinations on life among the phagocytes of an invading pneumococcal army. And did you ever find yourself wondering not on_ly what kind of "cell," but what kind of creature? Now emphysema is iust like a bunch of baloons ... •I The ultimate in physical diagnosis. You can find almost any kind of pathology in these crocks. 13 PHYf/0l0fJY I j l I I \ ) ) \ I ) Horace W. Davenport Professor of Physiology il/MIJJ1lltl11,,,,,,,,, ~ I \ I l ) ' I I I I Wherein the obvious was flogged to a fare-the-well. 14 MEO/CINE At last, it's your turn. This time you recheck the history of food habits, sex habits, etc. and repeat the physical until you've found the spleen. Batteries of lab work are serially completed and charted. You dive diligently into the vast, mystic realm of "the literature," and after seven sleepless days and nights you are placed in the stocks and scourged. A heavy sigh for it's over. You've presented to the Professor! Maxwell M. Wintrobe Professor of Medicine ..----.... , l l 1 I l I I ' I Seance! 16 e;r1W1~~~a~,~ ~ .Y .1: Well, speak up Are you sure you've never played pool before, Miss Dunn ? Call in the elders l I j 1 I ) I ) l I So that puts the lesion in the left upper .... no, the left middle ... o-h h ______ , what's the difference ? A.nd a tip of the Class Hat to Dr. Jarcho and cohorts, for revamping and revitalizing our Senior Year. At least one of them's happy. 18 Inspiration, expiration, or aspiration ? I Who needs patients to find pathology A "mugger" ? in every crowd. 19 fURfJERY Playing the odds on the admission lists was like playing the numbers racket ... we always lost, but at least y.1e proved repeatedly that our endurance for holding retractors in the 0. R. was phenomenal. And we even did a gastroieiunostomy without help ... uh, of course the patient was ca·nine. Ralph R. Richards Acting Professor of Surgery Now how did that d ______ knot go again ? 20 ••""1 WHOOPS 21 A chip off the old block ! But my watch says it's only 8:05. 22 Now say ah! Bed pan alley ! ANEITNEIIA Dr. Bollinger's soft, low monotone lulled us painlessly toward somnolent oblivion: "In passing the laryngoscope, one should be careful not to inadvertently knock out one of the patient's teeth ... Ether is a volatile liquid ... used for producing ... deep .. . anesthes ... zzzzz ... " Carter M. Ballinger Professor of Anesthesiology \ 1 j .. l Rock-a-bye my rock-a-bye baby, with a cyclo-melody. l 1 j I I I l 24 08-fJYN Many of our prolific class (and our wives) have had more than an academic interest in midwifery. Others will not soon forget Dr. Holmstrom's phenomenal ability to ferret out those absent from the previous lecture with a- few well-aimed questions. Emil G. Holmstrom Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology A little chalk goes a long way. 25 Honest, Dr. Holmstrom, she was only three centimeters when I checked her a minute ago. ! I j l j j Low forceps delivery. l \ j 26 Fundal pressure. If we had more "pros" we'd have fewer "Kahns" (positive). 27 PEfJIATR/Cf We approached well-baby clinic equipped with full knowledge of cystic fibrosis of the pancreas and adrenal cortical function in mesenchymal disease only to be deflated and routed by mothers who knew far -"'\\\\~'\\\:ore James F. Bosma Professor of Pediatrics A patent what ? 28 than we about their infants. And when did you first notice this difficulty ? What do you mean you "only" gave the kid "six" aspirin ? Ouch! 29 Past history may ·prove valuable. Patients are kept scrupulously clean. ACTH fall-off is positive. Squares on rounds. 30 The diagnosis be obscure. may Recovery may be prolonged. Appropriate is instituted. treatment Good treatment. 31 PIYCHIATRY Not all psychiatrists choose this field because of difficulty resolving their own inner conflicts ... not quite all, that is. We found this colorful department full of characters and good iokes and first learned of the "silly glutton" and the "complete zero." Our last year we "listened intelligently" and discovered that everyone is neurotic ... more o'r less. C. H. Hardin Branch Professor of Psychiatry-Neurology If we iust had a ball. 32 ' _; What chart? I I first noticed girls at the age of .... 33 I I "The septic tank should be six feet by five feet by three feet with the drain field tile placed at a depth of 12 to 16 inches but not over 36 inches from the top to the middle of the drain ..... " 1 14 Glen R. Leymaster Head, Dept. of Preventive Medicine ,. t' What do you see in this picture ? "Now the bored-pit ' type ... " j F -l 34 •. \ RAfJ/DlDfJY In the underworld of red goggles, lead aprons, and barium cocktails shadows ore adventitiously iuxtaposed to produce obscure diagnoses. Footnote: "The purpose of this course is not to teach the student to interpret X-ray films but to teach him how to prepare the patient." William R. Christensen Professor of Radiology -----I don't care if he is a male, a radiologist is never wrong. 35 -PATIi. CUN/Cl Lyman R. Fulton Director of Out-Patient Clinics , At last. A private practice of my own; where I can make the decisions. What's that Mrs. Throckmorton ? You didn't come in for all these questions and prodding and thumping ? You iust want your Equanil and Amphogel ? But, I haven't decided what's wrong with you ! Oh, you know already. What size tablets of Equanil ? How many? ... ~((aB> /~ ,~ Now this diet rm going to put you on .... 36 The bridge game goes on ... Well then, stop giving him Milk of Magnesia ! 37 • And on .... Screaming clinic ! -~-~----· ~&r·~~ ,,-< Bible class. 38 ... and on ! Let's see now, what is your address? I don't like doctors ! 39 PHILIP D. AFFLECK Phil calls Boise home. He's a Boise Jr. College and USAC booster and proudly dangles his AOA key from his lab coat lapel. Phil had a phobia for women and has remained celibate, but the worm is turning. During the summers Phil was a diamond driller for the Bureau of Reclamation and spent one summer in forced labor at "San Pediatrin." The "big bear" is known for playing tennis in season and out, playing football on basketball courts, and baiting pediatric residents. He plans a rotating internship and will spend three years doing physical exams for Uncle Sam. ANTHONY BALLARD Tony, after gamely fighting the battle of the bulge, has abandoned the central front, and is now trying desperately to protect his flanks. From Hurricane, Utah, Tony took his pre-med at the U of Utah and has spent his summers as an extern at Holy Cross and in Pharmacology research. Sharing honors with Mac and J. B., Tony and Afton boast of a family of three boys and a girl. Tony plans a rotating internship and will probably go into General Practice. DELLBARKER Dell, who has the distinction of scrawling the largest and most illegible notes in the class, is a Salt Laker who took his pre-med in Alaska and California. He and his wife Vickie have three heirs, ages 3 ½, 2, and newborn. Dell spent three years in the Navy, one summer as a genuine Fuller brush man and has worked for the department of Experimental Biology. An avid skier and student of Spanish, he still found time to work at LDS as an extern. Following his rotating internship, Dell hopes to set up a General Practice in California. DOYLE BARRETT Doyle ("Curly" to his friends) is the class "shorty" with lab coats tailor - made for the tiny. A Salt Laker by choice, he received his A. B. degree from BYU in Zoology and spent his formative years in the Navy. He enjoys music, photography, hunting, and fishing when not tied down to his work-a-day jobs which have included a job with the Dept. of Psychiatry at SLGH, ex-· ternships at LDS and St. Mark's, and searching out Willow trees to be fashioned into prosthetic limbs. His "spare time" he spends with Marcella and his strapping family of four. After graduation he plans a rotating internship and general practice in the West. JOHN D. BELL With half-closed eyes, cigarette dangling from his lips, and hunched over a piano garnished with tap beer, a Phi Beta Pi pin, and a golf putter, J. D. has managed to weather four years of medical impregnation unadulterated. After spending his youth in Lyman, Colorado, J. D. came to the U of Utah for his pre-med. During his sophomore year he gave up a lively, "shoot-em-up" bachelorhood to settle down with Marilyn, a pretty X-Ray technician. J. D. looks forward to a rotating internship followed by ln~ernal Medicine or Obstetrics. CHARLESREX BORUP "Silent Rex" comes from Emmett, Idaho, via the BYU. Rex is a member of Phi Rho Sigma and was outwardly a quiet, shy lad socially 'till his Senior year when he got carried away by the, spirit of Christmas and came back to school married to Sharon, his hometown sweetheart. During the summers Rex tamed the wilderness amidst the Idaho pines for the Forest Service. Before he lost himself to Sharon, Rex could be seen with Phil on basketball or tennis court or glowering at girls from afar. He plans a rotating internship and will set up a General Practice in Idaho. HAROLD(HAL} BOURNE From Farmington, Utah, "Stud" took his pre-med at the U of Utah where he began his career of "clocking-watching" in order to pay for football trips. He has since become a well-oriented "fire-watcher" after a summer sniffing smoke in the wilds of Idaho. Now an extern at Holy Cross, Hal spent one summer fishing and doctoring at Jackson, Wyoming. President of the class during the sophomore year, he and Annette have two children, Stephanie and Michael. Hal plans to practice General Medicine in California following a rotating internship. RONALDBUTLER A quiet, unassuming Richfield boy, Ron took his pre-med training at the U of Utah. He began his career as a carefree bachelor but soon fell prey to his comely wife, Carole. They now have a young daughter, Elaine. A conscientious student, Ron has worked on Surgery IV, helping the house staff bury their mistakes. He plans to take a rotating internship in Utah with long range plans focused on Pathology. DONALD R. CARSON When Don rode into Salt Lake from his home to:wn Ogden he was known as "Kit" Carson. After careful observation of the boy in action this was revised to "Casanova" Carson. He is one of the hold-out bachelors of the class, but claims to have special interest in art, dogs, and women or is that order reversed? Don studied pre-med at the U of Utah, externed at St. Benedict's last summer, and spent his evenings during the school year cheering up the girls at the Holy Cross nurses' home. He plans a rotating internship and will practice what the Ouija board indicates. WALLACE D. CROSBY "Casual Croz" from Panguitch, Utah, early developed talents destined to render him impervious to the threat of work. Foremost of these is his undisputed kingship as our worst speller. Before he met Bille, he pursued girl-watching, billiards, and spectator sports at the U of Utah. Now he helps care for a red-haired daughter, Sherry. In med school "Croz" has displayed a facility for sliding to the brink of disaster, tottering there and then slipping casually through with studied nonchalance. "Croz" plans a slow, rotating internship and a casual practice in General Medicine. JOYCE DUNN The only lady-doctor in the class, Joyce has received a liberal education extending far beyond the boundaries of mere medicine. Yet, in spite of her unenviable position, she has endeared herself to the class by maintaining her patience and feminity. Elected secretary-treasurer of the class for four consecutive years by acclamation, this Montpelier, Idaho, miss whittled her way through med school working nights as a lab technician at St. Mark's. She plans to get married in Scp+c11.l~c1, Ju Me, March, following which she will take a rotating internship at LOS Hospital. GORDON EVANS His pockets bulging with Terramycin and Tyzine, Gordo played detail man for Pfizer his senior year. Not content with this blasphemy, he worked for Schering the year before and extended his talents to become a surgical nurse and lab technician at LOS. A native of Sa It Lake City who took his pre-med at the U of Utah, Gordo has an easy smile and a distinctive chuckle. He has managed to keep his wife working at the Union Pacific R. R. to help support their boy, Li' I Gordo. After a rotating internship close to home, Gordo plans to specialize in Internal Medicine. HAROLDFOGELSON After years of driving bread trucks, wrestling for money (Southwestern New Jersey Conference; third place), and attending an obscure Eastern College (Lafayette), Hal found the profession for which he was groomed. (It is rumored that he heard Phi Beta Pi was a professional wrestling fraternity and to join it he had to enter medical school.) While in med school he has earned room and board tracing synapses for Dr. Swineyard. A soft-spoken bachelor with a red Ford convertible, Fogey hopes to be a Pediatric Neurologist following a pediatric internship in an Eastern teaching hospital MORRISD. GARDNER "Big Mo" is more or less a Logan ite, but he started his career at BYU where he played football and basketball and married Orpha. With a growing family he became genetically oriented at USAC, producing a paper on "Drosophila." "Big Mo" has spent a summer at Blackfoot Mental Hospital (as a physician), dabbled in carpentry, and externed at LDS Hospital. Morris studies hard, thinks deep, says little, likes people, and is liked by all. With Orpha and their two boys and a girl, "Big Mo" plans a rotating internship and will set up a General Practice in Utah. ROBERTHALES Capable Senior Class President, Bob is noted for the quiet, efficient manner in which he gets things done. He hails from Provo where he graduated from BYU with high honors. At the end of his Sophomore year he married Janette and now has a young daughter. As Dr. Bosma's right hand "boy neurologist," Bob spent his junior year learning to swallow. As Chaplain for Phi Beta Pi he hos comforted mo.ny o heavy loser at the gaming tables. Bob is planning q rotating internship and will probably go into General Practice. JAMESHANSEN Jim, who with Darrell occupied the front row at a 11 lectures, had his pre-med at Snow College in his hometown of Ephraim and at the U of Utah. A member of Phi Rho Sigma, Jim has worked his way through rpedicine projecting, introjecting, and suppressing. His wife, Carol, teaches at East High and keeps him up on latest adolescent behavior. Elected to AOA, the "human dynamo" has dabbled in anesthesia and had his.fingers in the blood bank, X-ray, and numerous other pies. Following his rotating internship he is considering an ENT specialty. I THOROLDD. HARRIS Sporting a wide, eager smile, "T. D." hails from Salt Lake City and earned an M. S. in Pharmacology at the U of Utah before entering medicine. "T. D." suffers from premature alopecia frontalis and an unexplained weakness: he is the most enthusiastic "rumor-rabble-rouser" ye olde Med School has ever known. A member of Phi Rho Sigma, he saved lives at St. Mark's to support Gloria and their daughters, Julie and Laurie. He plans a rotating internship and intends to specialize in Surgery. MARLAN HASLAM This smooth talking, dashing, debonair fellow has thus far eluded the clutches of the fair sex and remains one of the species "Elli gibble bachelorum." "Haz" migrated to us from the far north Lewiston, Utah sliding through pre-med at USAC. "Hasbeen" has been active in class functions giving freely of his musical ta lent, quick wit, and glib tongue. At present he is "taciturn" president of Phi Rho Sigma. He plans a rotating internship on the West Coast but is undecided whether or not he will specia Iize. CHARLESHENDERSON Charlie, a quiet, unassuming Phi Rho, came from Palo Alto to study pre-med at U of Utah carrying an enormous brief case (rumored to weigh 117 pounds) and displaying a total disregard for female entanglements. During his senior year both of these characteristics went to pot he lost his briefcase and became engaged. After the wedding in the spring, at which he will take notes and later abstract them, Charlie will take a rotating internship followed by a future practice in Internal Medicine. WAYNE L. HIRSCHI From a ranch in Park Valley, Utah, "Hirsch" got his cultural training in the Navy and at USAC in Logan. He worked his way through medical school peddling life insurance. During his freshman year he married Faunell and put her to work supplementing the family income 'till she supplemented the family with an heir, Ronald. They now have another in the chute. Wayne is a Phi Rho Sigma member with a dry sense of humor and a receding hair line. He plans a rotating internship and then will seek out a spot in northern California where he can make gobs of money and have plenty of time to loaf. ) J. ROBERTHOGAN Bob comes from Bountiful, Utah, and is a cynical battle casualty from six years Army service in World War II and Korea. He started prevet -training at Colorado A & M but flunked the course in "animal language" and transferred to pre-med at the U of Utah. Bob was a sheet metal mechanic during the summers and externed at St. Mark's his senior year to support Valera and their daughter Kathleen. While treasurer of Phi Rho Sigma, Bob acquired a new rod and gun to pursue his favorite sports. He plans a rotating internship and a General Practice. LAFAYETTEHOLBROOK Flashing a ready smile, Fay is well known for his generosity and lively sense of humor. But he is especially well known to Dr. H. W. D. (a physiologist' "as near as makes no difference") for his amazing ability to correlate. A native of Salt Lake City, he took his pre-med partly at the U of Utah and partly at a convent in Provo. Through med school he took organs from "crocks" and put them in crocks and later devitaminized guinea pigs for Al Done and money. At the end of his junior year he shed his bachelorhood and married his charming wife, Adiel. He plans on a straight Pediatric internship at home base. DEAN A. HOLT Tall, bespectacled, eager, and super-conscientious, Dean has a communicable case of spasticity which at times leaves colleagues helpless. From Salt Lake City, he started pre-med at BYU, finishing up at .the U of Utah. Dean does craft work and calmly(?) goes fishing for rehabilitation. During the lean years he supported Ruth, and their son Alan, oscillating among a multitude of jobs. He is the only man in the class who has known as many Deans of the Med School as Mrs. Strong. Dean plans a rotating internship, after which he will broaden his training with postgrad work and practice General Medicine. ROBERTJENSEN Bob, a one-time slender boy from Logan, will leave medical school broadened in more than one direction, but he still maintains he can run the l 00 yard dash in less than l 0.8 with only a week's practice! A Phi Rho Sigma member, Bob worked with Dr. Borison's cats, studying ·the cough reflex and uremia, and still found time to book worm his way into AOA and woo and wed his wife Peg. At present he is oscillating, vascillating, and scintillating between a future in Ophthalmology or Internal Medicine following his rotating internship. ROSSE. JENSEN Sandy-haired Ross, from Brigham City, frequently prowls the neorby swamplands with hipboots and shotgun and in season haunts the Provo River with rod and reel. Ross, who took his pre-med at the U of Utah, worked in Radiobiology during his medical training. A partying member of Phi Beta Pi, he can frequently be found with his cohorts in conferences over coffee in smoke-dimmed corners of the Busy Bee. Ross and Norma and their tads, Milton and Cindy, plan to stay in Salt Lake for a rotating internship and then to go to sunny California for a G. P. residency. ROGERJERNSTROM Thundering out of the savage, untamed black hills of South Dakota, "Jernst" laid down his smoking six-shooters and has become devoted to propagating and delivering children both with great success ! Roger's earthly possessions consist of his wife Mary Ann, three young'uns, Valerie, Vance, and Ross, a tennis racket with no strings, a torn Phi Rho Sigma membership certificate, and one delivery forcep. After he gets his sheepskin, he's moving on to a rotating internship on the West Coast and then a life "catchin' 'em." CHARLES0. JOHNSON The man with the brush lip, long determined stride, and hearty laugh comes from Onida, S.D. and is suspected of having a Russian background. During pre-med training at the U of S. D. he became very proficient at guzzling beer a trait which has stood him (and flattened him) in good stead through medical school. Before joining us in Utah, he attended the U of S. D. med school for two years. He served in the Army Medical Dept. in Japan and used the G. I. Bi II to support Mary and their two small daughters. He plans a rotating internship and a General Practice in the Midwest. OLIVER B. JOHNSTON Suave, dimpled, and flashing a pepsodent smile, Ole was Ogden's answer to the man shortage until Nina returned from Europe to take him out of circulation. They plan a big family and to show good faith have one on the way. Ole took premed at Weber College and the U of Utah and is a member of Phi Beta Pi. He filled an L D S mission in Aloha-land and is proficient in skiing, swimming, and basking in the sun. The Southern Pacific R. R. is losing a good fireman when Ole gets his sheepskin. During the Senior year he externed at Holy Cross, will take a rotating internship and plans in the future to plan his future. ROBERTKAHN r Due to limited space Bob's love life unfortunately cannot be discussed here. As this goes to press he could be married, engaged, in love, divorced, or in court. This Phi Bet is a world traveler. Born in Mainz, Germany, he grew up in New York, attended pre-med at the U of Wisconsin, and worked on a ranch in Arizona. He hopes to continue his travels by taking a rotating internship in the East and will probably settle down in Colorado as a Neurologist. RICHARDROE KENDRICK Serious, down "'.to-earth and taciturn, our "yearbook moneybags" came from Alabama for his pre-med at the U of Utah. Before entering med school he spoon fed many pre-med chicks - as lab instructor in Embryology. A misplaced forest ranger, "Big Dick" lets nothing, be it exams, an OB delivery, or graduation, mar the opening day of duck season. Elected to Phi Beta Kappa and AOA, Dick remains a bulwark of dependability' in Phi Rho. With his lovely wife Helen and two boys Kevan and Kim, Dick plans a rotating internship in Ogden and a General Practice in southern Idaho. HOWARD CHAUNCEY MacFARLANE A charter member of the Busy Bee Bousers, "Black Mac" is famous for his Christmas Special concocted of a green cherry and a vile liquid which smells like Prestone with a mushroom-shaped cloud hovering above the glass. A native of St. George, Mac took his pre-med training at the BYU and has worked in Public Health and Cancer Research. With a family of five children, Mac and Althea claim honors as the largest family to finish med school. After an internship in Ogden, he plans to practice General Medicine and oil drilling in Kanab, Utah. EUGENES. MAIER Gene, carrying a log chain weighted down by keys from Phi Kappa Phi, Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Qmega Alpha, and etc., is the only card shark in the class who can finesse a king three different ways and then trump his partner's ace. A native Sa It Laker, "Mai erhoff" had his pre-med at the U of Utah, where he found Merle. They now have a lively sixteen months old daughter. A member of Phi Beta Pi, he has worked in Biochemistry one summer and for Dr. Hecht and his "Cyclops" for two summers. He plans to take a rotating internship and is considering Obstetrics as a career. •/ JOHN MARGARIS "Cousin Weakeyes" is a Great Falls, Montana, product and was salutatorian of the College of Great Falls. Silent waters run deep, and beneath his heavy eyebrows and scantily populated dome, John is a quiet, deep thinker. He spent one summer traveling Europe and considerable energy evading tender traps of the fair sex. "Cousin Weakeyes" has an avid interest in eyes, especially the etiology of myopia. No bespectacled class member has escaped his eye strengthening harangue. The only class member who has read Duke-Elder from cover to cover in Braille, John plans a rotating internship and General Practice in Montana, and, well, he may retain his interest .in eyes ! CLARK G. McCARTHY A rambling, rolling gait and a briar pipe clenched between his teeth are pathognomonic of the "granddaddy" of the class from Bozeman, Montana. A homely philosopher, Pat finds it difficult to bridle his tongue and can be found in frequent bull-sessions spinning tales to the boys of days he spent piloting bombers over Europe in WW II. During med school he has become a virologist of sorts and a part time electromyographer. With his wife Virginia and daughter Shauna, he plans a clinic practice in Montana following a straight medical internship. DARRYL MINNIG A playboy Phi Beta Kappa from the U of Utah, the "Tiger" has never allowed medicine to interfere with his "extracurricular activities." An avid fishing and hunting enthusiast from Nounan, Idaho, he spent one summer "externing" in Alaska. Though he has lived in the shadow of the LOS Nurses' Home while working as a lab technician, he has survived four years of increasing eligibility completely single and unattached. He plans to rotate in a teaching hospital and then specialize in Internal Medicine. LEON MONROE NEAL The honorable president of Phi Beta Pi, Bud is a member of the Busy Bee Bousers, the Royal Order of the Week-Day Duck Hunters of America, and the ''I've Got a Missing Kidney, What Have You Got?" Club. Originally from Los Angeles, Bud took pre-med at the U of Utah and earned money dissecting for neophytic anatomists. Following up his interest in kidneys, he worked with Dr. Brown in the metabolic ward of the Vets. Bud and Shirley are justifiably proud of their two children, Lee Ann and John. After a rotating internship he plans to be a General Practitioner and friend to all in a little town somewhere. K. R. KELLYNICHOLES Kelly, the "pick-up and delivery" boy for Deseret Mortuary, is from Provo and earned a B. S. in Chemistry from BYU. There he married Ve.lyn, who has faithfully put him through med school and they are now the proud parents of a baby boy, Joseph Kelly. He has been jack of all trades from summer OB extern at LDS to house painter. Garrulous Kelly was nominated president of the "bitching committee" organized in an obscure corner of the College Inn, now defunct. He plans a rotating internship, three years serving Uncle Sam, and then a future in Obstetrics or Aviation Medicine. JOSEPHWILLIAM NOBLE "Slim" comes from Smithfield, Utah, via USAC in Logan, where he was a band leader and trumpet player of note(s). He and Eilene have two boys, Joseph D. and Mark W., 2 ½ (years and mos., resp.). Joddie is a Hi-Fi fan, a member of Phi Rho Sigma, and a lover of gracious living and lavish spending. He bought a wide, wide Buick to fit the family figure. He came into his own selling cemetery lots, thus rounding out his training: from womb to tomb! Joddie plans a straight surgical internship followed by a surgical residency and a stretch in the Army. LARRYOTTERNESS Hailing from the bleak, snow-bound prairie town of Minot (my knot), N. D., "Shoot-em-up" Otterness joined us at the beginning of his junior year when he transferred from the U of N. D. With his buoyant humor, side-splitting antics, and grandiose ideas, he has had a finger in every party pie. Otter spent last summer in Copenhagen, dabbling in medicine, wine, song, etc. A Phi Bet, Larry externed at St. Mark's during his senior year. Still an eligible bachelor, he will present himself at Queen's Hospital, Honolulu for a rotating "luau" with Aloha shirt, surf board, ukulele, and a pineapple between his teeth. DEANW. PACKARD A man of many talents, Dean has worked as a farmer, ball racker in a pool hall, welder, truck driver, bar tender, and cat skinner. An unassuming, conscientious native of Springville, he studied pre-med at the BYU and U of Utah. Active in Phi Rho Sigma, he still finds time for Melba and their daughter, Diane. An extern at St. Mark's his senior year, Dean plans a rotating internship in a local private hospital and wants to become a family doctor in a small town. •/ ' VIRGIL J. PARKER Before entering eph, Utah, filled the "fine things" med school, "Virgin" - the deers layer - on LDS mission to Fronce where in life. After his return he was from Jos- he learned to appreciate captured by a pretty die- tician called Jackie and started raising two daughters, Heather and Holly. Aside from his bulldog haircut and horn-rimmed glasses, Virgil is recognized by his hearty laugh, appropriate and inappropriate. Class President during his freshman year, he has worked for Ors. Tyler and Armstrong and as an extern at St. Mark's. He plans a straight medicine internship and a General Practice in a Western village. LESTER J. PETERSON Les, quiet and soft-spoken except when cornered by Dr. Wintrobe on an obscure anemia, started his career in Rexburg, Idaho, where he attended Rick's College. Finishing his pre-med at the U of Utah, he and Lola have raised a family of two boys, Mark and David. Les has always been able to find a good job for his wife, first operating a motel and later an apartment house. An active Phi Rho and city water purifier, he has followed the city's ophthalmologists around in relentless quest for pearls about eyeballs. He plans a rotating internship and will specialize in Ophthalmology. JOHN PLAGER This misplaced, misguided soul migrated into medicine from the Department of Biochemistry following his monumental discovery of the enzyme "jack-queen-king-ase" which catalyzes the reaction "l No-trump7 Spades" and increases the flow of almost everything. A native New Yorker, John took his undergraduate work at Corne I I. He brought with him his charming wife Louise, and they have added a daughter, Jan. In addition to being a top student and member of AOA, John plays at the guitar and sings(?). A member of Phi Beta Pi, he plans on a straight medical internship on the East Coast. MARVIN L. RALLISON "Take your own cotton pickin' X-Rays" Rallison has worked his way through med school ultra-violating the maimed and afflicted during the witching hours. A Loganite who took his pre-med at the US AC, Marv filled a mission to Germany before entering med school, where his dialect readings and quick wit have sparked many a party. A Phi Rho with a Phi Kappa Phi key, his muddling finger can be traced throughout this yearbook. Longtime poor man's "Don Juan" of the Nurses' Home, Marv is still a bachelor but hasn't given up hope. After a rotating internship he plans a future in Pediatrics. WILLIAM SCHWARTZ From Cando, North Dakota, Bill brought with him a fresh breath of ingenuousness that goes well with his sincere smile and outgoing friendliness. After studying pre-med at the U of California, Bill spent the first two years of medicine at the U of North Dakota. A member of Phi Beta Pi and an eligible bachelor, Bill joined Larry for a summer in Europe under the guise of an externship in Copenhagen. In continental naive fashion Bill learned that an offer of tea and "Smorrebrod" can conceal an erotic invitation. Following a rotating internship Bill plans a General Practice. LYMAN SOLKMAN SHURTLIFF An unassuming, thoughtful Salt Laker, Lyman quietly joined us in the clinical years. During his pre-med days at the U of Utah he found time to earn his B. A. in literature and can be found frequently browsing through philosophical and dramatic works. Norma and his two children keep him well occupied at home in the time he can find between his jobs as an extern at Holy Cross and an employee of the Infantile Paralysis Foundation. He expects to be a General Practitioner and take a rotating internship in a private hospital. DARRELL F. SMITH "Cuddles" served on an LDS mission to Britain before entering medical school and since developing an interest in skin-diving, has decided to continue his missionary work among the mermaids. A native Salt Laker, "Smittie" studied at the U of Utah where he met his wife Joan, a music major at the U. A member of Phi Beta Pi, Darrell is afflicted with "frontrow-nodding disease" and can be counted on to produce at least one question at the end of every lecture. Following a rotating internship he plans a surgical residency. CHARLES D. SPENCER "Speener," a thoughtful, moonfaced lad from Ogden, Utah, has recently begun counting calories, especially ethanolic ones. He studied pre-med at the U of Utah, and successfully induced the U. P. railroad to pay for most of his pre-med and medical training. When this fell through, he married Jerry, who manages to keep an eye on him as part of her nursing duties. A member of Phi Beta Pi, Doug plans a surgical specialty following a rotating internship in an Eastern teaching hospital. JAMES S. SULLIVAN "Sully," a skier, hunter, golfer, and Alaskan phthisiologist, attended Weber College and the U of Utah. During his sophomore year he married Shirley and spent a summer honeymoon watching for fires for the Forest Service in the wilds of Idaho. This whetted his appetite so he spent his last summer in Alaska on a fishing .... i.e. on an externship for the USPHS making a survey of apical "Tbc" in Eskimos. Jim plans a rotating internship and will probably become an Orthopod in Ogden. ROBERTSWENSON Swens, our ruddy, "tactful" Junior Class President from Provo, was taken under a hematologist's wing to solve the riddle of the rat's spleen. He plans early publication of his results entitled "Top Tips for Rat Handlers." Following a profitable summer spent on the Closed Ward, Swens banded together with "Speener" to propagate new-found knowledge of the bulbo-carvernosus reflex (JAMA 162:971 ). A bachelor until last summer, Bob seemed destined for smooth sailing with Maxine until their new Chev developed a baffling; idiopathic disease. Swens plans a straight medicine internship and expects to specialize in Cardiology. GEORGES. TANNER Stan is a Muscovite from Idaho who graduated in pre-med from the U of Idaho. Commissioned in the Navy, he was sea-sick for three years on an aircraft carrier in the Pac;:ific, and still wears his faded Navy overcoat. Model building, do-it yourself projects, and dabbling with color photography make studying tolerable, but if Stan had his "druthers" he'd go fishing. The Tanner family includes Nona, who builds the enormous lunches that keep Stan straw-thin, and red-haired Martin. Stan, a member of Phi Rho Sigma, externed at LDS Hospital, plans a rotating internship, a residency in Ophthalmology, and an eyeball practice in the West. LARRYTHATCHER Originally from Des Moines, Iowa, "Fletch" studied pre-med at the U of Utah and showed that it's possible to mix pleasure with studies and still break into Phi Beta Kappa and AOA. Before he settled down with his wife Irma, Larry struggled with carbonic anhydrase and HWD for a summer as chief glassware cleaner and followed with a summer at Los Alamos picking up facts and roentgens. A gaming, pipepuffing Phi Bet, "Fletch" will win $20 at graduation if Swenson sniffs too much cigarette smoke. After a straight medical internship, Larry plans a residency in Internal Medicine. PRESTONG. THOMPSON "Pres" is a quiet, dark, soft-spoken Utah southerner from Scipio. He was a USAC farmer one year, then finished his pre-med at the U of Utah. Pres and Phyllis have chalked up a record number of years of wedded bliss for the class, are raising a family of two bdys, David and Michael, and have another on the way. Pres, a member of Phi Rho Sigma, externed at Holy Cross and was a chemist at the Portland Cement Co. of Utah during med school. He plans a rotating internship, a G. P. residency, and a General Practice in the lntermountain area. J. BALLARDWASHBURN J. B. came to us from down south in Blanding, stopping at BYU for his pre-med training. One of the "producingest" members of the class, he and Barbara boast of three boys and a girl. A country boy at heart, "Washed-out" commands the respect of everyone for his genuine sincerity. He's tried his hand at uranium prospecting, selling graveyard plots to prospective patients, trumpet playing, and tennis (alas!). His evenings during the senior year were occupied by an externship at St. Mark's. After a rotating internship in the West he's planning to go into General Practice. DAVID WILKERSON Known fondly to his close associates as "Little David," he is a top student with an inquisitive, searching mind and usually finds an answer to even the most obscure question posed by the professor. He originated in Parowan, Utah, and studied pre-med at the U of Utah. A member of Phi Beta Pi, Dave was a natural for chief spokesman of the "bitching committee," a talent which he exercised at every opportunity. Kathleen. took care of their little girl Paula while Dave externed at Holy Cross during his senior year. He plans a rotating internship and a future General Practice or possibly Thoracic Surgery. PAULWILLIAMS An artist of no small stature, Willy warms the keyboard at class -parties, builds much of his own furniture from kitchen doors and scrap metal, and plays a fair game of pool. Born in Spanish Fork, he is a member of AOA and Phi Beta Pi. He is noted for his long fingers as many a patient on Med 111wi II attest. Since he stopped eating his own cooking and married Nadine, Willy has expanded his talents and is now known as "The Lump." After a rotating internship he will probably specialize in Internal Medicine. .. CLAll'S1 Philip D. Affleck University of Alabama Birmingham, Alabama Wayne L. Hirschi San Joaquin General Hospital French Camp, California Joseph W. Noble University of California Los Angeles, California Anthony Ballard Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah John R. Hogan San Joaquin General_ Hospita I French Camp, California Larry J. Otterness Queens Hospital Honolulu, Terr. Hawaii Dell J. Barker St. Mary's Hospital West Palm Beach, Florida Lafayette H. Holbrook Salt Lake General Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Dean W. Packard Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Doyle Barrett Dee Memorial Ogden, Utah Dean A. Holt Dee Memoria I Hospita I Ogden, Utah Virgil J. Parker Salt Lake General Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Hospital Hospital Hospitals John D. Bell University Hospitals Cleveland, Ohio Robert L. Jensen Ohio University Medical Columbus, Ohio Charles Rex Borup Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Ross E. Jensen St. Mark's Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah John E. Plager Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York Hal Bourne King County Hospita I Seattle, Washington Roger S. Jernstrom Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Marvin L. Rallison Minneapolis General Hospital Minneapolis, Minnesota Ronald B. Butler Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Charles 0. Johnson Mercy Hospital Des Moines, Iowa William L. Schwartz Jackson Memorial Hospital Miami, Florida Donald R. Carson St. Mary's Hospital San Francisco, Calif. Oliver B. Johnston Madigan Army Hospital Fort Lewis, Washington Lyman F. Shurtliff Holy Cross Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Wallace D. Crosby Garfield Memorial Hospital Washington, D. C. Robert J. Kahn Philadelphia General Philadelphia, Pa. Darrell F. Smith Letterman Army Hospital San Francisco, California Joyce Dunn Latter-day Saints Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Richard R. Kendrick St. Benedict's Hospital Ogden, Utah Charles D. Spencer Geo. Washington Univ. Hospital Washington, D. C. Gordon R. Evans Latter-day Saints Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Howard C. Macfarlane St. Benedict's Hospital Ogden, Utah James S. Sullivan U. S. Public Health Service Hosp. Staten Island, New York Murray H. Fogelson University .Hospitals of Cleveland Cleveland, Ohio Eugene S. Maier Letterman Army Hospital San Francisco, California Robert T. Swenson University of Minnesota Hospitals Minneapolis, Minnesota Morris D. Gardner Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah John Margaris St. Benedict's Hospital Ogden, Utah George S. Tanner University of Chicago Clinics Chicago, Illinois Robert H. Hales U.S.A.F. Hospital Lackland, AFB, San Antonio, Clarke· G. McCarthy Boston City Hospita I Boston, Mass. Lawrence D. Thatcher Salt Lake General Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah James E. Hansen U. S. Naval Hospital Bethesda, Maryland Darrell R. Minnig Wayne County Hospital Detroit, Michigan Preston G. Thompson Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Thorold D. Harris University of California Los Angeles, California Leon M. Neal St. Mark's Hos pita I Salt Lake City, Utah J. Ballard Washburn Latter-day Saints Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Kelly Nicholes Latter-day Saints Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah David L. Wilkerson Dee Memorial Hospital Ogden, Utah Marian H. Haslam King County Hospital Seattle, Washington Charles E. Henderson U. S. Naval Hospital San Diego, California Texas Hospitals Center Hospital Lester J. Petersen Latter-day Saints Hospital Salt Lake City, Utah Paul M. Williams Strong Memorial Hospital Rochester, New York FOUNTAIN & GRILL 1318 East 2nd South 54 Congratulations ... Graduates Remember the Spot for Relaxation, Fun and Good Fellowship. 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The 38,000,000 persons in the United States now enrolled in this non ...profit, prepaid, medical care plan demonstrates that the Ameri-can people can solve their health care needs on a voluntary basis. Your continued support and spon-sorship not only assures the success of the Blue Shield Plan, but a con-tinuation of our present free system of medical practice. &OTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA 58 COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY &Y COMPANY OF SALT LAKE BLUE SHIELD Wherever you may practice, become a participating physician of the Plap serving that area. THE NEW ENGLAND LIFE Hall of Fame . . . in the Home Office is a special Hall in which is dis-played the portrait of each of our representatives who writes a million dollars of insurance in one year. To be included in this distinguished group is an honor that can be achieved only by those men exceptionally skilled in underwriting; by those men whose knowledge and personal integrity have won the confidence and respect of their clients. 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We can help you outfit your of ... fice with prudence and economy. Long or short term financing available. Ask for our FR·EE booklet, "Your Professional Office" ... just write or phone. "Serving the Medical Profession Since 1924" ,pH y s I (A N s I sup p L y Surgical and Hospital Equipment and Supplies 48 West 2nd South 60 • Salt Lake City, Utah Phone Elgin 5-7459 SURECURE for weary medics and ailing pocketbooks: ''ALL FOR $3'' LOWE'S PHARMACY 349 East, 1st South SUPPER - DANCING EM 4-4375 Free Delivery Congratulations Graduates ONE OF AMERICA'S "DISTINGUISHED HOTELS" MAX CARPENTER, Manager theheartof the drug store M.edical Graduates Now or years from now let us help you build your medical library. Your orders will receive individual attention. If the books are in print, Domestic or Foreign publications, we will get them for you. UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE University of Utah ... "on the campus" SERVICE TO THE DOCTOR AND THE PATIENT Free Prescription Delivery EVERGREENDRUG CO. 3460 South 23rd East Salt Lake City, Utah Dial HU 4-4339 61 CONGRATULATION and BESTWISHES to the MEDICAL CLASS of 1957 College Book Store THANKING THE '57 MEDICAL CLASS FOR THEIR PATRON AGE George and Verla PHOTO SERVICE 200 University Street EL 9-9331 e·s E. 7TH SOUTH • SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH We enjoyed doing your Yearbook Portraits Thank You! RELIABLE DRUG 2102 South State Street IN 6-7222 You ~J!ect more from UTOCO and you g~ it! 62 UTOCO j Reliable Drug will retain all prescriptions of the former Linebaugh Drug. Braces PRESCRIPTIONS Crutches Extension Shoes Elastic Hosiery Trusses Arch Supports by Registered Pharmacists Owners: HOBART M. ARNOLD FRANK SCHNITKER The Fit-Well Artificial Limb Co. 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